TECHNICAL PROGRAM - Chemical & Engineering News Archive

Feb 21, 2005 - During the meeting, opportunities for continuing education and professional development will be available through exhibition workshops ...
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TECHNICAL PROGRAM

229TH ACS SPRING

NATIONAL MEETING San Diego, Calif, March 13-17

T

HE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCI-

ety's 2 2 9 t h spring national meeting is heading back to San Diego. Thirty of the society's technical divisions, two secretariats, and nine committees will participate in just over 930 technical sessions. More than 9,200 papers will be presented. The exposition, a description of which follows the technical program, will be open

MEETING INFORMATION ON THE WEB The most up-to-date and the official final version of the technical program is the Web version: http://chemistry.org/ meetings/sandiego2005. The information on this site will be updated as the meeting nears. Because some locations may change after C&EN's press time, also be sure to pick up an on-site program booklet at the meeting.

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in the San Diego Convention Center from Monday, March 14, through Wednesday, March 16. Hundreds of companies and organizations will display books, services, instrumentation, safety equipment, and more. During the meeting, opportunities for continuing education and professional development will be available through exhibition workshops as well as via ACS divisions. "Enterprise 2015," ACS President William F. Carroll's effort to develop scenarios of how the chemical enterprise— education, industry and government—will change in the next 10 years, will be explored in four symposia. Other special symposia focusing on academics and a public outreach event called "Festival de Quimica" will round out the meeting. The majority of ACS national awards for 2005 will be presented to recipients throughout the meeting. The awards dinner and general meeting will be held on Tuesday evening, March 15. George A. Olah will deliver the Priestley Medal Address during this event.

CLASSIFICATION OF REGISTRANT

ACS member or society affiliate Emeritus member Retired member 50-year member Unemployed member (Chemjobs waiver) Precollege teacher Graduate student, less than postdoctoral Undergraduate student One-day registrant

Chemical scientist Visitor: Nonchemical scientist or chemical technician Precollege teacher Graduate student, less than postdoctoral Undergraduate student One-day registrant Guest of registrant 3 EXPOSITION VISITORS Adult Student

STANDARD FEE

$355 180 180 No Fee No Fee 58 95 58 180

$625 355

58 295 150 355 30

$35 10

a Guest of registrants must be a spouse or family member of the registering attendee having no affiliation with the field of chemical science and who is not eligible to become a member of ACS. One guest registration is allowed per full or one-day registration.

HTTP://WWW.CEN-ONLINE.ORG

REGISTRATION

Γο make your reservation, or for more in- I formation, call:

EARLY REGISTRATION FOR THE 2 2 9 T H NA-

\vis

tional meeting is closed. However, you can still register via the Internet until March 17; standard fees took effect on Feb. 15. Late registrants may proceed to the preregistration counters at the San Diego Convention Center, Hall D Lobby to pick up their cre­ dentials. Please bring a copy of your e-mail confirmation withyou on-site for faster pro­ cessing and to avoid duplicate registrations. As an added service, attendees have the option to register online via any Internet connection using a credit card and will be able to pick up their credentials at the con­ vention center, Hall D Lobby On-site Registration: Attendees may also register on-site at the convention center. ACS will provide self-registration counters along with the traditional attended registration counters. Standard registration fees apply On-site registration hours at the con­ vention center are as follows: Saturday, March 12,3 to 6 PM; Sunday and Monday, March 13 and 14,7:30 AM to 6 PM; Tues­ day, March 15,7:30 AM to 5 PM; Wednes­ day, March 16, 7:30 AM to 4 PM; and Thursday, March 17, 7:30 to 11 AM. For your convenience, program booklets will also be available in the registration area.

;800) 331-1600; online at ht^'J/www.ayis. :om Refer to ID Code B120799

HOUSING FOR RESERVATION AND HOTEL INFORMA-

tion, log on to the ACS meetings website athttp://chemistryorg/meetings/sandiego 2005 and click on "Housing" or refer to the Preliminary Program in the Jan. 10 is­ sue of C&EN.

TRANSPORTATION

Hertz

;800) 654-2240; online at http://www. tiertz.com Refer to ID Code CV No. 02UZ0005 MRP0RT AND GROUND TRANSPORTA­ TION. San Diego International Airport is located 10 minutes from downtown San Diego. Twenty-two major and com­ muter airlines service the San Diego In­ ternational Airport. For terminal and air­ line information, call (619) 231-2100 or log on to the website at http://wwwsan.org. The Metropolitan Transit System's (MTS) buses, trolleys, and coasters proride convenient transportation through­ out San Diego County Use them for trav­ el to and from the airport, shopping centers, attractions, beaches, hotels, and Mexico. Bus schedules differ, but most ho­ tels and attractions have service every 15 to 20 minutes. The San Diego Trolley runs every 15 minutes throughout most of the day and every 30 minutes in the evening. The North County Coasters run 43 miles along the coast with station stops in downtown San Diego, Old Town, Solana Beach, Encinitas, Carlsbad, and Oceanside. Ifou can also get a free trolley trans­ fer, which will take you to Tijuana, Mexi-

United

(800) 521-4041,8 AM to 10 PM EST Refer to Meeting Plus Code 517SM US Airways

(877) 874-7687, 8 AM to 9 PM EST Refer to Gold File No. 60673269

equipped with wheelchair lifts. For sched­ ule and fare information, contact MTS at (800) COMMUTE orvisit the website at http://wwwsdcommute.com. Cloud 9 airport shuttle service is also available for a cost of $8.00 one way For more information or to make a reserva­ tion, go to http://www.cloud9shuttle.com and click on CAMERCS2005" in the field that states, "Enter your promo code, group code, or frequent rider ID No." Driving Directions: For parking infor­ mation and driving directions to the San Diego Convention Center, go to http://

Updates And Additions SOCIAL & SPECIAL EVENTS

Meeting Event/NT, 8 AM to 5 PM Undergraduate Hospitality Center, Manchester Grand Hyatt, Douglas D Reception/NTp noon to 2 PM ACS Scholars Reunion and Open House, San Diego Marriott, Manchester Receptions/NT, 5 to 7 PM Younger Chemists Committee, San Diego Marriott, Balboa

AUTO RENTAL. ACS has negotiated spe­ REU/LSAMP Travel Award Recipicial meeting rates with both Avis and Hertz ents, San Diego Convention Center, for the 2005 ACS MeetingTravel Program. Room 2 HTTP://WWW.CEN-ONLINE.ORG

Healthy scientists are happy scientists. Stretch your tired legs and join fellow chemists for the 4th Annual Younger Chemists Committee 5-K Run/1.5-Mile Walk on Monday, March U, 6:30 to 7:30 AM. Everyone is encouraged to par­ ticipate. Cosponsored by the Committee on Minority Affairs, the Society Commit­ tee on Education, the Women Chemists Committee, and the San Diego Conven­ tion Center. Prerace meeting location is at the rear of the convention center. For more detailed information and registration, go to http://chemistry.org/ meetings/sandiego2005 and click on "Social & Special Events," or see the form on page 59 of the Preliminary Program in the Jan. 10 issue of C&EN.

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SUNDAY, MARCH 13

AIR TRANSPORTATION. ACS has negoti­ ated special fares for all of its 2005 meet­ ings. Both carriers offer domestic zone fares for less than restricted fares and do not require a Saturday night stay

YOUNGER CHEMISTS COMMITTEE 4TH ANNUAL FUN RUN

MONDAY, MARCH U Meeting Event/NT, 8 AM to 5 PM Undergraduate Hospitality Center, Manchester Grand Hyatt, Douglas D Reception/NT, 5 to 8 PM Stanford University, School of Chemical Sciences Alumni & Friends, San Diego Convention Center, Room 31A TUESDAY, MARCH 15 Meeting/NT, 3:30 to 5 PM Division Officers Caucus, San Diego Marriott, Cardiff Reception/NT, 6 to 9 PM San Diego Science Writers, San Diego Marriott, Atlanta C&EN

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CELL

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON

Division of Cellulose and Renewable Materials

Section A

P. Gatenholm, Program Chair

San Diego Marriott San Diego A

SUNDAY MORNING

Carbohydrate Vaccines

Section A

R. Roy,

Convention Center Room 31Β

Organizer

1:30 94. Synthetic glycopeptides for the construction of anticancer vaccines. H. Kunz 2:05 95. Development of carbohydrate based cancer vaccines: Role of synthesis and structural definition. R. R. Koganty 2:40 96. Toward an AIDS vaccine: Progress in the synthesis of complex glycopeptides. S. J. Danishefsky 3:15 Intermission. 3:30 97. Bacterial polysaccharides antigens and their peptide-mimetics: Potential for discriminating vaccines. B. M. Pinto

Anselme Payen Award Honoring Professor Dieter Klemm, Frontiers in Cellulose Chemistry Industrial Perspectives T. J. Heinze and W. G. Glasser, H -P. Fink, Organizer,

Organizers

Presiding

9:00 1. Regenerated cellulose: An old material with a bright future. H. Harms

CARB/CELL

9:45 2. Challenges for the specialty cellulose business. T. Hjerde 10:30 3. Cellulose fiber solutions to materials science problems. G. H. Morton

Section Β

Section Β

Cell Wall Components and Their Assembly Tutorials

Convention Center Room 31C

T. Kondo,

Cell Wall Components and Their Assembly Tutorials T. Kondo,

Organizer

8:15 Introductory Remarks. 8:20 4. Xyloglucan in the primary and second­ ary walls. T. Hayashi, T. Takeda, Y. W. Park, K-l. Baba 9:00 5. Cell wall hydrolyzing enzymes as specific tools in understanding of the hierar­ chical structure of cell walls. M. Tenkanen 9:40 6. Quantitative in situ analysis of wood. S. S. Kelley, T. G. Rials 10:20 Intermission. 10:30 7. Interaction between lignin and polysaccharides, and free radical-mediated wood biodégradation by selective white rot fungi. T. Watanabe, T. Koshijima 11:10 8. From the fiber cell wall to waste waters - and further to advanced natural materials, the mannan story. S. M. Willfôr, A. C. Sundberg, B. R. Holmbom

Convention Center Room 32A Renewable Materials: Driving into New Markets Polymer and Composites G. W. Selling, D. K. Y. Solaiman, W. N. Marmer, and J. M. Cardamone, Organizers 8:20 Introductory Remarks. 8:30 9. The potential for renewable materials. G. Swift 9:00 10. A new polymer platform: Driving sorona(R) polymer into market. J. V. Kurian 9:30 11. Commercializing biobased, biodegradable starch foam plastics: From R&D to marketplace. R. Narayan 10:00 12. CheVeNa: A new approach for implementing renewable resources in industries. D. Sandholzer, A. Niederl, G. Braunegg, M. Narodoslawsky 10:30 13. Aerocellulose. G. G. Kraft, H. K. Weber 11:00 14. Synthesis and characterization of triglyceride polymers, renewable materials. P. Venukadasula, J-F. Zhang, T. Ito, S. X. Sun, D. H. Hua 11:30 15. Developing a domestic source of castor oil for bio-based polymers and plastics. T. A. McKeon, X. He, G. Q. Chen, J-T. Lin SUNDAY AFTERNOON Section A Convention Center Room 31Β Anselme Payen Award Honoring Professor Dieter Klemm, Frontiers in Cellulose Chemistry Industrial Perspectives H -P. Fink and T. J. Heinze,

Organizer

1:00 19. Cellulose in the cell wall. D. G. Gray 1:40 20. An attempt for fabrication of artificial cell walls. T. Kondo 2:20 Intermission. 2:30 21. Green composites: The latest devel­ opment from micro to nanoscale. K. Oksman, P. Gatenholm, M. Bengtsson, S. Dammstrom 3:10 22. From cell wall to advanced biomaterials. The Xylan story. P. Gatenholm, M. H. Grondahl, P. Karlsson, A. Hôije, J. P. Roubroeks, W. G. Glasser 3:50 Concluding Remarks. Section C Convention Center Room 32A Renewable Materials: Driving into New Markets Polymer and Composites G. W. Selling, D. K. Y. Solaiman, W. N. Marmer, and J. M. Cardamone, Organizers

Section C

W. G. Glasser, Organizer,

Convention Center Room 31C

Organizers Presiding

1:00 16. R&D for cellulose derivatives: Indus­ trial prospects and needs. K. Nachtkamp 1:45 17. Cellulose esters in slow and con­ trolled release drug formulations. K. Edgar 2:30 18. Cellulose acetates: R&D approaches for a successful future. P. Rustemeyer

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

1:00 23. Synthesis, characterization, and formulation of solvent-free waterbome resins and coatings. J. Baghdachi 1:30 24. Creating improved opportunities for food packaging and food service materials made from renewable thermoplastics. C. A. Pettigrew Jr., F. R. McDougall, N. S. McDonald 2:00 25. Water uptake and mechanical properties of cast films made from aqueous solutions of starch and polyvinyl alcohol. A. Jansson, P. Ràtto, L. Jàrnstrom 2:30 26. Biobased water-soluble functional polymers. G. Swift, G. Redlich, D. Westmoreland 3:00 27. Surface properties of water soluble starch esters. R. L. Shogren, G. Biresaw 3:30 28. Interaction between surfactants and 2-hydroxy-3-(N,N-dimethyl-N-dodecylammonium)propyloxy starches. A. Jonhed, L. Jàrnstrom Section D Convention Center HallD Poster Session P. Gatenholm,

Organizer

4:00-6:00 29. Delignification of Salix psammophila by hydrogen peroxide "C" Alkaline Process. F. Xu, R. Sun, X. Sun, H. Zhan 30. Catalytic upgrading of bio-oil from cellulose pyrolysis over mesoporous MCM-41. Y-K. Park, J-K. Jeon, H. J. Park, B. S. Kang, J. Choi, J-S. Kim, J. M. Kim, K-S. Yoo 31. Effect of isolation process on molecular structure and material properties of arabinoxylans from barley husks. A. Hôije, M. H. Grondahl, K. Tommeraas, P. Gatenholm 32. The fluorescence property of Schiff's bases of cellulose. J. Ye, J. Xiong 33. Analysis of preservative-treated wood by laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy. T. G. Rials, N. Labbé, M. Martin, S. Wullschleger, S. Kelley 34. Analysis on molecular orientation in nematic ordered cellulose films using deuteration and polarized FTIR. Y. Hishikawa, T. Kondo 35. Automated docking of lignin model compounds in the active site of laccases from Trametes versicolor. K. R. Overly, R. C. Fort Jr., R. J. Pedro 36. Cellulose triacetate oligomers exhibit C 0 2 solubility. R. M. Enick, E. J. Beckman, L. Hong, M. Fischer, R. Lopez 37. Characterization of biocomposite reinforced with silk nanofiber and carbon nanotube. S. O. Han, Y. S. Seo, N. J. Jung, W. H. Park, D. Cho

38. Characterization of pyrolytic lignin produced by fast pyrolysis. Y-K. Park, S. Myung, J-l. Dong 39. Chemical oxidation of bagasse for cellulose separation. C-H. Chung, Y-J. Lee, D. F. Day 40. Computational structural analysis of beta1,3-glucan-polynucleotide complex. K. Uezu, K. Miyoshi, K. Sakurai, S. Shinkai 41. Cr (VI) catalyzed oxidation of sugars: Functionalized polyhydroxycaproate via one-pot acetylation/oxidation of cellulose. M. Hunsen 42. Direct coloration of cellulose with carbon black nanoparticles. D. Li, G. Sun 43. Direct organic acid-catalyzed polyester derivatization of solid cellulose- and lignocellulosic materials. J. Hafrén, A. Cordova 44. Drimys winteri: A potential Chilean native wood for biokraft pulping. H. Franco, J. Freer, J. P. Elissetche, R. Mendonça, J. Rodriguez, J. Baeza 45. Effects of the solvent to cellulose ratio on the heterogeneous synthesis of carboxymethylcellulose. S. Dapia, J. Lopez, V. Santos, J. C. Parajo 46. Estimation of basic density, pulp yield of Eucalyptus globulus wood, and pulp mechanical properties by using near infrared spectroscopy. J. Freer, J. Ruiz, M. Peredo, J. Rodriguez, J. Baeza 47. Evaluation of autohydrolyzed cellulosic substrates for cellulose manufacture. C. Vila, V. Santos, J. C. Parajo 48. Rapid and sensitive structural analysis of polysaccharide materials by oligosaccharide mass profiling (OLIMP). L Neumetzler, N. Obel, T. Schwarz, I. Burgert, M. Pauly 49. Hierarchical formation in a callose fiber secreted from Betula protoplast. T. Seyama, M. Kinoshita, T. Kondo, M. Morita 50. High performance natural fiber thermoset composites for automotive applications. T. Behzad, M. M. Sain 51. Hydrogen-bonding forms to maintain beta1,3-glucan triple helix. K. Uezu, K. Miyoshi, K. Sakurai, S. Shinkai 52. Hydrothermal decomposition and electrolysis of bio-related materials. M. Sasaki, K. Yamamoto, M. Sakaguchi, M. Goto, T. Hirose 53. Influence of washing and particle size of feed and fluidizing medium on the production of bio-oil from rice straw by fast pyrolysis. J-S. Kim, Y-K. Park, B. S. Kang, K. H. Lee, S. I. Chang, J-K. Jeon, S. Kim, J. M. Kim 54. Injection molded cellulosic composites for automotive structural applications. S. Panthapulakkal, S. Law, M. M. Sain 55. Interaction of the carbohydrate-binding module with the catalytic core in Humicola insolens Cel45A endoglucanase. J. A. Langston, F. Xu 56. Kinetics of cellulose carboxymethylation in acetone-containing media. S. Dapia, J. Lopez, V. Santos, J. C. Parajo 57. Localization studies in the interaction between cellulose and xylan/xyloglucan and the effect of the surface properties on the mobility rate of Acetobacter xylinum. J. P. Roubroeks, T. Kondo 58. Molecular organization in the honeycombpatterned cellulosic films from W/O emulsion. W. Kasai, T. Kondo, M. Morita 59. Preparation of Sugarcane Bagasse maleates with ultrasonic pretreatment. C. Liu, Y. Jun, R. Sun, F. Xu 60. Production of bio oil using agricultural wastes in a fluidized bed reactor. S. H. Lee, K. S. Yoo, Y. C. Choi, J. H. Kim, J. G. Lee 6 1 . Relationship between the micromorphology and mechanical properties of cellulose. A. Sturcova, D. C. Apperley, D. Kalaskar, S. J. Eichhorn, M. C. Jarvis 62. Separation and characterization of value added chemicals from tar residue during wood carbonization process. S. H. Lee, K. S. Yoo, N. C. Kim, Y. S. Lee, S. H. Lee, J. K. Jeon, Y. K. Park, S. K. Kang 63. Structural characteristics of biaxially stretched cellulose film prepared from waterswollen cellulose. E. Togawa, T. Kondo 64. Studies on the chemical functionalization of xylans. K. Petzold, K. Schwikal, T. Heinze 65. Study on the application of modified gelatin. J. Ren, H. Qiu, R. Sun 66. Substrate specificities of two glycoside hydrolase family 11 xylanases. X-L. Li, D. B. Jordan, M. A. Cotta

67. Utilization of hemicelluloses from forestry residual streams as barrier film and hydrogel materials. J. Sjoberg, J. Hartman, A-C. Albertsson, M. Soderqvist Lindblad, A. Jacobs, O. Dahlman 68. Synergistic action of novel flame retardant finishing systems for cellulosic fabrics. S. Gaan, G. Sun 69. Synthesis and properties of hydrophobic starch ether and ester. W. Vorwerg, K. Hettrich, S. Radosta 70. Development of cooling system with microencapulated PCM slurries as a cold energy transporting media. S. H. Lee, Y. C. Choi, J. H. Kim, J. G. Lee 7 1 . The Studies on the preparation and properties of cotton cellulose xanthate. W. Shi, H. Wen, L. Wang, Y. Yang, Y. Yu 72. Removal of heavy metals from wastewater using cotton cellulose xanthate. W. Shi, F. Chang, D. Zhang, Y. Yang 73. Rapid assessment of naturally weathered wood surfaces. M. S. Lindblad, M. Zanetti, T. G. Rials, S. S. Kelley, D. Rammer 74. Valorization of autohydrolysis products and byproducts. J. C. Parajo, H. Dominguez, J. L. Alonso, V. Santos, A. Moure, S. Abad 75. Advanced spectroscopic analysis of adhesive bond performance in weathered wood. M. Zanetti, T. G. Rials, M. S. Lindblad, S. Kelley, D. Rammer MONDAY MORNING Section A Convention Center Room 31Β Anselme Payen Award Honoring Professor Dieter Klemm, Frontiers in Cellulose Chemistry Cellulose Acetate - 100th Anniversary H -P. Fink, T. J. Heinze, and W. G. Glasser, Organizers P. Rustemeyer,

Presiding

8:20 Introductory Remarks. 8:30 76. The 100-year-history of cellulose diacetate. P. Rustemeyer 9:00 77. Chemical characteristics of cellulose acetate. T. Heinze 9:30 78. How raw materials influence the quality of cellulose diacetate. S. Saka 10:00 Intermission. 10:30 79. Structure structure of cellulose diacetate in solution. A. M. Stein 11:00 80. Degradation and modification of cellulose acetates by biological systems. J. Puis, C. Altaner, B. Saake 11:30 8 1 . Cellulose acetate in membrane and chromatographic separations. T. Shibata Section Β Convention Center Room 31C Development of Wood Preservatives and Molds in Homes Mold in the Built Environment: Wood Protection D. Nicholas, H. Militz, M. Freeman, B. Goodell, and T. P. Schultz, Organizers S. L. Quarles,

Presiding

8:25 Introductory Remarks. 8:30 82. Mold in structures: An overview. S. L. Quarles 9:30 83. Molds and the indoor environment: Biology and microscopy. J. Jellison, B. Kitchin, G. Daniel, B. Goodell 10:30 Intermission. 11:00 84. Human health issues associated with mold in homes. T. S. Allems Section C Convention Center Room 32A Renewable Materials: Driving into New Markets Polymer and Composites; Fibers G. W. Selling, D. K. Y. Solaiman, W. N. Marmer, and J. M. Cardamone, Organizers

TECH-21

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 8:30 85. Polysaccharide nanoparticles: Approaches to quantifying degrees of sur­ face substitution. W. T. Winter, J. D. Goodrich 9:00 86. Potential of wood pulps and effluents as carbon feedstock alternatives for produc­ tion of enzymes of industrial importance. L. Christopher, G. Szakacs, J. du Preez 9:30 87. Edging into the synthetic electroactive polymer (ΕΑΡ) market: Solid polymer elec­ trolytes using renewable biomaterials. V. L. Finkenstadt 10:00 88. Oxidation of lignin in supercritical carbon dioxide. D. Argyropoulos, A. Gaspar, K. Koda 10:30 89. Finite element approach for cure simulation of natural fiber thermoset com­ posites. T. Behzad, M. M. Sain 11:00 90. High performance biofibre reinforced thermoplastic composites for automotive interior applications. S. Panthapulakkal, S. Law, M. M. Sain 11:30 9 1 . Effect of enzymatic treatment on fibre-matrix adhesion in resin transfer molded biocomposites. D. Gulati, M. Sain

3:30 102. Prospects for future applications of cellulose acetate. W. G. Glasser 4:00 103. Structure-property relationships of blockwise derivatized celluloses. H. Kamitakahara, D. Klemm, F. Nakatsubo, Y. Enomoto, C. Hasegawa, T. Takano 4:30 104. Transient rheological behavior of lyotropic solutions of (acetyl)(ethyl)cellulose in m-cresol with different chiroptical proper­ ties. Q. Dai, J. F. Kadla

Section D

1:30 105. Industrial hygiene issues related to mold in homes. J. B. Hicks 2:30 106. Mold remediation and litigation in the construction context. M. Pietrkowski 3:30 107. Molds and moldicide formulations in the US and internationally. K. Hansen

Convention Center Room 32B Pectins: Health and Agrichemical Applications Structure, Biosynthesis and Commercial Production Cosponsored with CARB D. Mohnen and A. T. Hotchkiss Jr., Organizers B. S. Patil,

Presiding

8:20 Introductory Remarks. 8:30 92. Pectic polysaccharides in plant cell walls: Structure and function. A. G. Darvill 9:00 93. Potential of pectins as structurally complex polymers. A. G. J. Voragen, S. E. Guillotin, G. J. Coenen, J. S. Zandleven, S. W. A. Hinz, J-P. Vincken, G. Beldman, H. A. Schols 9:30 94. Pectin is synthesised as a complex with xyloglucan in the Golgi apparatus in pea. E. Baydoun, R. M. Abdel-Massih, C. M. Cumming, H. D. Rizkallah, C. T. Brett 10:00 95. Pectin synthesis and its relevance to understanding pectin function. D. Mohnen, J. D. Sterling, K. L. Hosmer, M. Atmodjo, A. A. V. Cronk, V. S. K. Kolli, K. A. Smith, F. Adeyemo, G. Freshour, C. L. Jackson, M. G. Hahn 10:30 Intermission. 11:00 96. Flash extraction of pectin. A. T. Hotchkiss Jr., W. W. Widmer, M. L. Fishman 11:30 97. Global structure of high methoxyl pectin deposited from solution and in sugar acid gels. M. L. Fishman, P. H. Cooke, H. K. Chau, D. R. Coffin 12:00 98. Commercial pectins for pharmaceuti­ cal uses: Production, purity, and properties. H-U. Endress

Section Β Convention Center Room 31C Development of Wood Preservatives and Molds in Homes Mold in the Built Environment: Wood Protection

H -P. Fink, T. J. Heinze, and W. G. Glasser, Organizers K. J. Edgar,

Presiding

1:30 99. Cellulose acetate film: Properties and applications. T. Longdon 2:00 100. Viscoelastic and microstructural changes in sol-gel systems of cellulose acetate in a mixed solvent system. J. F. Kadla, C. Appaw, Q. Dai, S. A. Khan 2:30 101. Preparation of new functional poly­ mers by tailored esterification of cellulose. T. Liebert, T. Heinze, A-M. Friedel, S. M. Dapia Robleda, G. T. Ciacco 3:00 Intermission.

22-TECH

Convention Center Sails Pavilion

S. L. Quarles,

P. Gatenholm,

Presiding

Section C Convention Center Room 32A Renewable Materials: Driving into New Markets Fibers G. W. Selling, D. K. Y. Solaiman, W. N. Marmer, and J. M. Cardamone, Organizers 1:30 108. Relationship between chemical constituents in fractionated rice straw fibers and their electrokinetic properties. M. K. Inglesby, G. M. Gray, D. F. Wood, K. S. Gregorski 2:00 109. Building tensile and tear strength and abrasion resistance of finished cotton fabrics crosslinked with polymers. N. T. Prévost, N. D. Sachinvala 2:30 110. New proteolytic enzymes from fungi for wool antishrinking treatment. A. Erlacher, F. De Sousa, M. Schroeder, A. Cavaco-Paulo, G. M. Guebitz 3:00 111. Design of mechanism-based chronic wound dressings: Past, present, and future issues. J. V. Edwards, P. S. Howley, S. C. Goheen 3:30 112. Albumin adsorption to cotton and cotton derivatives. S. C. Goheen, N. Castro, J. V. Edwards 4:00 113. Adsorption and activation of elastase to albumin-treated derivatives of cotton. S. C. Goheen, N. Castro, J. V. Edwards

Organizer

8:00-10:00 34, 94. See previous listings. 120. Plant-based drug fiber and properties. H-G. Ding, Q. Shen 121. Surface treatment of bio-fibres: A comparison between alkalization, acetylation and enzymatic treatment. D. Gulati, M. Sain 122. Layer-by-layer self-assembly modification for pulp fiber. Z. Zheng, Y. M. Lvov, T. Shutava 123. Auto nano-fabrication of patterned 3D structure using Acetobacter xylinum. Y. Tomita, T. Kondo, M. Morita 124. Factors that influence physical properties of zein based articles. G. W. Selling, D. J. Sessa 125. Hydroxycinnamic acid ester conjugates of methyl-glucosides as a model for hemicellulose based antioxidative materials. K. Koivu, M. Edelman, M. Heinonen, M. Tenkanen, J. Sipilâ 126. Prediction of bioethanol production from soft- and hardwood. J. Baeza, C. Parra, A. Berrocal, S. Perez, J. Rodriguez, J. Freer 129-130, 138, 142, 148, 162, 172, 188, 190, 200, 204, 213-214, 227, 233-234, 251. See subsequent listings. TUESDAY MORNING Section A Convention Center Room 31Β

Pectins: Health and Agrichemical Applications Tools for Structure/Function Analysis and Modification Cosponsored with CARB D. Mohnen and A. T. Hotchkiss Jr., Organizers A. G. Darvill,

Presiding

1:30 114. Molecular analysis and functionality of pectin. J. D. Mikkelsen, H. Thorsoe, T. Christensen, B. Willats 2:00 115. Generating genetically-defined variation in pectin structures in the plant cell wall. M. C. McCann, J. Tewari, S. Zhou, A. Olek, K. Malik, I. Perez, M. Mills, N. McKeehan, D. Milioni, P-E. Sado, P. Derbyshire, K. Roberts, N. C. Carpita 2:30 116. Monoclonal antibody tools for studies of plant cell wall structure and dynamics. M. G. Hahn, G. Freshour, D. Chafin, M. R. Braga 3:00 Intermission.

Section Β Convention Center Room 31C Development of Wood Preservatives and Molds in Homes Wood Deterioration Overview and New Biocides for Wood Protection D. Nicholas, H. Militz, M. Freeman, B. Goodell, and T. P. Schultz, Organizers 8:55 Introductory Remarks. 9:00 133. Fungal degradation of wood. B. Goodell 9:30 134. Insects that colonize wood products. T. L. Amburgey 10:00 135. Molds and stain fungi: So many species, but what do they all mean? J. J. Morrell 10:30 Intermission. 11:00 136. Weathering and photostabilization of wood. P. D. Evans 11:30 137. Termite control from the perspec­ tive of the termite: A 21st century approach. R. J. Woodrow, J. K. Grace Section C Convention Center Room 32A Renewable Materials: Driving into New Markets Proteinaceous G. W. Selling, D. K. Y. Solaiman, W. N. Marmer, and J. M. Cardamone, Organizers 9:00 138. Protein-based blends and compos­ ites bioplastics: Where are we now? S. Guilbert, M. H. Morel, A. Redl, M. Pommet, P. Menut 9:30 139. Electrospun nanofibers from renew­ able materials. G. Buschle-Diller, J. Cooper, T. Richardson, A. Hawkins 10:00 140. Modifying the properties of electrospun fibrous materials derived from wheat protein. D. L. Woerdeman, S. L. Shenoy 10:30 141. Technology transfer and commer­ cialization of soy protein-based adhesives: Challenges and opportunities. D. J. Myers 11:00 142. Adhesive properties of acidic and basic subunits of soybean glycinin. X. Mo, Z. Zhong, X. S. Sun, D. Wang 11:30 143. New wood adhesives based on modified soybean protein. Y. Liu, K. Li Section D

Anselme Payen Award Honoring Professor Dieter Klemm, Frontiers in Cellulose Chemistry Bacterial Cellulose and Medical Applications H -P. Fink and W. G. Glasser, T. J. Heinze, Organizer,

Convention Center Room 32B

Anselme Payen Award Honoring Professor Dieter Klemm, Frontiers in Cellulose Chemistry Cellulose Acetate - 100th Anniversary

Section A

Sci-Mix

Section D

Convention Center Room 31Β

M O N D A Y EVENING

D. Nicholas, H. Militz, M. Freeman, B. Goodell, and T. P. Schultz, Organizers

MONDAY AFTERNOON Section A

3:30 117. Enzymatic removal of pectin from cotton with enzymes: Mechanistic comparison of pectate lyases and polygalacturonases. W. Schnitzhofer, B. Klug, M. Calafell, A. Cavaco-Paulo, G. M. Guebitz 4:00 118. Mass spectrometry peptide profiling for identification of Valencia orange pectin methylesterase isoforms. B. J. Savary, A. Nunez, R. G. Cameron 4:30 119. Pectin methylesterase modified pectin interaction with whey protein isolate and stability of double emulsions. N. Garti, L. Wicker

Organizers

Presiding

8:30 127. The "brave new world" of microbial cellulose: Novel applications. R. M. Brown Jr. 9:00 128. Possible origin of disordered struc­ ture in bacterial cellulose: Structure and structural evolution of sub-elementary fibrils. F. Horii, F. Suzuki, A. Hirai, K. Tsujitani 9:30 129. Bacterial cellulose as scaffold for tissue engineering. A. Bodin, H. Bâckdahl, G. Helenius, L. Gustafsson, B. Risberg, P. Gatenholm 10:00 Intermission. 10:30 130. Production of novel bacterial polysaccharides by Acetobacter xylinum applying new culture medium with different composition. S. Tokura, H. Tamura 11:00 131. Synthesis, characterization and application of cellulose sulfate. W. Wagenknecht, K. Hettrich, S. Fischer 11:30 132. Biofunctional aminocellulose derivatives. J. C. Tiller

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

Convention Center Room 32B Pectins: Health and Agrichemical Applications Nutritional and Biomedical Uses Cosponsored with CARB D. Mohnen and A. T. Hotchkiss Jr., Organizers A. Raz,

Presiding

8:00 144. Consumed byproducts of citrus are good sources of healthy pectin. B. S. Patil, Y. Liu, H. Ahmad, W. McKeehan 8:30 145. Films made with pectin: A versatile delivery system. R. Clark 9:00 146. Pectin derivatives as a carrier for colon-specific drug delivery. L. Liu, M. L. Fishman, Κ. Β. Hicks 9:30 147. Investigation of the biological activi­ ties of pectic oligosaccharides using in vitro models of the human colon. R. A. Rastall, K. Manderson, A. T. Hotchkiss Jr., G. R. Gibson 10:00 Intermission. 10:30 148. Clinical applications of modified citrus pectin. I. Eliaz 11:00 149. Pectin induces apoptosis in pros­ tate cancer cells: Structure and function relationship. C. L. Jackson, T. M. Dreaden, M. Eid, M. Stoffel, N. C. Egekeze, M. Y. Gao, T. L. Beal, M. V. Kumar, D. Mohnen 11:30 150. Recent progress in the develop­ ment of GCS-100. J. Rolke, F. Tao, A. S. Magee, Y. Chang

CELL TUESDAY AFTERNOON

Section D

Section A

Convention Center Room 32B

Convention Center Room 30D-E

Section C

Anselme Payen Award Honoring Professor Dieter Klemm, Frontiers in Cellulose Chemistry Advanced Biomaterials H -P. Fink, T. J. Heinze, and W. G. G lasser, Organizers Κ. Nachtkamp and S. S. Kelley,

11:30 181. Design of wood thermoplastic composites for efficacy against biodégradation. M. Wolcott

Presiding

1:00 151. Modulation of the molecular struc­ ture of arabinoxylans for optimal barrier films. M. H. Grondahl, P. Gatenholm 1:30 152. New results about BASYC® (BActerial SYnthesized Cellulose), the promising artificial blood vessel for microsurgery and further application of bacterial cellulose in medicine. D. A. Schumann, S. E. Marsch, D. O. Klemm, U. R. E. Udhardt, F. Kramer, C. Wiegand 2:00 153. Encapsulated cell therapy: A strat­ egy for focusing chemotherapy to solid tumours. W. H. Guenzburg 2:30 154. How to improve the hemocompatibility of dialysis membranes? J. H. Vienken, M. Diamantoglou 3:00 155. Selective syntheses, novel products and designed biomaterials in cellulose chemistry. D. O. Klemm Section Β Convention Center Room 31C Development of Wood Preservatives and Molds in Homes Development of Durable Wood Based Products - New Biocides Continued D. Nicholas, H. Militz, M. Freeman, B. Goodell, and T. P. Schultz, Organizers 1:00 156. Wood preservative fungicides. P. E. Laks 1:30 157. Development and testing of new insecticidal wood preservatives. G. Henderson, W. R. Smith, R. A. Laine 2:00 158. Borate wood preservatives: The current landscape. M. J. Manning 2:30 159. Evaluation of polymeric alkylphenol polysulfide as a new wood preservative. D. D. Nicholas, M. H. Freeman Section C Convention Center Room 32A Renewable Materials: Driving into New Markets Proteinaceous G. W. Selling, D. K. Y. Solaiman, W. N. Marmer, and J. M. Cardamone, Organizers 1:00 160. New value-added green materials from the proteinaceous byproducts of corn ethanol industries: Current status and future prospective. A. K. Mohanty, Q. Wu, D. C. Aithani 1:30 161. Comparison of chemically-modified zeins using a bis-aldehyde versus a carbodiimide. D. J. Sessa, S. A. H. Hamaker, G. W. Selling 2:00 162. Mass transport within biodegradable protein based materials: Application to the design of active biopackaging. S. Guilbert, V. Guillard, N. Gontard 2:30 163. Development of a semi-continuous process for C02-precipitated-casein films. M. Kozempel, P. M. Tomasula 3:00 Intermission. 3:30 164. Effect of ultrasound on type I bovine hide collagen structure. D. M. Stauffer, G. J. Maffia, E. M. Brown, P. H. Cooke 4:00 165. Non-feed applications for meat and bone meal. G. J. Maffia, B. Coll 4:30 166. Slaughter house waste proteins as renewable resource. S. Kontur, H. Fasl, F. Stelzer

Pectins: Health and Agrichemical Applications Nutritional and Biomedical Uses Mechanism of Action Cosponsored with CARB D. Mohnen and A. T. Hotchkiss Jr., Organizers R. Clark,

Presiding

1:00 167. Modified citrus pectin and cancer. A. Raz, P. Nangia-Makker 1:30 168. Possible mechanism of pharmaco­ logically active pectins from medicinal herbs. H. Yamada 2:00 169. Use of pectin as apoptotic agent in cancer therapy. C. L. Jackson, D. Mohnen, M. V. Kumar 2:30 170. Homopolygalacturonic acid in a calcium-induced conformation interacts with the extracellular domain of a recombinant wall-associated kinase 1. A. Decreux, B. Spies, R. Brasseur, J. Messiaen WEDNESDAY MORNING Section A Convention Center Room 31Β Anselme Payen Award Honoring Professor Dieter Klemm, Frontiers in Cellulose Chemistry Cellulose Derivatization H -P. Fink, T. J. Heinze, and W. G. Glasser, Organizers G. H. Morton,

Convention Center Room 32A Xylans, Mannans and Other Hemicelluloses; Biology, Chemistry and Technology Biosynthesis and Enzyme Interactions

4:00 199. Monitoring heterogeneous and homogeneous degradation processes of a multimodal distributed dissolving pulp by gel permeation chromatography and computer simulations. H. Sixta, A. Ecker 4:30 200. Determination of functional groups in cellulosic substrates: A novel diazo reagent for the fluorescence labeling of carboxyl groups. R. Bohrn, A. Potthast, T. Rosenau, P. Kosma, H. Sixta Section Β

M. Tenkanen, P. Gatenholm, and Κ. Β. Hicks, Organizers

Convention Center Room 31C

8:20 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 182. The organization of non-cellulosic polysaccharides in the walls of aleurone and starchy endosperm cells of wheat grain. B. A. Stone 9:05 183. Using endolytic enzymes and NMR spectroscopy to study the structure and biosynthesis of hemicelluloses in primary and secondary cell walls of higher plants. W. S. York, M. Pena, A. Harper 9:35 184. The maize (1->3),(1->4)-3-D-glucan: Searching for the genes that encode its synthase. M. A. Held, B. R. Urbanowicz, A. Brandt, W. Yong, C. Rayon, A-S. Fontaine, S. R. Scofield, N. Carpita 10:05 Intermission. 10:20 185. Microbial acetylxylan esterases: Twenty years after their discovery. P. Biely, G. L. Côté 10:50 186. Stability enhancement of a thermophilic xylanase. D. E. Stephens, N. Mchunu, K. Permaul, S. Singh 11:20 187. Enzymic hydrolysis of glucomannan and 1,3:1,4-Beta-D-Glucan. B. V. McCleary, S. Charnock, P. Rossiter 11:50 188. Soft-wood mannan: Isolation, structure and enzyme interactions. H. Stalbrand

Development of Wood Preservatives and Molds in Homes Development of Durable Wood-Based Products - Wood Preservative Systems D. Nicholas, H. Militz, M. Freeman, B. Goodell, and T. P. Schultz, Organizers 1:30 201. Wood preservation formulation development: Organic and inorganic based systems. M. H. Freeman 2:00 202. Totally organic systems for residen­ tial exterior applications. D. B. Helmer 2:30 203. Copper-based systems for exterior residential applications. D. P. Kamdem 3:00 204. Organic preservative systems for the protection of wood windows and doors. A. S. Ross 3:30 205. In process protection of wood com­ posites: An industry perspective. P. Merrick, M. Gnatowski 4:00 206. Using economical and benign addi­ tives to enhance the efficacy of organic bioicides. T. P. Schultz, D. D. Nicholas Section C Convention Center Room 32A

Presiding Xylans, Mannans and Other Hemicelluloses; Biology, Chemistry and Technology Recovery from Wood and Cereals

Section D 9:00 171. Viscous and elastic properties of water-soluble cellulose derivatives regarding to application. W-M. Kulicke, J. P. Plog, C. Clasen 9:30 172. Two novel tools in cellulose analyt­ ics. T. Rosenau, A. Potthast, P. Kosma 10:00 173. Influence of the activation on the etherification of cellulose. S. Fischer, W. Wagenknecht, B. Volkert 10:30 Intermission. 11:00 174. Functional cellulose derivatives as interfaces to biosystems. G. Wenz, N. Bordeanu, S. Jost 11:30 175. Cellulose silyl ethers. K. Petzold, T. Heinze, A. Koschella, A. Stein 12:00 176. Ultrathin aminocellulose-films for nanostructural modifications of physical surfaces. A. Jung, P. Berlin Section Β Convention Center Room 31C Development of Wood Preservatives and Molds in Homes Development of Durable Wood-Based Products - Non-Biocidal Chemicals and Processes

Convention Center Room 32B

M. Tenkanen, P. Gatenholm, and Κ. Β. Hicks, Organizers

Nanocomposites Nanocellulose: Structure K. Oksman and M. Sain,

Organizers

8:55 Introductory Remarks. 9:00 189. AFM of adsorbed polyelectrolytes on cellulose I surfaces. D. G. Gray, J. Lefebvre 9:30 190. Optimization of the preparation of nano crystals from microcrystalline cellulose in aqueous suspension. D. C. Bondeson, K. Oksman 10:00 191. The micromechanics of tunicate and sugarbeet cellulose nanocomposites. S. J. Eichhorn, A. Sturcova 10:30 192. Structural characterization of cellulose and its nanocomposites. B. S. Tanem, I. Kvien, K. Oksman 11:00 193. Structural development of wood microfibres as biodegradable reinforcing agents for composites. A. Chakraborty, M. Sain, M. Kortschot WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Section A

D. Nicholas, H. Militz, M. Freeman, B. Goodell, and T. P. Schultz, Organizers 9:00 177. Acetylation of lumber thickness wood. W. J. Homan 9:30 178. Eco-efficient wood protection: Furfurylated wood as alternative to traditional wood preservation. S. Lande, M. Westin, M. H. Schneider 10:00 179. Dimethylol resins for wood protec­ tion. A. Krause, H. Militz 10:30 Intermission. 11:00 180. Wood modification by heat treat­ ment: An overview of processes and proper­ ties. H. Militz

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

Convention Center Room 31Β Anselme Payen Award Honoring Professor Dieter Klemm, Frontiers in Cellulose Chemistry Cellulose Materials Science Aspects H -P. Fink, T. J. Heinze, and W. G. Glasser, Organizers H. Harms,

Presiding

1:30 194. What can the deformation of cellu­ lose tell us about structure? S. J. Eichhorn 2:00 195. Thermoplastic Composites with Lyocell fibers. W. G. Glasser, R. K. Johnson, A. G. Zink-Sharp, S. H. Renneckar 2:30 196. Novel composites with man-made cellulosic fibers. H-P. Fink, J. Ganster 3:00 197. Swelling and dissolution of cellulose. P. Navard, C. Cuissinat 3:30 198. ALCERU-special fibres and shapes for medical application. F. Meister

1:00 207. Biotechnological applications of hemicelluloses as a means for sustainable use of biodiversity. M. Buckeridge, D. U. de Lima, C. G. Lisboa, S. Μ. Ο Dietrich, M. A. S. Tiné, G. B. Silva, J. Prado 1:30 208. Recovery of hemicelluloses from industrially important softwood species. S. M. Willfôr, B. R. Holmbom, A. C. Sundberg 2:00 209. Influence of operation conditions on the extraction yield of hemicellulose from mixed southern hardwood. A. R. P. van Heiningen, M. S. Tunc 2:30 Intermission. 2:45 210. Water-soluble hemicellulose extraction from hardwoods after fungal biodelignification. A. J. Stipanovic, T. E. Amidon, G. M. Scott, D. J. Kiemle, V. Barber 3:15 211. Optimized refinement of xylans from alkaline extracts of oat spelts. B. Saake, S. Lebioda, N. Erasmy, J. Puis 3:45 212. Effects of processing on cereal arabinoxylan and mixed-linkage β-glucan. R. Andersson, P. Aman 4:15 213. A novel method for determination of ferulic and p-coumaric acids linked with hemicelluloses and lignin in the cell walls of sugarcane bagasse. X-F. Sun, F. Xu, R. Sun, J. M. Fang Section D Convention Center Room 32B Nanocomposites Nanocomposite: Processing K. Oksman and M. Sain,

Organizers

1:55 Introductory Remarks. 2:00 214. Cellulose nanocrystals for thermo­ plastic reinforcement: Effect of filler surface chemistry on composite properties. M. Roman, W. T. Winter 2:30 215. Nano or not nano: Strategies in the development of new biofiber composite materials. M. L. Lindstrom, F. Berthold, T. Iversen, K. Gamstedt, P. V. Persson, C. Neagu

TECH-23

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 3:00 216. Matrix influence on the material properties of bacterial cellulose/xylan nanocomposites. S. Dammstrom, L. Salmén, P. Gatenholm 3:30 217. Bacterial cellulose and its nanocomposites. W. Wan

THURSDAY AFTERNOON

THURSDAY MORNING

Section A

Section A

Convention Center Room 31Β

•mai

Development of Wood Preservatives and Molds in Homes Development of Durable Wood-Based Products - EPA Registration and Approval, Environmental & Disposal Issues, and International Trends in the Industry

Division of Chemical Education

Convention Center Room 31Β Development of Wood Preservatives and Molds in Homes Development of Durable Wood-Based Products - Efficacy Testing for Biodeterioration D. Nicholas, H. Militz, M. Freeman, B. Goodell, and T. P. Schultz, Organizers 8:30 218. Regional biodeterioration hazards across the United States. S. Lebow, T. Highley 9:00 219. Field test methodologies to deter­ mine susceptibility of wood products to biodeterioration in above ground and ground contact applications. A. R. Zahora 9:30 220. Accelerated test methodologies. D. Nicholas, H. Militz 10:00 Intermission. 10:30 221. Efficacy testing for biodeterioration depletion. J. N. Ruddick 11:00 222. The role of non-decay microorgan­ isms in the depletion of organic wood pre­ servatives. D. F. Wallace, D. J. Dickinson 11:30 223. Evaluating the durability of woodbased composites. G. M. Larkin, P. E. Laks Section Β Convention Center Room 31C

11:00 235. Microcrystalline Cellulose (MCC) nanocomposites with Poly Lactic Acid (PLA) and Cellulose Acetate Butyrate (CAB). L. Petersson, K. Oksman

D. Nicholas, H. Militz, M. Freeman, B. Goodell, and T. P. Schultz, Organizers 1:00 236. Discussion of the Federal Insecti­ cide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act and its impact on the development of wood preser­ vatives. H. M. Jacoby, M. H. Freeman 1:30 237. Obtaining AWPA listings and build­ ing code approvals for new systems. C. R. Mclntyre 2:00 238. EPA regulation and issues related to plants and waste disposal. Η. Μ. Rollins 2:30 239. Disposal issues for preservative treated wood. T. Townsend, H. Solo-Grabriele 3:00 240. Wood Protection Developments in Europe 2006 and beyond. A. R. A. Valcke 3:30 241. International trends in new wood preservatives: Asia and Oceania. A. F. Preston 4:00 242. Wood preservation trends in North America. Η. Μ. Barnes 4:30 Concluding Remarks. Section Β

Xylans, Mannans and Other Hemicelluloses; Biology, Chemistry and Technology Functional Properties and Applications M. Tenkanen, P. Gatenholm, and Κ. Β. Hicks, Organizers 8:00 224. Recent developments in under­ standing structure-function relationships of cereal β-glucans. P. J. Wood, S. Tosh, Q. Wang, Y. Brummer 8:30 225. Structure/function relationships between corn kernel arabinoxylans and their emulsifying properties. M. P. Yadav, D. B. Johnston, Κ. Β. Hicks 9:00 226. Dietary fiber from cereal bran and legume hulls. T. P. Shukla 9:30 Intermission. 9:45 227. Arabinoxylan from com hulls: Poten­ tial beneficial health effects and edible film production. P. Zhang, J. N. BeMiller, R. L. Whistler 10:15 228. Extraction of wheat hemicelluloses for the production of films. P. Maréchal, P-Y. Pontalier, L. Rigal 10:45 229. Effect of chemical structure on mannan-based films. K. Mikkonen, H. Helen, L. Hyvonen, M. Tenkanen 11:15 230. Modified hemicellulose for industrial and biomedical applications. D. D'Agostino

Convention Center Room 31C Xylans, Mannans and Other Hemicelluloses; Biology, Chemistry and Technology Interactions and Applications with Cellulosics M. Tenkanen, P. Gatenholm, and Κ. Β. Hicks, Organizers 1:00 243. A new triple helix consisting of one polynucleotide and two polysaccharide chains and its application to DDS. K. Sakurai, S. Shinkai 1:30 244. Application of xylans as paper additives. J. Puis, T. Busse, B. Saake 2:00 245. Affinity of dissolved carbohydrates towards different fibre components studied by QCM-D. T. Tammelin, M. Osterberg, J. Laine 2:30 246. Surface plasmon resonance studies of polysaccharide self-assembly on model cellulose surfaces. A. R. Esker, S. E. Gradwell, A. Kaya, W. G. Glasser 3:00 247. Formation and diffusion of xylan nanoparticles into cellulose fibril networks. P. Karlsson, P. Gatenholm 3:30 Concluding Remarks. Section C

Section C Convention Center Room 32A

Convention Center Room 32A Nanocomposites Nanocomposite and Processing

Nanocomposites Nanocomposite: Matrix and Reinforcement K. Oksman and M. Sain,

K. Oksman and M. Sain,

8:55 Introductory Remarks. 9:00 231. Agricultural byproducts derived nanocomposites and composites: Ultrasonic cavitation approach. G. Markevicius, V. M. Malhotra 9:30 232. Cellulose fibrils for polymer reinforcement. T. Zimmermann, E. Poehler, T. Geiger 10:00 233. Polylactic acid (PLA) Cellulose nanocomposites processed by twin screw extrusion. A. P. Mathew, A. Chakraborty, K. Oksman, M. Sain 10:30 234. Interactions and interfaces in cellulose composites: Reactive processing and bio-inspired design. S. H. Renneckar, W. G. Glasser, A. G. Zink-Sharp, A. R. Esker

24-TECH

Organizers

Organizers 12:55 Introductory Remarks. 1:00 248. Cellulose/polysulfone nanocompos­ ites. J. Simonsen, S. Noorani, S. Atre 1:30 249. Green nanocomposites from bioplastics and organo-clays: The challenges and opportunities. A. K. Mohanty

2:00 250. Nano/micro crystalline cellulose as polymer reinforcement. M. L. Auad, N. Bellesi, M. I. Aranguren, N. E. Marcovich 2:30 251. Dispersion of soybean stock based nanofiber in plastic matrix. B. Wang, F. Mok, M. M. Sain 3:00 Concluding Remarks.

C. Middlecamp, Program Chair

SOCIAL EVENTS: Dinner: Sat High School Interface Luncheon: Sun High School Workshop: Sun Social Hour: Sun BUSINESS MEETING: SUA SUNDAY MORNING Section A Holiday Inn on the Bay Pacific D Research at Predominantly Undergraduate Institutions: Establishing a Departmental Culture of Research T. J. Wenzel, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 1. Building and advancing programs of research in primarily undergraduate institu­ tions. J. R. Pladziewicz 9:00 2. Undergraduate research culture at Northern Arizona University. J. C. Ingram 9:25 3. Value of a strategic plan in initiating and sustaining a departmental culture of undergraduate research. R. E. Rodriguez 9:50 Intermission. 10:00 4. Simple suggestions for improving the undergraduate research programs. K. J. Graham, B. J. Johnson 10:25 5. Undergraduate research in chemistry at Trinity University: The value of enlight­ ened self-interest. N. S. Mills 10:50 6. Departmental five-year plan: Conver­ sations that bolster departmental unity and focus. T. E. Elgren 11:15 Panel Discussion. Section Β Holiday Inn on the Bay Porthole Exploring the Molecular Vision: Multidisciplinary Approaches to Curricular Reform Cosponsored with SOCED J. Heppert, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 7. Opportunities at the interface of the physical and biological sciences. J. M. Gentile 9:00 8. Multidisciplinary approaches to curricu­ lar reform: A mathematical perspective. L. P. Rosen 9:25 9. Reform initiatives in chemistry. M. M. Cooper 9:50 Intermission. 10:00 10. Systemic change in undergraduate engineering education: The SUCCEED coalition experiences. T. J. Anderson 10:25 11. Workshops and websites helping faculty improve undergraduate geoscience education. C. Manduca, H. Macdonald, D. Mogk, M. Savina, B. Tewksbury 10:50 12. Memorization or understanding: Are we teaching the right thing? E. Mazur 11:15 Panel Discussion.

J. N. Spencer,

Organizer

R. S. Moog, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 13. Enhanced learning through group problem solving. F. Schaefer, M. Mahalingam 8:55 14. Use of a modified RAP technique and student portfolios in Chemistry. D. J. Cantillo 9:15 15. A learning community designed to link chemistry and biology laboratory courses. B. D. Caldwell, M. Daggett 9:35 54. The process of using guided inquiry, hands-on collaborative activities, and the science writing heuristic for general chemis­ try. T. J. Greenbowe, K. A. Burke 9:55 17. Utilizing learning centered approaches toward an interdisciplinary course in chemical nanotechnology. L. A. Porter Jr. 10:15 Intermission. 10:25 18. Effectiveness of writings in the teaching/learning of chemistry. E. Yakali 10:45 19. PLTL: A student-faculty partnership for transforming the learning environment. I. J. Leal, P. Varma-Nelson 11:05 20. Problem-based learning: Learning chemistry on a need-to-know basis. J. C. Poë 11:25 21. ChemPrep: Self-paced OWL preparation for General Chemistry and Organic Chemistry. B. Botch, R. O. Day, W. J. Vining, S. Hixson, P. Samal, D. Hart, A. Peterfreund, K. A. Rath Section D Holiday Inn on the Bay West Coast US-Mexico Collaborations in Chemical Education Cosponsored with International Activities Committee C. V. Gauthier, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 22. Beginning a US/Mexico collaboration: First steps. B. Blake, Κ. Ε. Chambers 9:00 23. How the dignity of teaching provides a 13-year framework for change in chemical education. P. B. Kelter, C. M. Castro-Acuna 9:25 24. Benefits of academic exchanges between Mexican and US universities: A provincial state university point of view. E. Pena-Cabrera 9:50 Intermission. 10:00 25. A collaborative effort in environmen­ tal chemistry education between Mexico and the U.S. S. E. Manahan, M. D. C. Durân Dominguez de Bazua 10:25 26. Latin American initiative in crystallography: Joint efforts of the USNC/Cr and ACA. K. A. Kantardjieff 10:50 27. Mexico/USA: The need for joint graduate degree programs. K. H. Pannell, C. Ambler 11:15 28. Role of young scientists in interamerican projects for regional development. J. P. Noriega-Bernechea Sr., C. Castro-Acuna Sr. Academic Hiring - How Do You Get the Job? Cosponsored with Graduate Education Advisory Board, National Organization for the Professional Advancement of Black Chemists and Chemical Engineers, Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science, PRES, PROF, CMA, CPT, SOCED, WCC, and YCC SUNDAY AFTERNOON Section A Holiday Inn on the Bay Pacific D Undergraduate Research as a Way to Recruit and Retain Students in Chemistry T. J. Wenzel, Organizer,

Presiding

Section C

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

Holiday Inn on the Bay East Coast Learning Centered Approaches across the Curriculum Various Approaches

1:30 Introduction of Award Address. 1:40 29. Award Address (ACS Award for Research at an Undergraduate Institution, sponsored by Research Corporation). Award Address: Beyond the lily pond - an experience with undergraduate research. P. K. Dea

CELUCHED 2:20 Intermission. 2:30 30. Programs for preparing future researchers. D. C. Tabor 2:50 3 1 . Undergraduate research at Texas State: A success story in recruitment and retention of all students. L. M. Watkins 3:10 32. Engaging community college students in authentic undergraduate research. T. B. Higgins 3:30 Intermission. 3:40 33. Connecting undergraduate research with instruction: Practical means for recruit­ ment and retention. D. A. Quarless Jr. 4:00 34. MARC LTSTAR Program at Xavier University of Louisiana. T. T. Birdwhistell 4:20 35. Research internships for deaf and hard-of-hearing students: Polymer-based nanocomposites. P. Cebe, D. Cherdack, R. Guertin, T. Haas, J. O'Leary, R. Valluzzi 4:40 Panel Discussion. Section Β Holiday Inn on the Bay Porthole Teaching High School Chemistry as a Second Career Cosponsored with PRES M. A. Scharberg, Organizer,

Presiding

1:00 Introductory Remarks. 1:05 36. National trends in K-12 science education. G. Wheeler 1:35 37. How to successfully transition to a career in teaching high school chemistry. M. A. Scharberg 1:55 38. So, you want to be a teacher? D. Bennett 2:15 39. The A-B-C's of career transitions: Art to business to chemistry, or taking the long way home. J. A. F. Baumwirt 2:35 40. From the laboratory to the classroom: The diary of a 2nd career chemistry teacher. S. G. Hollis 2:55 4 1 . A trip worth taking. G. Sellers 3:15 Intermission. 3:25 42. From Darwin to Dalton: Techniques for surviving as a high school science teacher. D. Paige 3:45 43. Railroading to teaching: A major jump. R. Dunkle 4:05 44. Stay in industry or transition to teach­ ing? What are the challenges and do you have the personality to succeed? J. Gaston 4:25 45. Just because we were taught.

3:45 52. Development and implementation of guided-inquiry activities for allied health chemistry. M. P. Garoutte 4:05 53. Preparing guided inquiry materials: Expanding the concept of data. M. A. Horn 4:25 16. Project PRISM: Producing results in science and mathematics. S. S. Hunnicutt Section D Holiday Inn on the Bay West Coast Learning Chemistry Through Policy Issues and Civic Engagement Cosponsored with ENVR, and CEI T. Jordan and A. Baur, M. Fisher, Organizer,

Chemistry Survival Guide Cosponsored with SOCED S U N D A Y EVENING Section A

Section C

Convention Center Sails Pavilion

Holiday Inn on the Bay East Coast

General Posters

R. S. Moog,

Organizer

J. N. Spencer, Organizer,

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 46. POGIL: Process oriented guided inquiry learning. R. S. Moog 1:55 47. Facilitating learning: Implementing and developing POGIL activities. M. D. Perry Jr. 2:15 48. Facilitation: How to plan effective facilitation and document the results. V. Minderhout 2:35 49. Student centered learning in large organic chemistry classes. S. M. Ruder 2:55 50. Electron Energy Analysis: A process that allows students to develop relationsips between energy and reactivity. R. D. Libby, C. Salter 3:15 Intermission. 3:25 5 1 . POGIL and a learning centered approach to the laboratory curriculum. F. J. Creegan

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 55. SENCER: Linking science education and civic engagement. T. Jordan 1:55 56. Do undergraduates value their sci­ ence and math education? M. D. Wood, B. Callen 2:15 57. Chemistry in Context. Five editions of engagement. L. P. Eubanks, C. Middlecamp 2:35 58. "Chemistry, Energy, and the Environ­ ment:" So many molecules, so many prob­ lems, so little time. L. K. Steffen 2:55 Intermission. 3:05 59. How to incorporate aspects of civic engagement into introductory chemistry classes without sacrificing content delivery. G. C. Smith 3:25 60. Science in the heart of Appalachia: Coal as the theme of a learning community. A. Baur, J. Byers, G. Hansen, D. Hemler, P. Mason 3:45 6 1 . Scientific innovations and their eco­ nomic impact: A learning community. M. A. Curtin, H. Kazemi 4:05 62. Engaging general science education students by studying a Superfund site, the RETUrN learning community. S. J. Bachofer 4:25 Concluding Remarks.

4:45 Panel Discussion.

Learning Centered Approaches across the Curriculum Guided Inquiry Approaches

Organizers

J. A. Trischman, Organizer,

Presiding

7:30-9:30 63. The Division of Chemical Education: Struc­ ture and reactivity. M. Z. Hoffman 64. A course in green science and technology including green chemistry for nonscience students. S. E. Manahan 65. Interactive web activity illustrating the costs and benefits of incorporating green tech­ nologies. R. A. French, R. E. Engler, C. A. Farris, T. C. Williamson 66. Teaching-experiment design of treatment of oil-contaminated wastewater with improved powdered cinder. C. Chen, W. Shi, Q. Zhuang 67. An organic techniques project for teaching green chemistry. G. D. Bennett 68. Working to educate local communities about environmental awareness and pollu­ tion prevention through chemistry education. M. Prieto, S. Timmons, B. Meyers, A. Carcamo, A. Carcamo, V. Arguello 69. Center for Nanoscale Science: Exciting the public about nansocale science and technol­ ogy. A. E. Greenberg, R. D. Redwing 70. Students lecture in two different languages for course Network and Chemistry. L. Hu, X. Zhao 71. Synthesis, photophysical characterization, and gelation studies of a stilbene-cholesterol derivative: An advanced physical organic chemistry laboratory. H. C. Geiger, D. K. Geiger, C. Baldwin 72. Organic chemistry laboratory: Polysubstitution in the Friedel-Crafts ethylation of ben­ zene: A study using gc-ms. A. Klein, J. Schreck, D. Pringle

73. Assessing feasibility of supercritical reaction processes using benchtop laboratory equip­ ment. K. J. James, K. R. Krewson 74. Teaching gas chromatography using Pro Ez-GC. M. C. Koether, J. Fenstermacher, T. Atkins 75. GC/MS in the organic chemistry laboratory: Rearrangements of esters. L. J. Anna 76. Organic chemistry educators' perspectives on fundamental concepts and misconcep­ tions. J. M. Duis 77. Assessing and addressing student miscon­ ceptions in organic chemistry. R. J. Wikholm 78. Diagnostic tests in Organic Chemistry. V. R. Koganti 79. Isolation and chemical characterization of an iron-binding natural product from bacte­ rial culture media. A. T. Koppisch, S. Dhungana, J. G. Lack, L. E. Hersman, S. Iyer, C. E. Ruggiero, C. C. Browder 80. Visual aid for chemistry: Demonstrating Sn1 & Sn2 reactions. R. Valcarce, L. Giddings, P. J. lies, B. L. Roper, C. Sanders, O. Graybill, A. Schweighardt, R. Baraki, B. Clifford, N. Lawrence, K. May, V. Thipsouven, A. Millet, S. Taylor, C. Bradford 81. Relating macroscopic observations of melting and mixing to microscopic explana­ tions. K. C. Smith, M. B. Nakhleh 82. Encouraging students to think at the molecular level in the beginning organic laboratory course. J. A. Cramer 83. Increased use of TLC as an analytical tool in introductory organic lab. W. G. Hollis Jr., R. R. Oetgen 84. lodolactonization of 4-pentenoic acid: An organic laboratory exercise. R. D. Crouch, A. Tucker-Schwartz, Κ. Η. Barker 85. Energy of activation, steric hindrance, thermodynamic and kinetic control: An outdoor organic chemistry lab. L. D. Pedersen 86. Implementation of PLTL in the freshman/ sophomore organic chemistry sequence at Alma College. M. S. Cubberley, C. W. Slater 87. Synthesis and evaluation of plant auxins: A collaborative laboratory experiment organic and biochemistry students. C. E. Stilts, R. H. Fisher 88. DNA fingerprinting in the undergraduate biochemistry laboratory. D. D. Jackson 89. Use of a team based, inquiry driven labora­ tory exercise in an advanced undergraduate biochemistry laboratory. J. T. Tansey 90. Well-equipped undergraduate instrument laboratories for environmental and analytical chemistry: Overcoming challenges by work­ ing across disciplines. J. C. Schaumloffel, W. L. Armstrong, B. Knauer, J. Miller, A. Palmer, P. Muller, T. Allen, S. Labroo 91. Collaborative NMR training in the MidHudson Valley. D. A. Freedman 92. Adaptation and implementation of modem NMR techniques throughout the under­ graduate chemistry curriculum. T. W. Nalli, S. M. Hein, R. W. Kopitzke, C. S. Miertschin, C. B. W. Ng 93. Integrating fluorescence theory and practice into the undergraduate curricula using stu­ dent-designed, independent, laboratory group projects. J. J. Piatt, M. D. Schuder 94. Ab initio MO projects in the undergraduate curriculum: Interconversion pathways in 1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine. T. Tran, T. B. Malloy Jr. 95. Heat of formation of energetic compounds: Computational chemistry and molecular modeling experiments for the undergraduate instructional laboratory. J. A. Bumpus, A. M. Lewis, C. Stotts, C. J. Cramer 96. Implementing a research-rich laboratory experience in physical chemistry focused on thermodynamics and kinetics. D. A. Waldow 97. Laboratory-based, molecular-level introduc­ tory sequence for physical chemistry. J. R. Hutchison 98. Physical chemistry in practice: Results of classroom implementation. M. Towns, G. C. Weaver, J. U. Dyer 99. Boltzmann 3D: Real-time, hands-on com­ puter simulations of classical molecular motion to visually learn principles of molecu­ lar kinetic theory. R. B. Shirts, S. R. Burt, B. J. Lemmon 100. Raman spectroscopy of cryogenic materi­ als for physical chemistry laboratory. R. W. Schwenz, M. D. Dutka 101. Investigating the effective aspects of computer visualizations for student construc­ tion of understanding in chemistry. M. B. Nakhleh, B. Postek

102. Rethinking arenium ions. M. A. Juhasz, C. A. Reed 103. Development of a web-based point group symmetry tutorial. D. H. Johnston 104. Study and application on Web-based guided discovery learning of environmental chemistry. D-W. Chen 105. DFT calculations in the undergraduate laboratory: Structure and bonding in group 14 congeners of ethene. D. K. Geiger 106. Improving conceptions in analytical chem­ istry: The central limit theorem. A. Carrasquillo Jr., M. Rodriguez-Lopez 107. Integration of chemical representations in a titration experiment. N. M. Kunze, J. P. Suits 108. Introduction of research activities into an Advanced Fine Chemicals course. X. Zhang, L. Hu 109. Capstone laboratory experience: A "cradle to the page" project for seniors. W. H. Steel 110. Undergraduate proposal writing and col­ laborative investigation: A learning centered approach to a capstone laboratory experi­ ence. L. A. Porter Jr. 111. Undergraduate research opportunities at the interface of chemistry and art. P. S. Hill 112. Pedagogical tool for the processing of laboratory technology information. T. Pagano, T. Leiker, D. C. Templeton, L. K. Quinsland 113. Towards an computer managed introduc­ tory chemistry open lab. D. C. Tofan 114. A new way to depict the separation/deter­ mination of anions in qualitative analysis. J. H. Meiser, J. W. Ribblett 115. Chemical instrumentation in the freshman laboratory: It can be done. S. L. Hiley, M. W. Ducey, B. D. Caldwell, G. L. Zweerink 116. An on-line tutorial for the use of the TI-83 graphing calculator. R. M. Cicchino, W. R. Murphy Jr., R. D. Sheardy 117. Enhancement in the teaching of general chemistry by the incorporation of web based media. M. Falero-Gil, L. Fuentes 118. Nomenclature made practical: Student discovery of the Stock nomenclature sys­ tem. M. C. Wirtz, G. Hawley, J. Kaufmann 119. Incorporating nanoscale science and engineering experiments and demonstra­ tions into first-year undergraduate courses. E. J. Voss, M. J. Shaw, M. G. Bolyard, P. E. Wanda, N. Saniei 120. Teaching general chemistry using a com­ puter tutorial. O. A. Runquist, W. N. Komomicki 121. Implementing a technology rich, inquiry based first-year laboratory. C. J. Dunlap, J. P. Bays, D. McCarthy, I. Sanchez 122. Synthesis of silver nanoparticles. S. D. Solomon, M. Bahadory, A. V. Jeyarajasingam, S. A. Rutkowsky, L. M. Mulfinger, T. L. Fitzsimmons 123. Synthesis of silver nanoparticles: An undergraduate laboratory using a biological approach. A. M. Richardson, R. D. Crouch 124. Course for undergraduate laboratory instructors. B. A. Gaddis, A. M. Schoffstall 125. Changes in the scientific attitudes of non-majors in a physical science course. S. G. Downs, J. M. Iriarte-Gross, M. R. Weller 126. Using an ethylene glycol barometer in peer-led team learning (PLTL) workshops. S. D. Wiediger, E. G. Malina 127. Chemistry of wine: A new travel course for non-science majors. A. D. H. Marchetti, S. Schreiner 128. Easy and effective technique to assess student understanding in class sessions. C. M. Teague 129. Assessing student centered learning: Does it really work? A. R. Bressette 130. CHEMX: Assessing students' cognitive expectations for learning chemistry. N. P. Grove, S. L. Bretz 131. Investigation of the relationship between student personalities and critical thinking abilities/pathways. A. McGuirk, B. D. Fahlman 132. Student perception and construction of quality chemistry essay responses. D. M. Bunce, J. R. VandenPlas, K. L. Havanki 133. Writing for all: Road to institutionalizing Calibrated Peer Review™ at the University of New Hampshire. L S. Langdon, C. F. Bauer 134. Theory-based survey writing: Using sur­ veys to predict behavioral intention of work­ shop participants. K. L. Havanki,

TECH-25

TECHNICAL PROGRAM D. M. Bunce, J. R. VandenPlas 135. Classification scheme for preparing effective multiple choice questions based on item analysis theory. J. E. Haky, L. E. Hostetter, C. M. Conway 136. Facilitating and balancing collaborative group work in the large lecture class. R. E. Glaser. C. Koetting. Y. Sui, K. M. Carson 137. Supplemental Instruction: A benefit for all. H. J. Docktor. D. A. Powell 138. Research site for educators of chemistry at Wichita State University. D. P. Rillema 139. Establishing a Chemistry Resource Center P^J. lies R^Valcarce. L Giddings, B. L Roper, R. Sevennsen. N. Lawrence, P. Murphy 140. Expanding graduate students' views of effective teaching through the development of inquiry-based high school chemistry lessons. R. A. Eikey, J, A. Rudd II, F. W. Freking, R. D. Gerdeman, A. A. Russell 141. Go fish! A head start on NCW 05. A. Sarquis, L. Hogue 142. Toy mania! Ideas for NCW 05, L. Hogue, A. {. Sarquis 143. Mole Day at Elmira College: A spectacular event. M. Metcalfe, L. Hogue 144. Scientific Trivial Pursuit: a game for Utah elementary school children. L. Giddings, P. J. lies, R. Valcarce, B. L. Roper, C. Sanders, O. Graybill, A. Schweighardt. C. Bradford, R. Baraki, M. Elliott, N. Lawrence, K. May, V. Thipsouven, J Johnsen S Taylor

7:30-9:30 160. Doping zinc oxide thin films to achieve p-type electrical conductivity. M. Ballesteros, G. Kowach 161. TFA-d as an NMR solvent for ketones. J. Urena, B. Dewprashad 162. Molecular dynamics simulation of 1-butyl3-methylimidazolium phosphate. A. Grange, Μ. Ν. Kobrak 163. New York City Louis Stokes Alliance Program. J . Urena. M. Ballesteros. A. Grange 164. "Chemistry in the forefront of science"LSAMP and HBCU-Undergraduate. A. Peters, M. Greene. S. S. Sandhu 165. Research experiences for undergraduates and high school teachers at the University of Rochester: A combined REU-RET program. Τ R Kruqh

145. Scientoons and Organic Chemistry.

166. An introduction to the Philadelphia AMP.

159. PR2EPS: Preparation, recruitment, retention and excellence in the physical sciences. J. C. Schaumloffel, H. Gallagher, P. Bischoff, S. Labroo, N. Bachman, R, Grimaldi Section Β Convention Center Sails Pavilion LSAMP/REU Joint Poster Session B. Wilson and R. Turner, Organizers R. S. Duran. Organizer.

V R Koganti

Presiding

S R Cox V Keene R Lanqley

146. Space Endeavour Camp Chemistry.

167. Buffering capacity within solgel materials

1 J V ' SDChHr0eder .t h Λ 147. Big Red s summer chemistry camp: A summer camp for fifth, sixth and seventh grade students. L. L. Pesterfield. A. L. McDaniel, A. M. Hobos. M. J. Watson, K R Jackson 14β. Water quality studies for middle school students. T. R. Brewer 149. NSF GK-12 Partners in Science; A collaboration between the University of Colorado and the Boulder Valley School District. T. L. Minger, M. R. Asirvatham 150. Incorporating a summer NSF-sponsored RET experience in the rural high school science program. S. E. Jones, L. D. Kispert 151. Micro-Lab Kaiserslautern: Developing chemical experiments under a microscope for high school students. H. Sitzmann, F. Decker, C. Schlick, N. Junker. S. Schneider, f. Wolf, E. Wolfer 152. Food science in the classroom: An application-based approach to high school chemistry instruction. A. M, Rowley, J. S. Peacock, D. D. Armstrong, P. B. Biais 153. Special announcement: A new opportunity for high school teachers in ACS. J. W. Moore, E. A. Moore, J. L. Holmes, W. F. Carroll, J. Clevenger, M. Z. Hoffman 154. Thirty years of the Chemistry Educators Association: A partnership between Missouri Western State College and regional high school teachers. S. P. Lorimor 155. Harvard University-Cambridge Public School GK-12 program: The impact of graduate students in the high school chemistry classroom. I. T. Raheem, J. C. Schlenker, E. R. Dunkel, M. Sheehy, K. Hollar, M. Havern, M. Barron, J. Hutchinson, E. Mazur 156. Reforming policies and practices for the support and training of graduate students and postdoctoral researchers; Preparing the science and engineering workforce of tomorrow. L. A. Campbell 157. Fellowships for preparation of college teachers. W. J . Donovan 158. Impact of a Preparing Future Faculty seminar in chemistry: Perspectives from former participants pursuing academic careers. R. D. Gerdeman, R. A. Eikey, A. A. Russell

ί τ Τ ί ί °f enfymeS Lam0 ^ ^ J f " ' ^ ? , h 168. Evaluation of demonstrations for the general chemistry curriculum. V. Vilchiz. T. Bondzi-Quaye 169 - MALDI-TOFMS for the detection of DNA. B. Dawson. Z, Qiao, U. Udeochu. T. Jimerson, M. Fletcher. O. Bakare, C. M. Hosten 170. Modifcation of the physical chemistry laboratory. V. Vilchiz, J. Moon 171. Opportunities for undergraduate research in chemistry at Colorado State University. N. E. Levinger, O. E-H. El-Hakim 172. Solvent composition effects on silica surface coordination for cobalt(ll) neocuproine and similar structural adducts with differing solubility in methanol solutions. c . M. Taylor, E. J. Akoda. W. Braxton 173, Synthesis and purification of various acyla c p derivatives. K. Goodson. R M_ Cicchillo, Ν Μ Nesbitt D Iwig y Qa\^er Q J ' Booker ' 1 7 4 S y n t n e s i s 0 f mutant DNA strands from piasmid DNA using molecular s p r e m a r a t n e ρ yv A che qtatP 1 7 S ' R _ t p w _ v t n ς Γ ; Ρ η Γ Ρ ' - r L Lrk^n ,', Γ V , b u e 0ϋ', n ^ , Λ , University M^sissipp, Louis Stokes Alliance p a r T mi Perkins, G A Hl ' ' " 176 R e s e a r c h " experience at a predominantly teaching university as a recruiting tool in the search for chemistry majors. C. M. Taylor, v Vllcniz · - R - c - Gatrone 1 7 7 A stua Y ° η * h e binding cooperative of bacteriophage gene 32 protein variants. M. Garedew, R. Karpel 178. Affinity of copper(ll) for the amyloid-/0 peptide of alzheimer's disease. H. Akintoye, V. Szalai 179. The Florida-Georgia LSAMP. R.Turner, M. D. Edington, J. B. Greene 180. IMAGE: A Model of recruitment and retention of students of color in engineering and science: Mississippi State University. T. Stevenson 181. Kinetic study of an ammonia detection procedure. T. Evans, J. Weinstein-Lloyd 182. Lincoln University and Claflin University form collaborations with the University of Florida and Florida State University. R. Langley. A. Peters, P. Dixon, R. S. Duran 183. Pursuing scientific excellence through research, partnerships and collaborations. L. Jones, M. Wilson-Comer 184. Research internships in science of the environment (RISE) at Arkansas State University R. E. Hannigan, J L Farris 185. Texas Southern University's LSAMP student research and internship expertences. B. L Wilson, M Tolbert

P h o t o g r a p h i n g Of S l i d e s a n d / O r t a p ï n q Of t a l k s iS P r o h i b i t e d , . . . . . . UnieSS permission IS Obtained from individual presenters.

26-TECH

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186. The grand challenges of chemistry: Research experiences for student/faculty teams at Furman University. T. W. Hanks, T. Hanks, M. Lee 187. TIM: A dispersed REU site. N. S. Mills, I. D. Reingold, R. G. Brisbois, T. M. Mitzel, Κ. R. Mondanaro, Κ. C. Russell 188. Undergraduate research experience in combinatorial and parallel synthesis for the development of bioactive small organic molecules. 0 . Bakare, R. L. Copeland Jr.. Y, Kanaan, K. Manner, V. Patterson, I, McKelvey, S. Osei, R. Gopaul, P. Rogers, E. Igiehon 189. LS-LAMP of Grambling State University. D. Hubbard 190. The bonds between us: A proposed dual REU at Mississippi State University with an LSAMP relationship. G. Thomas 191. Selective biomass fractionation in a flow reactor. J. M. Robinson, J . Burrow, [_. Ornelas, L. Galvan, R. Caudle 192. Collaborative student-faculty research program in chemistry and biochemistry at Hope College. G. F. Peaslee, J. L. Stewart 193. Analysis of CoQ10 in nutraceuticais. C. Johnson Jr., N. Spradley, L. SubbaRao, D. J. Swinton, R. Langley, S. C. SubbaRao 194. Attracting and retaining women to chemistry—the REU program at Harvey Mudd College. S. M. Baker 195- Chemistry of chromium(V): Biological significance. S. M. Bernard, J. Chacon, s N - · Mahapatro 196 · Cultivating the future: The Texas A&M University System LSAMP vision. M

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197-Cyclic voltammetr

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198- LSAMP a U h ^ U ni versify of California, San Diego: UCSD-CAMP Science Program. d R /ùitejBremri D , Artis 1 g 9 M j d d | e T e n n e s s e e S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y . Tennessee Louis Stokes A|jjance for Minority

Participation. B. H. Knox 2 0 0 . NSF-sponsored research experiences for undergraduates in chemistry at the Univers r t y o f Kansas. M. V. Barybin, c. K. Johnson, C. K. Larive 201. Research experiences for undergraduates in environmental sciences at Northern Arizona University. D. E. Anderson, M. S. Costanza-Robinson 202. Synthesis of [2.1.1](2,6)-pyridinophanes for transition-metal mediated catalysis. A, O. Evans 203. Asymmetric reaction of alkynes to ketones. L - Jones, A. Rajaram, L. Pu 204 - Viscometry and infrared spectroscopy of solutions of lithium perchlorate in propylene carbonate. S. N. Lyles, J. A. King 205 - Alabama Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation. K. LaiHing 206 A n R E U Pro ram for 9 community college students at CSULA. S. L. Nickolaisen 207 N S FR E U Pr0 r m in 9 a chemistry at the University of North Texas. A. K. Wilson, T C u n d a a s

218. Wellesiey College NSF-REU site. D. R. Haines, C. R. Arumainayagam 219. Western alliance to expand student opportunities LSAMP. A. A. Garcia 220. Development of novel coatings for PDMSbased Microfluidic devices. K. J . McDaniel, G · Roman, C. Culbertson 221. Oxidative stress: A molecular and mechanistic a P P r o a c n · D - Y - Adamu 222 Texas A & M ' Cyclotron Institute REU pra9 ™ ) "Nuclear C h e m i f * • ? • J· YennteMo 223. Preliminary analysis of VOCs present in f T ^ T ! WN^n R Γ Ζ ^ L W S n K L n maS 7" ρ ^ ' " ° ' ° * ^ ^ J & compounds in residential a n dcommercia, indoor parking garages. A L M c M M l a n G . Kristanto, F. Conley, R Thomas, Q Wilson 2 25. Analysis of arsenic and other trace metals i n drinking water through the utilization of ICP-MS. D. Moore, B. Wilson, A . El-Demerdash 226. REU site "Practices and Perspectives" at Virginia Commonwealth University. S. M. Ruder, S. S. Hunnicutt 227. Exploring the Unknown: REUing at the University of Oregon. G. L. Richmond 228. Chemistry/Chemical Engineering REU site at the University of North Dakota. E. I. Kozliak, M. D. Mann 229. Environmental REU for LA/MS/TX STEM minority undergraduates. F. K. Cartledge 230. Making, measuring, or modeling molecules: The REU program at the University of Pittsburgh. J . J. Grabowski 231. REU program in nanoscience at U. South

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experience for undergraduates in chemistry at the University of Virginia. j N Demas M L Brown 2 0 9 . REU site in chemistry and Northeast LSAMP program at the University of Connecticut. A. R. Howell R. K. Bonn, j . Erickson, D. A. Williams 210. Research on chemical and radiation sensors: An REU site program at UNC Pernbroke. P. A. Flowers 211. Undergraduate research opportunities in rural Appalachia: An REU site for bio-inspired chemistry at Marshall University and West Virginia State University. J . Yom, S. D. Bush 212. Chemistry REU site program at South Dakota State University. J. Cole-Dai, D. Cartrette, M. L. Miller 213. Chemistry and the city: The NSF-REU site at Columbia University. L. W. Fine, S. Brydges 214. SeleXtract hollow fiber membrane concentration and recovery of phenols from refinery wastewaters. J. M. Robinson, M. Fierro, C. Gonzales II, B. Morgan, K. S. Sprawls 215. Montana's environmental chemistry and policy REU program. G. C. Smith, C. P. Palmer, E. R. Adams 216. Research experience in chemistry. B. W. Gung, K. W. Kittredge 217. Summer research experiences in chemistry at James Madison University. G. MacDonald, D. M. Downey

232. The NSF-REU program in chemistry and D°M toltarf* ^

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233. The REUprogram at Loyola University Chicago. M. K. Boyd 234. The US/France and University of Florida REU Sites. R. S. Duran, M. J. Scott, B w S m j t h j γ G N A N O u , J. P. Launay, C. Grosdemange, P. Audebert, C. Sanchez, C. Roux, D. Hulin, M. Condat 235. University-wide summer undergraduate research experience. D. R. Bobbin II, C. D. Riley, D. W. Paul 236. Chemistry with a purpose: REU program at SUNY-ESF. T. S. Dibble 237. Undergraduate research experience in chemistry at Syracuse University, K. Ruhlandt-Senge, M. B. Sponsler 238. NSF-funded REU chemistry program at The University of Alabama. J . B. Vincent, L. D. Kispert 239. Undergraduate research model for the New Mexico AMP. R. B. Jacquez, R. Pena, K. Luces 240. WiscAMP: The newest member of the AMP family. C. Middlecamp, D. L. Henderson, M. L. Carnes Joe Breen Student Poster Session in Green Chemistry (sponsored by Green Chemistry & Engineering Subdivision) Cosponsored w j t h | E C f a n dC E |

2 0 g Researcn

M O N D A Y MORNING Section A Holiday Inn on the Bay Pacjfjc D ( g e w Directions in Teaching Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Jim Spencer, 2005 George C. Pimentel Award ρ g Moog, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. g : 35 241. From Lebanon Valley to the future, c . L. Stanitski g : oo 242. Impact of the task force on the general chemistry curriculum. L. H. Rickard 9 ^ 5 243. How do the students visualize and filter the information in the classroom? R. S . Lamba g ^ r j Intermission. -|rj:00 244. Jim Spencer, POGIL, and chemical education. F. J. Creegan 10:25 245. POGIL evaluation and Jim Spenc e r ' s insight. D. M. Bunce

CHED

Section B Holiday Inn on the Bay Porthole Using Case Studies as a Problem-Based Learning Technique to Teach Chemistry Κ. Κ. Karukstis, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 246. 'You know, it seems like we're learning everything for a reason": Learning with ChemConnections modules. J. L. Stewart 8:55 247. Laboratory based case studies. F. J. Dinan, S. H. Szczepankiewicz 9:15 248. Biochemistry in context: A case study approach. K. A. Haushalter 9:35 249. Teaching students to think: The use of case studies in organic chemistry. M. Konaklieva 9:55 Intermission. 10:05 250. Case studies are a tool to develop critical thinkers and independent learners. T. J. Mueller, Κ. Κ. Karukstis 10:25 251. Problem-based learning: Its value to industry. A. H. Ullman 10:45 252. Using case studies of chemistry in the real world to teach second semester Introductory Chemistry. D. E. Goodney, T. P. Silverstein, K. M. Holman, S. R. Kirk, J. J. Willemsen, J. C. Williamson 11:05 253. Using case studies in an introduc­ tory biochemistry course. K. Comely 11:25 254. Using case studies to introduce environmental and economic aspects of chemistry. Κ. Κ. Karukstis 11:45 255. Examining a problem based approach to teaching NMR interpretation and structure elucidation. S. A. MacDonald, R. Martin

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 264. Sustainability, chemical education, and SENCER. A. M. Shachter 8:55 265. Science of abandoned mine drain­ age. C. L. Fish 9:15 266. Taking chemistry to new heights and down the street: A portable chemistry lab. K. P. Costello 9:35 267. "Living in a Material World:" A new material science course for non-science majors. G. J. Brust, L. J. Mathias 9:55 Intermission. 10:05 268. Developing scientific literacy in non-science majors using town meetings. J. A. Trischman, Y. N. Meulemans 10:25 269. Impact: science from all sides. M. R. Weller, J. M. Iriarte-Gross 10:45 270. Chemistry Is in the News: Engag­ ing chemistry and policy through the news . R. E. Glaser, K. M. Carson 11:05 271. Integrated educational projects: Teaching chemistry within a social context. C. M. Castro-Acuna, P. B. Kelter, G. Pinto Canon, J. M. Abraham 11:25 272. Teaching chemistry as part of "Global Water Issues": A new multidisciplinary course developed with SENCER ideals. R. C. Austin, E. F. Kosal,

C. Lawrence 11:45 Concluding Remarks.

Section Ε Convention Center HallD Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Analytical Chemistry Cosponsored with ANYL, and SOCED L. E. Garrison,

Organizer

11:15-1:15 Section C

273. A comparison of spectral properties of 2-acetylnaphthalene and 2-(trifluoroacetyl)naphthalene. J. C. Miller, T. C. Werner

Holiday Inn on the Bay East Coast Educating Biochemists for the Future, not the Past Cosponsored with American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology E. Bell, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 256. Bringing students to three-dimen­ sional protein structures using Deep View. L. M. Lindert 8:55 257. Structural biology of chicken muscle lactate dehydrogenase: A contemporary biochemistry laboratory. K. A. Kantardjieff, S. R. Herron, C. Srinivasan, N. Polder, J. Warfel 9:15 258. The study of glycobiology in an undergraduate advanced biochemistry laboratory. K. D. McReynolds 9:35 259. Introductory science courses: It all starts there. E. Bell 9:55 Intermission. 10:05 260. Dynamic computational models in inquiry teaching of molecular processes underpinning current and future laboratory procedures in biochemistry. B. S. Berenfeld, D. Damelin, B. Tinker, Q.Xie 10:25 261. Teaching biochemistry through analogies: How students interpret common biochemistry analogies. M. Orgill, G. M. Bodner 10:45 262. Integrated advanced biochemistry laboratory: A case study using tRNA(Phe). S. R. Kirk, K. M. Holman, T. P. Silverstein 11:05 263. Cooperation by chemistry and biology departments can lead to a success­ ful integrated biochemistry and molecular biology undergraduate degree. B. D. Caldwell 11:25 Panel Discussion. 11:55 Concluding Remarks. Section D Holiday Inn on the Bay West Coast Learning Chemistry Through Policy Issues and Civic Engagement Cosponsored with ENVR, and CEI M. Fisher and T. Jordan, A. Baur, Organizer,

Organizers

Presiding

274. Absorption studies of trivalent lanthanides and actinides using a soft donor extractant impregnated on a solid support. S. B. McCawley, D. D. Ensor 275. An inverse gas liquid chromatography study. C. Crew, J. Hardee Jr. 276. An investigation of the interactions between enkephalin peptides and sodium dodecyl sulfate micelles by means of NMR spectroscopy. J. L. Hunsader, K. F. Morris 277. An NMR study of the interactions between methionine enkephalin peptides and anionic micelles. J. K. Vincent, K. F. Morris 278. Analysis of allicin content in garlic varities. B. A. Loader, G. L. Seebach 279. Analysis of aluminum in drinking water using fluorescence. E. Sandoval, H. Altmiller 280. Analysis of cigarette smoke using CG-MS spectroscopy. E. Mahanger, H. Altmiller 281. Analysis of DEHA in plastic water bottles. D. S. Mobley, A. Humphrey, K. LaiHing 282. Analysis of inks and pigments by laserinduced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS). L. J. Condon, R. R. Hark 283. Analysis of the degradation of semi-volatile organic compounds and the application to the EPA holding time limit. N. D. Villiere, D. W. Green 284. Analysis of the major larval salivary gland proteins from Black Fly. Y. Arai, C. Brockhouse, M. Ngu-Schwemlein 285. Analysis of the volatile components of tea after sequential infusions. B. G. McBurnett, J. Mosso, A. C. Lopez, S. B. Kong, G. H. Lee 286. Analysis of vibrational mode coupling of tone wood using two dimensional correlation experiments. T. M. Schramm, C. D. Hanson 287. Analytical determination of homocysteine by microchip capillary electrophoresis with electrochemical detection. L. D. Wagner, W. R. Vandaveer IV, S. A. Pasas-Farmer, S. Lunte 288. As fascinating as watching paint dry. J. A. Smyder, S. Gravelle 289. Attachment of single wall carbon nanotubes on platinum surface by the self assembling monolayer technique. E. J. Contés-deJesus, B. Rosario, C. R. Cabrera, M. Pérez-Davis 290. Bimetallic platinum-iron dendrimer encapsulated catalysts. T. F. Fennewald, J. C. Garcia-Martinez, R. W. J. Scott, R. M. Crooks

291. Binding of spermine to nickel (II) ions: Spectroscopy and pH. S. W. Miller, G. L. Seebach, E. Csuhai 292. Biomimic of the electron transfer chain. D. Sheth, S. D. Minteer 293. Chemical characterization of an outfall pool at North Beach, Racine, Wl for the determination of the need for and sustainability of phytoremediation plants. B. A. Begotka, J. Kinzelman 294. Chemical sensor design for nitroaromatics using integrated optical waveguide platforms. M. J. Linman, P. L. Edmiston 295. Chemically modified electrodes with applications in the detection of glucose and hydrazine. J. S. Pinter, K. L. Brown 296. Comparison of different SPME fibers for the GC-MS analysis of trace organics in a biological matrix (urine). M. S. Eggert, P. A. Brown, M. G. Evola, T. E. Goodwin, L. E. L. Rasmussen, B. A. Schulte 297. Comparison of pK 2 and pH values of four different biochemical buffers at 25 and 37°C. S. R. LeNoue, C. E. Denton, A. N. Simon, C. N. Roy, L. N. Roy, R. N. Roy 298. Comparison of printer toner composition by FTIR-ATR spectroscopy. R. E. Price, S. R. Butler 299. Consistent application of the Boltzmann distribution to residual entropy in crystals. E. I. Kozliak 300. Conversion of a reversible one electron redox couple to a reversible 2 electron redox couple through intermolecular hydrogen bonding. J. E. Woods, Y. Ge, D. K. Smith 301. Creation of an analytical method for the measurement of analytes leached from a molecularly imprinted polymer. W. Underwood, J. C. DiCesare 302. Detection of superoxide using a microfluidic station with laser-induced fluorescence detection. B. M. Peterson, C. Whiting, H. Ahmadzadeh, E. A. Arriaga 303. Determination of folate vitamers in spinach via liquid chromatography combined with ultraviolet and fluorescence detection. Κ. Μ. Smith, M. B. Satterfield, B. Nelson 304. Determining rates of reactions of phosphi­ tes with phenyl radicals. M. J. Studler,

T. W. Nalli 305. Determining the source of arsenic in Montezuma Well, Arizona. M. Brandstrom, R. D. Foust Jr. 306. Development of chemical sensors based on redox-dependent receptors: N,N'-dimethyldiazapyrenium-modified electrodes. B. Egan, G. G. Montoya, D. K. Smith 307. Development of chemical sensors based on redox-dependent receptors: Viologen host modified electrodes. C. S. DeMaria, M. Puga, D. K. Smith 308. Development of continuous flow monitor­ ing system for microwave chemistry and application to ceramic leaching studies. A. N. Martucci, Η. Μ. Boylan 309. DNA amplification with colorimetric detec­ tion through nanosphere aggregation. J. Wong, E. Tan, D. Nguyen, A. Tan, B. Erwin, S. M. Baker, D. Galas, A. Niemz 310. Effect of solvent polarity and matrix choice on MALDI-MS analyte ion signals. S. Rawal 311. Effect of various storage conditions on the decomposition of THC in marijuana. E. M. Carvill, L B. Lewis, D. Knoll 312. Electro- and photo-chemical reduction of novel organically tailed polyoxotungstates by cyclic voltammetry and uv-irradiation. R. C. Osten, D. E. J. O. Atkinson, R. C. Chambers 313. Electrochemical synthesis and character­ ization of gold-covered porous silicon sur­ faces. M. D. M. Garcia-Maldonado, M. R. Rosario-Canales, A. R. Guadalupe 314. Electrospray mass spectrometry of diazo dyes and their metal complexes. J. R. Sutton, K. D. Cook, G. L. Seebach 315. Enhanced thermal stability of alkaline phosphatase entrapped in a sol-gel matrix. M. Timmers, P. L. Edmiston 316. Evaluation of chloride content in automo­ tive catalytic converters. E. Iski, T. Harris, W. T. Potter

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

317. Experimental study of Brita® water filter efficiency. J. L. Jeschke, J. M. Van Doren 318. Fluorescence and thermodynamic analysis of metal ion binding to a cyclooctapeptide. T. Whigham, B. Cook, P. Butko, M. Ngu-Schwemlein 319. Fluoride analysis of green tea. J. Lanvers, P. D. Hooker 320. Functionalization of nanowire arrays for the detection of Chlorpyrifos. L. M. Hunt, L. H. Rickard 321. GC/MS investigations of carbonyls with 0-2,2,2-trifluoroethyl hydroxyl amine. M. W. Holliday Jr., L. Lawal, T. Nguyen, J. T. Mayo, W. N. Tinnerman II, T. B. Malloy Jr. 322. Heavy metals in game fish from Lakes Erie, Ontario and the Niagara River. P. M. Schaber, K. A. Burke, K. Ondesko, L. A. Shepherd, P. Dehn 323. Hybrid rocket motor plume temperature and OH radical profile by UV spectroscopy. C. F. Zehm, M. W. Teague, A. M. Wright, I. B. McQueen 324. Hydrolysis rates of activated esters. M. M. Galloway, K. R. Gee 325. Immobilizing dehydrogenase enzymes in alkyltrimethylammonium bromide modified Nation membranes. Z. Johnson, S. D. Minteer 326. Impact of aqueous-metal oxide interfaces on biofilm formation: ATR-FTIR as an in-situ approach to probe bacterial adhesion. H. J. Gulley, H. A. Bullen 327. Interactions of several yeasts with com­ mercial dry malt extract. C. M. Hughey, E. Csuhai, G. L. Seebach 328. Investigation of cyclo[(Glu-D-Glu)2-(Leu-DLeu)2] and its metal ion binding properties. E. Henninger, M. Ngu-Schwemlein 329. Isolation of ammonia from human urine. E. P. Nwosu 330. Isothermal DNA amplification reaction on an electrowetting microchip. P. Qu, C. Cooney, A. Nadim, J. D. Sterling 331. Iterative root-finding approach for determi­ nation of anisotropic optical constants and surface coverage of Cytochrome c films. N. C. Rasmussen, A. Runge, S. S. Saavedra, S. B. Mendes 332. Laser ablation-inductively coupled plasmamass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS): A rapid method for elemental analysis of hair. S. Steely, D. Amarasiriwardena, J. Yâhez 333. Leaded paint in pre-1970 Albion residences. J . A. Fillinger, D. W. Green 334. MALDI-TOF MS analysis of partially soluble poly(p-phenyleneethynylene)s. S. T. Ellison, W. K. Nonidez, A. P. Gies 335. Mass defect labeling for enhanced protein identification. A. M. Ricks, I. J. Amster, C. Li, S. Niehuser, H. Hernandez 336. Matrix property correlation studies to gain insight into the mechanism of MALDI. J. J. Cavanaugh, G. R. Kinsel 337. Medium-throughput vehicle screening LC/MS assay to support pharmacokinetic studies. D. B. Laskar, L. Zeng, Y. Zhang, L. Zhang, D. B. Kassel 338. Microbial influenced corrosion of aircraft aluminum alloys. C. Crouch, R. Racicot 339. Microchip-based biofuel cell. A. Kinsella, R. S. Martin, S. D. Minteer 340. Microscopic characterization of CdSe/ZnS nanocrystals. G. Placzek, R. Wiser, K. P. Roberts 341. Modification of porous silicon for biological applications: Addressing important issues in the development of a stable and specific biosensor. C. Yu, M. P. Schwartz, C. Pacholski, M. J. Sailor 342. Modification of S i 0 2 surfaces with amineterminated organosiloxane films for biosensor applications. J. D. Acton, A. F. Farmer, G. G. McPherson, C. E. Campbell, A. C. Friedli 343. Molecularly imprinted sol-gel films for the detection of TNT. S. L. Dean, P. L. Edmiston 344. Multicomponent analysis of photodecomposition products of chemical sunscreen agent/antioxidant mixtures. A. E. Bjerke, J. R. Cody, A. R. Sasso 345. New H PLC stationary phase for boronate affinity chromatography. X-C. Liu, A. Wang, H. Cortez 346. Non-invasive determination of gender and maturity status in Chinook salmon by short wavelength near infrared spectroscopy. C. A. Davis, A. G. Cavinato, T. Hoffnagle, D. M. Mayes

TECH-27

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 347. PAT case study: Effusivity and NIR of compacts and tablets. R. N. Forcht, R. J. Voytilla, C. A. Anderson, J. K. Drennen III 348. Phosphorescent cyclodextrin complex used to detect glucose analytically. J. Varon, M. D. Schuh 349. Possible asthma triggers: PAH levels in Maine PM10 and soils. S. Mayberry, M. Cram, G. Van Epps. S. LangleyTurnbaugh, N. R. Gordon 350. Possible consolidating alkoxygermanes on calcareous stone. G. E. A. Rudd, E. N. Broaddus, W. Flomer, M. F. Striegel 351. Progress toward the determination of sulfamethoxazole in treated and natural waters. L. M. Kravanya, E. R. Acheson 352. Protein structure by mass spectrometry. A. A. Enyenihi, L. Wan, C. M. Greenlief 353. Rapid, non-destructive detection of micro­ bial spoilage in trout fillets by short-wave­ length near-infrared (SW-NIR) and Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy. L C. Croft, D. Hagar, A. G. Cavinato, M. Lin, B. A. Rasco 354. Second dissociation constant and pH of the amino acid buffers BICINE and AMPSO from 5 to 55°C. C. E. Denton, S. R. LeNoue, S. J. Richards, L. N. Roy, R. N. Roy 355. Self-assembly of polyelectrolytes on Au surfaces and nanoparticles. J. K. N. Mbindyo, C. M. Tabora 356. Separation and characterization of lipo­ philic proteins by electrical field flow fraction­ ation in non-polar fluid. M. Degirmenci, D. D. Russell 357. Shaken not stirred: An analytical assay for antioxidant activity in martinis using quenched luminol chemiluminescence and solid phase microextraction GC/MS. E. C. McCrum, R. I. Shear 358. Simple environmental analytes with impor­ tant consequences: Ion chromatography for introductory chemistry students. S. M. Davenport, A. T. Nguyen, L. U. Gron 359. Single walled nanotube sizing via gel electrophoresis of DNA functionalized tubes. C. Villegas, M. L. Norton 360. Stop-flow kinetics study and flow injection analysis using the dichloroimidazole cata­ lyzed chemiluminescence reaction. D. L Neff, C. Tyler, R. E. Milofsky 361. Study of an inexpensive device using anodic stripping voltammetry to detect heavy metals. A. Dauchez, T. L. Fisher 362. Testing of ionic liquids as replacement solvents for the solvent extraction of metal ions. A. M. Loccisano, P. M. Smith 363. The effect of calcium chloride on the hydrogen bonding in methanol. T. S. Trometer 364. Thermodynamics and pH for the biological buffer CHES from 5 to 55°C. P. A. Bryant, S. R. LeNoue, C. E. Denton, L. N. Roy, R. N. Roy 365. Towards an error-free method of detecting apurinic and apyrimidinic lesions in DNA. C. Azadi, J. A. Sobrino, J. Payton, K. P. Roberts 366. Towards effective bioassays using bioconjugates of semiconducting nanocrystals. L. Vasicek, R. Wiser, K. P. Roberts 367. Use of electrochemistry for determining oxidation of iron in baby formula. S. Furto, C. M. Josefson 368. Use of SPME, reverse phase SPE, and GC-MS in a search for African Elephant urinary pheromones. P. A. Brown, M. S. Eggert, M. G. Evola, T. E. Goodwin, L. E. L. Rasmussen. B. A. Schulte 369. Volatile components of the leaves of Piper auritum. B. G. McBumett, A. C. Lopez, J. Mosso, S. B. Kong, G. H. Lee 370. Volatile trace element disposition in car­ bonaceous chondrite meteorites. R. A. Blila-Lacy, D. L. Unger, S. F. Wolf 371. Working toward building a better water filter: Use of sol gel technology to filter semi-volatile organic compounds. M. Cox, D. Nguyen, L. Lee, J. Ash, C. Ellison. C. P. Higginbotham

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

28-TECH

372. XPS analysis of AI 2 03/Ni 3 AI(111) chlorination followed by H 2 0 exposure under nonUHV conditions. J. L. Abarca, J. A. Kelber, F. Qin, N. Magtoto Section F Convention Center Hall D Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Organic Chemistry Cosponsored with ORGN, and SOCED L. E. Garrison,

Organizer

11:15-1:15 373. Analysis of infrared spectra of ethanol and diethyl ether trapped in yttria powders doped with rare earth ions. E. Lopez, J. Corral, R. Vazquez, O. Rebolledo, O. Graeve, D. R. Brown 374. A new class of derivatized quinines and their use as asymmetric catalysts. K. L. Hanson, W. Dasher 375. A simple and reliable method for synthesis of alpha, beta-unsaturated oximes. J. A. Stull, T. K. Morgan, C. C. Browder 376. Acid-catalyzed alkenylation and HoubenHoesch reactions. C. A. Turney, M. J. Campbell 377. Withdrawn. 378. Alkyl halides from alcohols via triphenylphosphine and CuX 2 . B. Fox, G. L. Milligan 379. Aminochlorination of a,b-unsaturated ketones using 2-NsNCI 2 /2-NsNHNa. J. Mills, E. Barney, J. Liu, L. Guo, G. Li 380. Antiaromaticity of p-substituted 3-phenylindenylidene fluorene dications. K. Balena, S. Gordon, N. S. Mills 381. Application of tris(trimethylsilyl)germanes in organic synthesis. Z. Wang, D. Derane, S. F. Wnuk 382. Approaches toward the synthesis of 3-methoxyindenylidenefluorene and the antiaromaticity of its dication. G. Buchanan, N. S. Mills 383. Aromaticity and antiaromaticity of 3- and 4-substituted benzylidene fluorene dianions and dications. C. Do. J. Hatfield, S. Patel, N. S. Mills 384. Atranyl-uridines: Synthesis and applica­ tions for ribozyme structural biology. M. E. Pitzer, M. C. Mauck, I. M. Asif, C. M. Rink, M. Rheam, E. E. Fenlon 385. Attempted synthesis of 5-trimethylammonio-1-(3-indolyl)-pentan-2-one. E. L. Herrle, P. A. Leber 386. Attempted synthesis of a new linear tetraphenylphosphonium polymer. D. Bonsack, T. W. Nalli 387. Baeyer-Villiger oxidation of substituted indanones. A. M. Jacobine, F. J. Creegan 388. Calculations of cations from protonation of fluorine-substituted terminal alkenes. H. K. Forberg, D. F. Shellhamer, J. Lehman 389. Carbon-13 chemical shift correlations: Benzaldehydes and acetophenones. J. T. Stanley, D. Traficante, S. Lin, D. K. Dillner 390. Catalytic transfer deuteration using 10% Pd/C and 2-propanol-d8 as the deuterium source. N. K. Kokes, M. K. Teague, R. C. Mebane 391. Characterization and synthesis of polypep­ tides using NMR spectroscopy and solid phase synthesis (SPS). D. L. Maurer, K. P. Manfredi 392. Chemical constituents of Marcgravia brownei and Omphalea triandra. B. Held, G. E. Henry 393. Chiral auxiliaries for the resolution of aldehydes and ketones. N. M. Glagovich, Ε. Μ. Reed 394. Chromium Trioxide resin: A convenient oxidizing agent for microwave-assisted synthesis. L. Maiorini, C. Crutchfield, L. Farber 395. Comparison of methods to synthesize 5-5'-di-tert-butyl-N-(9-fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl)-4-carboxyglutamate. N. Callahan, R. V. Prigodich 396. Complexation of mono- and dicyanovinylarenes. C. S. Vogelsberg, K. V. Kilway, G. Marquez, D. M. Travis, R. Michelson, D. M. Ho 397. Conformational analysis of diamide macrocycles via dynamic NMR. D. Placencia, J. H. Glans

398. Conformational control for heterotropic cooperativity. J. Novack, Κ. Ε. Burns, S. A. Van Arman 399. Correlation of the rates of solvolysis of Sulfonyl Chlorides. L. Yaakoubd, S. E. Feld, M. J. D'Souza, D. N. Kevill 400. Cosmic radiation effects on solid methane. A. Lamb, M. H. Moore 401. Cross-couplings of sp 3 substrates bearing â-Heteroatoms. N. C. Giampietro, N. G. Andersen 402. Crystal structure and analysis of a bisoxamide core bi-directional dendrimer precursor. S. A. Henrie, C. J. Morton 403. Detailed reactivity study of cysteine-inserted cowpea mosaic virus extracted from primary and secondary leaves. L. A. Alexander, Q. Wang 404. Determination of saponins and alkaloids in Caulophyllum thalictroides (Blue Cohosh) by liquid chromatography mass spectrometry and uterine contractility assay. K. L. Horn 405. Determining selectivity in the addition of carbon nucleophiles to a proline derivative. H. A. Lindsay, J. R. Karczewski II 406. Development of a branched chiral selector stationary phase. S. A. Henrie, M. J. Barnett 407. Diels-Alder reactions in high temperature water. R. L. Poerschke, B. Weeks, L. U. Gron 408. Doped and undoped co-polymers of polyfuran, pyrrole, and thiophene: A chemical synthesis and conductivity studies. R. McConnell, M. S. McConnell, A. Green, A. Young, L. Young, W. E. Godwin 409. Drug discovery with marine bacterial broths and the use of solid-phase extraction. B. S. Ebaid, J. Trischman 410. Dynamic light scattering applied toward elucidating the mechanism of pattern formation in periodic precipitation reactions (Liesegang reactions). G. M. Lynn, J. M. Karty 411. Electrochemical detection of nanoscale phase separation in binary self-assembled monolayers. G. Lemen, W. Harris, R. C. Chambers 412. Enantioselective halo aldol reaction utilizing cyclopropyl ketone-derived enolates. E. Barney, J. Mills, C. Timmons, G. Li 413. Enantioselectivity in the formation of Fe(ll) amino-acid bipyridine complexes. D. C. Tahmassebi, M. Maybury, S. Sandoval 414. Ethidium-based derivatives as HIV-1 rev-RRE inhibitors. K. Muzikar, Q. Liu, Y. Tor 415. Experimental and theoretical investigation of carbenes generated from 10,10-disubstituted tricylco[4.3.1.01,6]decadiene-2,4(1 ). T. R. Newhouse, S. Presolski, D. M. Thamattoor 416. Finding the most efficient method for epoxidizing keto-alkenes. J. T. Ippoliti, K. J. Kent, S. A. Pribyl 417. Fluorous soluble crown ethers from a natural product. J. R. Herron, M. J. Campbell 418. Formation of chiral tertiary amines. A. Boustani, J. C. DiCesare 419. Friedel-Crafts reactions: Unexpected products. J. G. McLean, K. J. Brown 420. Generation and characterization of benzoylcarbene. N. A. Ullom, S. M. Dunn, J. P. Deluca 421. Green condensation reactions catalyzed by l-proline. J. Woods, G. D. Bennett 422. Greening the oxidation of borneol to camphor in the undergraduate organic laboratory. Y. Y. Lin, M. A. Sala, C. P. Schwartz, R. W. Gurney 423. Hybrid peptide synthesis from alpha and beta amino acids: Potential new peptidase inhibitors. L. D. Banks, E. M. Shoulta, E. Csuhai 424. Hydrophobically-directed selective reduction of ketones using amine boranes. C. Uyeda, P. LePlae, M. R. Biscoe, R. Breslow 425. Identification of Microcystin-LR in bluegreen algae dietary supplements. A. P. Campos-Serrano, Κ. Ο Shea 426. Improved enzyme storage stability in organic solvents by monomethoxypolyethylene glycol. M. Pagan Castillo, B. Castillo Cruz, G. L. Barletta 427. Improvements to the synthesis of [3.3.1 ]propellane-3,6-diene-2,8-dione, a precursor to a potentially bishomoaromatic molecule. M. A. Loth

428. Indium promoted couplings of propargyl aldehyde moieties with 1,2- and 1,4-regioselectivity. T. M. Mitzel, J. Wzorek 429. Intermediates in the synthesis of an oligo­ nucleotide analog. C. J. Nicastro, M. F. Harris 430. Investigating supramolecular synthesis via molecular topology. T. Sommers, K. A. Wheeler 431. Investigation of Hydroxycyclopentenones using 1 3 CO. M. B. Jones, A. M. Wilson 432. Investigation of NAD/NADP biosynthesis in E. coir. Mechanism of quinolinate synthase. B. A. Devilbiss, E. M. Hoge, V. A. Burke 433. Investigation of protected amine, alcohol, and acid-terminated silanes for controlled surface modification. J. R. Oxsher, G. G. McPherson, C. E. Campbell, A. C. Friedli 434. Isotope effects in solvolysis of a-trifluoromethyl â-silyl systems. R. M. Smith, L. J. Tilley 435. Key connections in the synthesis of a nerve agent antitoxin. J. L. Wiegand, A. M. Chubb 436. Maillard reaction. C. A. Conroy, D. H. Fish 437. Manipulation of reactions in high temperature water. B. Weeks, R. L. Poerschke, L. U. Gron 438. Mechanistic details of the 2+2 photocycloaddition. A. Parent, S. A. Fleming 439. Mechanistic insight on the stereoselective photooxidation of enecarbamates using PTAD, a singlet oxygen analog. C. Hooper, T. Poon, R. Franz, J. Sivaguru, S. Jockusch, N. J. Turro, W. Adam 440. Metal-mediated cyclization of 2-(phenylazo)benzonitriles: New methods for the generation of the isoindazole nucleus. J. Rivers, L. D. Shirtcliff, M. M. Haley 441. Metal-templated approaches to a polymethylene catenane and knot. S. L. Goh, Ε. Ε. Fenlon 442. Modification of the Swern oxidation for the synthesis of α-halo unsaturated phenyl ketones. J. D. Chisholm, C. E. Gallis 443. Modified McMurry olefin synthesis. S. Adamus, A. Kennedy, M. Callahan 444. Molecular packing differences in some solid isomeric benzylideneanilines. J. M. Smieja, H. M. Sexe, W. H. Ojala 445. Monitoring the cyclopentadiene dimerization in high temperature water. J. W. Herrold, L. U. Gron 446. N-Glycosyl triazole-linked carbohydrates: Synthesis and structure of pyranose deriva­ tives. P. Norris, B. Pirigyi, R. M. Risi, A. Malich, W. Chuang, A. King 447. New approach to the synthesis of 3-triazolylalanine. A. Weight, D. R. Haines, K. A. Moy 448. New approaches in the stereochemical synthesis of iron lactam compounds and their starting materials. C. S. Stein, A. Engle, D. Marten 449. New explorations of the catalyst, ligand, and base effect in the Pd-catalyzed synthe­ sis of N6-substituted 2-deoxyadenosine adducts. T. Melistas, F. Ngassa 450. New methodology for the formation of quaternary carbon centers. C. Field-Eaton, T. Poon 451. New synthesis of Sulfonimidates. A. Vagstad, A. Toussaint, D. Leca, E. Lacote, L. Fensterbank, M. Malacria 452. NMR spectroscopy analysis in the devel­ opment of inhibitors to an illicit drug proxy synthesis. K. R. McCormick, S. Seleem, P-P. Ilich 453. Novel synthesis of heterocyclic quinodimethane analogs and their use in ther­ mally initiated Diels-Alder reactions. C. B. King, J. J. Esteb 454. Novel synthetic methodologies toward the prepartion of linear disassembling dendrons. C. S. Shanahan, A. Ortiz, D. V. McGrath 455. Optimization of a palladium-catalyzed multi-component coupling reaction for the synthesis of â , â-unsaturated-â-lactones. H. C. Malinakova, C. D. Hopkins, L. Guan 456. Organic synthesis of precursors to RQ 3 . C. Brophy, J. N. Shepherd 457. Oxidation of ascorbate ion by chlorite ion: Kinetics and product yield. J. Martin, M. Viggiano, M. A. Curtin 458. Ozonolysis of cycloalkenes in the presence of alkenols: Synthesis of terminally differentiated aldehyde-ester-alkene containing products. J. O'Neill, J-P. Wolf, D. Soulsby

CHED 459. Peptide-derived oligamine reagents as transaminase mimics. N. M. Yerkes, W. Zhou, J. J. Chruma, R. Breslow 460. Photochemical decarbonylation of bridged bicyclic ketones. S. W. T. Choe, M. Rodriguez, E. Y. Yoo, R. Ficke, L. Aguirre 461. Photochemistry of some 1,4 and 1,5 diiodides. T. J. Morin, T. W. Nalli 462. Photocycloaddition of nitrosobenzene and alkenes. P. Shumway, S. A. Fleming 463. Photoinduced DNA cleavage by aryl sulfoxides. D. P. Turner, A. H. Predecki 464. Phytochemical composition of Comptonia perigrina (sweetfern). J. A. Martin, L. D. Pedersen 465. Phytochemical composition of Eupatorium rugosum (white snakeroot). F. Wahl, L. D. Pedersen 466. Phytochemical composition of Polygonum persicaria (lady's thumb). J. Ezdebski, L. D. Pedersen 467. Phytochemical composition of Wedelia trilobata (kaisnipata). K. M. P. Baczynski, L. D. Pedersen 468. Polymer-bound Ph 3 P in Mitsunobu reactions involving cyclic â-hydroxy tertiary amines. M. G. Stocksdale, L. A. Watson, R. E. Stacy 469. Preliminary studies toward the synthesis of phorbol esters and dactylol. J. H. Boyce, G. K. Murphy, F. G. West 470. Preparation and study of novel silver alkynes. E. Karnas 471. Preparation of a synthetic receptor for the age determination of cognac. L M. Spero, S. Schreiner 472. Preparation of arylphosphonates of cyclic nucleotides. A. K. Meier, T. W. Nalli 473. Preparation of N-amino acid (alkyl ester) thiophosphorinates: An undergraduate research prototype for upper division chemistry labs. Z. Lesic, L. A. Neely, N. Horgan, V. Nguyen, S. M. Schelble 474. Progress in the synthesis and characterization of novel donor-acceptor [14]-annulenes. S. Stamper, A. Mynar, K. C. Russell, S. Negassi, A. Muzny 475. Progress in the synthesis of 1,5-methylenesemibullvalene. D. K. Frantz, I. D. Reingold 476. Progress toward the synthesis of a new class of hypervalent iodine reagents. A. N. French, S. M. Paradine, E. A. Gruber 477. Progress toward the synthesis of the natural product corydendramine A. K. Steidlmayer, C. J. Nichols 478. Progress toward the total synthesis of corydendramine A. T. D. Hilger, C. J. Nichols 479. Progress towards the design, synthesis, and characterization of a novel class of oligonucleotide analogues: Phenylene ethynylene nucleic acids (PENAs). M. S. Cubberley, K. J. Gilde 480. Progress towards the synthesis of the natural product psymberin. K. A. Milinkevich, B. S. Gerstenberger, J. P. Konopelski 481. Purification and structure elucidation of compounds that inhibit the growth of mycobacteria. T. A. Veres, M. Kubin, J. A. Trischman 482. Radical translocation studies of 2-bromobenzyl ether and 2-bromobenzyl amine derivatives. A. Raban, J. Hopper, C. Sanborn, E. J. Kantorowski 483. Reaction of 2-Bromo-3-methoxy-1,4naphthoquinone with secondary amines and the subsequent dealkylation. S. Sanchez 484. Reduction of aldehydes and reductive ring opening of epoxides by catalytic transfer hydrogénation using Raney nickel and 2-propanol. A. Mansfield, P. S. Gass, R. C. Mebane 485. Resolution and isolation of (L)-difluoromethyllysine. M. Rodriguez, C. J. Peeples, J. C. DiCesare 486. Ring closure of hydroxyfulvenes with 4-hydrazinobenzenesulfonamide. B. P. Morgan, M. T. Blankenbuehler 487. Ring-expansion of substituted cyclopropylcarbinyl radicals. L. Ross, C. Brown, J. Lee, D. M. Solano, E. J. Kantorowski 488. Scope and limitations of the reaction of potassium hydride with thiones. S. J. Fischer 489. Selective photochemical reactions of tetrahydro-1,4-naphthoquinones in NaY zeolites. A. T. Wickboldt, T. Poon 490. Self-assembled ionophores based on 8-aryl-2'-deoxyguanosine analogues. D. De Jesus, V. Gubala, J. M. Rivera

491. Siderophores and hemolytic compounds from cyanobacteria. N. Baida, K. Rein 492. Solid state microwave-assisted reductions of aldehydes and ketones. L. L. White, K. W. Kittredge 493. Solid-state structures of some orthosubstituted benzylideneanilines. B. L. Sanders, E. Y. Ranta, W. H. Ojala 494. Solution-phase synthesis of a biomimetic asparagine-glycine peptide chain. M. A. Allen, S. R. McFeeters, M. H. Schmidt 495. Stereoselective synthesis of a retinoid X receptor (RXR) antagonist. B. H. Lipshutz, D. B. Ball, J. H. Howell 496. Structural consequences of non-natural nucleoside substitution in DNA duplexes with molecular dynamics applications. D. C. Tahmassebi, T. J. Dwyer, J. Butler, J. Cole, T. Parr 497. Structural eludication of the pyrrolizidine alkaloids from Heliotropium convolvulaceum. L K. Rathbone, M. R. Bruck, J. L. Piatt, A. L. Mariette, R. B. Kelley 498. Structural studies of the two types of 2,2,4,4,6-pentachlorocyclohex-5-en-1,3dione: Are they conformers? S. A. Wood, P. E. Baker, V. L. Heasley 499. Studies of interfacial concentrations utilizing a chemical trapping agent. J. K. Phelps, S. J. Bachofer 500. Studies of the zinc-mediated chain extension reaction: Approaches to alpha beta; -Amino Acids through the use of chiral sulfinimines. A. L A. Puchlopek, C. K. Zercher 501. Studies toward the synthesis of sterpurenes using ortho [2+2] photocycloaddition. K. McMahon, B. D. Shelley 502. Sulfur ylides: Exploring beyond the limitations. A. N. Proby, S. Amin, C. Bean, D. C. Forbes 503. Supramolecular applications of C 0 2 . Z. B. Ravjani, H. Xu, G. Woldemariam, D. M. Rudkevich 504. Supramolecular control over the stereoselectivity of metal hydride reduction of ketones. C. S. Cuadrado, V. I. Marin, V. Gubala 505. Syntheses and chemosensory of anthracene and phenanthrene bisimides. Z. A. Bogusz 506. Syntheses of 3-substituted indenylidene fluorene: Study of antiaromaticity indenyl and fluorenyl systems. T. Hoang, N. S. Mills, K. Hooten 507. Synthesis and characteristics of perhydrophenanthrene-1,5,10-trione. A. M. Butterfield 508. Synthesis and characterization of a series of 1,3,4-oxadiazolines. J. A. Bishop, K. Gilmore, D. D. Von Riesen 509. Synthesis and characterization of bipyrrole and dipyrrolylmethane anion receptors. E. A. Osborne, M. T. Huggins 510. Synthesis and characterization of flavin annulenes: Differentially protected bisalkynlyl flavin DHA precursors. D. J. Roach, P. Suer, K. C. Russell 511. Synthesis and characterization of pyrrole amide-based receptors. M. D. Bloomer, M. T. Huggins 512. Synthesis and characterization of tricyclo[6.2.2.01,6]dodecan-1 (6)-en-7-one. J. M. Shirley, I. D. Reingold 513. Synthesis and computational analysis of 1-oxaquinolizidine and some derivatives. J. B. Werness, Z. F. Al-Rashid, T. R. Hoye 514. Synthesis and conformation analysis of dipyrrinone analogs. F. N. Billimoria, M. T. Huggins 515. Synthesis and photochemistry of substituted naphthalimides: CY4 and ED4-tbu. K. Klein, J. E. Elbert 516. Synthesis and reactions of pentacyclo[4.3.0.0 2 ' 4 .0 3 ' 8 .0 5 ' 7 ]non-4(5)-ene. M. A. Forman, J. Herres, J. Stairs 517. Synthesis and strategies for the enantiomeric resolution of T-0632. J . Y. Lin, D. R. Haines 518. Synthesis and testing of a β-Ρϊιβ-β-ΑΙβ peptide. J. B. Elston, A. R. Malarkey, E. Csuhai

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

519. Synthesis and testing of a β-ΡΙιβ-β-ΡΙιβ dipeptide as a potential peptidase inhibitor. Z. R. Edens, J. W. Mullins, E. Csuhai 520. Synthesis and testing of unprotected beta-Ala-beta-Phe. M. D. Kelly, R. B. Johnson, E. Csuhai 521. Synthesis of 1-amino-2, 3, 4-butanetriol from glucose. N. Dunlap, T. Johnson, K. Summar 522. Synthesis of 6-aryl-1,2-indandiones as potential latent fingerprint visualization reagents. R. M. Santangelo, R. R. Hark 523. Synthesis of a chromogenic enzyme substrate for the detection of leukocyte esterase. J. C. Christenson, J. T. Ippoliti 524. Synthesis of a copper octacarboxylated phthalocyanine as a precursor in the forma­ tion of novel T i 0 2 aerogel and xerogel materials. M. C. Corbari, Η. Μ. Arntz, D. E. J. O. Atkinson 525. Synthesis of a series of alloxan thiosemicarbazone and semicarbazone compounds and structural characterization using 1Η NMR spectroscopy. E. C. Lisic, P. A. Cornell, E. C. Lisic 526. Synthesis of an oligophenylene for use as a hole-transporting agent in organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs). J. P. Schwerkoske, J. T. Ippoliti 527. Synthesis of Annonaceous acetogenins by tandem olefin metathesis. K. J. Quinn, A. K. Isaacs, B. A. DeChristopher, S. C. Szklarz, R. A. Arvary 528. Synthesis of C21-C26 domain (E ring) of azaspiracid. M. D. Manojlovic, S. Nguyen, C. J. Forsyth 529. Synthesis of dehydro-L-diflouromethyllysine: A precursor to tritiated L-diflouromethyllysine, a lysine decarboxylate inhibitor. M. Kiker, C. J. Peeples, J. C. DiCesare 530. Synthesis of eicosanyl-based bisglycerophosphocholine bolaamphiphiles. D. Sutton, D. H. Thompson 531. Synthesis of enantiomerically pure trisphenol for enantioselective metal catalysis. C. J. Weiss 532. Synthesis of fluorous catalysts for use in synthesis. K. D. Carpenter, R. S. Slogic, J. L. Valdez, J. A. Russak, A. M. Schoffstall 533. Synthesis of heterocyclic carbene ligand. L. M. Sanow, M. Brumfield 534. Synthesis of meso-substituted porphyrins using dipyrromethane intermediates. A. Mullaley. P. K. Kerrigan, J. McCullagh 535. Synthesis of monosaccharide lipids as hydrogelators. L. Dakessian, G. Wang 536. Synthesis of multidentate nitrogen-contain­ ing ligands by amidation reactions. D. Y. Son, H. Zhang, M. M. Adams 537. Synthesis of N-phosphoryl derivatives of amino acids using difluorenylmethyl phos­ phite. L. Wu, C. E. Berkman 538. Synthesis of new antibacterial agents: Novel isoxazolinones. L. R. Becker, J. T. Ippoliti 539. Synthesis of oxazolyl imidazolinium salts. J. F. Boulos, A. Montoya 540. Synthesis of p-substituted 3-phenyltribenzo[5.7]fulvalenes and the evaluation of the antiaromaticity of their dications. F. Cheng, J. Baylan, N. S. Mills 541. Synthesis of porphyrin-oligonucleotide conjugates. P. C. Rodriguez, M. Balaz, A. Holmes, K. Nakanishi, N. D. Berova 542. Synthesis of substituted naphthalimide fluoroionophores: Cis-cycHD4 and transcycHD4. J. L. Pearsall, J. E. Elbert 543. Synthesis of tetrazole analogs of D-ala-Dala. N. Dunlap, G. Jones 544. Synthesis of the Elaiophylin Ci 2 -C-| 6 and Bafilomycin C20-C25 fragments. V. Sepulveda, W. Davila, M. Mulero, J. A. Prieto 545. Synthesis of the mixed-donor macrocycle 9S2N, 7-aza-1,4-Dithiacyclononane. M. E. Botros, G.J. Grant 546. Synthesis of tripyrrane analogues and heteroazuliporphyrins from 6-tert-Butyl- and 6-Phenylazulene. J. A. El-Beck, T. D. Lash 547. Synthetic approach to lamellarins, marine natural products. C. N. Barnes, D. Z. Liu, T. E. Goodwin 548. Synthetic approaches to macrocycles based on phenyl-spaced anthracenes and biphenylenes, and their computational study. T. R. Newhouse, C. W. Gittleman, D. M. Thamattoor 549. Synthetic efforts toward novel phytosiderophore conjugates. M. G. Stocksdale, A. M. Lindsay, D. A. Hardesty, M. K. Silver 550. Synthetic pathway for the production of polyhydroxylated pyrrolidines. L. Brammer, L. J. Liotta

551. Synthetic preparation and GC-MS analysis of the anti-oxidant resveratrol. M. J. Morris, J. C. Adrian Jr., L A. Hull 552. Temperature dependent kinetic study of the reactions of atomic chlorine with cyclohexane and 1,4-dioxane at 260-340 K. A. Pirasteh, Z. Li 553. The oxidation of trialkylboranes with potas­ sium permanganate: Solvent and stoichiometry. C. B. Smith, C. E. Harris 554. The oxidation of trialkylboranes with potas­ sium permanganate: Solvent, stoichiometry and auto-oxidation. S. A. Kortlandt, C. E. Harris 555. The oxidation of trialkylboranes with potas­ sium permanganate: Solvent, stoichiometry and mechanism. V. M. Cangelosi, C. E. Harris 556. Thermal chemistry of bicyclo[4.2.0]oct-2ene. A. T. Higgs, P. A. Leber 557. Thermal decomposition of 3,4-dihydroxybenzaldehyde and catechol derivatives of magnesium aluminum isopropoxide. A. L. Anderson, D. S. Amenta, J. Gilje 558. Total synthesis of (±)-phoracantholide I: Approaches towards the synthesis of jas­ mine ketolactone. M. Sandy, D. Soulsby 559. Withdrawn. 560. Toward the synthesis of (+)-Gigantecin. T. R. Hoye, B. M. Eklov, M. S. Khoroosi 561. Towards synthesis of a small molecule that dimerizes streptavidin and p38alpha MAP kinase. E. J. Tamosauskas, B. R. Peterson, L. Mottram 562. Triazole-linked carbohydrates: Synthesis and structure of furanose derivatives. P. Norris, S. Gore, B. Dobosh, K. Pavlidakey 563. Trifluoromethanesulfonic acid catalyzed addition of alcohols to alkenes. S. J. Rodriguez, D. Shellhamer 564. Trying to find the perfect biodiesel for Michigan. L. L. Lincoln, B. W. Baldwin 565. Use of asymmetrical diyne formation enroute to 3-dimensional hydrocarbon cages. T. M. Mitzel, K. M. Allègue 566. Use of GC/MS for identification of potential novel antibiotics from competitive induction in marine bacteria. M. Malfavon, I. de la Torre, J. A. Trischman 567. Use of microwave-assisted aza-Cope-Mannich reactions in natural products synthesis. H. A. Lindsay, P. T. Sinawe 568. Vapor Pressure Osmometry (VPO) studies of the self-assembly of Guanosine Derivatives in organic solvents. A. Avila, V. Gubala, J. M. Rivera 569. Weed or gold mine: Chemical content of the pink plumed poppy. K. Silverstein, J. Fuller-Stanley 570. Zeolite catalyzed formation of functionalized benzenes from substituted indoles. F. Chavez Jr., T. Poon 571. [1,3] Sigmatropic rearrangement of 8-methylbicyclo[4.2.0]oct-2-ene. X. S. Bogle, P. A. Leber 572. [1,3] Sigmatropic rearrangement of trans, cis, fra/7S-tricyclo[6.3.0.02,7]undec-3-ene. D. C. Powers, P. A. Leber Section G Convention Center HallD Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Physical Chemistry Cosponsored with PHYS, and SOCED L. E. Garrison,

Organizer

11:15-1:15 573. A library of mesomorphic materials for the systematic study of structure and physical properties of the smectogenic 2,7 diacyl fluorenes. R. N. Harris, G. R. Van Hecke, L. Baker, K. A. Dallas 574. Activity coefficients of hydrochloric acid and praseodymium chloride in aqueous mixtures: Application of Pitzer formalism. L. N. Roy 575. Adsorption of hemoglobin to silica studied with cavity ringdown spectroscopy. H. A. VanBrocklin, V. M. Black, M. A. Everest 576. Adsorption of polyelectrolytes onto a charged air/water interface. R. Mak, D. E. Gragson

TECH-29

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 577. Amide rotational barrier in substituted pyridine carboxamides: NMR and ab initio studies. K. Pederson, J. Lai, G. M. Leskowitz, R. A. Olsen, L. J. Mueller, M. E. Hatcher 578. Analysis of poly(ethylene oxide) with magnesium triflate. C. M. Ragan, R. S. Cole, R. Freeh, M. McLauchlin 579. ATR-FTIR investigation of the effects of ionic strength on polyelectrolyte multilayer film formation. J. Comer, D. E. Gragson 580. Azo dye aggregation on CTAB/SOS vesicles. K. C. Gray, K. K. Karukstis 581. Azo dye aggregation on DTAB-SDS vesicles. E. W. Hall, Κ. Κ. Karukstis 582. Brownian dynamics of a single particle. M. Christiansen, M. Hinrichs, M. D. Wood 583. Calculation of the activity coefficients of hydrochloric acid and neodymium chloride: Application of Pitzer theory. S. N. Gibbs, C. N. Roy, E. B. Christiansen, L. N. Roy, R. N. Roy 584. Calculation of vibrational hyperpolarizabilities for the analysis of visible-infrared sumfrequency spectra. D. H. Parks, D. K. Hore, G. L. Richmond 585. Cation-pi interactions: Structural and thermochemical studies of model systems relevant to the function of ion transport channels. M. T. Rodgers, T. B. Ditri 586. Characterization of hybrid rocket exhaust plumes using NIR spectroscopy. J. R. Smeal, B. D. Keller 587. Characterization of lipid bilayers on sur­ faces by FTIR-ATR and AFM. H. Smith, S. M. Baker 588. Characterization of the aggregates of n-alkyl-n-methylpyrrolidinium bromide surfac­ tants in aqueous solution. J. R. McDonough, K. K. Karukstis 589. Characterizing nanoparticle size using EXAFS and TEM. S. Nemzer, T. Harris, I. Pister, L. Soussan, Y. Sun, M. Rafailovich, A. Frenkel 590. Chlorine atom transfer to ammonium ion from monochlorocyanuric acid, a common agent in swimming pools. D. W. Reading, G. H. Purser, J. S. Morgan 591. Cholesterol and alternate sterols promote film condensation in phospholipid/sphingo­ myelin Langmuir monolayers. S. Lipka, A. B. Serfis 592. Computational and experimental studies of electron attachment reactions involving sulfuryl halides. M. F. Bardaro, J. M. Van Doren 593. Construction of an acoustic array and testing its capabilities. B. A. Loushine, D. K. C. McGill, O. M. Ezeokoli 594. Correspondence between structure and diffusion rates for surface-adsorbed fullerenes. S. Van Lue, P. M. Nagel, S. Guo, S. A. Kandel 595. Critical micelle concentrations of cationicanionic surfactant mixtures. P. J. Krommenhoek, J. Hagen 596. Deactivation of platinum catalysts used in the C H 4 + C 0 2 reaction. G. Dent, M. J. Baird 597. Determination of biologically relevant lyotropic liquid crystalline phases. W. C. Duim, K. K. Karukstis, G. R. Van Hecke 598. Determination of pH effects on the struc­ ture of a 3-mercaptopropionic acid selfassembled monolayer on Au(111) using scanning tunneling microscopy. J. Gadd, Κ. Ε.Johnson 599. Determination of X3 values for benzene and its derivatives using degenerate fourwave mixing. C. Grant, L. Shakes, K. LaiHing 600. Development of a new chemical actinometer. R. Indralingam, C. D. Stefancik 601. Development of novel nanostructurebased solar cells. C. Burda, X. Chen, S. M. Halasz, J. V. Mankus 602. Diffusion of alkenes in n-alkanes. B. A. Kowert, R. M. Turner II, C. V. C. Caldwell 603. Direct measurement of the lifetime of NeBr 2 van der Waals molecules as a func­ tion of isotopic species. B. C. Olbricht, C. Bieler, J. A. Cabrera, K. Janda 604. Dynamic solvation in room temperature ionic liquids. T. Calhoun, L. Sanders, M. Haider, X. Song, J. W. Petrich 605. Effect of solid grain fuel on combustion reactions in hybrid rocket engines. M. M. Misztal, D. H. Fish, D. W. Grumbine Jr.

30-TECH

606. Effect of solvent polarity in triphasé catalysis using modified clay. N. Shabestary, S. Khazaeli, A. Tekeei 607. Electron-induced reactions of CF 2 CI 2 . H-L Lee, S. Wilson, L D. Weeks, I. Pascu, R. Nelson, C. R. Arumainayagam 608. Electronic structure of thienyl quinoxalines. K. Kopp, G. Crundwell, J. C. Durivage, N. E. Gruhn, A. Pierpont, P. Foss, B. McBurney, T. R. Burkholder, M. Zeller, A. D. Hunter, B. L. Westcott 609. Ellipsometry and optical parameters for kinetics. R. Romasco, R. K. Im, P. A. Hogan, W. Johnson, N. Liakis, P. Perov, P. Sheehan 610. Excess thermodynamic functions of anisole + alcohol mixtures using viscometry and quasi-elastic light scattering. C. L Kalcic, G. R. Van Hecke 611. Excited state luminescence quenching of tris(2,2'bipyridine)-ruthenium(ll) by electronic energy transfer to nile blue. A. S. Huss, J. M. Brom 612. Experimental and computational characterization of hydrazone antimicrobials. J. K. Hensel, R. M. Miller 613. Exploring the dependence of polyelectrolyte multilayer film formation on ionic strength and pH. G. Eldridge, M. VonEuw, D. E. Gragson 614. Fluorescence characterization of antimicrobial peptides using catanionic DDAB-AOT unilamellar vesicles. S. A. McCormack, Κ. Κ. Karukstis 615. Fluorescence quenching of aqueous uranyl ion. L. M. Kinnin, C. Noda 616. FT-IR rotation vibration spectra of carbon dioxide. A. Nguyen, S. W. Reeve, W. A. Burns 638. Near real-time monitoring of gas phase atmospheric species. A. Nguyen, S. W. Reeve, W. A. Bums 617. Gypsum hourglass inclusions and fluores­ cent zoning. J. E. Milliken, C. Noda 618. H/D exchange of three gas-phase peptide zwitterions: RKRARKE, RKRSRAE and bradykinin. B. M. Moscato, E. M. Marzluff 619. Identification of diastereomeric interactions in zeolites by solid state NMR. H. M. Yonutas, D. Cizmeciyan, M. Garcia-Garibay 620. Improved trace analysis of highly retained anions by macrocycle-based ion chromatog­ raphy. Q. P. Peterson, B. J. Tibbitts, J. D. Lamb 621. Integrating functionalized molecules onto silicon substrates. D. L. Mavour, S. R. Coon 622. Interaction of wild and mutant forms of Yersinia enterocolitica phospholipase A2 with phospholipid model membranes. J. Lutovich, A. B. Serfis 623. Interactions of metal cations with water clusters. T. Cheng, P. Momoh, M. S. El-Shall 624. Interfacial behavior between synthetic phospholipids and polymerizable alkoxysilanes. B. R. Dorvel, H. M. Keizer, K. Fang, R. Duran 625. Interfacial force microscopy of functional­ ized SAMs: The role of molecular level interactions. K. Everaerts, R. C. Major, X. Zhu 626. Investigation of some novel lithium manga­ nese oxide based cathode materials for use in lithium ion batteries. L. Kullberg, D. Dash 627. Withdrawn. 628. Kinetic study of cyclopentadiene dimerization: A physical/instrumental chemistry laboratory experiment. D. A. Lee, K. Halligan, B. L. Kalra, D. K. Lewis 629. Kinetic study of the gas phase reactions of ethylcyclopropane. C. Zaranyika, B. L. Kalra, D. K. Lewis 630. Kinetic study of the gas phase thermal isomerizations of 1,1,2-trimethylcyclopropane. J. D. Miller, B. L. Kalra, D. K. Lewis 631. Kinetics and mechanism of the reaction of monochloramine with hydroxylamine at neutral pH. D. M. Robinson, G. H. Purser 632. Kinetics of chlorine atom reactions with cyclic ethers. L. Brandt, M. Quant, R. Aguilera, G. Nagasundaram, R. Kelley, S. Hewitt 633. Kinetics study of the reaction between 1-propanol and copper (I, II) oxide. M. E. Peretich, T. C. DeVore 634. Kinetics study of the reaction between sulfur dioxide and atomic hydrogen. B. P. Morgan, P. Marshall 635. Measurement of OH radical concentration in the exhaust plume of hybrid rocket motors. S. A. Clements, C. F. Rivenbark II, H. R. Kennington

636. Withdrawn. 637. Mechanistic study of the retro-Diels Alder reactions of deuterium-labeled cyclohexene, norbornene and bicyclo[2.2.2]octene. J. T. Cesnavicius, D. K. Lewis 639. NMR kinetic characterization of cyclic /V-Trifluoroacetamides. L-A. Giddings, D. Bickar, C. Suârez 640. Pharmacophore determination of a series of butyrophenones with dopamine antagonist activity. A. Jackson, C. L. Klein Stevens, N. Zhu 641. Photochemical studies of diuretic drugs. L R. Wheeler, J. M. Allen 642. Photodissociation of boron bromide cluster ions formed by electron ionization of boron tribromide clusters. C. M. Mills, S. M. Rigsby, D. A. Hales 643. Photodissociation of boron bromide cluster ions from a discharge ion source. S. M. Rigsby, C. M. Mills, D. A. Hales 644. Photodynamics of a Ru(bpy) 3 2+ dopant in a silica-sol gel thin film. J. W. Bourne, B. Johnson, J. Bartlett, K. Yokoyama 645. Photoinduced electron transfer across Aerosol-OT reverse micelles interfaces. A. F. Frempong, P. K.C, R. E. Riter 646. Rate constant and temperature dependency of 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoro-2-difluoromethoxypropane reacting with OH radical. W. A. Hamilton, H. R. Kennington 647. Rate equation for the methane reforming reaction using a palladium catalyst. C. Brunetta, M. J. Baird 648. Reaction kinetics of N 0 2 with a- and 7-Fe 2 0 3 . H. M. Bevsek, B. C. Hixson 649. Reaction rates and temperature dependencies of isobutane and isopentane reacting with OH radicals. H. R. Kennington, S. A. Clements 650. Recent findings concerning the kinetics of the reaction of monochloramine and chlorine dioxide. T. J. Hoppe, D. M. Robinson, R. J. Vierling, G. H. Purser 651. Reduction of the orbital approximation. D. Liao 652. Refractive index measurements using a Michelson interferometer with a low-coherence light source. S. E. Caudill, W. T. Grubbs 653. Resonance and inductive contributions toward the gas phase acidities of X=CH-Y-H (X,Y=CH 2 , NH, O): A density functional theory study. R. Naumann, J. M. Karty 654. Self-assembled PS-PEO diblock copolymers at the air/water interface: Creating ordered templates for biochemical research. S. M. Baker, J. D. Pétrie 655. Solid State NMR studies of copper phthalocyanine Langmuir-Blodgett multilayers. E. F. Rude, D. J. Mitchell, U. Mazur 656. Solid state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) as a molecular level probe for the photochemical reaction of cyclohexane and acetophenone in zeolite Y. A. M. Amboya, D. Cizmeciyan, M. Lille, M. Ali 657. Spectroscopic studies of liquid solutions of pyridoxalideneasparginate of europium and silver nanoparticle aggregates. M. Bahoura, G. Zhu, C. Davison, M. J. M. Codrington 658. Spectroscopy of highly excited vibration states of formaldehyde by dispersed fluorescence. J. D. Herdman, W. F. Polik, B. D. Lajiness, J. P. Lajiness 659. Spin coating vs. dip coating: Comparing the regularity of multilayer thickness by AFM. A. Macaluso, D. E. Gragson 660. STM studies of the structure and dynamics of fullerenes on the Au(111 ) surface. P. M. Nagel, S. Guo, D. P. Fogarty, S. Van Lue, S. A. Kandel 661. Surface chemistry and radiation chemistry of Acetic Acid (CH 3 COOH) on Mo(110). H-L. Lee, L. D. Weeks, C. R. Arumainayagam 662. Surface enhanced raman scattering of para-(dimethylamino)cinnamaldehyde on noble metal substrates. K. E. Dunlap, C. M. Dondlinger, B. D. Gilbert 663. Surface-enhanced raman enhancement factor of azo dyes on Au & Ag colloids. A. Severson, B. Gilbert 664. Surface-enhanced raman scattering on novel silver nanoparticles in solution and immoblized on glass slides. C. M. Dondlinger, Κ. Ε. Dunlap, D. B. D. Gilbert

665. Synthesis of submicron fibers for sensor applications by electrospinning. A. Mantooth, T. M. Ticich, G. Berger, R. L. Vander Wal 666. System H 2 0 + HBr + CsBr at 5-55°C: Application of Harned rule and Pitzer formal­ ism. N. K. Sangoi, E. B. Christiansen, S. N. Gibbs, L N. Roy, R. N. Roy 667. System HCI + NdCI 3 + H 2 0 from 5 to 55°C: A study of Harned's rule. C. N. Roy, M. C. Pesek, L. N. Roy, R. N. Roy 668. System HCI + PrCI 3 + H 2 0 from 5 to 55°C: A study of Harned's rule. B. J. Tabor, C. A. Himes, S. J. Richards, L. N. Roy, R. N. Roy 669. T2-selective pulses in magnetic resonance micro-imaging. J. B. Noble, Κ. Μ. Smith, S. M. Brothers, S. D. Bush 670. Theoretical and experimental studies of thionyl halide electron attachment. P. Nguyen, J. M. Van Doren 671. Theoretical investigations of polyatomic interferences in inductively coupled plasmamass spectrometry experiments. K. C. Sears, T. J. Dudley, J. W. Ferguson, R. S. Houk, M. S. Gordon 672. Thermal isomerization of and HX elimina­ tion from hydrochlorofluoro-ethanes and propanes. V. Hubbard, D. Mudzingwa, B. L. Kalra, D. K. Lewis 673. Thermal treatment of color ceramics. J. F. Chiang, L. J. Mahoney 674. Thermodynamic properties of third row transition metal hexafluorides. A. S. Clark, D. A. Johnson, E. F. Westrum 675. Thermodynamic stability of tetramer RNA sequences in the presence of metal cations. A. J. Wood, G. Chen, T. R. Krugh, D. H. Turner 676. Thermodynamics of HCI + TbCI 3 + H 2 0 system. S. J. Richards, B. J. Tabor, C. A. Himes, L. N. Roy, R. N. Roy 677. Thermodynamics of unsymmetrical mixed electrolytes HCI + TbCI 3 + H 2 0 . R. D. Shaffer, Ε. Β. Christiansen, S. N. Gibbs, L. N. Roy, R. N. Roy 678. Transfer of coherences in a system of dipolar-coupled nuclear spins using adiabatic pulses. K. Cardwell, J-S. Lee, A. Khitrin 679. Water-soluble semiconductor nanocrystals: Synthesis and characterization of ZnSe and Mn(ll) doped ZnSe nanocrystals. E. J. McLaurin, E. M. Olano, J. Z. Zhang 680. XPS and AES analysis of Ν ί ^ Ζ η χ Ο solid solutions. A. K. Starace, S. C. Petitto, M. A. Langell Section Η Convention Center HallD Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Chemical Education Cosponsored with SOCED L. E. Garrison,

Organizer

11:15-1:15 681. 3,5-Dinitrosalicylic acid as a replacement for picric acid in the undergraduate labora­ tory. G. L. Milligan, C. W. Leyster, S. W. Hovorka, L. J. Steele 682. A fizzing reaction for K-8. Ν. Μ. Lock, F. Blanco-Yu 683. Atomic force microscopy and nanoparticle spectroscopy in the high school classroom. J. R. Boyd, V. N. Walters, T. L. Fitzsimmons, L. M. Mulfinger 684. Baeyer-Villiger oxidation with household sodium percarbonate. A. E. demons, R. A. Kjonaas 685. Bridging the gap between theory and practice: Comparing a simulation to the actual death of a Daniel cell. M. R. Johnson, R. W. McGiff, Μ. Ο Simmons, Κ. Β. Rider 686. Bridging the gap: Integrating secondary education science and collegiate experi­ ence. A. R. Hower, L. A. DiCicco

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

CHED 687. Computer simulated molecular binding of anti-cancer drugs to C-kit tyrosine kinase. K. Williamson, W. T. Potter, R. E. Howard 688. Design of an enzyme kinetics laboratory: Combining structural data mining and microplate screening. J. P. Hill, L. D. Frost 689. Development of inquiry centered activities for the secondary chemistry classroom. D. A. Durham, J. Stamback, S. L. Hiley 690. Effects of research participation on pre­ conceptions in science. B. M. Melroe, D. P. Cartrette 691. Employment of various educational tech­ niques in the Carnegie Science Center's Works Theater. K. J. Stutz 692. Empowering women for the future: The women in chemistry alliance. A. Baena, L. Lee, C. P. Higginbotham, R. A. Richards 693. Forensic chemistry pilot laboratory course for Millikin University. K. L. Topalovich, E. R. Acheson 694. Formative assessment in undergraduate general chemistry. V. Cordova, M. G. Hlatshwayo, J. Bennett 695. Four principles of combinatorial chemistry in a solution-phase, two-step synthesis in the introductory organic chemistry lab. K. R. Wieland, D. J. Jeffrey, J. M. Burchfield 696. Furfural from corncobs: An undergraduate laboratory experiment. G. L. Miliigan, U. Martin 697. General synthetic route for tetraaryldiboron compounds. J. E. Winans 698. Human gender DNA quantitation using fluorogenic probes for Alu element detec­ tion. N. Stoilova Sr. 699. Inquiry-based exercises for physical chem­ istry: Hydrogenic model. J. D. Herdman, T. L. O. Barstis, J. Snow 700. Introducing analytical biochemistry across the curriculum using supercritical fluid extraction (SFE) and the case study approach: To SFE or not to SFE, extraction of caffeine (an alkaloid) from tea leaves. P. M. Schaber, K. D. Berchou, E. E. Wierchowski, H. A. Pines, J. E. Larkin, A. Suriani 701. Middle school students' understanding of chemical and physical change. C. C. Strom, B. L. Gonzalez 702. Molecular modeling comparison of carbon monoxide, cyanide ion, and molecular nitrogen. J. A. Overly, L. M. Altman 703. Peer Led Team Learning (PLTL) in chem­ istry: The student perspective. J. L. Cardot, V. C. Van Vranken, T. A. Knoezer 704. Permanent-magnet carbon-13 NMR in the first semester sophomore organic chemistry laboratory: Detecting rearrangement in the conversion of alcohols to alkyl halides. R. J. F. Tucker, R. A. Kjonaas 705. Quantitative determination of aluminum using AI-27 NMR: An undergraduate analyti­ cal chemistry experiment. L. R. Ingalls, M. A. Curtin 706. Student perspective on debunking the freshman myth that biology is easier then chemistry. S. A. Gibbs 707. Study of N,N-(dimethylamino)benzonitrile as an undergraduate physical chemistry lab: Fluorescence spectroscopy and Gaussian calculations. J. M. Beck, J. B. Foresman 708. Synthesis and characterization of a liquid crystal imine: A laboratory experiment for organic chemistry. J. D. Dilley, J. J. O'Donnell 709. Synthesis of biodiesel and its use in R/C cars and boats. R. A. Rome, B. W. Baldwin 710. Synthesis of ionic liquids as an under­ graduate laboratory experiment. O. Fai-Yengo, A. Chumbow, M. J. Campbell 711. The Blue Bottle: New applications of an old demonstration. A. K. Charlton, R. O. Glenn, J. R. Andreatta, L. D. Schultz 712. The wonders of Crayola wonder markers. J. L. Volpe, P. Snetsinger, G. DeMenna 713. Unified molecular orbital images for the chemistry classroom. M. K. Sprague, A. S. Larsen 714. Vertically integrated nanotechnology experiments for the undergraduate curricu­ lum. P. Wortley, M. C. Leopold, K. W. Kittredge

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

The Rise and Fall of Chlorofluorocarbons The Rise of CFCs Cosponsored with HIST, ENVR, and PHYS

3:25 733. Low-cost spectroscopy experiments for the physical chemistry laboratory: Lightemitting diodes and blue diode lasers. J. E. Whitten 3:50 734. Write Like a Chemist: A writing course and text for upper division chemistry majors. M. S. Robinson, F. L. Stoller, M. Costanza-Robinson, B. M. Horn, W. Grabe 4:15 735. Using digital libraries to build educa­ tional communities: The ChemCollective. D. Yaron

MONDAY AFTERNOON

Section D

Section A

Holiday Inn on the Bay West Coast

715. What is the demand for a position in a NSF-sponsored, chemistry REU program? D. M. Coon, J. J. Grabowski 716. WISE women in chemistry. J. M. Iriarte-Gross, C. Bishop Chemical Safety Issues for Radiation Work Cosponsored with CHAS, NUCL, and WCC

Holiday Inn on the Bay Pacific D New Directions in Teaching Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Jim Spencer, 2005 George C. Pimentel Award

Learning Chemistry Through Policy Issues and Civic Engagement Cosponsored with ENVR, and CEI M. Fisher and A. Baur, Organizers

R. S. Moog, Organizer, Presiding

T. Jordan, Organizer, Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 717. Learning to teach as I learn, not as I was taught. A. Grushow 2:00 718. Change in AP chemistry: Is anybody listening? J. I. Geider 2:25 719. Lies we tell our students. G. M. Bodner 2:50 Intermission. 3:00 720. Engaging students with inquiry. R. Cole 3:25 721. Award Address (George C. Pimen­ tel Award in Chemical Education, sponsored by The Dow Chemical Company). Award Address: New approaches to chemistry teaching. J. N. Spencer

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 736. Integration of biochemistry and public policy through the eyes of the FDA. T. E. Hagen Jr. 2:00 737. Contextualizing chemistry/biochem­ istry by infusing public policy and discourse. T. E. Elgren, H. Lehman 2:25 738. Nanotechnology: Content and con­ text. K. M. Kulinowski, C. Kelty 2:50 739. Green chemistry as a tool for achieving sustainability. M. M. Kirchhoff 3:15 Intermission. 3:25 740. Exploring civic engagement using XRF in the laboratory. S. J. Bachofer 3:50 741. Injecting policy issues into analytical chemistry and vice versa: The course inter­ section method. S. L. Belli, C. J. Smart, P. Batur 4:15 742. Incorporating service learning and public policy into a junior-level medicinal chemistry course. C. Castro 4:40 743. HIV/AIDS, malaria, malnutrition, and undergraduate biochemistry: A tale of two worlds. M. A. Fisher 5:05 Concluding Remarks. 7:00 Business Meeting.

Section Β Holiday Inn on the Bay Porthole Whither Goest Physical Chemistry? What's New for Incorporating into the Curriculum R. W. Schwenz, Organizer, Presiding 1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 723. New uses for electronic structure and molecular dynamics calculations. G. C. Schatz 2:00 724. Time dependent wave packets and quantum chemistry. S. R. Leone 2:25 725. Electronic motion in material of confined space; nanoscience. M. A. El-Sayed 2:50 726. Opportunities for incorporating nanotechnology into the physical chemistry curriculum. A. B. Ellis 3:15 Intermission. 3:25 727. Going nonlinear in understanding aqueous surfaces. G. L. Richmond 3:50 728. Integration of liquid- and solid-state NMR into the undergraduate physical chem­ istry curriculum. Κ. Τ. Mueller, Ν. Μ. Washton 4:15 722. How I would revise physical chemis­ try for undergraduates. R. N. Zare

Section Ε Holiday Inn on the Bay Wicker Teaching Computer Modeling in First-Year Chemistry F. Autenrieth, Organizer, Presiding

S. H. Hixson, Organizer

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 744. Chemical education and a future of cyber-enabled chemistry research. T. Holme 2:00 746. Computer assisted teaching of quantum mechanics and atomic theory. F. Autenrieth 2:25 745. CIITN webtool: Employing informa­ tion science and technology to harness global information sources. R. E. Glaser, Y. Sui, K. M. Carson 2:50 747. Measuring evolution of chemical thought using formula recognition. J. R. Appling, J. C. Little 3:15 Intermission. 3:25 748. Digital and web-based supplements to encourage organic pre-lab preparation: A complete package. B. L. Groh 3:50 749. Computational chemistry for com­ munity colleges. H. Ungar, J. Camara

K. Parson, Presiding

Section F

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 729. DUE: Supporting undergraduate education at NSF. H. Ungar, K. Parson, S. H. Hixson, Η. Η. Richtol 2:00 730. Chemistry Is in the News. Evolution of a modem curriculum. R. E. Glaser, K. M. Carson, Y. Sui, B. Hodgen, C. Koetting, S. M. Schelble, U. Zoller, G. Fels, S. Rodgers 2:25 731. Bio-organic reaction animations. S. A. Fleming, P. B. Savage 2:50 732. Integrating proteomics into the undergraduate laboratory curriculum. E. S. Eberhardt, E. M. Woolridge 3:15 Intermission.

Convention Center HallD

Section C Holiday Inn on the Bay East Coast NSF-Catalyzed Curriculum Development

Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Biological Chemistry Cosponsored with SOCED L. E. Garrison, Organizer 2:00-4:00 750. In vivo and in vitro interface photocrosslinking studies with genetically incorpo­ rated p-benzoylphenylalanine. I. S. Farrell, J. L Hazen, S. M. Blanck, R. A. Mehl

751. A polymorphism in an aldehyde dehydro­ genase gene in Drosophila melanogaster. Association with enzyme activity and fre­ quency variation among natural populations. P. A. Jones, J. D. Fry 752. Activity of ascorbate oxidase and ascorbate oxidase modified with activated methoxypolyethylene glycol. D. Mac, D. P. Rillema 753. Amine release from sulfonic acids: Degra­ dation of VX by taurine-utilizing bacteria. B. A. Dengler, M. P. Labare 754. An efficient approach to place mutant genes in an expression vector. M. Geryk, I. Urbatsch 755. Analysis of actin in the aphanoplasmodium and coralloid Plasmodium of Stemonitis flavogenita. J. T. B. Collins, M. K. Brittain 756. Apoptosis-inducing effects of Antimycin A and analogs. W. E. Sanford Jr., J. D. Pike, L. M. Ambrosini, S. L. Fullam 757. Attempts at constructing novel Na, Κ ATPase/H, Κ ATPase expression vectors. M. E. Wiggers, S. Sherritt, D. L. McGill 758. Bcl-2 family proteins: Subcellular localiza­ tion and translocation in response to a microtubule inhibitor. B. A. Skaug, T. C. Chambers 759. Binding and kinetic studies of lactoperoxidase with phenolic substrates. K. Mansfield Matera, J. Davin, C. Lindsey, S. A. Torain, K. Lelonis 760. Biologically active phenolic metabolites of dalea aurea (FABACEA). G. Belofsky, R. Carreno, D. R. Wallace 761. Broad spectrum antimicrobial activity of leukocyte extracts from the American alliga­ tor (Alligator mississippiensis). M. E. Méchant, N. J. Léger, E. Jerkins, M. P. Sims, K. M. Loubser, K. Mills 762. Buffers for the physiological pH range of BES, TABS, and MOBS from 5 to 55°C. A. N. Simon, C. E. Denton, S. R. LeNoue, L. N. Roy, R. N. Roy 763. C-terminal processing of polyphenol oxidase from Agaricus bisporus. J. K. Inlow, C. M. Marusek, W. W. Flurkey 764. Characterization of C. elegans genes that were related to innate immunity using functional genomics. J. P. Luciano, A. Aballay, N. Gaddis, S. E. Kerry, J. L. Tenor 765. Characterization of a novel gene coding for a putative lipid storage protein. E. M. Hlavin, J. T. Tansey 766. Characterization of a novel mechanismbased cross-linking reaction for protein kinases. S. A. Bains, Κ. Μ. Shokat, D. J. Maly 767. Characterization of bacterial and archaeal thioredoxin systems via protein film voltammetry. S. E. Chobot, H. H. Hernandez, C. L Drennan, S. J. Elliott 768. Characterization of intracellular lipid drop­ lets by Raman microscopy. Κ. Τ. Beers, S. R. Bartholomew, D. H. Johnston, J. T. Tansey 769. Characterization of key molecular features in the membrane activity of anti-listerial bacteriocins. J. A. Whiles Lillig, A. Nadell 770. Characterization of mouse ceruloplasmin. A. N. Nguyen 771. Characterization of proteases in Dusky Pigmy Rattlesnake {Sistrurus miliarius barboun) venom. A. L. Juusela, D. D. Jackson 772. Chelation studies of the marine metabolite Adenochrome. R. B. Sears, J. K. Hand, C. M. Davis-McGibony 773. Cleavage of DNA by a lysine-ferrocene conjugate. P. J. Higgins, M. F. Freitag, C. Talarek 774. Comparison of different storage protein gene activities in anautogenous and autog­ enous adult mosquitoes. W. D. Dyer, U. K. Jinwal, R. L Willis, H. Benes 775. Comparison of telomerase activity in longand short-lived avian species. A. S. Dickson, R. Hrdlickova, J. Nehyba, H. R. Bose Jr. 776. Competitive inhibition of LuxS: A quorum sensing enzyme. M. MaCauley, N. Stephenson, S. Ulrich 777. Complex functionality of KcsA. B. Karmaker, A-M. Nickel 778. Construction of a DNA library and comple­ mentation of a Rhodospirillum rubrum mutant. J. E. Kreutz, J. N. Shepherd, F. Neacsu 779. Crystal structure of lactate dehydrogenase from chicken breast muscle. J. M. Warfel, N. Polder, S. R. Herron, C. Srinivasan, K. A. Kantardjieff

TECH-31

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 780. Degradation rates and metabolites of endocrine disrupting agents. W. M. Winslow, S. K. O'Shea 781. Deoxyribonuclease II (DNase II), a zinc enzyme, and its inhibition by EDTA and 2-mercaptoethanol. J. V. Morrissey 782. Dependence of DNA-protein cross-linking on DNA sequence. M. E. King, J. Scala, A. Grana, E. D. A. Stemp 783. Design, biological expression, and metal binding studies of a 4 W-IGA. G. M. Skubick, S. D. Moran, C. Tommos, B. R. Gibney 784. Designing a recombinant DNA methodol­ ogy for the production of serine carboxypeptidase II at the undergraduate level. I. Saravia, M. Kopecki-Fjetland 785. Determination and comparison of pyrrolizidine alkaloids from Pacific Northwest Senecioid taxa. A. M. Jones, D. S. Kelley, A. K. Miller, R. B. Kelley 786. Determination of the conformational space available to the chromophore in GFP, GFP mutants and fluorescent proteins related to GFP. S. L Maddalo, M. Zimmer 787. Determination of the postmortem interval by fluorescent analysis of DNA degradation. M. M. Fletcher, C. E. Stilts 788. Determining the effects of local DNA environment on cross-linking. M. S. Batangan, C. L. Lightfoot, J. Hale, C. Ochoa, K. Kurbanyan, A. M. Lueras, E. D. A. Stemp 789. Development of experiments for the undergraduate forensic biochemistry labora­ tory. N. M. Beyer, F. C. Mayville Jr. 790. Development of quantitative assay for glutathione reductase. F. Medina, E. Healy 791. Development of yeast expression vectors for use in a novel assay. N. Kamath, J. R. Flammer, T. Borza, M. K. Pflum 792. Differential in vitro cytotoxicity of (-)-Epicatechin Gallate (ECG) to cancer and normal cells from the human oral cavity. H. A. Nissim, M. E. Krupka, H. L. Zuckerbraun, H. Babich 793. Does DHEA virilize female mice? E. M. Ciak, S. G. Bassett 794. Effect of mut-2(r459) allele on recombina­ tion between loci on linkage groups II and X of Caenorhabditis elegans. C. Almeida, M. Stratton, C. Patten, D. Kondili 795. Effect of electronic, steric, and hydropho­ bic factors in electron-withdrawing phenols on the competitive inhibition of L-tyrosine binding to tyrosinase. Β. Τ. Wang, R. P. Verma, C. R. Selassie 796. Effect of surfactants on Candida rugosa lipase activity. I. Spalding, J. Bertrand, C. Whiddon, H. Carlsson 797. Effects of microwave heating on the struc­ ture and activity of lysozyme as compared to conventional heating. R. Morey, H. Boylan 798. Effects of temperature and ionic strength on the interaction between Bordetella per­ tussis filamentous hemagglutinin and adeny­ late cyclase toxin. J. L. Palumbo, M. A. Fisher 799. Efficiency of a protein degradation bacte­ rial motor: ClpAP. M. D. Plazas-Mayorca, J. A. Kenniston, R. T. Sauer 800. Elucidating the biosynthesis of rhodoquinone in C. elegans using RNAi. J. R. Strahan, J. N. Shepherd, A. Lunceford, C. F. Clarke 801. Enantioselectivity of Phosphotriesterase and G60A mutant analogue for chiral organophosphates. J. E. Carpenter, F. M. Raushel 802. Encapsulation of Horseradish Peroxidase into liposomes using the lipid film hydration and the dehydration/hydration techniques. M. Santiago Jr. 803. Engineering of a cost-efficient small-scale bioreactor. S. R. Bartholomew, J. T. Tansey 804. Evaluation of computer assisted drug design for production of therapeutics directed against ricin and related ribosomal inactivating proteins. J. Trice, J. Chen, B. W. Hicks 805. Evidence that multiple GABA A receptor arginines coordinate binding of the carboxylic group of GABA. A. J. Jansen, K. A. Gniotczynski, D. A. Wagner, M. V.Jones 806. Evolutionary lineage of lipid droplet pro­ teins implicated in neutral lipid metabolism. L. O. Dickey, J. T. Tansey 807. Examination of alternative splicing in SGCE gene. R. Roth, L. Ozelius, L. Liu

32-TECH

808. Expression of a putative caspase from Schizophyllum commune. J. P. Grondin, A. K. Roberts, Ε. Ε. Bendana, Κ. Μ. Fox 809. Extraction of Taxol from soil with possible commercial application. D. T. Vo, A. M. Hoffman 810. Fast-forwarding Nidogen/GFP evolution by computational design. X-T. T. Nguyen, M. Zimmer 811. Fatty acid transport in vascular smooth muscle (VSM). B. J. Gillenwater, T. J. Allen 812. Fluorescent-based assay for ribozyme activity. E. M. Toth, C. E. Rohlman 813. Folding of the disulfide containing protein Ribonuclease A (RNase A). L. Perez, Y. Silva, W. J. Lees 814. Generating cysteine depleted polymerases for studying dynamic interactions during translesion synthesis. L. M. Krusko 815. Genetic incorporation of the unnatural photocrosslinking amino acid p-benzoylphenylalanine into malate dehydrogenase as a tool for studying protein-protein interactions. S. M. Blanck, R. A. Mehl 816. Glucose metabolism and enzymology in Acidobacterium capsulatum. L. E. Sommerville, C. Fujii, J. Lee, C. DelaRosa 817. Glutathione peroxidase homologs from Staphylococcus aureus. C. Wesley, J. Luba 818. Heme coordination chemistry of ferric cytochromes c'. A. M. Tiwari, A. E. Servid, M. C. Kecskes, J. M. Stafford, J. W. B. Moir, W. Huston, R. R. Eady, C. R. Andrew 819. Homology modeling of Cdk4 with the T-loop in both the "in" and "out" conforma­ tions. R. S. Reeves, M. J. Grossel, M. Zimmer 820. How does the DNA glycosylase MutY repair nucleosomal DNA? S. Petesch, K. A. Haushalter 821. Hyaluronan affects integrin-mediated adhesion of colon cancer cells to the extra­ cellular matrix protein laminin. M. A. Twesme 822. Hydrophobic contributions in ligand-DNA interactions. J. K. Phillips, D. Graves 823. Identification of lipid droplet proteins in macrophages. T. M. Ander, J. T. Tansey 824. Identifying sera biomarkers from obese and insulin resistant patients using MALDITOF Mass Spectrometry. S. M. Lofgren, G. L. Nelsestuen, A. Sinaiko 825. Elucidation of the cell signaling pathway involved in atherosclerosis linked events. N. D. Boespflug, R. A. Udelhoven 826. In vitro site-directed mutagenesis of glyc­ erol kinase in Escherichia coli. J. M. Kohlenberg 827. Incorporation of unnatural amino acids into the active site of a nonspecific nitroreduc­ tase to evaluate activation of cancer pro­ drugs. J. C. Jackson, R. A. Mehl 828. Inhibition of restriction enzyme cleavage detects sites of DNA-Protein crosslinking. Y. Trejo, N. Rollins, P. To, E. V. Rivas, A. L. Reno, E. D. A. Stemp 829. Investigating ligand-receptor interactions: Organic foldamers recognizing the EVH1 domain. E. J. Dimise, S-J. Stimpson, J. D. Kehlbeck 830. Investigating osteocalcin structure via FT-IR analyis of amide III bands. W. Roux, R. V. Prigodich 831. Investigating the effects of multi-amine salts on genetic transformation efficiency. N. Sutton, A. Zanella, M. E. Hatcher 832. Investigation into the proposed catalytic site of the spliceosome: The U2-U6 RNA complex. N. W. Harbison, S. J. S. Tate, V. J. DeRose 833. Withdrawn. 834. Investigation of temperature induced structural changes of egg white lysozyme by fluorescence spectroscopy. L. Willie, I. A. Struganova

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

835. Isolation and separation of fatty acids from two Calanoid copepods, Diaptomus sicilis and Epischura lacustris. K. M. Schwaderer, M. A. Teece 836. Isolation and study of pea lectin in proteincarbohydrate interactions. R. A. Udelhoven, M. J. Cloninger 837. Low-dose, long-term cell cycle effects of triethyleneglycoldimethyacrylate (TEGDMA) on L929 mouse fibroblast cells. C. Wilson, L. A. Wetmore 838. M.Ecori: enzyme studies. J. A. Gomez, B. Youngblood, N. O. Reich 839. Model system studies of NADH dehydro­ genase reactions using N-substitued 1,4dihydropyridine. R. M. Koralewski, R. D. Libby 840. Modulatory effect of taurine on two neu­ rotransmitters, glutamate and gammaaminobutyric acid (GABA), in HCN-2 neu­ ronal cells. R. Snead, L. A. Wetmore 841. Mutational changes in Class 1 MHC/ HLA-A2 affect peptide binding. S. E. Dunn, T. K. Baxter, Β. Μ. Baker 842. Neonatal genistein exposure and its effects on the ovary: Alterations in protein expression using immunohistochemistry and Western blotting. Κ. Μ. Hernandez Cruz 843. NMR and computational studies of the polyproline II structure. J. R. Bush, J. D. Kehlbeck, J. S. Anderson 844. Observation of DNA oxidative damage through a modified uridine. A. S. Thompson 845. Oligomeric proanthocyanidins interaction with Vitamin C. M. I. Refaat, L. L. Kirk, K. Silliman 846. Optimization of the overexpression of protein kinase A. A. B. Studniski, J. Grzybowski, G. Veglia 847. Pharmacological induction of premature senescence in human fibroblasts using beryllium sulfate. S. M. Kindell, S. S. A. Coates, R. K. Gary 848. Phenolic metabolites of dalea schottii (fabaceae). G. Belofsky, C. Bridge 849. Photoacoustic study of carbon monoxide dissociation from myoglobin. W. D. Terrell, J. Miksovska 850. Phototrophic growth of Halobacterium salinarum. E. S. Satkiewicz, G. J. Turner 851. Polarimetric study of the growth media of Neurospora crassa. S. A. Reigh, A. Infanger 852. Progress in generating an arginine kinase dimer using site-directed mutagenesis. R. Prada, P. L. Edmiston 853. Progress towards the synthesis and test­ ing of the phytotoxin herbarumin I using Arabidopsis thaliana. L. Baron, K. Yap, R. Lopez, C. Curtis, A. Nguyen, S. Blauth, D. Soulsby 854. Protein interface studies of the yeast triosephosphate isomerase dimer interface with the unnatural photocrosslinking amino acid, p-benzoylphenylalanine. J. L. Hazen, R. A. Mehl 855. Protein stabilization during solid-oil-in-oil encapsulation with polyethylene glycol. F. J. Barrios, W. Al-Azzam, K. Griebnow 856. Proteolytic cleavage studies of the effect of fructation on gamma-crystallin conformation. J. C. Tomko, M. A. Fisher 857. Proteomic analysis of the systemic immune response of drosophila. D. Lopez, L. Ehret-Sabatier 858. QSAR study of the hydrolysis of phenyl hippurates by proteases. E. A. Allen, C. Bateman, S. K. O'Shea 859. Quantification and functional studies of a Na,K-ATPase and Η,Κ-ATPase chimera. A. Bray, E. Ferraris, D. L. McGill 860. Quantification, by mass spectrometry, of acetylation at specific lysine residues on the amino-terminal tail of yeast histone H3. K. G. Kline, C. Smith 861. Rb-family protein complexes in 3T3-L1 preadipocyte differentiation. J. Barham, L. H. Taylor, T. E. Hayes, R. E. McGehee 862. Reductive pathway of penicillin-resistant Pseudomonas syringae. R. L. Gant, M. F. Santiago, G. M. Meyer 863. Regulation of guanylyl cyclase C by the PDZ protein IKEPP. L Edgington, C. Hodson, S. Milgram 864. Regulation of the human presenilin 1 gene by p53 protein and zinc finger proteins Sp1 and ADR1. M. L Baez, H. K. Das 865. Reversible conversion of xanthine dehy­ drogenase to xanthine oxdiase. C. J. Deguffroy, M. A. Fisher 866. RNA-protein crosslinking via the flashquench technique. E. Khamou, C. L. Lightfoot, C. B. Evangelista, E. Lee, A. L. Reno, E. D. A. Stemp

867. Role of zinc and zinc transporter in the pathogenesis of prostate cancer. D. Moody 868. Saccharomyces cerevisae and Candida albicans metabolize arginine and glutamine differently. N. E. Flynn, J. Seely, M. Patyrak, Z. Martin 869. Screening of environmental samples for microorganisms capable of oxidative biotransformation. A. Kainovic, T. L. O'Keeffe, M. M. Baum 870. Selected experiments for the undergradu­ ate chemistry laboratory using a relatively inexpensive system to detect nitric oxide. L. M. Dieckman, J. Bumpus, L. A. Beltz 871. Selective inhibition of mutant histone deacetylases. M. Hedglin, S. M. Ulrich 872. Self-assembly of guanosine derivatives in Aqueous Media. L. Rivas, M. Garcia, J. M. Rivera 873. Semi-volatile compound made by gram positive bacterium is an effective antibiotic. S. A. Morbeck, A. M. Hoffman 874. SHetA2 induces mitochondrial swelling, superoxide formation and apoptosis in human cancer cells. W. J. Kelly, L. W. Gill, B. Hannafon, D. M. Benbrook 875. Signaling and transcription factor activa­ tion. K. M. Schneider, D. Goel, C-J. Hsiao, S. R. Stapleton 876. Simple model systems for DNA-Protein crosslinks. C. B. Evangelista, M. E. King, E. D. A. Stemp, D. Cizmeciyan 877. Site-directed mutagenesis of the E. coli prolyl-tRNA synthetase editing domain. N. L. Thome, C. Silvers, K. Musier-Forsyth 878. Site-directed mutagenesis using asparagine-29, leucine-33, and leucine-37 on the interaction between GATA-1 and DNA. D. J. Lubbers, M. J. Pikaart 879. Withdrawn. 880. Structural features responsible for GFPuv and S147P-GFP's improved fluorescence. N. Y. Baffour-Awuah, F. Fedeles, M. Zimmer 881. Study of the secondary structure of lipidbound antimicrobial peptide piscidin-1 through circular dichroism and solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance. M. Cotten, S. Jones, Y. Nikolayeva 882. Substrate location by the DNA repair enzyme SMUG1. S. Bundick, R. Mashiyama, K. A. Haushalter 883. Superoxide anion generation via autoxidation of retinoids: A single electron transfer process. W. J. Kelly, G. W. Shepherd, G. O. Hassan 884. Synthesis of S-glutathionyl-3-bromooxindole acetic acid as a potential Trojan Horse inhibitor of glyoxalase II. A. Erbeck, E. J. Brush 885. Synthesis, deuteration and analysis of bovine lactoferricin peptides. A. Subotic, D. Greathouse 886. Withdrawn. 887. Tea extracts inhibit leukemic but not nor­ mal Τ lymphocyte growth. J. W. Jansen, L. A. Beltz, K. P. Manfredi 888. The effect of Cdc25 phosphatase hot spot mutations in vivo. F. M. Thomas, J. Rudolph 889. The effect of coordination number on hole-size and non-planar deformations of free coenzyme F430 and F430 in methyl coenzyme M reductase. C. Mbofana, L. N. Todd, M. Zimmer 890. The effect of liposome encased porphyrin on C6 cells in phototherapeutic treatment. R. A. Matundan, M. F. Roberto, D. A. Reeves, T. Smith, P. K. Kerrigan, J. Haley 891. The phototherapeutic treatment of C6 cells using water soluble porphyrins. J. Padavil, D. P. Kerrigan, R. Matundan, D. J. Haley, M. Roberto, T. Smith, D. J. Bradshaw 892. The role of XBP1 in tumorigenesis. J. Alexander, L. Romero, A. Koong 893. Thermal stability of higher order RNA structure. B. Granlund, D. Sauter, C. E. Rohlman 894. Thermodynamic parameters of DNA adenosine bulge loop nearest-neighbors. B. Gill, N. Watkins, J. SantaLucia Jr. 895. Toward determination of the structural basis for HIV-1 integrase substrate recogni­ tion. Y. E. Paz, W. L. Santos, G. L. Verdine

CHED 896. Tryptophan fluorescence: Probing the carboxyphosphate domain of E. coli carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. J. K. West, B. W. Laird, J. L. Johnson 897. Uptake of Cu-64 by HEP G2 cells and purification of a2M. P. M. Hamer, M. C. Under 898. Use of the modified (Kado) microsuspension assay to screen Dusky Pigmy Rattlesnake {Sistrurus miliarius barbouri) venom for potential mutagenicity. C. A. Rouhier, D. D. Jackson 899. Using diverse aromatic systems as inhibitors of an aminoglycoside antibiotic kinase. T. R. Murdock, A. Al-Mestarihi, C. Sperry, M. H. Perlin, J. R. Cox 900. Withdrawn. 901. Variation in honey bee venom composition as a function of aggressive behavior. C. L Wong, R. C. Frederick, L. M. Mulfinger, J. Hosier, M. D. Boyle Section G Convention Center HallD Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Computational Chemistry Cosponsored with SOCED L. E. Garrison,

Organizer

2:00-4:00 902. Topological Index Calculator III: Computation of the Hosoya Index using SMILES representation. S. D. Granz, I. J. Levy 903. A computational study of cadmium sulfide quantum dots. J. Stoll, A. R. Spencer, S. Nunes, J. Madura 904. A density functional theory investigation of molecular complexes of sulfur trioxide. B. N. Ida, J. M. Standard 905. Ab initio study of hydrogen chemisorption to carbon nanotube models. S. A. Houston, J. J. Vadnal, R. C. Brown 906. Aqueous solubility of organic drug molecules: Continuum solvation method versus quantitative structure-property relationship. S. K. LaiHing, S. Raman, K. LaiHing 907. Building and testing a 16-node cluster for computational chemistry. J. S. Clements, K. M. Glasser, A. C. Goren, S. Branham, D. Carrico, M. Lala, K. Moorman, M. Le Van 908. Chiral enantiomer of B-DNA: A computer modeling project. L. Madan, J. Davis 909. Competition of H 2 and CO elimination reactions in Y+acetone. C. J. Edwards, E. D. Glendening 910. Computational analysis of zincocene, decamethylzincocene, and decamethyldizincocene. M. K. Ludlow, J. B. Foresman 911. Computational investigation of the acetonitrile anion with explicit solvents. A. M. Goncher 912. Computational studies into the mechanism of human tyrosyl-DNA phosphodiesterase. K. M. Glasser, J. S. Clements, A. C. Goren, C-G. Zhan 913. Computational studies of fluoroolefins as peptide mimetics. B. G. Tillman, J. J. Urban 914. Computational studies of the conformational preferences of fluorinated amino acids. J. L. Gann, J. J. Urban 915. Computational study of the trend in boiling points for chlorinated acetic acids compared to fluorinated acetic acids. C. L. Barnes, O. P. Priest, P. M. Todebush 916. Computational study of Zr+CH 2 0 reactions. E. N. Oelker, E. D. Glendening 917. Computer predictions of chemical reactions. S. P. Swartzentruber II, M. Swanson, T. Kuntzleman 918. Duquesne REU experience involving density functional investigations of C2-substituent effects in bis(oxazoline) copper(ll) catalysts on the rate and selectivity of DielsAlder reactions. E. G. Franklin, J. DeChancie, J. D. Evanseck 919. Electronic structure of ZnSb and a hypothetical "MgSb". M. A. Fierke, G.J. Miller 920. Extraction of the pair potential from structural data for liquid. J. R. Changstrom, X. Song

921. Molecular dynamics simulations of the HIV Rev-RRE complex. A. M. Knolhoff, K. J. Kennett, A. S. Turner, C. L. Robinson, M. C. Nagan 922. Molecular mechanics study of chemisorbed hydrogen on full models of carbon nanotubes as a fucntion of radii, geometry, and hydrogen coverage. N. L. Vaccariello, R. C. Brown 923. Molecular modeling as a tool for understanding the reactions of monochloramine with hydroxylamine and hydroxylammonium ion. T. J. Paslay, G. H. Purser 924. Monte Carlo simulations of hydrogen uptake levels in an infinite array of carbon nanotubes. J. J. Vadnal, M. Rectenwald, R. C. Brown 925. Multicenter bonding and Atoms in Molecules (AIM) theory. D. M. Clark, L. R. Schmitz 926. Nucleophilic substitution at selenium in cyclic diselenides. F. P. Lee, S. M. Bachrach 927. Nucleophilic substitution at selenium in cyclic selenosulfides. C. Walker, S. M. Bachrach 928. QM/MM reference to modeling ground state properties of the hydrogen bond. S. Amstein, J. D. Evanseck 929. Relative bond dissociation energies of M 2+ [18]annulenes and organosulfur ligands: A theoretical (DFT) study. K. A. Beran, R. Ruiz, T. Millstead 930. REU experience covering a 100 nanosecond comparison of implicit and explicit solvation methods of biomolecules. R. A. Newton, J. D. Evanseck 931. Solution-phase nucleophillic substitution of SCI2 and SOCI2. T. Moon, S. M. Bachrach 932. Stability of BaPtTI2. T. J. Barker, G. J. Miller 933. Structure and reactivity of nitrile anions. J. N. Geidosch, J. D. Madura, F. F. Fleming 934. Study of pentazolium cations for use in ionic liquid materials. S. R. Elzey, M. S. Gordon 935. TD-DFT studies of extended pi-systems. D. W. Demoin, S. M. Bachrach 936. The Fourier Grid Hamiltonian method for calculation of vibrational frequencies in nitromalonamide. Z. E. Goude, J. N. Woodford 937. Theoretical analysis of the bond dissociation energies of M(NH 3 ) 5 L 2 + and its potential application in Hydrodesulfurization processes. K. A. Beran, A. R. Gipson, E. Estrada, D. Healer 938. Theoretical studies a newly proposed IR frequency scale for acidity. S. M. Stanford, M. Juhasz, E. S. Stoyanov, C. A. Reed, H. Carlsson Section H Convention Center HallD Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Environmental Chemistry Cosponsored with ENVR, and SOCED L. E. Garrison,

Organizer

2:00-4:00 939. Phytoremediation of tin. M. Joseph 940. Pyrrolizidine Alkaloid determination and comparision from the Cynoglosseae Tribe. M. L. Conrad, B. J. Hegtvedt, J. Brockey, T. Holcomb, R. B. Kelley, H. Nyby 941. Analysis of organochlorine residues in indoor air using passive air sampling methodology. K. M. Willard, R. L. Falconer 942. Analysis of pesticides in organically and traditionally grown root vegetables. T. Motley, R. L. Falconer 943. Analysis of phosphates in water and soil samples near chicken farms. C. Hill, J. J.O'Donnell 944. Analysis of the cadmium shoot accumulation uptake profile of Helianthus annuus. M. M. Meighan, J. MacNeil 945. Analyzing lead content in drinking water using graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrophotometry. A. M. Rizzuti, L. N. Rogers, N. Philip 946. Aquatic environmental photochemistry and biological activity of fluoroquinolone antibiotics. E. L. Matzen, K. H. Wammer, J. J. Werner, K. McNeill 947. Aquatic sorption and resuspension of sedimentary phosphorus in Lake Macatawa. H. M. Mentzer, N. Hoogeveen, R. Rediske, G. F. Peaslee

948. Arsenic and uranium analysis of water samples. S. Begay, J. C. Ingram 949. Arsenic remediation of drinking water using limestone: Contaminant interference and surface morphology. C. Campbell 950. Atmospheric plume modeling of class 2 liquefied compressed gases. M. Carter, N. Loney, G. Rao, M. Seals, B. Bosuku, B. Tisdale, R. Clark, T. Chisholm, P. Harvey 951. Bioremediation of mining refuse at Tar Creek. M. Moskal, K. Williamson, J. B. Fisher, J. B. Tapp, C. Settles, W. T. Potter, K. P. Roberts 952. Connecting to the community: Servicelearning opportunities in environmental chemistry. R. A. Tache, L. K. Rathbone, C. A. Davis, A. G. Cavinato, R. B. Kelley, J. Cox, S. Harris 953. Detection method for low concentrations of CO2 in photoproductive water samples. L. J. Bell, E. M. White, D. J. Kieber 954. Determination of aqueous and solid phase metal contents in abandoned lead and zinc mining area. C. Green, C. Kim 955. Determination of organic compounds in drinking water using Liquid Solid Extraction and Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectroscopy. T. Zeigler 956. Determination of toxic elements in fish by ICP-AES. J. Fusco, J. C. Schaumloffel 957. Developing an alternative Potential Source Contribution Function analysis method and its application for Lake Champlain Basin mercury study. P. K. Panday, N. Gao, P. Hopke, E. Kim, R. Poirot 958. Development of a novel molecular recognition probe for the detection of phosphite in natural waters. A. Carlton, J. A. Moss, M. M. Baum, G. Hanrahan 959. Directed mutagenesis of Photosystem I to create a protein capable of light-driven reductive dehalogenation of haloaromatic pollutants. A. R. Bernard, K. Redding 960. Effect on gonadal developement of Argopecten irradains after short term exposure to nonylphenol. C. M. Lavelle, K. A. Douglass, S. K. O'Shea, D. F. Leavitt 961. Effects of alfalfa seedlings on chromium and manganese solutions. L. R. Kiley, D. M.Joseph 962. Effects of elevated carbon dioxide levels on a marine bacterium. E. A. Bare, R. E. Watts, J. T. Bays, M. A. Butkus, M. P. Labare 963. Effects of the Conservation Reserve Program on soil quality and overall economic viability of Maryland's Native Grassland Restoration Projects. K. A. Koenig, L. A. Sherman 964. Groundwater quality and land-use correlation in a small watershed in southwestern Connecticut. C. Kalweit, M. Sullivan, E. Alkhatib 965. Heavy metal analysis of commercially purchased fish. A. C. Palbus, J. MacNeil 966. Historical trace metal profile of a Lake Michigan sediment core. C. Avery, P. DeYoung, R. Rediske, G. F. Peaslee 967. Hydrogen generation from lithium aluminum hydride. C. M. Stanley, J. S. Wilkes 968. Identification of soil health and water quality. S. M. Ruston, A. Smisek, J. R. Schultz 969. Withdrawn. 970. Jack Mountain Research: Establishing a water quality background for the Jack Mountain area, Hot Spring County Arkansas. A. G. West, J. F. Nix 971. Kinetics of the hypochlorous acid degradation of a diketonitrile metabolite of the herbicide, isoxaflutole. J. R. Barber, J. C. DiCesare, G. H. Purser 972. Leaching of chromated copper arsenate from treated lumber. W. C. Kirui, J. T. Long 973. Magnesium hydride for use in fuel cells. C. R. Bullock, J. S. Wilkes 974. Management of manganese levels in a public water supply. M. J. Edwards, S. D. Bush 975. Measurement of anthropogenic pollutants at a southern California beach. C. J. Lentini, C. D. Clark, W. J. de Bruyn, C. A. Hughey 976. Mercury content of Lake Erie Perch (Perca fiavescens). G. Grasinger, S. Simeoni 977. Method development and measurement of silver in continental margin sediments off Washington State, USA. G. S. Yen, J. L. Morford

978. Microemulsions as media for extracting persistent organic pollutants for chemical analysis. C. M. Katz, J. K. N. Mbindyo 979. Middle Georgia water quality analysis by GC&SU undergraduates. M. Mobley, S. Hart, T. Blue, M. Fulghum, J. Horsley, C. Piper, A. Baena, L. Cramer, C. Brooks, J. Brinson, B. Graham, C. P. Higginbotham 980. Minimization of perchlorates in pyrotechnic compositions. D. W. Himmelberger 981. Partitioning of trivalent f-elements to various soil and rock minerals. B. N. Bottenus, S. E. Pepper, S. B. Clark 982. pH Dépendance of 2,4-D adsorption and biodégradation in garden soil. J. A. Motes, M. R. Shaikh, A. U. Shaikh 983. Pharmaceuticals and personal care products in residential and industrial effluent wastewater. E. Hammond, A. Humphrey, C. Nwankpa, K. LaiHing 984. Phosphorous content in domestic water supply. S. A. Schlipp, H. H. Schlipp, S. Vento 985. Photocatalyzed abatement of TNT in soil. W. R. Stevens, S. D. Bush 986. Photodegradation of alkyl pyridinium compounds. J. K. Yeates, D. B. Alger 987. Potential estrogen pollution from chicken litter. B. C. DeCoursey, J. B. Fisher, K. P. Roberts 988. Quantification of lead in paint chips and soil. S. A. Schlipp 989. Quantitative/Qualitative correlation between a stream and adjacent groundwater observation wells in a small watershed in southwestern Connecticut. D. Dabkowski, A. Kaska, E. Alkhatib 990. Rates of formation of porphyrin Ru nitrosyl complexes. C. E. Carrig, S. K. O'Shea 991. Reactions of iron (IV) and iron (III) in the formation of nitrosyl products. L M. Fischetti, S. K. O'Shea 992. Rosemary and lavender oils as deer repellents. W. E. Wolanski, W. G. Hollis Jr. 993. Slurry design for carbon dioxide based chemical mechanical planarization. R. Smith, G. M. Denison, J. M. DeSimone 994. Soil nutrients, San Salvador, Bahamas. C. E. Schiaffo, L. J. Stephens 995. The design and development of novel sensor materials for toxic heavy metal detection and sequestration. L. Potts, H. N. Gray, T. Shtoyko 996. The generation of nickel nitrosyl adduct from complex nickel(lll) and nickel(ll). A. Ferrie, S. K. O'Shea 997. Total organic carbon in Florida Bay. A. K. Gambrel, D. A. Hansell, C. Farmer 998. Trace metal analysis of soils from different sites in Salisbury, NC using ICP-AES. D. S. Pinkston, M. S. Sabo 999. Transesterification of soybean oil for preperation of biodiesel using wheat germ derived lipase. G. D. Labenski, R. Hartmann 1000. Trihalomethanes formation potential in simulated wet weather conditions. M. Hernandez, E. Alkhatib 1001. Water quality analysis by bacteriophage amplification. G. Goulding, I. Ferrer, Ε. Τ. Furlong 1002. A computational study on alkoxy radicals in the atmospheric degradation of 2-methyl3-buten-2-ol. T. H. Pham, T. S. Dibble 1003. Classification and structural crystalchemistry of uranyl oxalate compounds. P. A. Giesting, N. J. Porter, P. C. Burns 1004. Effects of Ni on growth of aerobic Pseudomonas mendocina bacteria. R. M. Thompson, E. A. Haack, P. A. Maurice 1005. Photochemistry of 1,6-dinitropyrene on un-activated silica gel as model of atmo­ spheric particulate matter. I. Alers-Rivera, M. C. Morel-Espinosa, R. Arce-Quintero 1006. Understanding the photochemistry of atmospheric halogen sources, intermedi­ ates, and reservoirs: Excited state dynamics and energy partitioning. T. C. Niday, S. W. North

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

TECH-33

TECHNICAL PROGRAM Section I Convention Center HallD Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Inorganic Chemistry Cosponsored with SOCED L. E. Garrison,

Organizer

2:00-4:00 1007. A tripodal ligand as a support for molecu­ lar wires. J. L. McGinnis, R. G. Baughman, J. M. McCormick 1008. Acid-base studies of [Ru(tpy)(OH2)]2(bpm)4+. J. Griepenburg, M. T. Mongelli, W. R. Murphy Jr. 1009. Activation conditions for dendrimer encapsulated Pt nanoparticles. A. R. Singh, B. Chandler 1010. Withdrawn. 1011. Adsorption of a tris-heteroleptic Ru(ll) complex containing a flavin mimic on to Ti0 2 -coated ITO electrodes. Μ. Ε. McGuire, J. Roden, C. Morin 1012. Amphiphillic polyoxometalate compounds based on the Wells-Dawson P 2 V 3 Wi 5 0 6 2 9 ". T. Lund, R. C. Chambers 1013. An experimental and theoretical investi­ gation of Olation reactions. C. L. Vallée, M. Delaney, C. F. Rodriquez 1014. Assembly of manganese-based magnetic clusters with a dendrimer template. H. E. Toomey, T. Coradin, C. Sanchez, C-O. Turrin, A. M. Caminade, J. P. Majorai, J. Larionova 1015. Characterization of novel vanadium(lll)/ acetate clusters formed in aqueous solution. B. A. Dougan, N. E. Brasch, F. H. Fry, C. J. Ziegler 1016. Characterizing catalysts for the transesterification of triacetin and methanol. M. E. McCaughey, J. G. Goodwin Jr. 1017. Combined gas chromatography/mass spectrometry and thermogravimetric analysis study of the thermal decomposition of bis(dibenzyldithiocarbamato)copper(ll). S. M. Brothers, M. J. Baird, A. F. Hepp, N. V. Duffy 1018. Complex formation between cobalt (II) and quinolines. L. Thomason, E. Csuhai, G. L. Seebach 1019. Computational modeling of enantioselectivity in the chelate-controlled synthesis of ansa-Zirconocenes. A. R. Dunn, D. C. Wiser 1020. Continued synthesis of a fullerene/transition metal supramolecular system. N. L King, A. Shiveley, C. H. McMillen, N. Moore, K. A. Walters 1021. Continued synthesis of a new building block to facilitate multi-metallic chains. S. A. Beetem, K. Kinman, K. A. Walters 1022. Coordination compounds of 2,5-bis(4'tert-butylpyridinium-1 '-yl)-3,6-dioxy-1,4benzoquinone. A. S. Koch, T. A. Clem 1023. Crystallographic studies of lead coordination compounds. E. L. Null, R. G. Baughman, J. M. McCormick 1024. Degradation of functionalized porous silicon in simulated body fluid. G. R. Fulmer, D. R. Thornberry, S. D. Rhodes, L. A. Porter Jr. 1025. Degradation of functionalized porous silicon in simulated gastric fluid. D. R. Thornberry, G. R. Fulmer, S. D. Rhodes, L. A. Porter Jr. 1026. Design of ruthenium dimer complexes for intercalation with DNA. T. W. Chapp, N. A. Law, S. Glazier 1027. Design of supramolecular compounds using copper (II) ion, 1,3-cyclohexanedicarboylic acid, 1,3-adamantanedicarboxylic acid, and ammonia derivatives. B. West, A. Vedenko, C. V. Gauthier 1028. Determination of aqueous heavy metal ions in multicomponent systems. K. D. Sienerth, A. J. Biscoe, E. E. Gooch 1029. Developing novel methods for detecting bacterial spores in extreme environments. M. L. Cable, A. Ponce 1030. Development of robust macrocyclic iron(lll) and manganese(lll) complexes as potential nitrogen atom-transfer reagents. C. Rivera, V. J. Pilewski, L. D. Vuocolo 1031. DNA binding studies of Ru(ll) complexes of 2-(2-pyridyl)benzimidizole. J. A. McClain, M. Zewail-Foote, G. Rawji 1032. DNA binding studies of [Ru(sal-phen)CI2]. C. M. Maypole, M. Zewail-Foote, G. Rawji 1033. Effect of bite angle in cyclopentadienyl diphosphine ruthenium complexes on binding neutral ligands. J. B. McNeill III, N. W. Hoffman, G. A. Khitrov, A. G. Marshall

34-TECH

1034. Effect of steric bulk on the reactivity of a triphosphazane. J. T. Wasacz, S. M. Young 1035. Effect of the particle size on the ability of FePt nanoparticles to transform to the L10 phase. J. K. Hand, D. E. Nikles 1036. Electrodeposition of NiW alloys with alumina nanoparticles. J. M. Armstrong, E. Podlaha 1037. Energetic ionic liquids. E. D. Kappe, J. S. Wilkes 1038. Europium complexation to ribose and glucose studied by luminescence. T. Guzman, S. Smith, H. Silber 1039. Extension of sweetener-anion coordination chemistry from Rh(l) to CpRu(ll) and Pd(ll)-Pincer systems. B. Wicker, R. Traylor, N. Hoffman, J. H. Davis Jr. 1040. Fluorinated aromatic germanes as possible precursors for chemical vapor deposition ( CVD ). A. M. Winkhart, N. J. Wells 1041. Fluorous modification of a Re(l) photocatalyst. T. Spears, J. Ormord, B. L. Bennett 1042. Formation of imino ester(s) mediated by [Re 6 Se 8 ] 2 + metal cluster core. D. P. Ferris, Z. Zheng, P. J. Orto 1043. From ethanediones to quinoxalines to silver complexes. V. Stacy, S. Cantalupo, B. McBumey, G. Crundwell, M. Zeller, J. B. Updegraff III, A. D. Hunter 1044. Further NMR and AA investigation of heteropolytungstate chemistry in nonpolar solvents. K. Coughlin, O. Bitar, M. Kozik 1045. Identification of resorc[4]arene derivatized metallic nanostructures. M. CondaSheridan, J. S. Gardner, R. G. Harrison, J. D. Lamb 1046. Interactions of monosaccharides with cis-bipyridine complexes of Ru(ll) and Rh(lll). L. T. McDonald, S. M. Lane, S. C. Haefner 1047. Investigations into the synthesis of ternary phases of Nd-Sb-Se and Nd-Sb-Te. J. A. Ball, L. H. Strauss 1048. Isolation and characterization of a chromium peptide from bovine liver. K. J. Banker, R. L. Peterson, C. F. Works 1049. Isotopic studies on the reaction of monochloramine with hydroxylamine. T. J. Hoppe, G. H. Purser 1050. Lewis acid catalysts for ring opening polymerizations. A. H. Ryan, G. E. Hofmeister 1051. Lithium doped YBCO type superconductors. J. R. Arnold Jr., M. J. Campbell 1052. Low temperature NMR studies of group 14 metalloles. F. Fridman, J. L. Mullin, H. J. Tracy 1053. Mechanism and energetics of solvent displacement from the (Arene)Cr(CO)2(solvent) complex. A. A. Bengali, R. Fehnel 1054. Mechanistic studies of light-induced darkening of mercuric sulfide. J. L. Hart, A. M. Macintosh 1055. Metal complexes of 3-hydroxyflavothione. B. L Tran, S. M. Cohen 1056. Metal complexes of dipyrromethene ligands. N. Janet, M. R. Malachowski 1057. Molecular mechanics analysis of platinum complexes with methionine residues. D. J. Chapman, Κ. Μ. Williams 1058. NADH electrooxidation using Bis (1,10phenanthroline-5,6-dione)(2,2'-bipyridine)ruthenium(ll)-exchange zirconium phosphate modified carbon paste electrodes. C. A. Casillas Barreto, M. B. Santiago, M. M. Vêlez, A. Diaz, A. R. Guadalupe, J. L Colon 1059. New rhenium(l) tricarbonyl compounds with amino ester derivatized bidentate diimine ligands. K. R. Crandall, R. S. Herrick, C. J. Ziegler, J. Shaw 1060. Non-aqueous synthesis of Ba + 2 , Ca + 2 , Pb + 2 , Sr +2 halo and hydroxy apatites. H. M. Brown, C. H. Yoder 1061. Novel palladium (IV) complexes: Synthesis and characterization. K. D. Sienerth, M. M. Caruso, R. M. Granger 1062. Organic synthesis on a chip: Chemical reactions on functionalized porous silicon. S. D. Rhodes, L. A. Porter Jr.

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

1063. p-Type nanocube CuO films and polycrystalline C u 2 0 films for photoelectrochemical energy conversion. T. A. Poison, A. Fillinger 1064. Photochemical approach for generating nitric oxide in microseconds. E. Bae, V. Moua, A. A. Pacheco 1065. Photochemical studies of a model compound for iron-only-hydrogenase. J. Harr, N. Martineau, C. F. Works 1066. Photoluminescence of rare earth silver/ gold dicyanide powders: The case for tunable energy transfer from Ag/Au(CN) 2 " to rare earth cation. A. Keller, J. L. Mullin, J. Ford, H. J. Tracy 1067. Platinum (II) complexes of crown thioethers with chiral diphosphine and diamine ligands. E. R. Hinson, G. J. Grant 1068. Preparation of comers of a self-assembled molecular cube using trivalent group 9 metal complexes. W. Chen, G. J. Grant 1069. Pt and Pd MPCs for use in asymmetric hydrogénation. R. Moorhouse, D. E. Cliffel, S. Ecklund 1070. Purification and preliminary characterization of MtrA, a protein involved in the irondependent respiratory pathway of Shewanella Oneidensis. K. Pfeifer, G. Bodemer, A. A. Pacheco, D. Saffarini 1071. Reaction of N-acetylmethionine with a non-C 2 -symmetrical platinum diamine complex. S. R. Massey, K. M. Williams 1072. Reactions of aldehydes with aluminium enolates. Z. S. Sales, R. Nassar, K. W. Henderson 1073. Rhodium-mediated delamination of layered metal phosphonates: Mechanistic studies using cadmium vinylphosphonate. L K. Byington, D. A. Knight 1074. Separating and testing novel spermine derivatives: Amines and amides. B. E. Richardson, E. Csuhai, G. L. Seebach 1075. Simple model sytem for inner sphere electron transfer. R. M. Duchemin, T. J. Reinert 1076. Sonochemical synthesis of gold-magnetite nanoparticles. R. C. Jones, A. Pradhan, M. A. Tarr 1077. Special theory of inorganic chemical reactions. E. P. Nwosu 1078. Spontaneous hierarchical assembly of rhodium nanoparticles into spherical aggregates and superlattices. T. D. Ewers, A. K. Sra, R. E. Schaak 1079. Stereoselective alkylation of benzaldehyde by chiral titanium amino alcohol complexes. A. R. Johnson, C. M. Jones, H. Li 1080. Strategies for studying the kinetics of the reaction of chlorine dioxide with hydroxylamine. C. J. Kubarych, J. D. Biberdorf, G. H. Purser 1081. Study of boric acid esters using NMR spectroscopy and CAChe molecular modeling. A. K. Bostick, V. R. Miller 1082. Supramolecular assemblies based on thioether-dipyrrinato transition metal complexes. L. Do, S. R. Halper, S. M. Cohen 1083. Syntheses, characterization, and electrochemical studies of a series of dioxo-Mo(VI) centers with a thiol coordination. J. J. Miller 1084. Synthesis and characteristics of metalloporphyrins. T. Crecelius, D. T. J. Reinert, J. Dyck 1085. Synthesis and characterization of 1,1dimethoxy-2,3,4,5-tetraphenylmetallocyclopentadienes. E. Fitch, H. J. Tracy, J. L. Mullin 1086. Synthesis and characterization of a copper dimer immobilized by various methods: progress toward realizing functional models of hemocyanin. E. T. Yukl, J. W. Gohdes 1087. Synthesis and characterization of a hydrazine substituted amine-carboxyborane. B. K. Johnson, J. P. Alishouse, G. M. Edvenson 1088. Synthesis and characterization of a self-assembled platinum(ll) molecular square. K. N. Patel, G. J. Grant 1089. Synthesis and characterization of a series of iron chloride layered perovskite. D. T. V. Tran 1090. Synthesis and characterization of amidate complexes of Cu(ll). T. Han, S. C. Haefner 1091. Synthesis and characterization of cisand trans- of amine complex of Iridium. M. Andal, J. Fan 1092. Synthesis and characterization of cyclopentadienyl nitrosyl ruthenium complex. M. J. Pearsall, A. S. Larsen

1093. Synthesis and characterization of lanthanide alkoxides for improved materials. L A. M. Ottley, T. J. Boyle, J. Dawley, M. A. Rodriguez, J. Richardson, R. G. Tissot, P. Clem, B. A. Tuttle 1094. Synthesis and characterization of lowmelting salts: N-alkyl pyridinium cations with derivatized carborane anions. J. Kleingardner, A. S. Larsen 1095. Synthesis and characterization of magnetic nanorods for retrieval in biological cells. J. A. King, T. J. Boyle, N. Bell 1096. Synthesis and characterization of metalcontaining polymers. W. Flomer, C. Conerly, A. Bradford 1097. Synthesis and characterization of mixed ligand complexes of ruthenium(ll) with DNA binding properties. B. Kumar, C. M. Maypole, G. Rawji 1098. Synthesis and characterization of pentadentate ligand frames with invariable N2S donor atoms and the corresponding Cu(ll) and Ni(ll) anologues. E. A. Farrell, L. A. Tyler 1099. Synthesis and characterization of ruthenium (II) hexafluoroacetyl-acetonate compounds with bidentate nitrogen donor ligands. E. J. Marti 1100. Synthesis and characterization of solvated osmium complexes ligated primarily by N, N-dimethylformamide. E. D. Curry, S. C. Haefner 1101. Synthesis and characterization of two novel Zn II porphryins and their reactivity with various DNA oligonucleotides. J. M. Spore, R. J. Hickerson, J. E. Bradshaw 1102. Synthesis and characterization of various molybdenum-tricarboxylic acid complexes. L Wiener, E. F. Healy 1103. Withdrawn. 1104. Synthesis and reactivity studies of bis(2phenylphosphidoethyl)phenylphosphine. L. J . Mason, M. L. Helm 1105. Synthesis and separation of boron nitride nanotubes. J. B. Hurst, K. A. Knappman, D. Gorican 1106. Synthesis of hetroditopic receptors from Calix[4]arenes. C. Jennings, J. Suksai, T. Tuntulani 1107. Synthesis of manganese diamide-diimine complexes as potential nitrogen atomtransfer agents. S. Orkis, L. D. Vuocolo, M. Z. Wilson 1108. Synthesis of molecular building blocks based on a molybdenum halide cluster core. M. L. Mohler, D. H. Johnston 1109. Synthesis of new silicon thioether ligands from triS!(methylthio)methane. M. K. Kalra, D. Y. Son, H. Zhang 1110. Synthesis of novel amino acid derivatized diimine complexes of molybdenum and tungsten. M. G. Beaver, R. S. Herrick, C. J. Ziegler 1111. Synthesis of novel Mn porphryins for use in photodynamic therapy. R. J. Hickerson, J. M. Spore, J. E. Bradshaw 1112. Synthesis of surface functionalized CdS nanoparticles. N. Furrow, T. A. Newton 1113. Synthesis of thioether-diketiminate ligands for modeling monocopper enzyme active sites. N. M. Holm, N. W. Aboelella 1114. Synthesis of transition-metal phosphides by direct reduction of their phosphates. C. M. Sweeney, K. L. Stamm, S. L. Brock 1115. Synthesis of water-soluble metal-Nheterocyclic carbene complexes. S. M. Cooks, L. M. Moore, K. H. Shaughnessy 1116. Synthesis, characterization and reactivity of a series of ruthenium acetylide complexes. J. F. Hill, C. J. Timpson 1117. Synthetic analogs of non-heme iron and non-corrin cobalt enzymes. J. K. Angelosante, B. J. Lewis, L. E. Cooper, C. J. A. Daley 1118. Templating calcium oxalate monohydrate for in-silu crystal growth studies. T. M. Cabrera, C. P. Brennan, B. J. Berry, A. M. Johnson, E. M. Gunn, R. W. Gurney 1119. Ternary phase relations in the system Bi 2 03-Fe 2 0 3 -Nb 2 05.1. M. Pazos 1120. Toward the synthesis of possible DMSO reductase mimics. C. E. Hobbs, S. A. Mankin, D. K. Howell 1121. Transfer of reduced heteropolytungstates (heteropoly blues) into nonpolar solvents. M. Kozik, K. Coughlin, A. Rinaldi 1122. Transition-metal organometallic fragments bound to siloxanes or fluorinated aromatics: Possible precursors for CVD or homogineous catalysis. K. Melnek, R. Fritchman, N. J. Wells

CHED

1123. Trends and factors characterizing oxoacid strength. E. A. Dumas, D. M. Marques, D. A. Habboush 1124. Vanadium alkoxides for the generation of VxOy nanomaterials. L. Tribby, T. J. Boyle, T. M. Alam, T. J. Headley 1125. Wavelength converting coatings for plasma display phosphors. Β. Β. Dawson, A. L Diaz Section J Convention Center HallD Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Medicinal Chemistry Cosponsored with SOCED, and MEDI L. E. Garrison,

Organizer

2:00-4:00 1126. Are microbes able to differentiate between enantiomers? A structure activity relationship study. P. Dhar, T. Snyder-Leiby, F. Khawam, J. Green 1127. Computational modeling of carbohydratemimicking antigens for phytohemagglutinin-L. C. M. Robinson, M. D. Perry Jr. 1128. Computational studies of melatonin analogues. J. L. Baima, M. D. Perry Jr. 1129. Constituents of the Kenyan Tea: Isolation and structure elucidation of anti-cancer and anti-HIV agents. N. N. Kariuki 1130. Design and synthesis of DH-21: An imidazole/Pyrrole containing hairpin target­ ing ATGA sequences within the DNA minor groove. L. Forrest, D. Harris, S. Bailey, K. Buchmueller, D. Wilson, M. Lee 1131. Design of an endoplasmic reticulum localization deficient iron regulatory protein 1 construct. R. Sharma, S. M. Patton, J. R. Connor 1132. Designing and combining a functional protein mimic of carbohydrates. M. Dyar, M. D. Perry Jr. 1133. Development and validation of a HPLC method for the determination of lidocaine in an over-the-counter analgesic gel. H. F. Bruce, D. S. Pinkston, E. P. Noble, M. S. Sabo 1134. Drug delivery by controlled release from polymer-encapsulated particles. K. Arunraj, F. Phu, M. M. Baum, T. J. Smith 1135. Effects of pretreatment with S-AdenosylL-Methionine and Ascorbic Acid on p-Aminophenol toxicity in renal slices from Fischer 344 (F344) rats. D. K. Hoover, M. A. Valentovic, T. F. Guetzloff, M. Terneus 1136. Extraction of marine bacteria by mem­ brane filtration and solid phase extraction techniques. M. D. Afkar, J. A. Trischman 1137. Withdrawn. 1138. Is there a correlation between age and D-aspartic acid in knee cartilage? S. S. Lopez, K. Peterson, T. Goff, I. Philip, R. Gaviria, N. Lorenzo, M. Tsesarskaja, G. Fisher 1139. Large scale synthesis of a highly functionalized indole. C. E. Rogers, S. D. Debenham, H. B. Wood, R. M. Black, P. T. Meinke 1140. Latex beads with a cleavable linker for identifying the drug receptors of Brefeldin A. R. M. Risi, V. J. Davisson, N. Anadu 1141. Manganese detection in breath conden­ sates. A. E. Libby, W. T. Potter 1142. New cathepsin D inhibitors with hydroxyethyl cyclic tertiary amines. R. M. McConnell, C. J. Trana, H. Strickland, A. Green, K. Sayyar, W. E. Godwin 1143. Non-peptide agonists of insulin induction. M. F. Hogan, D. R. Haines 1144. PEG-conjugated ligands for nicotinic receptors: A-84543 homologs. B. C. Chastain, R. W. Fitch 1145. Withdrawn. 1146. Photochemistry of sunscreens at the oil/water interface. M. T. Baker, J. R. Lee, A. Volkov, M. Volkova, K. LaiHing 1147. Potential carbohydrate-mimicking pep­ tides binding with wheat germ agglutinin. S. M. Hunt, M. D. Perry Jr. 1148. Progress on the lipid-lowering effects of novel pyrroles. B. McCranor, J. D. Berkowitz, J. Hallback, M. Cooper, B. Kurt, B. S. Burnham

1149. Proximities of peptide agonist fragments upon interaction with a receptor. L. G. Oesterich, D. R. Haines 1150. Purification and characterization of pCXCR4 antibody. R. Sidwell, J. B. Rubin 1151. Purification and structure elucidation of marine natural products to identify active antibiotics against Mycobacterium tuberculo­ sis. E. E. Uhegbu, J. A. Trischman 1152. Reaction of a-acetoxytamoxifen with DNA: Recognition and structural effects of covalent modification. S. Smith, L. J. Guziec, M. Zewail-Foote 1153. Structure-activity relationship (SAR) of new synthetic peptides with transcinnamic and dihydrocinnamic acids as inhibitors for thrombin. P. Chimieze, C. Clement, M. Philipp 1154. Studies of antigen/antibody (IgG/a-IgG) interactions with nanoparticles. C. S. Seney, J. C. Yelverton, R. M. Bright 1155. Substituted nickel phthalocyanine for use in photodynamic therapy. A. Humphrey, L. Evans, K. LaiHing 1156. Synthesis of 1,2,3-triazole analogs of antiviral drugs. A. M. Danowitz, J. G. Lindberg 1157. Synthesis of a series of 5-nitro-isatin thiosemicarbazone and semicarbazone compounds. M. D. Stone, P. A. Cornell, E. C. Lisic 1158. Synthesis of N-cyanoguanidine analogs of vanilloid receptor agonists and antago­ nists. J. J. Jablonski, L. G. French 1159. Synthesis of novel β-carbolines by the Pictet-Spengler reaction of tryptophan and ninhydrin: Oxidative rearrangement of yohimbanone to the corresponding β-carboline. J. C. Rohanna, M. S. Leonard 1160. Synthesis of novel morphine analogs. J. M. Schuster, G. A. Kraus 1161. Synthesis of novel spermine derivatives as potential inhibitors of trypanothione reductase. M. Waitner, K. Dauer, N. Karney, A. DeLuca, M. O'Sullivan 1162. Synthesis of phytanol derivatives as vaccine adjuvants. M. Hamilton, R. A. Kjonaas, S. K. Ghosh 1163. Synthesis of prospective nAChR antago­ nists by amino allyl(bis)silane condensation. E. Leonardo, T. Livinghouse, T. Kercher, M. Stan, J. M. Wehner, W. R. Bartlett 1164. The role age plays in the development of AD-like pathology in Α-beta infusion model of Alzheimers. D. O. Uwa-Eke 1165. Theoretical generation of peptide mimics for the carbohydrates bound to 2G12 antiHIV monoclonal antibody. B. A. Skaug, M. D. Perry Jr. 1166. Toward the synthesis of the pentasac­ charide moiety of CAY-1, antifungal steroidal saponin. J. D. Swenson, K. L. Bowdy, B. S. Jursic 1167. Triglitazone inhibits breast cancer: Mechanism. D. Surie, R. Oliver, E. Friday, T. Welboume Section Κ Convention Center HallD Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Polymer Chemistry Cosponsored with SOCED L. E. Garrison,

Organizer

2:00-4:00 1168. Model compound studies for the modifi­ cation of linear-polyethylenimine to promote water solubility. C. A. Crouse, D. K. Mohanty 1169. Au-containing N-isopropylacrylamide gels as sustained drug releasing materials. M. K. Lee, Ν. Τ. Flynn 1170. Characterization of N-isopropylacrylamide/acrylic acid copolymer hydrogels containing gold nanostructures. A. D. Agnello, Ν. Τ. Flynn 1171. Copolymer formation of araliphatic polya­ mides in the melt as followed by solution NMR. J. H. Glans, P. Yarincik 1172. Copolymerization of heteronorbornenes with styrene and acrylates via coppermediated ATRP. T. V. Shaner, G. S. Long, A. D. H. Marchetti 1173. Core-shell colloidal dispersions of poly (N-isopropylacrylamide). S. S. Messer 1174. Decontaminating sensor coatings for the detection and removal of lead and mercury. D. Porter, S. Brown, H. N. Gray

1175. Design and characterization of new cation-responsive PXDOTs. J. P. Maciejewski, B. D. Reeves, J. R. Reynolds 1176. Determining reactivity ratios of a silicone acrylate with common monomers. C. M. Baldwin, Β. Μ. Jones 1177. Effect of copolymer architecture on compatibilized polymer blends studied via optical microscopy. J. K. Hoffert, D. A. Waldow 1178. End functionalized regioregular poly(3hexylthiophene) as a precursor to the syn­ thesis of conducting block-copolymers. A. B. Krankowski, M. lovu, R. D. McCullough 1179. Evaluation of water content in poly (phenylene sulfonic acid)s for its application in PEMFC's. K. Owusu-Sarfo 1180. Examining phase transitions of hydrogels containing presynthesized Au nanoparticles. J. R. Bell, Ν. Τ. Flynn 1181. Fluorescence behavior of dansyl chloride in polysiloxane/silicate core-shell nanopar­ ticles. J. L. Wong, J. L. Chavez, R. S. Duran 1182. HPLC analysis of polyethylene additives in the undergraduate laboratory. J. R. Hudgins, M. S. Sabo 1183. Hydrogels based upon random copoly­ mers of 2-hydroxyethyl acrylate and 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate. A. R. Luce, W. T. Grubbs 1184. Investigation of palladium-initiated inser­ tion polymerization from inorganic surfaces. C. Strepka, G. S. Long, A. D. H. Marchetti 1185. Investigation of polymeric coupling agents to improve the adhesion in dental composite materials. D. Narsavage-Heald, H. S. Baxi 1186. Investigation of the impact of surfactant structure and morphology on the minimum inhibitory concentration of biocides. A. P. Hathorne, A. M. Rhoades, D. A. Wicks 1187. Investigations into the role of silicone surfactants in flexible polyurethane foams. C. M. Baldwin, K. A. Graham 1188. Ionic conduction in thin films of polymer electrolytes. N. H. Truong, D. Teeters 1189. Molecular weight characterization of Polyvinyl Acetate resin (PVAc) using multiangle laser light scattering (MALLS). R. P. D'Amelia, L. Cheng 1190. Nanocomposites of polyvinylidene fluo­ ride) with lucentite organically modified silcate. J. Buckley, M. Jenkins, J. Pan, N. Washington, D. Cherdack, P. Cebe 1191. Nanoporous surfaces for the deposition of bio-functionalized nanostructures. L. Ho, K. Bandyopadhyay, S. M. Baker, A. Niemz 1192. Oligomerization, polycondensation, and copolymerization of L-Lactic Acid. S. E. Perlinger, E. Y. X. Chen 1193. Optimization of energy and carbon source for silk/collagen copolymer produc­ tion in Pichia pastoris. S. J. Joseph, S. W. Harcum 1194. Phase behavior of a diblock compatiblized polymer blend studied using high temperature dynamic light scattering. A. C. Kanarr, D. A. Waldow 1195. Phase transition behavior of hydrogels with in situ generated gold nanoparticles. F. Y. Pong, Ν. Τ. Flynn 1196. Polyaniline nanofibers as chemical sen­ sors. S. Soleymani, C. O. Baker, S. Virji, R. B. Kaner 1197. Production of rodlike particles with con­ tinuously variable length. P. Bellamkonda, M. Bergstedt, J. Sun, P. S. Russo 1198. Ring opening polymerizations of D,Llactide using P"i(trisphenolate)(OR)]2 cata­ lysts. A. J. Tumas, S. K. Russell 1199. Solid state NMR of siloxane systems: A chemical shift investigation. G. T. Burg, R. J. luliucci 1200. Solvent affects on the morphology of polyaniline nanofibers. G. J. Tong, C. O. Baker, J. Huang, R. B. Kaner 1201. Structure-property studies on a series of alkyne containing liquid crystals. E. M. Leonard, E. Scharrer 1202. Surface ionic conductivity of polyethyl­ ene oxide)-lithium triflate complexes. P. E. Crider II, D. Teeters 1203. Sustainable approach to conducting polymers using electrophilic carbohydrate reagents. M. B. Keddy, R. W. Gurney, D. J. Sandman 1204. Synergism between fracture fluids to improve dynamic transport of proppant. C. Buben, J. Weaver, J. Bryan

1205. Synthesis and characterization of photoresponsive rod-coil polymers containing azobenzene chromophores. A. A. Accurso, D. S. Tyson, M. A. Meador 1206. Synthesis and evaluation of poly(2,5benzoxazole) as a proton exchange mem­ brane fuel cell candidate. M. Kienzler, E. W. Choe, E. Scanlon, B. C. Benicewicz 1207. Synthesis of amphiphilic diblock copoly­ mers for crosslinkable micelle assembly. A. E. Tavakley, Y. Chen, T. A. Taton 1208. Synthesis of highly-conjugated styryl derivatives through palladium-based cou­ pling reactions. P. J. Riedel, D. C. Rogness, K. N. Wiegel 1209. Synthesis of polystyrene/polybutadiene block copolymers via an anionic polymeriza­ tion to atom transfer radical polymerization crossover technique. P. G. Clark, D. A. Waldow 1210. Synthesis of two zwitterionic polymers produced via ring-opening metathesis poly­ merization. J. J. Vlaminck, J. T. Ippoliti, M. A. Hillmyer 1211. Terthiophene and bithiophene monomers of isophthalic acid diethyl ester as precur­ sors for electroactive polymers. K. P. O'Halloran, A. D. Bettencourt-Dias 1212. The determination of maximum propaga­ tion distances and front characteristics for isothermal frontal polymerization. E. L. Underwood, L. L. Lewis 1213. The impact of surfactant structure on biocide efficacy. A. R. Alam, A. M. Rhoades, M. O. Elasri, D. A. Wicks 1214. The use of laser line deflection (Werner's method) to determine diffusion coefficients for use in isothermal frontal polymerization. J. S. Hanna, L. L. Lewis 1215. The use of thiol-enes in UV-curable coatings for microelectronic packaging. H. J. Docktor 1216. Thermal expansion control in thermoplas­ tic elastomers. A. T. Detwiler, S. Iyer, D. Schiraldi Preparing Yourself to be a Faculty Member Cosponsored with YCC, and WCC The Rise and Fall of Chlorofluorocarbons The Fall of CFCs Cosponsored with HIST, ENVR, and PHYS M O N D A Y EVENING Section A Convention Center Sails Pavilion Sci-Mix C. Middlecamp, Organizer,

Presiding

8:00-10:00 63-64, 69, 88, 90,119,127,152-154,156. See previous listings. Section Β Convention Center Sails Pavilion Sci-Mix: Successful Student Affiliates Chapter Poster Session Cosponsored with SOCED L. E. Garrison,

Organizer

8:00-10:00 1217. 2004 NCW demonstrations presented by the NKU student affiliates. Μ. Ε. Wiggers, S. A. Beetem, E. Ferraris, S. Stamper, K. A. Walters 1218. A glimpse at a commendable SAACS chapter: Longwood University. K. A. Wolcott, M. R. Johnson, L. K. Wooldridge, R. W. McGiff, M. C. Simmons, S. J. Crane, M. C. Rhoten

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

TECH-35

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 1219. A new era in the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign chapter of the ACS-SA. A. J. L. Clemens, L. A. Kinsinger, C. H. Chan, D. Studer, J. Glassner, V. Chan, L. E. Kolodziej, J. Streeky, A. Cannon, L. A. Denofrio, T. A. Miller 1220. A small, but active, CSUS Chem Club. Z. Malko, L. Borer 1221. A team-building workshop for Student Affiliates. K. M. Manes, T. Spranger, A. N. Sumner, M. J. Mio 1222. A student affiliate-managed laboratory experience for earning girl and boy scout chemistry merit badges. Κ. Μ. Manes, M. Mouyianis, V. Hornik-Rosinski, M. J. Mio, M. A. Benvenuto 1223. ACS Student Affiliates Chapter as part of the campus community. A. K. Charlton, L. T. Lam, R. S. Sevcik, D. A. Tucker, R. M. Gonzalez 1224. Activities for students' motivation at Inter-Metro. K. Lozada, J. C. David, I. Rosado-Lozada 1225. Activities of the Angelo State University Student Affiliates Chapter. R. Crowson 1226. Activities of the Dairy University Student Affiliate Chapter. S. J. Richards, S. A. Petrich, J. Bennett 1227. Cal Poly Pomona SAACS. A. B. Lee 1228. Carroll College Student Affiliates: A decade of growth and service. C. L. Casper, B. D. Shelley, M. D. Schuder 1229. Catawba College chemists are shakin' things up in schools. D. S. Pinkston, H. F. Bruce, J. R. Hudgins, A. Goshorn, K. C. Prescott, B. Robbins, M. Haynes, T. Rummage, A. C. Weddington, H. Burleson, B. Shick, M. Bartholomew, J. Beard, C. A. Miderski, M. S. Sa bo 1230. Chemistry and the community: Moving together in orbit. S. S. Slaughter, T. A. Curran, J. Nanasy 1231. Chemistry and you at SHU. Ν. Μ. Lock, N. Uddin 1232. Chemistry Club on campus and in the community. B. C. Hatfield, C. Korves, N. Motl, M. Sydow, Y. Lu, E. G. Malina, S. D. Wiediger 1233. Chemistry matters at Washington Col­ lege. K. A. Koenig, A. E. Marteel-Parrish 1234. Chemistry, health and wellness. K. Rodriguez, D. Hernandez, J. Suârez 1235. ChEmory: Emory University's Student Affiliates chapter. S. A. Johnson, S. J. Smith, T. Morkin 1236. Cholesterol: Ally or Villain, a presentation for health and wellness. E. Frankowicz, E. Litchfield, P. Di Raddo 1237. Community involvement of MSUM chemistry club. B. C. Pemberton, P. A. B. Marasinghe, L. Streitz 1238. Community outreach in the inter-city by undergraduates at the University of Colorado at Denver. A. Naoum, S. Wear, C. Vogel, S. M. Schelble 1239. Creating a student-centered organization: Experiences from Penn State. G. S. Chriss III, E. J. Tamosauskas, B. S. Aldinger, N. U. Morisseau, K. P. Reber, K. L. Reynolds, K. A. Yarmey 1240. Creative and pragmatic web and listserve for SAACS chapters. M. S. Patel, S. K. Airee 1241. DemoDays: Hot topics in chemistry. P. T. Sheehan, R. Im, D. I. Lewis 1242. Duquesne Student Affiliates: Helping to motivate Pittsburgh's molecules. L. A. DiCicco, A. R. Hower, J. E. Winans, S. Arnstein 1243. Eastern Oregon University SAACS: A year of commitment to community outreach. C. A. Davis, L. K. Rathbone, A. K. Miller, A. M. Jones, A. G. Cavinato 1244. Dry weather, hot sun, cool club. N. C. Rasmussen, S. Barker, D. Lerette, T. Kim, J. R. Pollard 1245. Elements for success. E. Holland, P. Michel 1246. Elements of an effective Student Affiliates chapter: Rind-raising, community service and public outreach. S. S. Lopez, S. Morgan, A. Montoya, C. Boston, L. Willie, S. Lopez, G. Fisher 1247. Fun in a flask (or beaker) at Union College. E. J. Dimise, A. K. Roberts, S-J. Stimpson, J. Miller, G. Carlson, S. G. Mandel, E. A. Lax, R. Peters, J. P. Grondin, J. R. Bush, M. E. Hagerman, M. K. Carroll

36-TECH

1248. FUNdamental chemistry at Bridgewater State College. E. J. Broderick, A. Erbeck, J. Miller 1249. Grassroots chemistry: Changing perspectives. K. J. Tunis, S. Gnidovec, M. Bassett, B. Torri, M. Johll 1250. Green chemistry at Ferris State University: Community and university involvement. R. Littich, P. Di Raddo 1251. Growing greener at Suffolk University. R. K. Im, S. D. Oliveira, R. Romasco, P. Sheehan, S. Streszak, K. Timko 1252. Health and Wellness: NCW at Georgia College and State University. A. Baena, C. Ellison, N. Hart, C. P. Higginbotham, R. A. Richards, M. B. McGinnis 1253. Health and wellness on the praire. S. C. Moje, M. L. Mekoli, J. M. Benson 1254. Healthy mind, healthy body: Chemistry and our lives. J. Kuehn, M. Santiago, D. P. Kerrigan, M. Andal, A. Mullaley 1255. If it glows, grows, pops and rocks with color between your socks. G. E. A. Rudd, A. Dunham, A. Bradford, E. Boudreaux 1256. Incorporating chemistry in other science disciplines. M. Exposito, M. Delgado, J. Machado, N. A. Bedoya, A. Castello, M. Saint Vil 1257. Innovative Activities Grant for the 2004-05 ACS-Student Affiliates Chapter at the University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras Campus. I. Montes, M. Rodriguez 1258. Innovative ways to energize your Student Affiliates Chapter: The 2004-2005 school year activities of the University of Northern Colorado ACS Student Affiliate. M. Kriz, Η. Ο Robus 1259. Inspire. Communicate. Connect: Themes for the University of Michigan-Flint chemistry club. B. Reatherford, H. Kazmi, R. Grablick, A. Abuaita, J. L. Tischler 1260. Jump start in chemistry and math. M. Exposito, M. C. Castello, F. Kottar, W. Pinales, E. Primelles 1261. Millersville University ACS chapter. J. L. Boyer, L. M. Hunt, S. Nichols, J. Myers 1262. Morehead State University SAACS. B. P. Morgan, J. J. Gullett, K. D. Trent, M. T. Blankenbuehler, T. L. Stroud 1263. MTSU SAACS diet: Chapter activities in 2004. B. D. Anderson, T. L. Johnson, K. L. Summar, L. B. Whitson, E. E. Diener, J. R. Oxsher, J. D. Acton, G. D. White, A. C. Friedli 1264. National Chemistry Week: Promoting health and wellness at the Children's Museum of Maine. F. Fridman, S. Mayberry, E. Fitch, A. Bresler, J. Ford, C. K. Prudente 1265. Nazareth College's community outreach. M. J. Graves, J. K. Stanbro, A. Wirlo 1266. NDSU Chemistry club fundraising: Work­ ing together to make chemistry outreach possible. J. P. Pinke, C. Boucher, S. C. Rasmussen 1267. New Orleans LEAP preparation. A. Jackson, S. M. Harris 1268. On the importance of vitamins in main­ taining good health: Vitamin A and vision. R. Peterson Sr., L. Wynkoop Jr., P. Di Raddo 1269. Periodic table of Affiliates. J. Goss 1270. Power of pressure and influence of temperature: Learning at the high school level. H. R. Fournier, J. A. Bishop 1271. Promoting chemistry through positive interactions with the community. B. West, A. Vedenko, M. Crawford, H. L. Hurner, J. F. Capetillo, C. V. Gauthier 1272. Redefining student affiliate chapter goals. C. Jensen, T. M. Anderson, Q. P. Peterson, A. Parent, A. M. Bean, S. Bean, J. Powell, E. T. Sevy 1273. Resurrection of an ailling chapter. J. L McGinnis, Ν. Ε. McCrate, A. M. Knolhoff 1274. SAACS activities at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. J. K. Phillips, S. T. Ellison 1275. SAACS at Georgia Southern: A mixture of the right ingredients gives a great prod­ uct. R. B. Sears, C. L. Humphrey, J. K. Hand, Ε. Τ. Edenfield, C. M. Davis-McGibony 1276. SAACS at PCUPR celebrating chemistry in the community for National Chemistry Week. M. Borges, Y. Vega, W. Marrero, A. Duran, C. Collazo 1277. Saint Louis University Student Affiliates: Reaching higher. D. Sheth, M. Thorson, J. Fraser, C. V. C. Caldwell

1278. Saint Mary's College Student Affiliates to the American Chemical Society. G. M. Skubick, D. J. Lubbers, L. Brazys, J. D. Herdman, A. Subotic, S. Dunn, A. Szany, D. Travis, N. Hollenbaugh, M. DeSmet, C. Dunlap 1279. Science and service: Forging community ties in rural Arkansas. C. M. Robinson, M. D. Perry Jr. 1280. Seattle Pacific University Student Affili­ ates chapter: Engaging the community through chemistry. K. Allen, L. Blake, K. L. Klug, C. Ramey, G. D. Phelan 1281. Student Affiliate activities at a Metropoli­ tan University. A. M. Gunter, K. L. Kelley, Ν. Street 1282. Student Affiliates of the American Chemi­ cal Society at the University of St. Thomas, Houston, TX. J. T. Mayo, S. Ninan, T. Vu, J. Rajan, H. Nguyen, M. W. Holliday Jr., T. B. Malloy Jr. 1283. Succesful student affiliate chapter at a two-year college: Community College of Philadelphia. S. A. Gibbs, C. Nolsoe 1284. Succesful student affiliates chapter at community colleges: The good, the bad, and the ugly. S. A. Gibbs, C. Nolsoe, K. Harter, A. Fulep 1285. Successful SAACS: University of Texas of the Permian Basin. S. Ruiz, D. Urias, B. Rebber, E. Aicenena, F. Rodriguez, J. Espinoza, F. Bolivar, D. Alimbuayo, L. Hines, A. Farber 1286. Sustaining excellence among SAACS at Centenary College. L. Stevison, A. S. Dickson, D. Surie, A. Lacy, J. H. Boyce, T. M. Ticich 1287. Taking chemistry to the community. A. L. Rothbard, S. M. Ruston, C. M. Skraban, J. R. Schultz 1288. Texarkana College Chemistry Club presents its successful activities. K. Mauer 1289. The chemistry club at SVSU: Chemistry, service, education and fun. M. R. Heggan, M. Riley, K. Watcharachatchawan, M. Bradford, D. R. Huntley 1290. The Shu Chem Zoo. M. Hernandez, F. Christopher, L. Tariq, A. Gorecki, H. Julian, C. Badala, C. MacNeill, J. Horvath, I. Olsson, C. Crutchfield, L. Maiorini, J. Volpe, D. Placencia, P. Yarincik, K. Fallo, D. M. Marques, E. A. Dumas, L. Farber 1291. Union University SAACS Chapter. S. E. Perlinger, K. A. Knappman 1292. University of Southern Maine teaching the Scientific Method using demonstrations and inquiry-based group work at Lincoln Middle School. E. Fitch, J. Ford 1293. University of Southern Maine's Chemistry Club sharing a world of science with our local middle school community. A. Keller, A. Kline, M. Jewell, Y. Coehn, C. K. Prudente, J. Ford 1294. University of Toledo chemistry summer camp. J. R. Kalisz, L. A. Sieg, S. L. Barteck 1295. University of Toledo investigating forensics: Why start with a chemistry degree? L. A. Sieg, S. L. Barteck 1296. UPT-SAACS 2004-05: Promoting chem­ istry in community. J. Banner, S. Askey, S. Kleck, K. Giel, D. Beers, K. Anderson, H. Naqvi, C. Martone, S. Scott, P. Furlan 1297. Washington & Jefferson College's Stu­ dent Affiliates experience Le Chatter's Principle. B. A. Frazier, J. E. Smith, S. H. Katragadda 1298. Water testing as a means of interesting high school students in science. T. P. Saul, J. J. O'Donnell 1299. Western Kentucky University Student Affiliate Chapter. K. Milner, A. M. Hobbs, J. P. Culver, Κ. Μ. Williams

PROGRESS: Strengthening Our Academic Foundations Cosponsored with WCC, and PRES S. Chapman, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 1300. Award Address (ACS Award for Encouraging Women into Careers in the Chemical Sciences, sponsored by the Cam­ ille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, Inc). Award Address: COACh - Working to level the playing field for women chemists in academia. G. L. Richmond 9:30 1301. Some results from PROGRESS for women chemists and chemical engineers. H. M. Free, F. Dixon 9:55 1302. A site visit process identifying best practices for hiring and retaining women faculty in chemistry and chemical engineer­ ing departments at research extensive institutions. D. McCarthy 10:20 Intermission. 10:30 1303. Some preliminary findings from PROGRESS surveys and focus group interviews: Students and post-doctoral fellows. C. H. Marzabadi, S. A. Nolan, J. P. Buckner 10:55 1304. Some preliminary findings from PROGRESS surveys and focus group interviews: Faculty and administrators. S. A. Nolan, J. P. Buckner, Ο Η. Marzabadi 11:20 1305. How come men aren't lucky? V. J. Kuck 11:45 Concluding Remarks. Section Β Holiday Inn on the Bay Porthole Going Green: Lecture Assignments and Lab Experiences for the College Curriculum Cosponsored with I EC I. J. Levy and J. C. Warner, M. Kirchhoff, Organizer,

Organizers

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 1306. Educational resources for green chemistry: An overview. M. M. Kirchhoff 8:55 1307. Infusing chemistry lecture courses with green chemistry: Poster and oral pre­ sentations, web-based modules, supple­ mental material, and textbooks. M. C. Cann 9:15 1308. Chemistry capstone seminar with green theme. P. Varma-Nelson, T. R. Weaver, R. W. Gilman 9:35 1309. Educating environmentally respon­ sible citizens and scientists through green, environmental chemistry. L. U. Gron, M. W. Teague, S. Bradley 9:55 1310. Measuring the greenness of under­ graduate laboratory experiments. G. D. Bennett 10:15 Intermission. 10:25 1311. Transforming the organic chemis­ try laboratory experience with greener labo­ ratory experiments. J. E. Hutchison, K. M. Doxsee, L. C. McKenzie 10:45 1312. Learning to be green: Involving students in the decision making process. R. W. Gurney 11:05 1313. Investigating the regioselective enolization of 2-substituted cyclohexanones: A green chemistry experiment for organic labs. S. P. Lee 11:25 1314. Laboratory experiment on gene subcloning for chemical engineering stu­ dents. C. F. Komives, S. Rech, M. McNeil 11:45 Concluding Remarks. Section C Holiday Inn on the Bay East Coast

TUESDAY MORNING Section A Holiday Inn on the Bay Pacific D

Research in Chemical Education Gateway Issues M. H. Towns,

Organizer

J. E. Lewis, Organizer,

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 1315. Evolution and effectivness of intro­ ductory chemistry: A longitudinal study. K. A. Chambers, B. Blake

CHED 9:00 1316. Intensive courses in introductory chemistry: Does student performance suf­ fer? L. A. Wilson, M. V. Hall 9:25 1317. Student study habits: Why do they succeed? R. C. Bauer, J. P. Birk, P. S. Marks 9:50 Intermission. 10:00 1318. Qualitative research: Lessons learned. N. L Hume, G. Bodner 10:25 1319. Chemistry Merit Program for Emerging Scholars: Addressing the man­ power pipeline problem. G. M. Adams 10:50 1320. Gender issues and student perfor­ mance in general chemistry. B. Blake, K. A. Chambers 11:15 1321. Effects of college chemistry course on freshman students' drawings of chemists. V. M. Williamson, L. Brown

2:35 1335. Illustrating green chemistry through hands-on learning from the "real world". A. S. Cannon, S. Trakhtenberg, J. C. Warner 2:55 1336. How to estimate the cost of manu­ facturing an organic chemical. B. W. Cue Jr. 3:15 Intermission. 3:25 1337. Green organic chemistry laboratory at the University of Oregon. Κ. Μ. Doxsee, J. E. Hutchison 3:45 1338. Asymptotic approach to the devel­ opment of a green organic chemistry labora­ tory. T. E. Goodwin 4:05 1339. Synthesis of banana oil using green chemistry. P. Brown, S. Dexter 4:25 1340. Adaptation of phase vanishing reactions and solid-solid reactions to under­ graduate organic chemistry laboratory. V. Dragojlovic 4:45 Concluding Remarks.

Section D Section C

Holiday Inn on the Bay West Coast

Holiday Inn on the Bay East Coast

Use and Assessment of Classroom Polling Systems J. Reeves,

Organizer

M. R. Asirvatham, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 1322. Formative assessment of electronic response systems: Large lecture classes for science majors. M. R. Asirvatham 9:00 1323. Classroom polling devices as a means of student engagement. S. M. Ruder 9:25 1324. Introducing classroom polling in lectures at Virginia Commonwealth Univer­ sity. S. S. Hunnicutt 9:50 Intermission. 10:00 1325. Personal response devices: The missing link in teaching and learning organic chemistry. T. A. Dickneider 10:25 1326. Implementation of a personal response unit into the chemistry curriculum. G. D. Phelan TUESDAY AFTERNOON Section A Holiday Inn on the Bay Pacific D Agricultural Chemistry in the Classroom: Solutions for Global Environmental Issues Cosponsored with AGRO R. D. Wauchope, Organizer,

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 1327. Predicting the environmental impact of molecules. D. I. Gustafson 2:05 1328. The chemistry of prions: Mad cow disease and its relatives. B. Caughey 2:35 1329. Fertilizer, chemistry and the class­ room: The real scoop. W. L. Hall Jr., W. C. Herz 3:05 Intermission. 3:15 1330. Genes are chemicals, too: The integration of chemistry and biology for assessing the risks of genetically modified organisms in agriculture. A. S. Felsot 3:45 1331. Reducing the environmental impact from soil fumigation with methyl bromide. S. R. Yates Section Β Holiday Inn on the Bay Porthole Going Green: Lecture Assignments and Lab Experiences for the College Curriculum Cosponsored with I EC I. J. Levy and M. Kirchhoff, J. C. Warner, Organizer,

Organizers

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 1332. Progressive introduction of green chemistry into undergraduate organic chem­ istry research, lab, and lecture curriculum at Bridgewater State College. E. J. Brush 1:55 1333. Energy and the environment: A green approach to general studies physical science. J. M. Iriarte-Gross, M. R. Weller 2:15 1334. Implantation of the principles of green chemistry in the teaching of sopho­ more organic chemistry. K-T. Liu

Research in Chemical Education Student Beliefs, Misconceptions, and Understandings M. H. Towns and J. E. Lewis, J. B. Robinson,

Organizers

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 1341. Middle school students' beliefs about matter. M. B. Nakhleh, A. Samarapungavan, Y. Saglam Sr. 2:00 1342. Exploring the classification schemes used by chemistry students to identify different types of substances. M. Veron, V. Talanquer 2:25 1343. Use of a two-tier multiple choice instrument to study students' misconcep­ tions about molecular shape, bonding and polarity. P. L. Rambo, J. R. Pribyl 2:50 1344. Why do lemons taste different than oranges? The origin of our chemical senses. V. Talanquer 3:15 Intermission. 3:25 1345. Tackling misconceptions in fresh­ man chemistry with demonstraions. C. H. Atwood, J. M. Shimkus 3:50 1346. Improving students' understanding of solution calorimetry concepts. T. J. Greenbowe, K. A. Burke 4:15 1347. Blind students' use of text, figures and analogies to visualize abstract chemis­ try concepts. P. M. Mayo, M. Orgill, G. M. Bodner 4:40 1348. Good scientific explanations in chemistry classrooms: How to judge {prime}{prime}good" and "scientific"? L. S. Langdon Section D Holiday Inn on the Bay West Coast Use and Assessment of Classroom Polling Systems M. R. Asirvatham,

Organizer

J. Reeves, Organizer,

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 1349. A first time use of a student polling system in general chemistry. J. L. Sarquis 2:00 1350. Active learning in lecture classes through use of electronic response systems. A. M. Schoffstall, B. A. Gaddis, D. R. Anderson 2:25 1351. CPS and ConcepTest implementa­ tion in large lecture classes. W. J. Donovan 2:50 1352. Effectiveness on student achieve­ ment of a student response system (SRS) vs. WebCT quizzes. D. M. Bunce, J. R. VandenPIas, K. L. Havanki 3:15 Intermission. 3:25 1353. SRS: A different kind of polling system. J. Reeves, C. R. Ward 3:50 1354. Evaluation of a wireless response system in general chemistry. J. E. Carter, T. C. Castonguay, D. Dill, M. Z. Hoffman, J. R. Miecznikowski, T. D. Tullius

WEDNESDAY MORNING Section A Holiday Inn on the Bay Pacific D Research Experiences for Undergraduates: Assessment and Impact J. J. Grabowski,

Organizer

C. Hovis, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 1355. ACS-CPT survey of 2001-2004 enrollments in selected chemistry courses. M. V. Merritt, N. Mills, M. Thompson 9:05 1356. How do we provide research opportunities for the non-traditional under­ graduate science student? R. D. Foust Jr. 9:35 1357. What is the market demand for NSF-sponsored summer REU positions in chemistry? J. J. Grabowski, D. M. Coon 10:05 Intermission. 10:15 1358. What do we need and hope to learn through assessment studies of under­ graduate research? T. J. Wenzel 10:45 1359. NSF undergraduate research experiences (UROs): who participates and what are the effects? S. H. Russell 11:35 Panel Discussion. Section Β Holiday Inn on the Bay Porthole Going Green: Lecture Assignments and Lab Experiences for the College Curriculum Cosponsored with IEC M. Kirchhoff and J. C. Warner, I. J. Levy, Organizer,

Organizers

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 1360. GEMs: A database of Greener Education Materials for chemists. J. A. Haack, J. E. Hutchison 9:00 1361. A green culture: Practicing and teaching responsibility in general chemistry. B. W. May 9:25 1362. Towards the greening of our minds: A special topic chemistry course offered at Washington College, MD. A. E. Marteel-Parrish 9:50 1363. Teaching lab report writing through inquiry: A novel Green Chemistry first-year undergraduate experiment. K. L. Cacciatore, H. Sevian 10:15 Intermission. 10:25 1364. Analyzing green chemistry: A description of metrics with applications in academia and industry. L. J. Hamel, I. J. Levy 10:50 1365. Green chemistry in the organic laboratory: A beginning. G. O. Spessard 11:15 1366. Transesterification as green synthesis of ethyl and methyl alkyl esters. B. W. Baldwin, A. S. Clark 11:40 1367. Laboratory experience in a benchscale fermentor to produce bioethanol, a renewable source of energy. A. B. Henriques, K. Karim, F. Mei, Μ. Η. Al-Dahhan 12:05 Concluding Remarks. Section C Holiday Inn on the Bay East Coast Research in Chemical Education Outcomes of Pedagogical Approaches M. H. Towns and J. E. Lewis, R. C. Bauer,

Organizers

10:15 Intermission. 10:25 1372. Effect of an inquiry general chem­ istry laboratory on the ability to abstract formal reasoning from context. K. Monteyne, M. S. Cracolice 10:50 1373. Catalysis of PChK in the labora­ tory. J. Bond-Robinson 11:15 1374. Collaborative professional devel­ opment for high school chemistry teachers. A. C. Banerjee 11:40 1375. News in chemistry education: Practices and recommendations. S. G. Charnick Section D Holiday Inn on the Bay West Coast Chemistry for the Health Sciences - GOBs of Fun L. J. D. Frost and P. K. Kerrigan, Organizers, Presiding 8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 1376. Chemistry even a nurse could love. W. A. Wallace 9:00 1377. Reasoning skills in GOB chemistry. M. A. Horn 9:25 1378. Using skinfolds to teach measure­ ment: A lab exercise for the allied health student. L. J. D. Frost 9:50 1379. GMOB: A metabolic framework for teaching organic chemistry and biochemistry to health science majors. J. P. Suits 10:15 Intermission. 10:25 1380. Identification of chemical hazards in the GOB laboratory. L. J. Anna, D. H. Anna 10:50 1381. Experiment in terror: A no-lecture approach in teaching chemistry for the health sciences. D. E. Arrington 11:15 1382. GAB Lab: A general analytical biochemistry laboratory course for health science majors. J. Dunkle, R. Hyslop, J. P. Suits 11:40 1383. Peer-Led Team Learning (PLTL) in a course for allied health professionals. P. Varma-Nelson WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Section A Holiday Inn on the Bay Pacific D Research Experiences for Undergraduates: Assessment and Impact C. Hovis,

Organizer

J. J. Grabowski, Organizer,

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 1384. Assessing the impact of under­ graduate research on student retention and pursuit of graduate education. S. R. Gregerman, R. S. Hathaway 2:05 1385. Assessing the undergraduate research experience. A. Zydney, J. S. Bennett, K. W. Bauer 2:35 1386. Structure and assessment of summer research programs at JMU: What can we assess and what does it tell us? G. MacDonald 3:05 Intermission. 3:15 1387. Expanding the researcher pipeline: Best practices of undergraduate research programs for women and underrepresented minorities. B. B. Alexander, J. Foertsch 3:45 1388. Comparative analysis of gains to students of effective undergraduate research experiences as reported by partici­ pating undergraduates and their faculty research advisors. A-B. Hunter, E. Seymour, S. L. Laursen, K. De Welde 4:35 Panel Discussion.

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 1368. General chemistry placement and peer led team learning at Ohio University. K. L. Brown, L. E. McMills, Κ. Ε. Eichstadt 9:00 1369. What happens next? A follow-up study of PLTL workshop leaders. P. Varma-Nelson, L. Gafney 9:25 1370. PLTL research: Further explora­ tions at Miami University. J. C. Detchon, J. L. Sarquis 9:50 1371. Guided inquiry-based curriculum: Teaching styles and student achievement. S. Τ. Κ. Garrow

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

TECH-37

TECHNICAL PROGRAM Section Β Holiday Inn on the Bay Porthole Automation and Remote Access Technology in the Undergraduate Teaching Laboratory R. M. Hanson, Organizer,

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 1389. What does a student learn from using automated instrumentation? A. Grushow 2:00 1390. Using a laboratory robot to teach analytical methods development. D. J. Beussman, J. P. Walters 2:25 1391. Interfacing MeasureNet Laboratory Information Management Systems with gas chromatography. A. Zavaleta, R. W. Morrison 2:50 1392. Remote COSY NMR experiment for structure and sequence determination of simple dipeptides. A. G. Cavinato, R. B. Kelley 3:15 Intermission. 3:25 1393. Sharing instruments across the US/Canada border: Using WWU's Inte­ grated Laboratory Network for the analysis of metals in traditional herbal medicines at UBC. D. A. Cancilla, S. P. Albon 3:50 1394. Remote access instrumentation for undergraduate research. F. E. Lytle, G. C. Weaver, D. Steffen, P. J. Wyss, K. Kliewer 4:15 1396. Enhancement of organic chemistry laboratory by the WebCT. S. V. Slobodzian 4:40 1395. Remote access and instrumenta­ tion consortia for undergraduate education and research. A. D. Hunter, M. Zeller, T. Wagner, R. Hoff, P. Szalay Section C Holiday Inn on the Bay East Coast Research in Chemical Education Organic Chemistry M. H. Towns and J. E. Lewis, P. Varma-Nelson,

Organizers

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 1397. Online prélecture quiz design for optimization of student learning and assessment in a first semester organic chemistry lecture course. T. A. Miller, S. G. Smith 2:00 1398. Characterization of EChK in organic synthesis. J. Bond-Robinson, A. P. Stucky 2:25 1399. Linking critical thinking skills to problem-solving ability: Mechanism deduction in organic chemistry. D. P. Cartrette 2:50 1400. Representational preferences of undergraduates in organic chemistry. N. J. Barrows, L. L. Jones 3:15 Intermission. 3:25 1401. Problem-solving strategies of undergraduates in organic chemistry. N. J. Barrows, L. L. Jones 3:50 1402. Organic chemistry students' ways of understanding electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions. A. M. Duffy, B. A. Sawrey 4:15 1403. Whose reality is it anyway? G. Bhattacharyya, G. M. Bodner 4:40 1404. Mental models and misconceptions of undergraduates in organic chemistry. N. J. Barrows, L. L. Jones Section D Holiday Inn on the Bay West Coast Crystallography Education in the 21st Century: What Do Students Need to Know? K. A. Kantardjieff, Organizer,

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 1405. USNCCr surveys of crystallography education and training. K. A. Kantardjieff

2:00 1406. Collaborative project Gemini XRD: What should undergraduate students know about powder X-ray diffraction? G. L. Trammell, H. Bapat, K. E. Dungey, W. Gade, E. J. Voss, M. J. Shaw, M. Shabangi, E. G. Malina, S. D. Wiediger 2:25 1407. Teaching chemists to be better crystallographers. V. G. Young Jr. 2:50 1408. Single crystal diffraction methods: How low can/should you go? A. D. Hunter, S. J. DiMuzio, W. E. Snyder, M. Zeller 3:15 Intermission. 3:25 1409. Understanding electron-density maps. J. P. Glusker 3:50 1410. Problems in teaching x-ray crystallography to modern day students. A. McPherson 4:15 1411. Teaching biomolecular crystallography: A holisitc approach. B. Rupp 4:40 Panel Discussion. THURSDAY MORNING Section A Holiday Inn on the Bay Wicker General Papers Priming the Pipeline B. A. Sawrey,

Organizer

J. A. Trischman,

Presiding

8:00 Introductory Remarks. 8:05 1412. Nanoscience for non-science majors. R. D. Crouch 8:25 1413. SPAN: A dual credit college/high school chemistry program. L. C. Byrd, D. R. Hartman 8:45 1414. Analytical chemistry summer camp for middle school girls. M. E. Robbins, M. H. Schoenfisch 9:05 1415. No child left behind: The chemistry module in Texas. B. Blake, K. A. Chambers 9:25 Intermission. 9:35 1416. Examining the role of undergraduate training in the academic career path: Does gender matter? J. P. Buckner, V. J. Kuck, C. H. Marzabadi, S. A. Nolan 9:55 1417. Chemistry Fellows Program: An approach for training and retention. J. L. March Section Β Holiday Inn on the Bay Porthole General Papers Laboratories and Simulations B. A. Sawrey, Organizer,

Presiding

8:00 Introductory Remarks. 8:05 1418. Virtual ChemLab Project: Realistic and sophisticated simulations for freshman and sophomore level chemistry. B. F. Woodfield, M. C. Asplund 8:25 1419. Virtual ChemLab Project: Using realistic simulations of quantum, calorimetry, and gas experiments to connect experiment with theory. B. F. Woodfield, M. C. Asplund 8:45 1420. Incorporation of thermogravimetric analysis/FTIR into an undergraduate research program. M. J. Baird, N. V. Duffy 9:05 1421. Development of a more efficient solvent system for the recrystallization of benzoic acid: An organic chemistry labora­ tory experiment. T. R. Hightower, J. D. Heeren 9:25 Intermission. 9:35 1422. Microwave-induced organic synthe­ sis of oxidized sterols. B. Dayal, N. H. Ertel 9:55 1423. Is it against the law to have light in my beer? S. J. Donnelly 10:15 1424. Using a combination of technique and self directed laboratory experiments featuring MeasureNet. B. J. Stanton, L. Zhu 10:35 1425. Using Java software to manage a chemistry open lab with remote access. D. C. Tofan, C. Tofan 10:55 1426. Withdrawn.

Section C Holiday Inn on the Bay East Coast Research in Chemical Education On-line Tools and Student Perceptions of Problems M. H. Towns and J. E. Lewis, D. Cartrette,

Organizers

Presiding

8:00 Introductory Remarks. 8:05 1427. Student views of online syllabi and assessments as laboratory course curricula. L. A. Denofrio, P. B. Kelter 8:30 1428. Assessing the effect of web-as­ sisted tools on visual spatial ability and logical reasoning in chemistry. B. L. Gonzalez, P. A. Wegner, R. D. Arasasingham, I. Martorell 8:55 1429. Analysis of student learning using online tutorials. B. N. Stewart, W. J. Vining 9:20 1430. Is more feedback really necessary? A look at feedback and performance. D. R. Walker, J. J. Lagowski 9:45 Intermission. 9:55 1431. Biochemistry students' perceptions of buffer problems. M. Orgill, D. W. Emerich 10:20 1432. Expert and novice categorization of general chemistry problems. R. M. Finney, R. W. Schwenz 10:45 1433. Chemistry and cognition: Do students use metaphors to understand periodicity and atomic structure? C. Phelps, T. Morris, K. Sayne, N. Schwartz Section D Holiday Inn on the Bay West Coast "Hot Topics" in Organic Chemistry Approaches to Undergraduate Laboratory Courses C. Stessman,

Organizer

Ν -Υ. Τ. Stessman, Organizer,

Presiding

8:00 Introductory Remarks. 8:05 1434. Introduction of a research based component into the organic chemistry labo­ ratory sequence. D. Soulsby 8:25 1435. An NMR-intensive organic labora­ tory curriculum. T. W. Nalli 8:45 1436. Molecular modeling: A vital compo­ nent of the organic chemistry laboratory. R. T. Luibrand 9:05 1437. Use of matrix team learning in teaching organic labs. S. C. Waller 9:25 Intermission. 9:35 1438. Open-ended purification schemes for organic chemistry laboratory practical. K. J. Graham, B. J. Johnson, T. N. Jones, E. J. Mclntee 9:55 1439. Incorporation of a scientific meeting modeled "organic symposium" into the undergraduate organic chemistry laboratory class. C. Stessman, N-Y. T. Stessman

Section Β Holiday Inn on the Bay Porthole Using Environmental Analysis in Teaching Analytical Chemistry D. O. De Haan, Organizer,

Presiding

1:00 Introductory Remarks. 1:05 1449. Chemistry of breathalyzers: Under­ graduate research to develop laboratory exercises. P. Brown, J. Poku 1:25 1450. Calibrated Peer Review (CPR) writing for laboratory experiments with an environmental chemistry focus. L. Margerum 1:45 1451. Project-based environmental ana­ lytical chemistry: Introduction to inductively coupled plasma-mass/atomic emission spectrometry and ion chromatogtapy in undergraduate chemistry curriculum. D. Amarasiriwardena 2:05 1452. Integrating ocean science research into a quantitative analysis course. M. J. Robertson, C. D. Winn 2:25 Intermission. 2:35 1453. Loving analytical chemistry: Field studies and student buy-in. D. O. De Haan, J. P. Bolender 2:55 1454. A river runs through it: Redesigning quantitative analysis lab with an urban environmental focus. K. J. Leckrone 3:15 1455. Northwestern University soil sci­ ence laboratory for chem 101. F. M. Geiger Section C Holiday Inn on the Bay East Coast

THURSDAY AFTERNOON

"Hot Topics" in Organic Chemistry Approaches and Lectures in Organic Lecture Courses

Section A

C. Stessman,

Holiday Inn on the Bay Wicker

Ν -Υ. Τ. Stessman, Organizer,

General Papers Introductory Chemistry B. A. Sawrey, C. A. Bailey,

Organizer Presiding

1:00 Introductory Remarks. 1:05 1440. Engineering connections in G11-13 chemistry courses: Applying stoichiometry and the ideal gas law to tuning an automo­ bile engine. T. R. Gilbert, B. Dietz

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

38-TECH

1:25 1441. Making connections: A course of practical skills in physical science. R. L. Nafshun 1:45 1442. Learning from classroom assess­ ment in an introductory chemistry course. F. Chen 2:05 1443. Boltzmann 3D: A Java-based computer simulator for demonstrating and visually learning principles of molecular kinetic theory and statistical mechanics. R. B. Shirts, S. R. Burt, B. J. Lemmon 2:25 Intermission. 2:35 1444. Technology as a tool in teaching general chemistry. C. A. Bailey, G. A. Neff, J. Retsek 2:55 1445. Analysis of student-student interac­ tion in inquiry modules using materials around everyday life. S. J. Kang, H-S. Kim, E-K. Lee 3:15 1446. Paradigm shift in explanation of chemical kinetics and catalysis http:// www.itchem.com/. Y. V. Gankin, V. Gankin 3:35 1447. Quantum-chemical vs. phenomenological explanations in introductory chemistry. Y. V. Gankin, V. Gankin 3:55 1448. Using simple cartoon representa­ tions to show history of elemental nucleogenesis in stars. R. J. Schroeder

Organizer Presiding

1:00 Introductory Remarks. 1:05 1456. Celebrating the obvious in teaching organic chemistry. I. R. Gould 1:25 1457. Organic chemistry and the news. R. Mogul 1:45 1458. Reaction Rolodex: Assessment of reaction flash cards in organic chemistry. E. J. Mahan 2:05 1459. Nature's chemical wonders: Organohalogen compounds. G. W. Gribble, J. J. Worman 2:25 Intermission. 2:35 1460. Microwave-mediated synthesis: A green chemistry technology. M. P. Pollastri 2:55 1461. Green Chemistry methods for a solid-state Diels-Alder [4ττ + 2Tr]cycloaddition reaction. J. R. Whitfield, J. C. Warner 3:15 Concluding Remarks.

CHED/CHAS/CINF

Division of Chemical Health and Safety J. M. Kapin, D. M. Decker, and G. H. Wahl Jr., Program Chairs

3:55 14. Nanoholes in biological membranes caused by nanoparticles. M. M. Banaszak Holl, B. G. Orr, J. R. Baker Jr., S. Hong, E. K. Janus, P. Leroueil, A. Mecke 4:25 15. Nanotechnology: The promises and perils. B. C. Gbaruko, P. N. Gbaruko, C. J. Molokwu 4:55 Concluding Remarks. TUESDAY MORNING

SOOALEViNTSï

Programming Luncheons fcton aaeeftfoe/DMston Otomn Men *

Section A

CHAL's Ongoing Intellectual Property Sense; Key Topics in US. Patent Law (see CHU, Sun) Value Creation and IP Protection for the Smafi Molecule Start-Up (see CHAL Tue) SOCIAL EVENTS:

Luncheon: Tue Reception: Sun, Tue BUSINESS MEETING: Sat

San Diego Marriott San Diego C

SUNDAY MORNING

SUNDAY AFTERNOON

Teaching Safety - Safety Education Expectations in the Real World

Section A

Section A

G. H. Wahl,

Convention Center Room 33A

San Diego Marriott New York

9:00 Introductory Remarks. 9:10 16. How the acrylamide scare got started: The Hallandsas Tunnel Project in Sweden, an occupational health and environmental disaster. I. J. Wilk 9:30 17. EPA and colleges and universities. S. Moon, R. Lippman 9:50 Discussion. 10:00 18. Strengthening safety education of chemistry undergraduates. R. H. Hill Jr., D. A. Nelson 10:30 Intermission. 10:40 19. Committee on Chemical Safety: Mission, structure, and activity. K. P. Fivizzani 11:10 20. CPT: Safety and safety education. E. N. Kresge 11:40 Panel Discussion.

PDA Use and Trends in Chemical Safety J. M. Kapin,

Organizer

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 1. The importance of chemical recognition at an incident. G. Ouzounian 1:55 Intermission. 2:15 2. Paperless lab audits with tablet PCs. R. Vernon 2:35 3. Performing a chemical inventory with PDA. H. M. Whyte, J . Tapia 2:55 Concluding Remarks. MONDAY MORNING Section A

Chemical Safety Issues for Radiation Work Cosponsored with CHED, NUCL, and WCC Organizer

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 4. Evaluation of alpha and gamma radiation from fly ash. M. E. Hall, J. A. Zimmerman 9:00 5. Radiological hazards present the greatest risk in a chemical laboratory—not. M. C. Cournoyer, M. Maestas 9:25 6. How can Integrated Safety Management improve the safety record of your lab? J. T. Voss 9:50 Intermission. 10:10 7. New frontiers for safety professionals: Design of a bioimaging facility, or you thought you'd seen it all! T. Grant 10:35 8. Striving for safety excellence in chemical and glovebox environments. M. L. Montalvo, C. A. Vigil, M. E. Lucero, R. F. Martinez 11:00 9. Safety concerns in radioanalytical work: Does the dose make the poison? H. J. Elston 11:25 Concluding Remarks. MONDAY AFTERNOON

Section A San Diego Marriott San Diego C

Nanotechnology: Is Little Stuff Such a Big Deal? Cosponsored with ENVR, and CEI

Organizer

8:00 1. 'The importance of being Ernesf: Why gathering and cleaning all the relevant data matters for patent analysis. A. J. Trippe 8:30 2. Patent analysis: The technical intelligence professional's adjustable spanner. R. A. Stembridge 9:00 3. Technology oriented competitive intelligence: A primer. B. Mason 9:30 4. Rapid technology intelligence process. A. L. Porter 10:00 Intermission. 10:15 5. PatGen DB: A consolidated genetic patent database platform. R. J. Rouse 10:45 6. Globalization trends measured via patent analysis. A. F. Breitzman Sr. 11:15 7. Assembling the information mosaic. D. Walter 11:45 8. Analyzing and presenting chemical structural information in support of competitor or technology assessment. K. G. Stanley SUNDAY AFTERNOON Section A Convention Center Room 33A

Organizer

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:40 2 1 . Fundamentals of developing effective safety training. B. R. Tophaj, F. Wood-Black 2:00 22. Development of a safety culture in an academic program through the ACS online course on chemical safety. A. U. Shaikh, R. E. Belford 2:20 23. Lessons learned from teaching an online chemical safety course. B. L. Foster 2:40 24. OLCC lessons learned: Emergency response. H. J. Elston 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 25. Student experiences with web based safety resources. R. E. Belford, C. Killingsworth 3:40 26. Teaching an online chemistry course: Chemical safety, protecting ourselves and our environment. G. L. Trammell, D. Rosenthal, S. Van Bramer, D. Lee 4:00 Panel Discussion.

Division of Chemical Information

Organizer

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 10. Introduction to nanomaterial health and safety: Part A. P. D. Lichty 2:05 11. Introduction to nanomaterial health and safety: Part B. P. D. Lichty 2:35 12. Exhausted laminar flow hoods: Clean hood and potential hazard. P. D. Maynard 3:05 Intermission. 3:25 13. Investigating the toxicity of nanoscale materials by gene expression profiling: A systems biology approach. M. J. Cunningham, S. R. Magnuson, M. T. Falduto, L. Balzano, D. E. Resasco

Section A A. J . Trippe,

G. H. Wahl Jr.,

T. Wright, Program Chair D. M. Decker,

Technical Intelligence

Teaching Safety - Safety Education Expectations in the Real World

Section A San Diego Marriott Columbia 1

Safe Exchange of Chemical Information: Can Relevant Chemical Information be Exchanged Without Disclosing Chemical Structures? Cosponsored with COM Ρ MONDAY MORNING

TUESDAY AFTERNOON

San Diego Marriott Columbia 1

C. Lentz,

Organizer

1:25 18. Opportunity knocks: Chemical infor­ mation careers in industry. D. A. Breiner 1:50 19. From lab chemist to patent searcher: Why, what, and how. R. K. Ward 2:15 20. Chemical information careers at U.S. GOCO research laboratories. D. M. Kozelka 2:40 2 1 . Chemical information in not-for-profit nirvana. A. T. O'Brien 3:05 22. So you are thinking of becoming an online information entrepreneur. A. Engel 3:30 23. Careers in science writing and pub­ lishing. L. Friedmann 3:55 24. Career opportunities in computational chemistry and computer-assisted drug design. J. P. Bowen

OTHER SYMPOSIA OF INTEREST: Combinatorial and Higb-Througnput Analysis of Biological Systems (see BIOT, Sun. Mon)

Data Mining and Analysis of Biological Systems (see BtOT, Mon) Teaching Computer Modeling in FirstYear Chemistry (see CHED, Mon) PDA Use and Trends In Chemical Safety (see CHAS, Sun)

Informatics Challenges for Startups Cosponsored with SCHB T. Wright,

Organizer

1:25 Introductory Remarks. 1:30 9. Start-up companies and chemical informatics: A professional service provider's perspective. R. D. Feinstein 1:55 10. Developing an hepatotoxicity database. J. Kelly 2:20 11. Battling the data avalanche: A chemical data management solution for the start-up company. A. Williams 2:45 12. Integrating ISIS/Host RCG databases with other applications. M. Runyan, R. Sandstrom, J. Myhre, A. Tulinsky, A. Oliva 3:10 Intermission. 3:20 13. Capturing and aggregating largescale discovery data in a start-up environment. S. M. Baxter, J. Fetrow, S. J. Reisinger 3:45 14. Mobilizing published data to make informed drug discovery decisions. R. Hillard 4:10 15. The Vault, ArQule's dry compound archive. R. J. Carazza 4:35 16. Extracting knowledge and delivering data: From the analytical laboratory to the chemist's desktop using web-enabled technologies. A. J . Williams Section Β Convention Center Room 33B Careers in Chemical Information Cosponsored with YCC P. Barnett,

Convention Center Room 33A Safe Exchange of Chemical Information: Can Relevant Chemical Information be Exchanged Without Disclosing Chemical Structures? Cosponsored with COM Ρ C. A. Lipinski,

Organizer

T. I. Oprea, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:40 25. Sharing chemical information without sharing chemical structure. L. Shen, K. M. Smith, B. B. Masek, R. S. Pearlman 9:10 26. How to reveal without revealing. R. Abagyan, E. Raush, L. Budagyan 9:40 27. Reverse engineering chemical struc­ tures from molecular descriptors: How many solutions? J-L. Faulon, W. M. Brown, S. Martin 10:10 28. Possibilities for transfer of relevant data without revealing structural information. O. O. Clement, O. F. Guner 10:40 Intermission. 11:00 29. Screens as a secure descriptor of chemistry space. N. Osadchiy, S. Trepalin 11:30 30. Why relevant chemical information cannot be exchanged without disclosing structures. D. Filimonov, V. V. Poroikov 12:00 3 1 . Are topomers a useful representa­ tion for "safe exchange of chemical informa­ tion"? R. D. Cramer Section Β Convention Center Room 33B The Future of Scientific Publishing Cosponsored with CSA Trust G. Grethe,

Organizer

8:00 Introductory Remarks. 8:05 32. The perfect storm: Electronic publish­ ing and the Internet. S. R. Heller 8:35 33. Scientific and technological data in society. R. Deplanque 9:05 34. Open access and the Chemical Semantic Web. P. Murray-Rust, H. S. Rzepa 9:35 35. RDF-based molecular relationships, the Semantic Web and the future of scien­ tific publishing. H. S. Rzepa, O. Casher, P. Murray-Rust 10:05 36. Movement toward open access: Why new models of research communica­ tion are inevitable. A. J. Wolpert 10:35 37. Open access and the BERLIN DECLARATION: The MPG strategy. R. Schlogl, T. Velden 11:05 38. Open reader access, a better busi­ ness model? A view from the STM-Association. P. Bolman 11:35 39. Springer Open Choice: evolution, not revolution. D. Haank

Organizer

1:00 17. What do they want from me? A chemistry librarian explores liaison needs and desires. B. Thomsett-Scott

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

TECH-39

TECHNICAL PROGRAM

2:00 Introductory Remarks. 2:10 40. Secure statistical analyses on distributed databases. S. S. Young, A. Karr, o.n • « r L · , , • ,* 2:40 41. Encoding molecular structures as ranks of models: A new, secure way for sharing chemical data and development of ADME/T models. I. V. Tetko 3:10 Panel Discussion.

58. NMR spectral invariants as numerical descriptors for diastereomers and enantiomers. R. Natarajan, S. C. Basak 59. Partition of solvents-co-solvents of nanotubes: Proteins and cyclopyranoses. F. Torrens 60. Prediction of biologic partition coefficients and binding affinities using QSAR models. D. Mills, M. M. Mumtaz, H. A. El-Masri, D. M. Hawkins, S. C. Basak 61. Prediction of blood: Brain penetration of chemicals using computed molecular descriptors. C. T. Matson, S. C. Basak, LR.Drewes 62. How to find the best computational chemistry method using cheminformatics. T. Ercanli, D. B. Boyd 63. Scaffold hopping and virtual screening using similarity search and bioisosteric replacement. G Liang I. Morize 64. QSTR models of juvenile hormone mimetic compounds for Culex pipiens larvae. J. J. Kraker, D. M. Hawkins, D. Mills, R. Natarajan, S. C. Basak 71, 96. See subsequent listings.

Section Β

TUESDAY MORNING

Convention Center Room 33B

Section A

MONDAY AFTERNOON Section A Convention Center Room 33A Safe Exchange of Chemical Information: Can Relevant Chemical Information be Exchanged Without Disclosing Chemical Structures? Cosponsored with COMP C. A. Lipinski, Organizer T. I. Oprea, Organizer, Presiding

The Future of Scientific Publishing Cosponsored with CSA Trust G. Grethe, Organizer 1:30 42. Open access, open minds. A. Twiss-Brooks 2:00 43. Wide road to open access. N. R. Cozzarelli 2:30 44. Chemistry journals: A modest proposai. S. M. Bachrach 3:00 45. Open access publication: One editor's perspective. L J. Marnett 3:30 46. Publishing implications of open archiving proposals: An examination of academic chemistry research funding sources. G. S. Porter 4:00 Intermission. 4:30 Open Meeting: Committees on Publications and Chemical Abstracts Service. 1 1 Λ Μ η Α ν CWCMIMr. MONDAY EVENING Section A Convention Center Sails Pavilion

Convention Center Room 33A ADME/tox Informatics Cosponsored with COMP, MEDI, and TOXI O. F. Giiner, Organizer 9:00 65. Beyond the ADME challenge: Integration of experimental and in silico approaches. J. R. Chretien, M. Pintore, Ν. Piclin 9:30 66. Beyond the LFER paradigm: Harnessing atomic descriptors and artificial neural networks to predict pKa. R. Fraczkiewicz, B. Steere, M. B. Bolger 10:00 67. Building a computational platform for predicting toxicity. J. E. Penzotti, G. A. Landrum, S. Putta 10:30 68. Making FDA toxicity data available to the public: FDA ToxML database for f ^ 2 t0X,C,5f· " · ! · Α ™ < * ο η ; Mayer, M. L. Twaroski, R. D. Benz, E. J. Matthews, N. L. Kruhlak, M. A. Cheeseman, C. Yang 11:00 69. Strategic assessment of domain applicability of QSAR models. G. Patlew.cz, C. Yang, G. J. Myatt, K. Cross, P. E. Blower Section Β

Sci-Mix T. Wright, Organizer 8:00-10:00 47. Practical use of scientific and engineering information at United Technologies and Hamilton Sundstrand. S. Cristina 48. Aqueous solubility prediction using 7,000 compounds. P. J. Jurgutis, A. Sazonovas, P. Japertas 49. Estimation of estrogen receptor binding affinity using theoretical molecular descriptors. D. Mills, S. C. Basak, D. M. Hawkins 50. Alchemist Club at Missouri Western State ΓΟΙΙΡΟΡ J M Hovev J M MrKinzie ^ Ï ^ L " ! ! ^ ^ S. A. Oehlert, M. B. Mears 51. Application of rough set theory to structureactivity relationships. J. Petit, G. M. Maggiora 52. Canonicalized systematic nomenclature in chemoinformatics. J. J. Yang 53. Data publication @ source via the open archive initiative. S. J. Coles, J. G. Frey, M. B. Hursthouse, L. A. Carr, , n,Marifina n C. J. Guttendge 54. Designing libraries from HTS data: Hot fragments and activity models. C. M. Barker, J. E. Mills 55. Hierarchical quantitative structure-toxicity relationship (Hi-QSTR) modeling of aquatic toxicity anS mutagenicity. D. Mills, S. C. Basak, B. D Gute 56. MGE: A model generating engine and applications. S. Schefzlck, M. Bradley 57. Mutagen/non-mutagen classification of congeneric and diverse sets of chemicals using computed molecular descriptors: A hierarchical approach. D. Mills, S. C. Basak, D. M. Hawkins, B. D. Gute

Convention Center Room 33B Informatics and High Throughput Experimentation Cosponsored with MEDI Μ

· Α · Miller, Organizer

8:55

Introductory Remarks. ™. CAMS: A high-throughput compound ™ management system. . _R",:F|i"ste,n * L ™L ^ ^ «ÏÏÏÏL Ï Ï ^ S ^ T i i S S S f pSe p Ït l dT e f rS a J 9 m e n t a t , o n Patterns in tandem

9:00

VYuanTnLtsa-To.ic s m i t h > v. H. Wysocki ' 9 : 5 0 7 2 p rog ressable hit identification from HTS data: An integrated informatics solution. M. A. Hermsmeier 10:15 Intermission 10:30 73. Triple store databases and their role j n high throughput, automated, extensible data analysis. K. R. Taylor, R. J. Gledhill, j w Essex J G Frey y „ Λ „ •'fvl .Γ , . r4 4. 10:55 74. Informatics implementation in ExxonMobil Chemical Company. R. J . Wittenbrink, M. E. Lacey, G. J. Howsmon, D. A. Stachelczyk ^ T G ^ n g

M s

Lipton

R D

rts P h o t o g r a p h i n g Of S l i d e s a n d / θ Γ t a n i n n « f t a l L e ie « r ^ h i K i t ^ H te m P 9 ° f te,kS I S Prohibited U l l l e S S ρ β Π Π Ϊ β β Ι Ο Π IS O b t a i n e d f r o m individual presenters. "

11:20 75. Designing test plates with maximal information content and diversity for the development of library protocols. J- E. Patterson, Y. Zhang, A. Smellie, D. Li, D s · - Hartsough, L. Yu, C. M. Baldino TUESDAY AFTERNOON

10:30 92. Prioritizing hit series when hERG is inherent. D. Patterson, B. Wible 11:00 93. Substructural analysis of toxicologiCal databases. H. O. Villar, M. R. Hansen, j . Hodges, R. Friedman 11:30 94. QSPR Studies of PBDEs. p. Q. Seybold, M. J. O'Malley

Section A

Section Β

Convention Center Room 33A .«..„ .* ADMEAoxlnformat.es M JJew ethodolog.es Cosponsored with COMP, MEDI, and TOXI

Convention Center Room 33B

Cauner, Organizer and graphbased coding for ADME prediction. , K l e a n e r Δ Zell 2 -30 77 Electron density derived descriptors in ' ADME/tox screening. N. Sukumar, c. M. Breneman, M.J. Embrechts 3 : 0 o 78. Methods to assess diversity and quality of local neighbors in toxicity databases. K. P. Cross, C. Yang, G. J. Myatt, P. E. Blower 3:30 79. An approach to the interpretation of computational neural network QSAR models. R. Guha, D. T. Stanton, P. C. Jurs 4:00 80. ALOGPS (http://www.vcclab.org) is a free on-line program to predict lipophilicity and aqueous solubility of chemical compounds. I. V. Tetko, V. Y. Tanchuk 4:30 81. Oral bioavailability prediction based on expert knowledge and informatics. P· J- Jurgutis, D. Zmuidinavicius, R · Didziapetris, P. Japertas 2:0Q

? 6 D i f f e r e n c e in v e c t o r . b a s e d

Section Β Convention Center Room 33B Informatics and High Throughput Experimentation Cosponsored with MEDI M

· A"

General Papers T

Wrjght

Organizer

9 5 Application of virtual screening tech™l°?ies ° " d i s c o v e r y o f f a c t o r X a i n h i b i t o r s · ·' "M o " z e K ^ , Q J? • ^ K Comparative pharmacophore modeling of or anic anion 9 transporting polypeptides: a meta-analysis of rat Oatp1a1, human OATP1A2 and OATP1B1. c - Chang, S. Pang, S. Ekins, P. Swaan 9 : 5 0 97 · Integrated approaches to informatics: ba er y healthcare pharmacophore informatics platform, part 1 : document handling, project support and portfolio management. W. J. Scott, S. Weigand, P. G. Nell, S-N. Wirtz, E. Lohrmann, R-M. Brunne, J. Mittendorf 10:15 98. Integrated approaches to informatics: Bayer Healthcare Pharmacophore Informatics Platform, Part 2: Data integration, analysis and visualization. P. G. Nell, M. Haerter, R-M. Brunne, W. J. Scott, S. Mundt, A. Goeller, J. Wood, F. Reiche, M RUppelt, J. Mittendorf 10:40 99. LigandScout: Interactive automated pharmacophore model generation from ligand-target complexes. G. Wolber, T |_a nger 11:05 100. Virtual screening of combinatorial libraries for asymmetric catalysis. J. D. Hirst 9;00

Applications of Information Theory in Chemistry Cosponsored with COMP

M,ller

' Organizer 1 - 4 5 8 2 Librarv desian throuah lead ODtimiza " fon: ^ ^ ί ο η 9 ί θ Γ inte g ra ting data and" workf|ow a m h jg h .t h roughput scientists. L j CuJot Jr Boosting descriptors for similarity 2.Λ0' ^ searches: feature trees trained by machine | e a m j n g M G a s t r e i c h ) j. L i a 0 ) G . He ssler, s pfeiffer-Marek, S. A. Hindle, M. Warmuth, C. Lemmen, T. Naumann, K-H. Baringhaus 2:35 84. Comparison of the effect of false positives on Tanimoto and modified BayeS j a n similarity. D. Rogers 3:00 85. Design and linkage of compound filters to HTS assay promiscuity. B. C. Pearce, M. J. Sofia, D. A. Stock, Q A. Drexler 3:25 Intermission. 3:40 86. Fingerprint-based virtual screening using multiple reference structures. J. Hert, P. willett, D. J. Wilton, P. Acklin, K. Azzaoui, E . Jacoby, A. Schuffenhauer 4 : 0 5 8 7 . Learning from library design. G. A. Landrum, J. E. Penzotti, S. Putta 4:3 ° **' U s i n g t o p o m e r s i m i l a r i t y a n d R e x S ^ °PtDesi9n to create tar9eted G P C R libraries. S. Choi, F. Soltanshahi, M S " " ' " " ^ * ° ^ WEDNESDAY MORNING « ™ ™ C W M munraiw ς ^ ^ . oecnon Λ r tr ^ Γ Μ Α

AnuicAov i«]thiophene. G. R. Kolakowski, R. A. Kasar, M. Kim, K. L. Bjomson, I. Jacobson, F. S. Farouz, E. D. Thorsett 146. Comparative study of the effects of acid "promoters" on the microwave and thermal Friedel-Crafts acylations of 1-(phenylsulfonyl)pyrroles. D. M. Ketcha, S. N. Cooke 147. /V-Oxidation of 2-substituted pyridines by dimethyldioxirane: Kinetics and activation parameters. W. R. Winkeljohn, P. Leggett-Robinson, B. S. Crow, P. C. Vasquez, P. J. Franklin, L. Strekowski, A. L. Baumstark 148. Synthesis of novel amphiphilic N-alkylpyridinium salts. J. H. Wynne, A. W. Snow 149. New routes to 6-oxoverdazyl free radicals: Synthesis of 1,5-diisopropyl substituted verdazyls. D. J. R. Brook, A. J. Brieger, E. Paré, M. Badik, M. Schinke 150. Synthesis of anti-prion active acridine derived compounds. R. Csuk, A. Barthel 151. Suzuki coupling reactions of 6-(azolyl, alkylthio and fluoro)purine 2'-deoxynucleosides and nucleosides. J . Liu, M. J. Robins 152. Tetrabutyl ammonium salt-induced denization of nitropyridines: Synthesis of fluoro-, hydroxy-, and methoxypyridines. S. D. Kuduk, R. M. DiPardo, M. G. Bock 153. The reaction of 4-nitro-3-bromopyridine (and 2-nitro-3-bromopyridine) with amine: A novel nitro-group migration. J . Yao, J. Yang, P. Blake 154. Synthesis of new bis(ethynylpyridine) alcohol ligands. M. B. Jacobsson, D. Y. Son, H. Zhang 155. Syntheses of bipyridyl-tethered macrocyclic tetrathioether ligands. W. Qu, D. B. Rorabacher, M. J. Taschner

156. An efficient regiospecific synthesis of 2,4,6-trisubstituted pyrimidine-5-carboxaldehydes. B-L. Deng, H. Fenniri 157. Symmetric and asymmetric substituted cyclopenta[d]pyridazines. M. T. Blankenbuehler 158. A Henry route to N, O-substituted 2-piperidinones from aspartate-derived precursors. F. A. Luzzio, D. Y. Duveau 159. A highly efficient enantioselective synthesis of 2-methyl chromans with studies in the Pd-catalyzed aryl ether ring formation. M. Palucki, N. Yasuda 160. A synthetic approach to ellipticine. T - L Ho, S. Y. Hsieh 161. Progress toward the synthesis of cis-2,3epoxy-5-phenylpentan-1 -ol derivatives, precursors to potential HIV-1 protease inhibitors. M. R. Dintzner, T. W. Lyons, M. H. Akroush, P. Wucka 162. Design and synthesis of labeled A 9 -THC analogs. L. Qi, M. M. Meijler, K. D. Janda 163. New metabolites from the Caribbean gorgonian coral Pseudopterogorgia bipinnata. C. A. Ospina, A. D. Rodriguez 164. Pyrrole-based conjugated /V-acyliminium ions: Generation and reaction with electronrich heteroaromatics. A. R. Ekkati, D. K. Bates 165. Bicyclic lactams from imidosulfone cyclizations: Functionalization and applications to pyrrole synthesis. A. S. Gopalan, N. M. Hernandez, F. A. Sanchez, H. K. Jacobs 166. Concise synthesis of 5,8-disubstituted indolizidines and pumiliotioxins from a common intermediate. A. D. Walker, P.J. Stevenson 167. Preparation of ligands for lipoxygenase model complexes. J. H. Volkman, Κ. Μ. Nicholas 168. N-Tfa and Fmoc-(a-aminoacyl)benzotriazoles as chiral C-acylating reagents. R. Jiang, K. Suzuki 169. Synthesis and reactivity of tetraphenylazuliporphyrins derived from 6-tert-butyl and 6-phenylazulene. J. A. El-Beck, T. D. Lash 170. Synthesis of novel porphyrin analogues from resorcinol and 2-methylresorcinol. L Xu, K. Miyaké, T. D. Lash 171. PLGA encapsulated porphyrin nanoparticles as activateable photodynamic therapy and imaging agents. J. R. McCarthy, J. M. Perez, R. Weissleder 172. Enhancement of phlorin stability by the incorporation of meso-mesityl substituents. G. R. Geier III, T. D. LeSaulnier, B. W. Graham 173. Convenient microwave-assisted organic synthesis of 1,3,5-triarylobenzenes by cyclotrimerization of in situ formed enaminones. R. Lundin, P. loannidis 174. General synthesis method of diaryl- and diaryl thio-ethers via SNAr using microwaveassisted synthesis. P. loannidis, R. Lundin 175. Two-step, one-pot synthesis of 5-aryl-2amino-1,3,4-oxadiazoles using microwaveassisted synthesis. P. loannidis, R. Lundin 176. A 2 -lsoxazolines from β,γ-unsaturated oximes. M. D. Mosher, K. S. Frost, L. G. Emmerich, B. Anderson 177. New route to 2-amino-2-imidazoline by aza-Wittig/carbodiimide ring closure. S. M. Nalli, M. Shipman, A. S. Franklin 178. One-step synthesis of 2-amino-7-chlorothiazolo[5,4-d]pyrimidines: A versatile synthetic intermediate. J . Liu, R. J. Patch, M. R. Player 179. Preparation of 3-aryl-3Hbenzo[e][1,2]dithiolo[3,4-b]thiopyran-4-ones. C. Mukjergee, E. R. Biehl, H. Zhang 180. Study of alkylating reaction of 6-methyl-2selenoxo- pyrimidinon-4. K. O. Zohidov, D. A. Shermuhamedov 181. Study of alkylating reaction of 6-methyl2-aminopyrimidinon-4. K. O. Zohidov, S. Kambarov 182. Asymmetric synthesis of quinazolines via directed orthometallation and addition to tert-butanesulfinyl imines. H. Zhu, H. A. Rajapakse, M. B. Young, S. Chariton, N. N. Tsou 183. Novel and highly regioselective synthesis of substituted pyrazoles. J. S. Grimm, R. Callahan, A. Choudhury, B. Segmuller, K. L. Sorgi, T. Xiao, D. Xu 184. The synthesis and further transformations of carbohydrated-fused heterocycles. M. De Castro, C. H. Marzabadi

TECH-89

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 185. Structure-based design, synthesis and structure-activity relationship of peptide libraries containing Phe analogs as reversible inhibitors for thrombin. C. Clement, J. Gonzalez, R. Alcantara, P. Chimieze, M. Philipp 186. Capillary-based instrument for screening metal-based catalysts for slow organic reactions. G. Shi, S. G. Weber, Q. Liang, F. Hong, S. Nelson 187. Analytical constructs and monomer reactivity profiling. C. F. Portal, M. Bradley 188. Synthesis and characterization of a pHreporting cladding for optical fibers. A. Benko, P. Geissinger, A. W. Schwabacher 189. Applications of light-directed radial combinatorial chemistry: Development of new surface chemistries and applications to the synthesis of small molecule microarrays. M. Patel, A. Shaginian, S. T. Flickinger, P. J. Belshaw, F. Cerrina 190. Light-directed radial combinatorial chemistry: Towards the synthesis of small molecule microarrays. A. Shaginian, M. Patel, P. J. Belshaw 191. Modular synthesis of pantetheine and phosphopantetheine. A. L. Mandel, M. D. Burkart, J. J. Laclair 192. ROMP strategies to high-load electrophile scavengers. J. Guerra, R. Herpel, P. Vedantham, G. I. Georg, L. A. Mitscher, D. L. Flynn, P. Hanson 193. Ring-closing metathesis of macrocyclic compounds and cross-metathesis of allyl esters of amino acids leading to peptidomimetics. T. K. C. Low, E. Enholm 194. Withdrawn. 195. Bifunctional polymer-supported reagent/ catalyst approach for the preparation of pure dihydrogen trioxide (HOOOH). L. Eltepu, P. Wentworth Jr. 196. Polymer-supported reagents in the synthesis and purification of 6-methyl-2-(phenylethynyl)pyridine. M. Singer, S. Li, F. Epie 197. Solid-supported [2+2+2] cycloadditions. A. Deiters, D. D. Young, W. H. Fields, M. L. Sharma 198. Polymer-supported chiral lithium amide bases: Synthesis and application in asymmetric organic reactions. L. Ma, P. G. Williard 199. Novel antibiotics: Macrocyclic peptides designed to trap Holliday Junctions. C. L Carroll, I. Medina, S. R. McAlpine 200. Versatile macroporous resins: Universal scavengers for synthetic organic chemistry. P. A. Boguszewski, A. F. Coffey, J. W. Davies, A. A. MacDonald, A. J. Mendonca, F. P. Warner 201. Silica-based carbonate: A useful reagent for amide synthesis. F. Béland, M. Morin, G. Gingras, F. Chaumel 202. Convenient solid phase synthesis of internal β-tum mimetics and their applications toward biologically interesting ligands. B. J . Min, X. Gu, R. R. Petrov, A. V. Mayorov, V. J. Hruby 203. Multi-polymer solution phase reactions: Application in Mitsunobu reactions. A. M. Harned, V. Punitha, T. Samarakoon, H. S. He, P. H. Toy, P. R. Hanson, D. L. Flynn 204. Polymer-supported bifunctional reagents for catalysis. C. Wood, A. Marsh, J. W. Davies 205. New boron-based multi-component reac­ tions. N. A. Petasis, B. J. Douglass, J. C. Raber 206. Synthetic routes to diverse S-heterocyclic libraries. M. D. S. Jimenez, J. H. Jun, J. M. Dougherty, P. Hanson 207. Development of new fluorous scavenging and coupling reagents. W. Zhang, C. H-T. Chen, Y. Lu, J. Irwin, I. Batra 208. Fluorous benzoaldehydes for diversityoriented synthesis. W. Zhang, Y. Lu, C. H-T. Chen, T. Nagashima 209. Synthesis and screening of a library of streptogramin Β analogues. M. C. Rosen, A. Shaginian, P. J. Belshaw 210. Diversity-oriented synthesis of a library of alkaloids: Planning, methodology, and development. A. M. Taylor, S. J. Taylor, S. L. Schreiber

90-TECH

211. Pd-catalyzed amination in a polar medium: Microwave-assisted synthesis and a novel tandem Suzuki cross-coupling. M. A. Steinbeiser, S. R. Stauffer 212. A "Click" approach to the synthesis of coumarin-based fluorescent molecules. F. Xie, K. Sivakumar, B. M. Cash, Q. Wang 213. One-pot parallel synthesis of the 3-amino, 3-carboxamide, and 3-sulfonamide-substituted quinazolinones. J-F. Liu, P. Ye, K. Sargent, K. Sprague II, D. Cherrak, D. Yohannes, C. M. Baldino 214. Reversible Diels-Alder reactions for the generation of dynamic combinatorial librar­ ies. P. J. Boul, P. Reutenauer, J. M. Lehn 215. Design of chromophore for chiroptical molecular switches based on dithiocarbamate - iminodithiolane interconversion. D. A. Guthrie, J. D. Thobum 216. How do simple molecular-level machines perform tasks? D. A. Leigh, M. N. Chatterjee, E. R. Kay 217. Toward synthetic molecular motors: Stud­ ies of chiral biaryls designed to exhibit unidirectional bond rotation. B. J. Dahl, B. P. Branchaud 218. Towards membrane spanning rotaxanes. A. Bertocco, D. A. Leigh 219. Molecular lithography. J. E. Jàrvholm 220. Synthesis and characterization of porphyrin arrays mounted on PEDOT surfaces. T. Hanks, S. Singh, L. Glish, L. L. Wright 221. Helical encapsulation of chromophores for unique photonic/electronic properties. M. Pepitone, H. L Ricks, J. Je, 0-K. Kim 222. Synthesis and chemosensory behavior of anthracene bisimide derivatives. D. S. Tyson, F. Ilhan, M. A. Meador 223. Synthesis and optical properties of highly substituted anthracene bisimide derivatives. F. Ilhan, D. S. Tyson, M. A. Meador 224. Synthesis and characterization of new blue emitting material with tetraphenylsilane. J-U. Kim, H-B. Lee, J-S. Shin, Y-H. Kim, Y-K. Joe, S. K. Kwon 225. Cycloalkylidene fulgides: Synthesis and comparison of photochromic properties. W. W. Wayne Lee, L. M. Gan, T. P. Loh 226. Chiral assembly of dendron rod-coil molecules. B. W. Messmore, S. I. Stupp 227. Manipulation of fluorescence in poly(phenyleneethynylene)s through the use of disassembling dendrons. D. T. Sisk, A. Ortiz, C. S. Shanahan, D. V. McGrath 228. Synthesis and characterization of polyamidoamine or polyamine dendrimrers functionalized with electrochemiluminescent Ru(ll) complexes. B. H. Kim, D. N. Lee, Ε. Η. Kim, H. S. Park, J. Y. Lee, Y. M. Jun, W-Y. Lee 229. Dendritic materials for enhanced electrooptic activity through active component. A. Akelaitis, P. A. Sullivan, G. McGrew, S. K. Lee, D. H. Choi, L. R. Dalton 230. Amorphous organic glasses from multiarm dendrimers for thin-film photonics appli­ cations. P. A. Sullivan, A. Akelaitis, J. Luo, M. Haller, Y. Liao, B. H. Robinson, A. K. Y. Jen, L. R. Dalton 231. Synthesis of dendronized-carboxylic acids for peptide derivatization. J. E. Betancourt, M. G. Rosario, E. Rosa-Molinar, J. M. Rivera 232. Instrumented indentation testing to develop hardness and elastic modulus of thin films based on silsesquioxane. L. Hu, S. Zhao 233. Method to determine the stress-strain behavior of thin films based on SP 2 -SSO. S. Zhao 234. Developing functional assays for detecting chemical agents using synthetic ion chan­ nels. J. Yang, S. Blake, J. Rose, M. Mayer 235. Development of a nerve agent sensor. T. J. Dale, J. Rebek Jr. 236. Ab initio calculations of intermolecular transfer integrals and bandwidth for organic molecular materials. J. Huang, M. Kertesz 237. 3,6-Diazido-1,2,4,5-tetrazine: A new pre­ cursor for the preparations of carbon nanospheres and nitrogen-rich carbon nitrides. D. E. Chavez, M. H. Huynh, M. A. Hiskey 238. Processing the right actuator: The relation­ ship between nanostructure and materials properties of higher-order pyrroles. B. D. Pate, E. L. Thomas, R. Z. Pytel 239. Synthesis and characterization of mixed heterocyclic acenes of thiophene and pyr­ role. K. Ogawa, S. C. Rasmussen 240. Synthesis and properties of dithieno[3,2-b: 2'3'-d]pyrrole oligomers with applications in conjugated systems. A. R. Wohl, K. R. Radke, S. Mayo, S. C. Rasmussen

241. Studies of N-alkylamino and N,N-dialkylamino-functionalized polythiophenes. S. D. Rothstein, S. C. Rasmussen 242. Density Functional Theory calculations on some oligothiophenes. P-T. Pham, S. Gaik 243. To fold or not to fold? Conjugated polythiophene foldamers. J. R. Matthews, A. P. H. J. Schenning, E. W. Meijer 244. Tricyanovinyl oligothiophenes for electronic devices. T. M. Pappenfus, W. J. Stegner, N. E. Williams, J. C. Johnson, B. A. Edlund, K. R. Mann, D. E. Janzen, M. W. Burand, K. A. McGee 245. Preparation and microstructure of doped polyaniline. D. Yu 246. Functional poly (lactones): Methodology and polymerization. W. W. Gerhardt, D. E. Noga, M. Week, D. M. Collard, A. J. Garcia 247. Nitric oxide-releasing polymeric materials derived in part from acrylonitrile monomer. F. DeRosa, M. L. Citro, L. K. Keefer, J. A. Hrabie 248. Withdrawn. 249. Optimizing the binding site of a novel photo-reversible calcium chelator. D. Hernandez, S. Kumar, A. McCurdy 250. 3-Cyano-2-(dicyanomethylene)-4,5-dihydrocarbyl-5-hydroxy-3-pyrroline, a multifunctionizable electron acceptor for nonlin­ ear optical (NLO) chromophores. Y. Liao, K. A. Firestone, C. Anderson, B. H. Robinson, P. J. Reid, L R. Dalton MONDAY MORNING Section A Convention Center Ballroom 20A-B Current Aspects of Synthetic Organic Chemistry Cosponsored with MEDI C. Lane,

Organizer

P. V. Ramachandran, Organizer,

Presiding

9:00 251. Carbanion-mediated strategies for synthetic aromatic chemistry. V. Snieckus 9:45 252. Organic azides: Late bloomers. K. B. Sharpless 10:30 253. Making natural products by fluo­ rous mixture synthesis. D. P. Curran 11:15 254. Natural products in drug discovery. S. J. Danishefsky 12:00 Concluding Remarks. Section Β

Frontiers in Bio-organic Chemistry and Chemical Biology Cosponsored with BIOT, and MEDI

Convention Center Room 11A Asymmetric Reactions and Syntheses V. B. Birman,

Presiding

8:00 263. The asymmetric synthesis of 3-adenenyl and 3-guanidinyl-5-hydroxymethyl-2-pyrrolidinones. A. Saleh, J. D'Angelo, M. B. Smith 8:20 264. Asymmetric C-C and C-0 bondforming reactions. P. J. Walsh, A. E. Lurain, A. Kelly, A. G. Maestri 8:40 265. Stereoselectivity in the [2+2] photodimerization of derivatives of orotic acid. J. M. Hahn, B. Greene, K. Brawner, M. Patel 9:00 266. Development of an enantioselective organocatalytic intramolecular cyclopropanation reaction. M. J. Gaunt, N. Bremeyer, S. V. Ley 9:20 267. Enantioselective Simmons-Smith cyclopropanation using chiral reagents derived from phosphoric acids. A. B. Charette, M-C. Laçasse 9:40 268. Alkyl-C-NHCs, new carbene ligands for transition metal catalysts. V. Lavallo, G. Bertrand 10:00 269. Reagent controlled asymmetric homologation of boronic esters with configurationally stable chiral carbenoids. P. R. Blakemore, H. D. Vater 10:20 270. Efforts toward the development of peptide-based chiral N-heterocyclic carbene ligands. S. R. Gilbertson, G. Xu 10:40 271. Efficient enantioselective synthesis of functionalized piperidines through Mocatalyzed asymmetric ring-opening cross metathesis (AROCM). A. Cortez, A. H. Hoveyda, R. R. Schrock 11:00 272. Asymmetric intramolecular alkylation of indoles with unactivated olefins. X. Han, R. A. Widenhoefer 11:20 273. Synthesis of chiral, non-racemic cyclopentenones from allylic hydroxy phosphonates. C. D. Spilling, B. Yan, S. Bandyopadhyay 11:40 274. Asymmetric Diels-Alder catalysis using a silica-grafted bis(oxazoline) catalyst: Influence of surface passivation on the enantioselectivity. D. Rechavi, B. Albela, L. Bonneviot, M. Lemaire

Convention Center Room 10 Total Synthesis of Complex Molecules M. A. deLong,

Organizer

M. G. Oakley, Organizer,

Section C

Section D

Convention Center Ballroom 20 C-D

L. L. Kiessling,

11:30 262. A combinatorial approach to pro­ moting human embroynic stem cell selfrenewal. L. L. Kiessling, B. P. Orner, R. Derda, R. Lewis, J. Thomson

Presiding

8:00 Introductory Remarks. 8:15 255. New opportunities at the interface of chemistry and biology. P. G. Schultz 8:40 256. Mechanistic and structural studies on thiamin biosynthetic enzymes. T. Begley 9:05 257. Probing miniprotein stability via backbone thioester exchange. S. H. Gellman 9:30 258. Threading polyintercalators. B. L. Iverson, J . Lee, V. Guelev, Y. Chu 9:55 259. Ligands for diverse protein surfaces: Design, discovery, and phenotype. A. Schepartz 10:20 Intermission. 10:40 260. Mimicking the structures and func­ tions of DNA. E. T. Kool 11:05 261. How cells enhance DNA flexibility. N. A. Becker, J. D. Kahn, L J. Maher III

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

Presiding

8:00 275. Synthesis and crystallographic analysis of 1-azafenestranes. S. E. Denmark, J. I. Montgomery 8:20 276. Diastereoselective Mgl 2 -mediated ring expansion of methylenecyclopropanes: Application towards the total synthesis of (-)-alpha-Kainic acid. M. Lautens, M. E. Scott 8:40 277. Improved synthesis of the Lamellarins. S. T. Handy, Y. Zhang 9:00 278. Development of a cascade asymmetric Heck-iminium ion cyclization: Total synthesis of the strychnos alkaloid Minfiensine. A. B. Dounay, L. E. Overman, A. D. Wrobleski 9:20 279. First enantioselective synthesis and structure determination of (—) -crambidine. L. E. Overman, Y. H. Rhee 9:40 280. Model studies towards the synthesis of Catharanthine. J. M. Mejia-Oneto, H. Zhang, S. M. Lynch, A. Padwa 10:00 281. Studies toward the total synthesis of Koumine. J. D. White, D. C. Ihle 10:20 282. Total synthesis of the tetracyclic hapalindoles. D. B. England, M. A. Kerr 10:40 283. Synthesis of complex indoles: Total syntheses of cis-trikentrin A, cis-trikentrin B, and herbindole Β. Μ. A. Kerr, S. C. Banfield, S. K. Jackson 11:00 284. Towards the total synthesis of Manzamine A using 1,3 dipolar cycloaddi­ tion of azomethine ylides. S. M. Pih, I. Coldham

ORGN

11:20 285. Expedient synthesis of (±)-Tetraponerine-4. S. Mathieu, A. B. Charette 11:40 286. Studies directed toward the total synthesis of the cephalotaxus esters. J. D. Eckelbarger, D. Y. Gin Section Ε Convention Center Room 9 Materials, Devices, and Switches M. C. Biewer,

Presiding

8:00 287. Synthesis, spectra and structure of bis(diarylamine)s with electron-rich heterocy­ clic bridge groups. S. Zheng, T. L. Kinnibrugh, O. Kwon, C. Fink, C. Risko, L. Beverina, S. Barlow, E. Zojer, T. V. Timofeeva, J-L. E. Bredas, S. R. Marder 8:20 288. Stacked oligothiophenes: New materials and models for charge carriers in polythiophenes. D. M. Collard, K. Knoblock 8:40 289. Poly-p-phenylene phosphine/polyaniline alternating copolymers: Electronic delocalization through phosphorus. B. L. Lucht, Z. Jin 9:00 290. Gating reversible multielectron transfer reaction in porphyrins and metalloporphyrins. H. Sun, V. V. Smimov, A. P. Nelson, J. C. Biffinger, S. G. DiMagno 9:20 291. Synthesis and electronic properties of ethynyl porphyrin derivatives with proquinoidal units. K. Susumu, T. V. Duncan, M. J. Therien 9:40 292. Synthesis and characterization of free standing molecular wires. J. Hu, C. Khemtong, H. Wang 10:00 293. Perfluoroaryl derivatized siloles and thiophenes for use as advanced electronic materials. K. Geramita, D. Tilley 10:20 294. Exploiting allosteric effects in shuttling: Molecular machines with metalinduced mechanical movement. D. S. Marlin, A. M. Z. Slawin, D. A. Leigh 295. Withdrawn. 10:40 296. Macroscopic motion from a molecular machine. J. Bernâ-Cânovas, E. M. Pérez, D. A. Leigh, S. Mendoza, M. Lubomska, P. Rudolf 11:00 297. Ratcheting, escapement and periodicity in repetitive molecular-level machines. D. A. Leigh, E. R. Kay, M. N. Chatterjee 11:20 298. Exploring sulfoxide-based templates for hydrogen bond-directed rotaxane formation: Application to a chemical stimuliresponsive bistable molecular shuttle. A. Altieri, V. Aucagne, D. A. Leigh, P. Rollin, A. Tatibouët Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Organic Chemistry Cosponsored with CHED, and SOCED MONDAY AFTERNOON Section A Convention Center Ballroom 20A-B Herbert C. Brown Award for Creative Research in Synthetic Methods K. A. Parker, Organizer,

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 299. The best reactions for stitching with nitrogen. K. B. Sharpless 2:20 300. Complex natural products as a driving force for discovery in organic chemistry. B. M. Stoltz 3:05 301. Organic synthesis: The gateway to nanoscience. E. Nakamura 3:50 Award Presentation. 4:00 302. Award Address (Herbert C. Brown Award for Creative Research in Synthetic Methods, sponsored by the Purdue Borane Research Fund and the Herbert C. Brown Award Endowment). Comments in the margins. G. Stork

M. G. Oakley,

Organizer

L. L. Kiessling, Organizer,

Presiding

1:00 Welcome back. 1:05 303. Biorganic chemistry of Amphotericin. Ε. Μ. Carreira 1:30 304. Model Substrates for Cell Adhesion. M. Mrksich 1:55 305. Targeting RNA with small mol­ ecules. Y. Tor 2:20 306. Using organic chemistry to facilitate studies on DNA damage. M. M. Greenberg 2:45 307. Artificial micelles for the study of protein-lipid interactions. M. G. Oakley 3:10 Intermission. 3:30 308. Recognition of Duplex RNA by proteins and small molecules. P. A. Beal 3:55 309. RNA catalyzed splicing and protein synthesis. S. A. Strobel, P. Adams, M. Stahley, J. Wang 4:20 310. Small molecule replacements of transcriptional activation domains. A. K. Mapp 4:45 311. Perspectives. P. B. Dervan Section C Convention Center Room 11A Asymmetric Reactions and Syntheses P. J. Walsh,

Presiding

1:00 312. Kinetic resolution of chiral oxazolidinones via catalytic, enantioselective N-acylation. V. B. Birman, Ε. W. Uffman 1:20 313. 2,3-Dihydroimidazo[1,2a]quinolines: The second generation of asymmetric acylation catalysts. V. B. Birman, H. Jiang 1:40 314. Synthesis of sphinganine analogs with conformationally restricted headgroups. A. M. Dougherty, F. E. McDonald, D. C. Liotta 2:00 315. Efficient stereoselective synthesis of 1-deoxysphingolipid analogs. J. M. Wiseman, F. E. McDonald, D. C. Liotta 2:20 316. Asymmetric synthesis of trans-2substituted 3-amino- and 3-hydroxy-1,2,3,6tetrahydropyridines and of tetrahydropyrroloimidazoles. A. Lemire, D. Beaudoin, A. B. Charette 2:40 317. Enantioselective formal hydration of α,β-unsaturated imides by Al-catalyzed conjugate addition of oxime nucleophiles. C. D. Vanderwal, E. N. Jacobsen 3:00 318. Designing catalysts for the asym­ metric epoxidation of alkenes. D. Gilheany, M. Vôgler 3:20 319. Organocatalytic enantioselective synthesis of metabotropic glutamate receptor ligands. C. F. Barbas III, J. T. Suri, D. D. Steiner 3:40 320. Organocatalytic asymmetric addition to multiple bonds. M. Bella, S. Saaby, K. A. Jorgensen 4:00 321. Desymmetrization by metathesis, producing enantioenriched P-stereogenic phosphine oxides. F. Bisaro, V. Gouverneur 4:20 322. P-chirogenic MOP phosphines: The crystal structures of oxides, reduction studies and alternate syntheses. L. J. Higham, E. F. Clarke, D. G. Gilheany 4:40 323. Kinetic resolution of racemic hydroperoxides by means of an enantioselective reduction. J. R. Harris, T. G. Driver, K. A. Woerpel Section D Convention Center Room 10 Total Synthesis of Complex Molecules M. A. Kerr,

Presiding

1:00 324. Biomimetic cascade reactions in organic synthesis: Total syntheses of 1-0methyllateriflorone and gambogin. K. C. Nicolaou, H. Xu

Section Β Convention Center Ballroom 20 C-D Frontiers in Bio-organic Chemistry and Chemical Biology Cosponsored with BIOT, and MEDI

1:20 325. Rapid diversification of the phorboxazole chemotype. B. Wang, L. Ying, C. J. Forsyth 1:40 326. Total synthesis of the highly potent anti-HIV natural product Daurichromenic acid and two chromane derivatives, Rhododaurichromanic acids A & B. Y. Kang, Z. Jin 2:00 327. Progress toward the total synthesis of Aspergilin PZ. L. E. Overman, E. J. Velthuisen 2:20 328. Total synthesis of Luminacin D. D. Oehlrich, S. M. E. Vidot, M. W. Davies, M. Shipman, J. L. Whatmore, L. Maskell 2:40 329. Total synthesis of Kendomycin: A macro-C-glycosidation approach. Y. Yuan, H. Men, C. Lee 3:00 330. Synthesis of a universal hapten for antibody detection of the azaspiracids. S. Nguyen, J. Xu, C. J. Forsyth 3:20 331. Studies towards a total synthesis of spirastrellolide A. E. A. Anderson, S. M. Dalby, O. Loiseleur, I. Paterson 3:40 332. Studies on the synthesis of elatenyne. J. W. Burton, H. M. Sheldrake, C. Jamieson 4:00 333. Enantioselective synthesis of thiomarinol derivatives using a tandem catalytic asymmetric hetero [4+2]/allylboration reaction as a key step. X. Gao, D. G. Hall 4:20 334. Studies toward the total synthesis of (-)-Kendomycin. J. D. White, H. Smits 4:40 335. Studies toward the syntheses of (-)-zampanolide and (-)-dactylolide: Synthetic strategies for the completion of the C8-C20 subunit. M. P. Jennings, F. Ding Section Ε Convention Center Room 9 Materials, Devices, and Switches J. Hu,

Presiding

1:00 336. A photoactive molecular triad: A nanoscale power supply for a supramolecular machine. S. Saha, L. Johansson, A. Flood, H-R. Tseng, J. I. Zink, J. F. Stoddart 1:20 337. Design, synthesis and use of thiophene-based oligomers as hole transport layer in a solid-state solar cell. O. Clot, D. C. Selmarten 1:40 338. Fluorescent photoinduced electron transfer (PET) cation sensors derived from natural products. S. de Silva, K. Loo 2:00 339. Continuous glucose sensor with thin film hydrogels made of two component systems. B. Singaram, P. Thoniyot, S. Gamsey, D. B. Cordes, R. A. Wessling 2:20 340. Patterned chromophoric surfaces by aided self-assembly. J. A. A. W. Elemans, R. van Hameren, P. Schon, J. W. Gerritsen, R. J. M. Nolte, S. Speller, A. E. Rowan 2:40 341. Development of photoswitchable catalysts. M. C. Biewer, S. Saiyed 3:00 342. Molecular design and synthesis of novel photoresponsive azo liquid crystals. Q. Li, H-S. Park, J. Kim 3:20 343. Synthesis and characterization of polymerizable phosphorescent metal com­ plexes for solution-processable organic light-emitting diodes. J-Y. Cho, B. Domercq, J. Li, C. R. South, T. V. Timofeeva, S. Barlow, B. Kippelen, S. R. Marder 3:40 344. Harnessing triplet emission in poly­ mer LEDs. A. B. Holmes, K. L. Chan, N. R. Evans, C. S-K. Mak, S. E. Watkins, C. K. Williams, C. E. Boothby, R. H. Friend, A. Koehler, A. Hayer, L. Sudha Devi 4:00 345. Effective color tuning in organic light emitting diodes based on Alq 3 derivatives with tunable emissive properties. V. A. Montes, R. Pohl, J. Shinar, P. Anzenbacher Jr. 4:20 346. Synthesis of organometallic nonlin­ ear optical materials. Y. Mao, L. K. Tran, W. H. Watson 4:40 347. Fluorophenyl thiophene liquid crys­ tals for field effect transistors. M. L. Turner, F. Jaramillo-lsaza, J. Maunoury M O N D A Y EVENING

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

Section A Convention Center Sails Pavilion

R. D. Larsen,

Organizer

8:00-10:00 83, 87, 89, 93,103,107-108,111, 117,127, 129, 137-138, 142, 149, 154, 158, 164, 170, 177,184-185,194-195, 203, 205, 208, 218, 220, 226, 234-235, 244, 247. See previous listings. 441, 448, 460, 463, 466-467, 472, 474, 478, 483, 492, 495, 498-499, 506-507, 520, 522, 529, 534, 537, 545, 554, 561, 568-569, 572, 577, 587, 591, 594, 596, 599, 603, 699, 708, 711, 718, 721, 725, 730, 737, 741, 746, 753, 760, 763, 768, 772, 780-781, 790, 792, 798, 804, 808, 813, 822, 826, 830-831, 840, 843, 849, 853, 858, 861. See subsequent listings. TUESDAY MORNING Section A Convention Center Ballroom 20A-B Ernest Guenther Award in the Chemistry of Natural Products I. Ojima, Organizer,

Presiding

8:55 Introductory Remarks. 9:00 348. Progress towards the total synthesis of Okilactomycin and Chrolactomycin. A. B. Smith III 9:40 349. Total synthesis of antiparasitic natural products: Nafuredin and Borrelidin. T. Nagamitsu 10:20 350. Progress towards a total synthesis of the Phomoidrides. J. L. Wood 11:00 351. Award Address (Ernest Guenther Award in the Chemistry of Natural Products, sponsored by Givaudan). Discovery of microbial products with specific biological targets. S. Omura Section Β Convention Center Ballroom 20 C-D Earle B. Barnes Award for Leadership in Chemical Research Management M. P. Doyle, Organizer,

Presiding

8:55 Introductory Remarks. 9:00 352. A saga of secramine: A small mol­ ecule link between Cdc42 and protein traf­ ficking. M. D. Shair 9:40 353. The chemistry of galactofuranose residue incorporation. L. L. Kiessling, M. Soltero-Higgin, E. E. Carlson, J. H. Phillips, J. F. May, T. D. Gruber 10:20 354. Recent findings in the field of total synthesis of natural product targets. S. J. Danishefsky 11:00 355. Award Address (Earle B. Barnes Award for Leadership in Chemical Research Management, sponsored by The Dow Chemical Company). Chemistry and the CYPHER® Sirolimus-eluting coronary stents. C. A. Maryanoff Section C Convention Center Room 11A Asymmetric Reactions and Syntheses A. Bhattacharya,

Presiding

8:00 356. Direct, highly enantioselective pyrro­ lidine sulfonamide catalyzed Michael addi­ tion reactions of aldehydes and ketones to nitrostyrenes and applications for formal synthesis of Montanine alkaloids. W. Wang, J. Wang, H. Li 8:20 357. Chiral pyridine N-oxides as novel organocatalysts for the asymmetric allylation of aldehydes with allyltrichlorosilanes and the role of arene-arene interactions between the catalyst and the substrate. A. V. Malkov, M. Bell, F. Castelluzo, L. Bendova, P. Hobza, P. Kocovsky 8:40 358. Asymmetric reduction of ketones and ketimines with trichlorosilane. A. V. Malkov, A. J. P. Liddon, Κ. Ν. MacDougall, P. Kocovsky 9:00 359. Asymmetric alkylations using tetradentate ligands. U. B. Tadikonda, B. D. Dangel, R. L. Polt

TECH-91

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 9:20 360. Synthesis of optically active trimethylsilyl-substituted tertiary α-allenic alcohols via asymmetric propargylboration. E. Hernandez, J. A. Soderquist 9:40 361. New class of bis(oxazoline)/salen hybrid ligands and applications in asymmet­ ric catalysis. J . C. D. Le, Β. L Pagenkopf 10:00 362. Enantioselective, catalytic acylPictet: Spengler reactions. M. S. Taylor, Ε. Ν.Jacobsen 10:20 363. Catalytic, asymmetric hydrogénation of vinyl boronic esters. W. J. Moran, J. P. Morken 10:40 364. Catalytic, asymmetric hydrogénation of the C=N bond. L. Tan, J. C. McWilliams, N. Yoshikawa, J. Murry, D. M. Tschaen, R. P. Volante 11:00 365. Highly enantioselective reduction of α-haloacetophenones using TarB-N0 2 and NaBH 4 under mild conditions. D. B. Cordes, T. J. Kwong, K. Morgan, N. Praveen, B. Singaram 11:20 366. 'Tethered" Ru(ll) catalysts for the asymmetric transfer hydrogénation of ketones. A. Hayes, M. Wills, F. K. (. Cheung 11:40 367. New catalysts for the asymmetric reduction of ketones. M. Wills, J. Hannedouche, A. Hayes, G. Williams, Y. Xu, D. J. Morris, F. K. Cheung Section D Convention Center Room 10 Total Synthesis of Complex Molecules G. W a n g ,

Presiding

8:00 368. Preparation of highly enantioselective acetate aldol via homoaldol methodology and its application towards the total synthesis of (+)-Acutiphycin. R. Rendy, R. E. Taylor 8:20 369. Application to the hetero-Pauson Khand (HPK) reaction: Flexible route to prostaglandins. M. Appeaning, W. Crowe 8:40 370. Progress towards the total synthesis of acutumine. M. D. Reeder, S. B. Jones, G. S. C. Srikanth, S. L Castle 9:00 371. Novel syntheses of 2-deoxystreptamine. G. F. Busscher, F. L. van Delft, F. P. J. T. Rutjes 9:20 372. Progess toward the total synthesis of sclerophytin A. J. M. Hutchison, H. A. Lindsay, M. C. Mcintosh 9:40 373. Approach to the total synthesis of massileunicellin-l. Y. Chai, Z. Mou, M. Mcintosh 10:00 374. Total synthesis of antillatoxin and biological evaluation of antillatoxin and fragments using zebrafish embryo. K-C. Lee, W. W-W. Lee, T-P. Loh, H-Y. Song 10:20 375. Synthetic studies toward the total syntheses of Superstolides A and B. Z. Hua, Z.Jin 10:40 376. Towards a total synthesis of the comexistins: Taking advantage of a reversible aldol. J. C. Tung, R. E. Taylor 11:00 377. Studies directed towards the total synthesis of (-)-disorazole C1. P. Wipf, T. H. Graham 11:20 378. Synthetic studies toward UCS1025A. M. Christmann 11:40 379. Tandem 5-exo-dig cyclization/ Claisen rearrangement strategy: A straightforward approach toward the synthesis of the frondosins. I. Martinez, P. E. Alford, T. V. Ovaska Section Ε Convention Center Room 9 Proteins, Peptides, Amino Acids, and Enzymes A. K. Mapp,

Presiding

8:00 380. Enzymatic synthesis of beta-hydroxycarboxylic acids. T. Habicher, F. Haunert, B. Hauer 8:20 381. Synthesis of small mechanicallyinterlocked peptides: Application to the total synthesis of Microcin J25 (MccJ25). A. R. Thomson, D. A. Leigh, V. Aucagne 8:40 382. Peptide cyclodimerization by coppercatalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition. S. Punna, J. Kuzelka, Q. Wang, M. G. Finn

92-TECH

9:00 383. N-(Z- and Fmoc-a-aminoacyl)benzotriazoles: Stable derivatives enabling peptide coupling with free amino acids in aqueous media with complete retention of chirality. P. Angrish 9:20 384. Toward tailor-made transmembrane ion channels: A designed peptide that folds into a unique βΓχ-ΙιβΙίοθΙ species in solution. T. D. Clark, M. Sastry, G. Wagner 9:40 385. Synthesis of constrained helical peptides from HIV gp41 by thioether ligation. F. M. Brunei, S. Church, Μ. Β. Zwick, D. R. Burton, P. E. Dawson 10:00 386. Design of protein kinase-inducible domains. N. J. Zondlo, S. Balakrishnan, D. Naduthambi, C. W. AmEnde 10:20 387. Conformational proteomics of proline-rich domains. N. J. Zondlo, A. M. Brown, A. L. Rockwell, Κ. Μ. Thomas 10:40 388. Effects of side chain configuration and backbone spacing on the gene delivery properties of lysine-derived cationic oligo­ mers and polymers. S. E. Eldred, M. R. Pancost, K. M. Otte, D. Rozema, S. S. Stahl, S. H. Gellman 389. Withdrawn. 11:00 390. Post-translational regulation of protein activity with small-molecule-con­ trolled peptide splicing. G. Skretas, D. W. Wood 11:20 391. bZIP/bHLH-Hybrid proteins target specific DNA sequences. J. A. Shin, A. V. Fedorova, l-S. Chan, A. Schwartz Mittelman, J. Xu Market Pull versus Technology Push in Industrial Organometallic Chemistry Cosponsored with INOR, and SCHB TUESDAY AFTERNOON Section A Convention Center Ballroom 20A-B Elias J. Corey Award for Outstanding Original Contribution in Organic Synthesis by a Young Investigator H. M. L. Davies, Organizer,

Presiding

1:20 392. Complex target-oriented synthesis. D. A. Evans 2:00 393. Development of transition metal catalysts for organic synthesis. F. D. Toste 2:40 394. Understanding drug-receptor interac­ tions in the nervous system. D. A. Dougherty 3:20 395. Recent studies in alkaloid total synthesis. L. E. Overman 4:00 396. Award Address (Elias J. Corey Award for Outstanding Original Contribution in Organic Synthesis by a Young Investiga­ tor, sponsored by the Pfizer Endowment Fund). Enantioselective organocatalysis: New catalysis concepts of broad utility to chemical synthesis. D. W. C. MacMillan Section Β Convention Center Ballroom 20 C-D Ronald Breslow Award for Achievement in Biomimetic Chemistry J. T. Koh, Organizer,

Presiding

1:40 Introductory Remarks. 1:45 397. DNA charge transport chemistry and biology. J. K. Barton 2:30 398. Synthesis and discovery enabled by DNA-templated chemistry. D. R. Liu 3:15 399. Expanded genetic code. P. G. Schultz 4:00 400. Award Address (Ronald Breslow Award for Achievement in Biomimetic Chemistry, sponsored by the Breslow Endowment). Toward transcriptional therapy with programmable DNA binding oligomers. P. B. Dervan 5:00 Concluding Remarks. Section C Convention Center Room 11A Process R&D, Practical Synthesis, and Methodology

L. Tan,

Presiding

1:00 401. Green technology in pharmaceutical process development: Application in the synthesis of Acetaminophen, Ibuprofen and heterocycles. A. Bhattacharya, V. H. Suarez, V. Tamez, N. Patel, F. Rinaldi, J. A. Grosso 1:20 402. Zn-Cul-Mediated coupling of alkyl halides with vinyl sulfones, vinyl sulfonates and vinyl sulfonamides. M. M. Zhao, C. Qu, J. E. Lynch 1:40 403. Novel synthesis of substituted homochiral pyrrole derivatives. A. S. Demir 2:00 404. Bronsted acid-catalyzed amidation of imines. J. C. Antilla, H. Zhang, Y. Wang, Ε. Β. Rowland, G. B. Rowland 2:20 405. Stereoselective synthesis of densely functionalized bicyclo[3.1.0]hexane mGluR2 agonists. F. W. Hartner, L. Tan, N. Yasuda, N. Yoshikawa, K. K. Eng, W. R. Leonard, F-R. Tsay, R. P. Volante 2:40 406. Process research for the synthesis of RWJ-56423. M. Breslav, B. Harris, B. Kenney, C. A. Maryanoff, F. J. Villani Jr., F. Zhang-Plasket, H. M. Zhong 3:00 407. Development of a practical asym­ metric synthesis of a DP receptor antago­ nist. Z. Peng, M. Hillier, G. Humphrey, M. Journet, J. Kuethe, P. Maligres, J. Marcoux, C. McWilliams, D. Tellers, A. Wong, E. Grabowski, D. Hughes 3:20 408. Discovery, implementation, and mechanism of a pressure-dependent cata­ lytic, asymmetric α,β-unsaturated carboxylic acid hydrogénation. D. M. Tellers, J. C. McWilliams, G. Humphrey, M. Journet, Y.Sun 3:40 409. A novel concise total synthesis of the quinazoline alkaloids. J-F. Liu, P. Ye, M. Kaselj, K. Sprague II, K. Sargent, Y. Isome, B. Zhang, G. Bi, D. Yohannes, L. Yu, C. M. Baldino 4:00 410. BILN2061 synthesis: Development of practical processes for the synthesis of the quinoline subunit and its coupling to the macrocyclic core. R. P. Frutos, P. Beaulieu, V. Farina, M. Johnson, N. Haddad, I. Houpis, N. Yee, C. Senanayake 4:20 411. Total synthesis of (±)-Cytisine: A flexible approach to novel nicotinic acetylcholine receptor ligands. V. S. Murthy, D. Vo, D. Fokas, A. Smellie, C. M. Baldino, K. Kellar, Y. Xiao, D. Yohannes 4:40 412. Total synthesis of (±)-Oxocytisine and other oxygenated analogs: A flexible approach to novel nicotinic acetylcholine receptor ligands II. H. Orgueira, C. Baldino, K. Kellar, Y. Xiao, D. Yohannes Section D Convention Center Room 10

4:20 423. Progress toward the synthesis of 6-deoxyerythronolide Β via an iterative aldol approach: Exploiting the thiazolidinethione chiral auxiliary. D. J. Slade, M. T. Crimmins 4:40 424. Model studies toward the synthesis of the C22-34 fragment of Antascomicin-B. W. Qi, M. C. Mcintosh Section Ε Convention Center Room 25A Proteins, Peptides, Amino Acids, and Enzymes N. J. Zondlo,

Presiding

1:00 425. Syntheses of isotopic Rhodamine 6G dyes for relative quantification of pro­ teins by SERRS. S. K. Deb, D. Zhang, D. Ben-Amotz, V. J. Davisson 1:20 426. Semi-synthesis of the immunity protein Im7 to study the effect of glycosyla­ t e on protein folding. C. P. Hackenberger, C. T. Friel, S. E. Radford, B. Imperial! 1:40 427. Selective protein modification with rhodium carbenoids. J. M. Antos, S. A. Bains, M. B. Francis 2:00 428. Chemo-enzymatic protein modifica­ tion. M. D. Burkart 2:20 429. Nucleophile-catalyzed nitrosation of primary amino acids. G. da Silva, E. M. Kennedy, B. Z. Dlugogorski 2:40 430. Multivalent peptides and proteins using native chemical ligation. I. van Baal, H. Malda, S. W. A. Reulen, Τ. Μ. Hackeng, M. Merkx, E. W. Meijer 3:00 431. Manipulating biological systems with proximity-accelerated reactions. P. J. Belshaw 3:20 432. Immunological consequences of methamphetamine-based protein glycation. T. J. Dickerson, N. Yamamoto, K. D. Janda 3:40 433. Aminooxy thiol linkers for site-spe­ cific protein display. D. S. Jones, H-T. Ton-Nu, C. A. Kessler, K. A. Cockerill 4:00 434. Synthesis of a tetradentate histidinephenol crosslink that mimics the active site of Cytochrome c Oxidase to study the reduction of dioxygen to water. Y. R. Landaverry. K. N. White, N. Praveen, J. P. Konopelski, J. Cappuccio, I. Sen, A. K. Patra, 0 . Einersdottir 4:20 435. De novo design of aminoacyl trans­ ferase coiled-coil peptides. L. J. Leman, K. M. Wilcoxen, D. A. Weinberger, M. R. Ghadiri 4:40 436. Antiviral cyclic D,L-a-peptides. W. S. Home, C. Cui, C. M. Wiethoff, K. M. Wilcoxen, M. Amorin, G. R. Nemerow, M. R. Ghadiri

Total Synthesis of Complex Molecules

Market Pull versus Technology Push in Industrial Organometallic Chemistry Cosponsored with INOR, and SCHB

D. H. Thompson,

T U E S D A Y EVENING

Presiding

1:00 413. Progress towards the total synthesis of Amphidinolide B. S. G. Nelson, A. Gopalarathnam, A. J. Kassick 1:20 414. Synthesis of the trioxadispiroketal domain of spirastrellolide A. C. Wang, C. J. Forsyth 1:40 415. Towards a total synthesis of 20-desoxy apoptolidinone: Efforts to a more stable derivative of apoptolidin. D. J. Guseilla, W. D. Paquette, R. E. Taylor 2:00 416. Studies toward the total synthesis of the tedanolides. L D. Julian, W. R. Roush 2:20 417. Stereoselective synthesis of FR252921 using chromium-mediated C-C forming reactions. H. Tsutsui, H. Fukui, S. C. Joseph, J. R. Falck 2:40 418. Synthetic effort towards aeruginosin analogs. G. Wang, X. Nie 3:00 419. Synthesis and conformational studies of Gramicidin S analogues with (£)alkene peptide isosteres. J. Xiao, P. Wipf 3:20 420. Efficient and modular synthesis of bullatacin and squamotacin. H. Zhao, B. L. Pagenkopf 3:40 421. Thyrsiferol: A regio- and stereoselective approach. M. A. Smart, F. E. McDonald 4:00 422. Application of a titanium (lll)-mediated coupling reaction to the synthesis of thyrsiferol and related compounds. G. A. Nishiguchi, R. D. Little

Section A Convention Center Sails Pavilion New Reactions, Methodology, Total Synthesis, Physical Organic Chemistry R. D. Larsen,

Organizer

8:00-10:00 437. Effect of ring-strain on the aqueous reac­ tion of spiro-acetals. J. J. Labuda, R. W. Nagorski 438. Generation and characterization of triplet HC 5 H. N. P. Bowling, R. J. Halter, R. J. McMahon, J. F. Stanton

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

ORGfsl

439. Charge transfer transitions of fulvenes in solutions of lithium perchlorate-diethyl ether. R. D. Goode, G. T. Spyridis, Y. Pocker 440. Crystallographic and quantum mechanical studies of 1,3-disubstituted azulenes. A. R. Van Dyke, J. B. Benedict, W. Kaminsky, E. A. Salter, A. Wierzbicki, G. T. Spyridis 441. Mixed aggregates of chloromethyllithium with lithium dialkylamides. L M. Pratt, L. T. Le 442. Structure, bonding, and solvation of lithium vinylcarbenoids. L. M. Pratt, L. T. Ly, N. V. Ngan 443. N-(Hydroxybenzyl)benzamides: pH-Rate profiles and the effect of buffers on the rate of the aqueous reaction. D. E. Przybyla, R. W. Nagorski 444. pH-Rate profile and buffer catalysis of the reaction of a novel series of N-(hydroxybenzyl)acetamides. M. F. Sansone, R. W. Nagorski 445. Hopping of a single electron in hexakis-(4benzoylphenyl)benzene through the hexaphenylbenzene propeller. E. J. Kopatz, R. Rathore, F. A. Khan 446. Studies of intramolecular energy transfer through cofacially stacked polyfluorene spacers. S. H. Abdelwhaed, E. J. Kopatz, R. Rathore 447. Phosphate ester hydrolysis catalyzed by alkali metal ions in low water content media. P. Gomez-Tagle, G. I. Vargas-Zufiiga, A. K. Yatsimirsky 448. Determination of bromonium ion structure: Single symmetric structure vs. rapid equilib­ rium. R. E. Hough, J. W. Schubert, B. K. Ohta 449. Conformational studies of propynoic acid and related compounds. G. Gill, D. M. Pawar, E. A. Noe 450. Conformational study of cyclic dienes and cycloalkynes by computational methods. G. Gill, J. Moncada, D. M. Pawar, E. A. Noe 451. Conformational study of thioformic anhy­ dride by computational methods. G. Gill 452. Conformational studies of cis - 1 , 4 - di tert - butylcyclohexane by dynamic NMR spectroscopy and computational methods. G. Gill, D. M. Pawar, E. A. Noe 453. Oxidation of cis- and frans-alkenes by dimethyldioxirane: Kinetics, solvent effects and activation parameters. B. S. Crow, W. R. Winkeljohn, E. Michelena-Baez, A. M. Navarro-Eisenstein, P. J. Franklin, P. C. Vasquez, A. Baumstark 454. Synthesis of O-alkylarylhydroximoyl iodides. S. Smith, K. Patel, D. D. Dolliver, J. E. Johnson, J. E. Rowe, C. Bryan 455. Mechanism of the reaction of methoxide ion with the Ζ and Ε isomers of O-methylbenzohydroximoyl cyanide. J. E. Johnson, D. C. Canseco, B. Yao 456. Photochemistry and computational study of C 4 H 2 S isomers. Y. S. Kim, R. J. McMahon 457. A three-component photoreversible tag for thiol modifications. K. M. Clarke, J. J. La Clair, M. D. Burkart 458. Tuning the photoinduced electron transfer in heptamethine cyanine dyes. S. Fengling, P. Xiaojun 459. Photolytic study of 3-azide-3-phenyl propiophenone. M. Chang, P. N. D. Singh, M. Vu, S. M. Mandel, A. D. Gudmundsdottir 460. Photochemical studies on 7, δ, and ω azidoaroylketones. J. Sankaranarayanan, P. N. D. Singh, J. Hale, S. Muthukrishnan, S. M. Mandel, B. S. Ault, A. D. Gudmundsdottir 461. Photochemical regulation of the activity of a restriction enzyme BamH\ using an azobenzene moiety incorporated into the dimer interface. K. Nakayama, M. Endo, T. Majima 462. Photochemical control of caspase-3 activ­ ity for induction of apoptosis. K. Nakayama, M. Endo, Y. Kaida, T. Majima

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

463. Synthesis and fluorescence studies of 4-diethylenetriamine substituted 1,8-naphthalimides. A. Skobeleva, J. E. Elbert 464. Mechanistic insights into the diastereoselective photooxidation of enecarbamates. R. Franz, T. Poon, J. Sivaguru, S. Jockusch, N. J. Turro, W. Adam 465. Hammett analysis of photodecarbonylation of crystalline 1,3-diphenylacetones. M. J. E. Resendiz, M. A. Garcia-Garibay 466. Use of 1 8 0 isotope shifts on 3 1 P NMR to probe potential medium effects on phos­ phate ester bond strengths. K. C. Sorensen-Stowell, A. C. Hengge 467. Unexpected dihedral-angle dependence of one-bond scalar 13C-13C coupling con­ stants in ethers. M. Erdélyi, C. L. Perrin 468. Temperature dependence of dynamic isotope effects. N. R. Weikel, D. A. Singleton 469. Why is reaction of ethyl (2-cyanoacetyl)carbamate with ethyl orthoformate highly stereoselective? K. Sung, P-M. Huang, M-C. Lin 470. Correlation of the rates of solvolysis of 2-phenyl-2-ketoethyl bromide and tosylate. D. N. Kevill, C-B. Kim 471. Semiempirical and DFT calculations of SN2 reaction enthalpies. J. R. Waas 472. Nitrosulfolene rearrangement: A mechanistic study. J. E. Elbert, V. M. Berestovitskaya, I. E. Efremova, V. V. Abzianidze 473. Mechanism of oxidosqualene cyclase. J. Hirschi, D. A. Singleton, A. I. Scott 474. Circumannular long range orbital interactions affect the free energy of activation for the inversion of groups on nitrogen in 3-imino-2,2,4,4-tetramethylcyclobutanones. J. J. Worman, R. Ditchfield, A. Chong, G. Mloston, M. Wozicka 475. NMR and ab initio studies on the factors controlling the supramolecular structure and dynamics of self-assembled G-analogues. V. Gubala, M. J. Vilkas, Y. Ishikawa, J. M. Rivera 476. Aqueous Wittig reactions and the application toward the synthesis of streptogramin type A antibiotics. R. J. Anness, W. Zhao, A. El-Batta, C. Jiang, M. Bergdahl 477. Green technology in organic synthesis: Environmentally friendly waste free bromination of substituted acetophenones, benzocyclic ketones, and aromatic compounds. R. E. Plata, V. Jimenez, C. Garcia, V. Garcia, A. Morales, A. Bhattacharya, J.Wu 478. Green technology in organic synthesis: An efficient one-step synthesis of acetaminophen™. V. H. Suarez, V. Tamez, S. Reddy, F. Rinaldi, A. Bhattacharya 479. Discovery and application of a highly enantioselective carboxyesterase. J-H. Xu, Y-Q. Zhao, J-H. Qian 480. Unexpected retro-Aldol condensation of chalcones: A structure and reactivity study. Part II. R. LeBlanc, J. Dickson, T. Brown, H. Holt Jr., M. Lee 481. Simple, efficient organocatalytic alphaselenenylation and alpha-sulfenylation reactions of aldehdyes and ketones. W. Wang, J. Wang, H. Li 482. Reactions of amines with formaldehyde derivatives and organoboron compounds. N. A. Petasis, P. Yiannikouros 483. Synthesis of allenyl and alkynyl amines from allenyl boron derivatives. N. A. Petasis, F. Liepouri 484. Substrate effect on preparation of α-amino-a-aryl acids from aryl boronic acids. Z-Y. J. Zhan, Y-P. Wu, F. Pan 485. Choice of conditions for the condensation of a base-sensitive substrate with a variety of Wittig-type reagents: Homologation of (Z)-2-methyl-3-iodopropenal. Y. H. Lim, K. A. Parker 486. Solvent-free reactions in organic synthesis: Surfactant-mediated sodium borohydride reduction of aryl carbonyl substrates to aryl alcohols. C. A. Almaraz, F. Pedraza, S. Muramulla, A. Bhattacharya, J. Wu 487. One-pot reaction to synthesize 1,3-diketones in the presence of Mgl 2 through the acylation of ketones with acid chlorides. H. Hu, Q. Ma, H-X. Wei, P. W. Pare 488. Cyclic orthoesters as epoxide alternatives in intra- and intermolecular reactions. T. Zheng, R. S. Narayan, J. Schomaker, B. Borhan 489. Surfactant-mediated, solvent-free oxidation of primary alcohols to aldehydes. F. Pedraza, J. Wu, A. Bhattacharya

490. Zeolite catalysis in organic synthesis: Application in etherification, formylation, ester hydrolysis, and indole synthesis. R. Sanchez Jr., R. Tichkule, R. Thomas, J. Wu, A. Bhattacharya

519. New synthetic method of 3-substituted-4hydroxy-5-nitrobenzaldehyde and 2-substituted-4,6-dinitrophenol from 3-substituted-D4-hydroxyphenylglycine. Y. Shin, S-H. Yoon, J. Lee, J. Lee

491. Environmentally friendly surfactant-medi­ ated cleavage of aryl esters and ethers under neutral conditions. N. Patel, R. Tichkule, R. Sanchez, A. Bhattacharya, J.Wu 492. Exploring the utility of 1-alkynyl ethers for carbon-carbon formation. T. G. Minehan 493. UAIH4 aryl alkyl ether cleavage of BINOL derivatives. W. E. Kowtoniuk, D. K. MacFarland 494. Copper(l)-catalyzed conjugate additions of vinylzincates and vinylzirconocene reagents: New tools in synthesis of natural products. A. El-Batta, W. Zhao, T. Hage, S. Plotkin, M. Bergdahl 495. Improved synthesis of arylbutadiynes utilizing an in situ ethynylsilane deprotection reaction. A. F. Brooks, B. S. Dagher, J. P. Guina, A. E. Labut, M. J. Mio 496. New syntheses and reactions of enol esters. L. J. Goossen, J. Paetzold, D. Koley 497. Bis(trifluoromethyl)mercury: New faces for an old reagent. I. Nowak, M. J. Robins 498. Microwave-assisted Stille coupling of unactivated aryl and vinyl chlorides. S. D. Fidanze, S. A. Erickson, G. Sheppard 499. Diastereoselective synthesis of 1,2,3substituted potassium cyclopropyl trifluoroborates via an unusual zinc-boron exchange. S. Mathieu, A. B. Charette 500. Cross-coupling reactions of 1,1-dihalo-1alkenes with alkylzinc bromides. D. Andrei, A. Gonzalez, S. F. Wnuk 501. Synthesis of 2,2-dialkyl 1 -vinylboronates using the ruthenium-catalyzed Alder-ene reaction. D. Lee, E. C. Hansen 502. Magnesium amide-promoted one-pot synthesis of aryl amides from aryl nitriles and carboxylic acids. S. Cherukuri, V. Villarreal Jr., S. Muramulla, R. Sanchez 503. Microwave-assisted preparation of N,N'aryl cyanoguanidines. S. K. Hamilton, D. E. Wilkinson, G. S. Hamilton, Y-Q. Wu 504. Novel N1-C4 beta-lactam bond breakage: Synthesis of thioesteramides. M. Kostova, M. Konaklieva 505. Liquid-phase oligosaccharide and its derivatives synthesis using a cycloalkanes soluble platform. A. Ohmori, A. Tsuruyama, S. Kim, K. Chiba 506. A novel method for the construction of the side chain of norbrassinosteroids. S. Rincon, R. Santillan, R. E. Del Rio, J. Sandoval-Ramirez, S. Meza-Reyes 507. Synthesis of organic halides using organotrifluoroborates. G. W. Kabalka, A. R. Mereddy 508. Boron trihalide-mediated alkenylation of benzylic alcohols. G. W. Kabalka, M-L. Yao, S. Borella, Z-Z. Wu 509. Lewis acid-mediated stereo- and regioselective alkenylation of allylic alcohols. G. W. Kabalka, M-L. Yao, S. Borella, Z-Z. Wu 510. Cyclic siloxane synthesis via two consecu­ tive catalytic processes. R. L. Miller, D. Lee 511. Regioselective addition of carbamoylsilanes to functionalized olefinic substrates. A. R. Motta, R. F. Cunico 512. Significant effects of ligands in manga­ nese-catalyzed epoxidation of a wide range of alkenes. B. Kang, H. Han, J. M. Lee, S. Chang 513. Recyclable flavin-[BMIm]PF 6 catalyst system for the oxidation of sulfides to sulfox­ ides. A. A. Linden, N. Hermanns, J-E. Bàckvall 514. Intramolecular opening of oxetanes: A stereospecific route to cyclic peroxides. P. Dai, P. H. Dussault 515. Fouling and cleaning of Nation membrane in direct electrochemical synthesis processes of p-aminophenol. J. Zhao, H. Hu, X. Yang, L. Wang, C. Song, F. Wang 516. NBS/CHCI3 as bromination reagent for electron-rich tetramethoxynaphthlene, synthesis of 2,6-dibromotetramethoxynaphthalene. F. You, K. A. Parker 517. Reverse polarity C-glycosidation and benzannulation of Fischer carbene as key steps for total synthesis of ravidomycin. F. You, K. A. Parker 518. Regio-controlled synthesis of iodo-naphthols and anthranols by aromatic ring annulation. L. Qi, K. A. Parker

520. Lithium amide-catalyzed enantioselective addition of alkyl lithiums. J . Liu, P. G. Williard 521. Regioselective addition of n-alkyllithium to a,a'-disubstituted-1,8-naphthyridines: Effect of solvent polarity and chelation. T-G. Nam, M. Wijtmans, N. A. Porter 522. Facile synthesis and purification of 1,9diacyldipyrromethanes. S. H. H. Zaidi, M. Kannan, J. S. Lindsey 523. Divalent activation via phosphate tethers: Desymmetrization of pseudo-C^-symmetric monocyclic phosphates. J. P. McParland, A. Whitehead, P. R. Hanson 524. Effects of counter cations in selective monohydrolyses of symmetric diesters. S. Niwayama, A. Rimkus 525. New synthetic methodology for the preparation of N-hydroxysulfamides: An interesting class of ligands that inhibit carbonic anhydrase activity. A. S. Gopalan, H. K. Jacobs, K. Devanathan, P. C. Wilkins, J. A. Bell 526. Peptide synthesis by using cycloalkanebased thermomorphic system and application to flow system. A. Tsuruyama, A. Ohmori, S. Kim, K. Chiba 527. Applications of cyanide-catalyzed aldimine coupling: Dimerization, cyclization, oligomerization, and ligand synthesis for catalytic epoxidation. B. J. E. Reich, A. K. Justice, J. M. Goss, B. T. Beckstead, S. A. Miller 528. Formation of oxasilacyclopentenes from carbonyls and alkynylsilanes: An investigation of reaction scope and mechanism. S. V. Maifeld, D. Lee 529. Manganese(lll) acetate-mediated oxidative free radical cyclisations. D. G. Hulcoop, J. W. Burton 530. Indirect intramolecular electroreductive cyclization using catalytic Ni (I) salen. J. A. Miranda, C. J. Wade, R. D. Little 531. Tandem Diels-Alder/ene reaction: Total synthesis of Isoligularone. J . Bae, G. A. Kraus 532. Exploration of Diels-Alder reaction with multifunctionalized dienes and dienophiles. Y. T. Koo, K. C. Lee, T. P. Loh 533. Cyanoacrylates as equivalents of sterically congested acrylates in Diels-Alder reaction. H. J . Liu, J-C. Guo, K-S. Shia 534. Synthesis of octahydroisoindole derivatives by Diels-Alder reactions of 3,4-dehydropyrrolidines. P. Y. Leung, D. Grotjahn, J. Payne, S. Venkatraman 535. Microwave enhanced tandem 5-exo-dig cyclization/Claisen rearrangement reactions as a convenient route to the synthesis of the phorbol core. C. E. Mcintosh, I. Martinez, T. V. Ovaska 536. 1,2,3-Vicinal tricarbonyl systems from 3-acetoxy-4-dimethylthio β-lactams. C. J. Myers, M. Konaklieva 537. Domino reactions that combine an azidoSchmidt ring expansion with the Diels-Alder reaction. Y. Zeng, D. S. Reddy, E. Hirt, J. Aube 538. Microwave-assisted sequential amide bond formation and intramolecular amidation: A rapid entry to functionalized oxindoles. R. R. Poondra, N. J. Turner 539. Nitrenium ion spirocyclization-cyclohexadienone cleavage: A new synthetic strategy for the stereocontrolled preparation of diand trisubstituted lactams. D. J. Wardrop, M. S. Burge 540. Synthesis of 4,5-dihydrodyridazin-3-ones from Meyers bicyclic lactams. M. A. Flores, P. T. Buonora 541. Acid-catalyzed cyclization reactions involv­ ing ynamides. A. D. Davis 542. Efficient one-pot, one-step synthesis of pyrrole derivatives: An unprecedented solvent selectivity in Barton-Zard pyrrole synthesis. V. Tamez Jr., S. Cherukuri, N. Patel, J. A. Grosso, V. Palaniswamy, A. Bhattacharya 543. Synthesis and film formation of ethynylporphyrins. Z. Liu, I. Schmidt, P. Thamyongkit, D. F. Bocian, J. S. Lindsey 544. 13 C-labeled porphyrin dyads for holehopping studies. P. Thamyongkit, J. R. Diers, D. F. Bocian, J. S. Lindsey 545. Direct synthesis of palladium porphyrins from acyldipyrromethanes. S. S. Duddu, A. Z. Muresan, K. Muthukumaran, J. S. Lindsey

TECH-93

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 546. Synthesis of 13-acetylchlorins: Simple models for chlorophylls. J. K. Laha, J. S. Lindsey 547. Ortho-selective nucleophilic aromatic substitution reactions of haloanilines with dithiocarbonate anion: A convenient synthe­ sis of substituted 2-chloro-1,3-benzothiazoles. L. Zhu, M. Zhang, D. Miao 548. Copper-mediated cyclization of alpha.betaunsaturated ketoximes. M. B. Kraft, T. S. Morey, N. C. Gearhart, C. C. Browder 549. Enamine approach for the synthesis of 1,2,3-triazoles. T. R. Chan, V. V. Fokin, K. B. Sharpless 550. Bismuth(lll) chloride-catalyzed direct substitution of the hydroxyl group in alcohols with allylsilane. S. K. De, R. A. Gibbs 551. An efficient and practical procedure for the synthesis of 4-substituted coumarins. S. K. De, R. A. Gibbs 552. Iodine as a novel and efficient reagent for the synthesis of α-aminonitriles by a threecomponent condensation of carbonyl com­ pounds, amines, and trimethylsilyl cyanide. S. K. De, L Royer, R. A. Gibbs 553. Studies of rhodium-catalyzed ring opening of vinyl epoxides. J . D. Ha, S. K. Kang, J. H. Ahn, S. S. Kim, J-K. Choi 554. Toward a total synthesis of elenic acid: An inhibitor of topoisomerase II. K. K. Tung, R. P. Hsung 555. First synthesis of the C1-C13 fragment of dorrigocin A. J-Y. L. Brazidec, C. A. Gilson III, M. F. Boehm 556. A divinylcyclopropane rearrangement applied toward the synthesis of deoxyhelminthosporol. T. Sladicka, L. Safi, L. M. Delia Greca, L Clayville, E. Pusateri, E. Casillas 557. Synthesis and characterization of 1,10dimethylbicyclo[8.8.8]hexacosane. E. Mash, I. W. Jones, Y. Monguchi 558. First total synthesis of antimitotic com­ pound, (+)-phomopsidin. T. Suzuki, K. Usui, Y. Miyaké, M. Namikoshi, M. Nakada 559. Synthetic studies on Taxol. M. Iwamoto, M. Utsugi, H. Kawada, M. Miyano, M. Nakada 560. Synthetic studies on FR182877. T. Suzuki, T. Matsumura, N. Tanaka, M. Nakada 561. Progress on the synthesis of phorbol esters via a consecutive 5-exo-dig cyclization/Claisen rearrangement. K. Parcel la, I. Martinez, T. V. Ovaska 562. Synthetic studies on Erinacines. M. Takano, A. Umino, S. Kashiwa, M. Nakada 563. Studies toward the total synthesis of norzoanthamine. F. Rivas, M. Gonzalez, E. A. Theodorakis 564. Total synthesis of demethoxypiplartine, piplaroxide, and desmethylpiplaroxide: Three compounds isolated from Piper impériale. J. L. Richards, J. S. Rolig, B. S. Mirick 565. Total synthesis of anticancer alkaloids via cobalt-mediated cycloadditions. T. J. Heckrodt, K. P. C. Vollhardt 566. Synthetic studies on omuralide and salinosporamide A. Y. Kobayashi, C. Gilley, K. Ozboya, L. Ju 567. Synthetic studies on tetrapetalone A. Y. Kobayashi, S. Born, J. Wu 568. Progress towards a catalytic enantioselective total synthesis of phorboxazole B. B. S. Lucas, L. M. Luther, S. D. Burke 569. Towards the total synthesis of bengazole A. S. V. Ley, E. P. Balskus, J. A. Bull 570. Stereoselective synthesis of cis-3,5-diphenyl-5-ethyl-3-methyl-1-pyrazolin-4-one. A. G. Moiseev, A. A. Shakhmin, T. H. Kinstle, D. C. Neckers 571. Toward the total synthesis of (-)-Dihydroguaiaretic acid and analogs. P. C. Chen 572. New approach toward a highly functionalized skeleton of Ingenol via a [6+4] cycloaddition. J. H. Rigby, G. Chouraqui 573. Synthesis and biological evaluation of Eleutherobin analgoues. S. Y. F. Mak, G. Chiang, J. W. Burton, A. B. Holmes 574. Studies toward total synthesis of Amipurimycin. Z. Guo, J. Xue 575. Studies toward the stereoselective synthesis of elaiophylin C 4 -C 1 6 polypropionate fragment. W. Dâvila, J. A. Prieto 576. An efficient formal total synthesis of (-)kazusamycin A. W. Liao, S. Zhou, H. Chen, S. Chen, G. Li, R. Ando, I. Kuwajima

94-TECH

577. Progress towards the total synthesis of tautomycetin and the development of chiral N-aminoaziridine hydrazones as auxiliaries for the synthesis of deoxypolypropionate units. C. A. Zaharia, A. R. Chamberlin 578. An epoxide approach towards the stereoselective synthesis of the rifamycin S polypropionate chain. D. Rodriguez, M. Mulero, J. A. Prieto 579. Studies towards the stereoselective preparation of the bafilomycin A1 polypropionate chain. M. Mulero, D. Rodriguez, J. A. Prieto 580. Regioselective cleavage of 2-methyl-3,4epoxy MEM ethers with diethylpropynyl aluminum: Synthesis of polypropionate tetrads. W. Torres, G. Torres, J. A. Prieto 581. Towards the total synthesis of Sorangiolides. S. Abraham, S. Das, S. C. Sinha 582. Studies toward the asymmetric synthesis of peroxyacamoic acids. P. Dussault, C. Xu, J. M. Raible 583. Studies toward the total synthesis of micrandilactone A featuring a novel, carbocation-mediated rearrangement. D. A. Fischer, E. A. Theodorakis 584. Total synthesis of norrisolide and biological evaluation of norrisolide analogues. T. P. Brady, G. Guizzunti, S. H. Kim, V. Malhotra, E. A. Theodorakis 585. Discovering the real structure of mucoxin. J. Yan, R. S. Narayan, B. Borhan 586. Studies toward the total synthesis of (-)-gymnodimine. K. Kong, Z. Moussa, D. Romo 587. Recent progress towards the total synthesis of artocarpol A and D. M. P. Paduraru, P. D. Wilson 588. Synthesis and biological evaluation of novel eunicellin analogues. R. Gilmour, J. Davidson, J. W. Burton, A. B. Holmes 589. Studies towards the total synthesis of neolaulimalide, laulimalide and biologically active analogues. I. Paterson, A. Longstaff, D. Menche, D. J. Wong 590. Synthesis of intermediates of polycyclic strained hydrocarbons. W. Eccles, P. Kaszynski, B. Stulgies 591. Progress toward the synthesis of Trilobin and Trilobacin. L. M. Wysocki, S. D. Burke 592. Synthetic studies on Clavosolide A. D-H. Lee, J. Son, N-Y. Kim 593. Toward the total synthesis of spiroketal enol ether natural products. J. L. Koviach, A. M. Wensley, A. O. Hardy 594. New generation synthesis of the EF fragment of the spongistatins. S. V. Ley, A. Polara, M. J. Gaunt, S. Kawahara 595. Progress towards the total synthesis of SCH-351448. O. Soltani, J. K. De Brabander 596. Progress toward the total synthesis of Lasonolide A. G. Gralla, J. E. Dalgard, N. A. El-Said, S. D. Rychnovsky 597. Studies towards the total synthesis of peloruside A. S. J. Atkinson, I. Paterson, M. E. Di Francesco, T. Kuhn, M. Lochner, K. Lorenz 598. Synthesis and evaluation of simplified Salicylihalamide-based V-ATPase inhibitors. S. Lebreton, X-S. Xie, D. Ferguson, J. K. De Brabander 599. Studies toward the synthesis of Beauveriolides I and III. Y. Chen, P. Wentworth Jr. 600. Synthetic and structural studies of the spongidepsins. T. Takemura, J. Chen, C. J. Forsyth 601. Synthesis of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor: Conversion of pyridine to pyridone. F. Li, Z. Wang, D. Fokas, C. Baldino, K. J. Kellar, Y. Xiao, D. Yohannes 602. Synthesis of 6,9-disubstituted (+)-Cyfusine. S-Y. Lin, D. Fokas, C. Baldino, K. J. Kellar, Y. Xiao, D. Yohannes 603. Diversity-orientated synthesis of novel nicotinic acetylcholine receptor ligands related to cytisine. Y. Guan, D. Fokas, C. Baldino, K. J. Kellar, Y. Xiao, D. Yohannes 604. Synthesis of novel nicotinic acetylcholine receptor ligands related to cytisine. S. R. Akireddy, D. Fokas, C. Baldino, K. J. Kellar, Y. Xiao, D. Yohannes

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

605. Synthetic studies towards symbioimine. Y. Kobayashi, Ε. Ε. Olson 606. Total synthesis towards (-)-Stenine by type 2 intramolecular N-acylnitroso Diels-Alder reaction. L. Zhu, K. J. Shea 607. Synthesis of alpha-isosparteine from a tetraoxobispidine core. P. R. Blakemore, N. R. Norcross, P. C. Astles

Section C

WEDNESDAY MORNING

8:00 625. Allosteric self-assembly. A. E. Rowan, J. A. A. W. Elemans, P. Thordarson, R. G. E. Coumans, P. J. Thomassen, R. J. M. Nolte 8:20 626. Polymerizable monosaccharide derivatives as organogelators. G. Wang, S. Cheuk, X. Nie 8:40 627. Self-assembly and behavior of one-dimensional oligo(thiophene) based supramolecular nanostructures. B. W. Messmore, J. F. Hulvat, W. Tsai, S. I. Stupp 9:00 628. Self-assembly of noncovalent amphiphiles. Y. Liu, J. Xu, S. L. Craig 9:20 629. Molecular recognition-directed solidstate self-assembly of polyhydroxy com­ pounds with aromatic bases. A. Jayaraman, V. Balasubramanian, S. Valiyaveettil 9:40 630. Functional polymer design via multisite self-assembly. M. Week, J. M. Pollino, M. N. Higley, K. P. Nair, C. Burd 10:00 631. Evaluation of trimethylsilane as a binding motif for self assembled monolayers on gold. D. Nilsson, J. Mârtensson 10:20 632. OMNiMIPs: One monomer molecularly imprinted polymers. D. A. Spivak, M. Sibrian-Vazquez 10:40 633. Molecular recognition in 2D binary mixtures of DNA bases studied by STM. M. Schôck, E. Rauls, R. Otero, W. Xu, E. Laegsgaard, I. Stensgaard, B. Hammer, F. Besenbacher 11:00 634. DNA manipulation using artificial restriction enzyme. M. Komiyama, Y. Yamamoto, A. Uehara, T. Tomita 11:20 635. Controllable array formation using DNA-decorated virus particles. E. Strable, J. E. Johnson, M. G. Finn 11:40 636. Optimization of light activated RNA interference through variation in modification degree and position. S. H. Friedman, S. Shah

Section A Convention Center Ballroom 20A-B ACS Award for Creative Work in Synthetic Organic Chemistry D. G. Drueckhammer, Organizer,

Presiding

8:20 608. Reactivity and application of a new type of aminodiene. E. J. Sorensen 9:00 609. Chemistry, selectivity and the bio­ logical interface. P. J. Reider 9:40 610. Studies in protein chemistry. G. M. Whitesides, K. Gudiksen, I. Gitlin, L. A. Estroff, V. Semetey, V. M. Krishnamurthy, P. Garstecki, D. T. Moustakas, J. Yang, J. D. Carbeck 10:20 611. Secret life of enzymes: An aggres­ sive strategy for drug discovery. Κ. Β. Sharpless 11:00 612. Award Address (ACS Award for Creative Work in Synthetic Organic Chemis­ try, sponsored by Aldrich Chemical Com­ pany, Inc). Enzyme-based and program­ mable organic synthesis: Application to carbohydrate-mediated biological recogni­ tion. C-H. Wong Section Β Convention Center Ballroom 20 C-D New Reactions and Methodology Β. Κ. Banik,

Presiding

8:00 613. Facile synthesis of 2-amino-trifluoroacetophenones by the direct C-N insertion of arynes into trifluoroacetanilides. Z. Liu, R. C. Larock 8:20 614. Synthesis of aminopyridines from 2-fluoropyridine and lithium amides. B. Singaram, L. Pasumansky, S. Gamsey, A. R. Hernandez, C. T. Goralski 8:40 615. A novel rearrangement of orthoaryloxy arylcarboxamides. Y. Han, L. Shen, C-S. Lee, G. Bi, S. Couture, A. Bell, D. Hepworth, L. Yu, Y. Zhang, M. Harris, C. Baldino 9:00 616. New methodology for the synthesis of 1,2-dioxolanes by annulation of peroxycarbenium ions with olefins. A. Ramirez, K. A. Woerpel 9:20 617. Intramolecular Diels-Alder reactions of vinylimidazoles: Approach to ageliferin and nagelamide E. C. J. Lovely, Y. He, S. Rasappali, R. Moningka 9:40 618. Intramolecular Morita-Baylis-Hillman cycloallylation reactions. M. E. Krafft, T. F. N. Haxell 10:00 619. Intramolecular Morita-Baylis-Hill­ man cycloalkylation reactions. K. A. Brookover, T. F. N. Haxell, M. E. Krafft 10:20 620. Lewis acid promoted intramolecular hetero-[2 + 2] cycloadditions of ynamides: An equivalent of yn-carbonyl metathesis. K. C. M. Kurtz, R. P. Hsung, Y. Zhang 10:40 621. Tandem Sakurai-Aldol reactions as a route to structurally complex carbocycles. S. G. Nelson, B. D. Stevens 11:00 622. Cycloaddition vs atom transfercyclization: Chemistry of TMM diradicals. A. Maiti, J. B. Gerken, R. D. Little 11:20 623. Wittig reactions in water employing stabilized ylides and aldehydes. M. Bergdahl, J. Dambacher, W. Zhao, A. El-Batta, R. J. Anness, I. Ballard 11:40 624. High throughput synthesis of novel isobenzofuran based drug candidates for the treatment of cancer. M. Mcintosh, A. Joshi, D. Bateman

Convention Center Room 11A Molecular Recognition and Self-Assembly P. S. Arora,

Presiding

Section D Convention Center Room 10 Metal-Mediated Reactions and Syntheses N. G. Bhat,

Presiding

8:00 637. Asymmetric palladium-catalyzed [3,3] rearrangement of (allyloxy)iminodiazaphospholidines. E. E. Lee, R. A. Batey 8:20 638. Fast and easy copper-free Sonogashira couplings: The much overlooked solvent and base dependence. T. G. Ljungdahl, J. Mârtensson 8:40 639. Organogermanes in Pd-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions. Z. Wang, P. I. Garcia Jr., A. Gonzalez, S. F. Wnuk 9:00 640. Palladium-catalyzed addition of alkynes to cyclopropenes. J. D. Chisholm, J.Yin 9:20 641. Palladium-catalyzed synthesis of tricyclic heterocycles. M. Lautens, D. Alberico 9:40 642. Palladium/Proazaphosphatrane: An efficient catalyst system for the synthesis of enamines by amination of alkenyl bromides. V. R. Chinta Reddy, S. Urgaonkar, J. G. Verkade 10:00 643. Palladium-pincer complex catalyzed transformations involving organometallic substrates. K. J. Szabo 10:20 644. Scope, limitations, and mechanism of the Pd-catalyzed synthesis of tetrahydrofurans from gamma-hydroxyalkenes. M. B. Hay, A. R. Hardin, M. A. Rossi, J. P. Wolfe 10:40 645. New Pd-catalyzed reactions for the stereoselective synthesis of pyrrolidines and octahydrocyclopenta[b]pyrroles. J . E. Ney, M. B. Bertrand, J. P. Wolfe 11:00 646. New developments in the Pdcatalyzed synthesis of oxygen and nitrogen heterocycles. J. P. Wolfe, J. S. Nakhla, Q. Yang, R. Lira, J. E. Ney 11:20 647. Role of aliène substitution in the regiocontrol of palladium-catalyzed coupling of aliènes, boronic acids and aldehydes: Synthesis of a^-unsaturated-8-lactones. C. D. Hopkins, L. Guan, H. C. Malinakova

ORGN 11:40 648. Steric effects in palladium cata­ lyzed CO/ethene copolymerization. M. Caporali, C. Mueller, D. Vogt, P. W. N. M. van Leeuwen Section Ε Convention Center Room 9 Proteins, Peptides, and Nucleotides J. C. Antilla, Presiding 8:00 649. Catalytic peptide dendrimers. J-L. Reymond 8:20 650. Synthesis and self-assembly proper­ ties of acylated cyclodextrins and nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA)-modified guest ligands for interfacial protein crystallization. M. Zhou, S. Haldar, J. Franses, J-M. Kim, D. H. Thompson 8:40 651. pH-Controlled self-assembly of alpha-helical nanofibers. J. Hartgerink, H. Dong 9:00 652. Chemically programmed antibodies: From chemical diversity to novel therapeu­ tics. M. Popkov, C. F. Barbas III 9:20 653. Synthesis of native 3'-5' RNA link­ ages by deoxyribozymes. R. L Coppins, W. E. Purtha, Y. Wang, S. K. Silverman 9:40 654. Oligonucleotide synthesis by peptide chemistry. A. K. Reid, D. Graham 10:00 655. Long-range charge transfer in periodic DNA through polaron diffusion. C-M. Chang, A. H. Castro Neto, A. R. Bishop 10:20 656. Electrophilic fluorination reactions of 5-cyanomethyl imidazole 4-carboxylate nucleosides: Facile entry to 3-fluoro-3-deaza guanosine analogs. K. Sakthivel 10:40 657. S^gAr Reactions of fluorinated imidazo-pyridine nucleosides: Efficient synthesis of 3-deaza-3-fluoro-adenosine analogs. K. Sakthivel WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Section A Convention Center Ballroom 20A-B Nakanishi Prize C. A. Maryanoff, Organizer, Presiding 1:00 Introductory Remarks. 1:05 658. Heterocycles and transition metalcatalyzed reactions of aliènes. K. M. Brummond 2:00 659. Long range radical initiation essential for class I ribonucleotide reductases: Direct evidence for amino acid radical intermediates. J. Stubbe, M. Seyedsiamdost, D. G. Nocera 2:55 660. A mechanism for the chain elongation, cyclopropanation, and branching reactions in isoprenoid biosynthesis. C. D. Poulter 3:50 Award Presentation. 4:00 661. Award Address (Nakanishi Prize, sponsored by the Nakanishi Prize Endowment). Probing the assembly and function of biosystems. S. Benkovic Section Β Convention Center Ballroom 20 C-D New Reactions and Methodology Y. Han, Presiding 1:00 662. Tandem ring-opening/cyclocondensation reactions of 3-bromoisoxazoles. M. G. Kociolek, N. G. Straub, J. V. Schuster, E. J. Marton, J. W. Shaffer 1:20 663. Tandem cation-olefin-azide cyclization: Novel synthesis of azapolycyclic ring systems. S. Baskaran, P. G. Reddy, M. G. Sankar 1:40 664. Asymmetric route to lactams utilizing a [3+2] annulation of chiral alpha-siloxy allylsilanes. A. Romero, K. A. Woerpel 2:00 665. Intramolecular silyl triflate promoted aldol-like cyclizations. V. Dvomikovs, T. R. Hoye

2:20 666. Stereoselective synthesis of pyrro­ lidines using a homo 3+2 dipolar cycloaddi­ tion: Synthesis of the core structure of nakadomarin A. M. A. Kerr, I. S. Young, J. L. Williams 2:40 667. Synthesis and Diels-Alder reactivity of 2-oxazolone derivatives. M. B. Smith, F. Gaenzler 3:00 668. A short diastereoselective synthesis of (2S,5R)-5-hydroxypipecolic acid and 6-substituted derivatives. R. H. Blaauw, P. N. M. Botman, Q. B. Broxterman, H. E. Schoemaker, F. P. J. T. Rutjes 3:20 669. Synthesis of stable triazole-linked glycopeptide mimics. F. P. J. T. Rutjes, B. H. M. Kuijpers, S. Groothuys, P. J. L. M. Quaedflieg, R. H. Blaauw, F. L. van Delft 3:40 670. Direct conversion of aldehydes to nitriles. G. Kuklis, N. Heindel 4:00 671. A straightforward route to sphinganine-containingalpha-galactosylceramides. A. R. Howell, R. M. Ndonye 4:20 672. Expanding the scope of Prins cyclization methodology through mechanistic studies. R. Jasti, S. D. Rychnovsky 4:40 673. Rational synthesis of bacteriochlorins. H-J. Kim, J. S. Lindsey Section C Convention Center Room 11A

1:20 687. New ligands in copper-catalyzed amination of aryl bromides. A. Shafir, S. L. Buchwald 1:40 688. Synthesis and applications of β-silylsubstituted allylic silanes. P. Cleary, K. A. Woerpel 2:00 689. Formation and utility of oxasilacyclopentenes derived from functionalized alkynes. T. B. Clark, K. A. Woerpel 2:20 690. Expedient synthesis of cyclopropyl amino acids. B. Moreau, A. B. Charette 2:40 691. Zinc carbenoid chain extension reactions. C. K. Zercher 3:00 692. Cyclopropanol to cyclopropanol isomerization: A process mediated by Ti(IV) and a Lewis acid. C. P. Casey, N. A. Strotman 3:20 693. Tungsten promoted [4+2] DielsAlder reactions of pyridines. P. M. Graham, D. Delafuente, M. Sabat, W. D. Harman 3:40 694. Reactivity of ç 2 tungsten pyridine complexes. D. A. Delafuente, P. M. Graham, M. Sabat, W. D. Harman 4:00 695. Synthesis and reactions of ynamides and allenamides. L. Shen, R. P. Hsung 4:20 696. New applications of the PausonKhand reaction: Medium ring synthesis. C. J. Lovely, C. E. Madu 4:40 697. Cr(0)-Mediated higher-order cycloaddition reactions of aliènes. J. H. Rigby, Z. KamaI, M. S. Laxmisha, Β. Τ. Forrest, M. J. Heeg WEDNESDAY EVENING

Physical Organic Chemistry: Calculations, Mechanisms, Photochemistry, and High-Energy Species J. M. Karty, Presiding 1:00 674. 4,5-Dehydro-1,1,2,2,9,9,10,10octafluoro[2 2]paracyclophane: Reaction and mechanism. Y-A. Zhai, W. R. Dolbier, I. Ghiviriga, M. A. Battiste, K. A. Abboud 1:20 675. Towards new concepts for the (organo-)catalytic activation of hydrogen peroxide for the epoxidation of olefins. A. Berkessel, J. A. Adrio 1:40 676. Buffer catalysis of the aqueous reaction of N-(hydroxymethyl)benzamide: A new mode of aqueous reactivity. R. W. Nagorski 2:00 677. Mechanistic investigation of the Staudinger ligation. F. L Lin, H. M. Hoyt, H. van Halbeek, R. G. Bergman, C. R. Bertozzi 2:20 678. Biomimetic inorganic H2SX reaction which yields polysulfane products from ortho-quinone. E. M. Brzostowska, A. Greer 2:40 679. Synthesis of a C2-symmetric bisdioxirane and the study of vicinal proximity effects on dioxirane stability. N. Sawwan, A. Greer 3:00 680. Enhancing the reactivity of Sml 2 in THF: Mechanic aspects of the role of photo­ chemical excitation and added water. R. A. Flowers II, P. Edamana 3:20 681. Photochemical synthesis of 1,5diaryl substituted homoquadricyclanes: Mechanisms and applications. T. A. Zeidan, S. V. Kovalenko, R. J. Clark, I. Ghiviriga, T. Gedris, I. V. Alabugin 3:40 682. Dissecting the Bergman cycloaromatization kinetics for ortho-substituted benzannelated enediynes. T. A. Zeidan, S. V. Kovalenko, M. Manoharan, I. V. Alabugin 4:00 683. A theoretical study on the mecha­ nisms of "Hydride Shift" rearrangements of carbocations. T. Zuo, L. Xu, D. Troya, H. C. Dom 4:20 684. Experimental and theoretical NMR studies on the cleavage of highly substituted epoxides with organoalane reagents. G. Torres, J. A. Prieto, Y. Ishikawa 4:40 685. Ab initio study of stereoselectivity and mechanism of Schmidt-type reactions. J. Radkiewicz-Poutsma Section D

Section A Convention Center HallD Asymmetric Reactions, Molecular Recognition, Self Assembly, Bioorganic Chemistry, Process R&D R. D. Larsen, Organizer 8:00-10:00 698. Rational design of a bivalent inhibitor. G. H. Bird, C. E. Schafmeister 699. Switchable synthetic ion channels. M. S. Gin 700. A dynamic combinatorial library of histidine-based pseudopeptide oligomers ternplated against transition metal ions. M. Matsumoto, K. M. Nicholas 701. Cleft receptors with donor-spacer-donoracceptor hydrogen bonding arrays: Implica­ tions for amino acid recognition. W. E. Allen, A. L. Sargent, D. K. Bamhill 702. Recognition of a protein receptor with the hydrogen bond surrogate-based artificial alpha-helices. D. Wang, W. Liao, P. S. Arora 703. Synthetic mimics of mammalian cell sur­ face receptors. S. Boonyarattanakalin, S. E. Martin, S. A. Dykstra, B. R. Peterson 704. Molecular oriented affinity groups for artificial caffeine receptors. O. Wolff 705. Synthesis of a C3-symmetric molecular scaffold inspired by Lissoclinum cyclopeptides for the construction of large receptors. G. Haberhauer, M. Schmunk, T. Mergenthaler 706. Synthesis of novel oxazol-based cyclic pseudopeptides as scaffolds for artificial receptors. Â. Pinter, G. Haberhauer 707. De novo design of urea-based receptors for anions. V. Bryantsev, B. P. Hay, B. A. Moyer 708. Development of bispidine-derived artificial receptors for organic molecules. L. Toom, H. Grennberg, A. Gogoll 709. Dephosphorylation of crown ether-bearing mimics of phosphotyrosine. W. E. Stancill, W. E. Allen 710. Studies of millipede artificial enzymes. E. Smiljanic, W. B. Motherwell, Β. Η. Warrington, S. Y. F. Wong 711. Chemical crosslinkers for the study of multivalent protein-ligand interactions. J. Yang, M. R. Bautista, P. Inbar

Convention Center Room 10 Metal-Mediated Reactions and Syntheses J. P. Wolfe, Presiding 1:00 686. Cross coupling reactions of aryl nitriles and aryl ethers: Synthetically useful alternatives to typical aryl halides substrates. J. M. Penney, J. A. Miller

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

712. Tailoring the surface properties of β-amyloid fibers through interactions with deriva­ tives of Congo Red. J. Yang, P. Inbar 713. Effect of crosslink dynamics on the mate­ rial properties of thermoreversible networks. D. M. Loveless, W. C. Yount, S. L. Craig 714. Using Heck reaction to sense transition metals via catalytic signal amplification. Q. Wu, E. V. Anslyn 715. The structure and nonlinear optical proper­ ties of the HMT-CDA 1:1 adduct: Experi­ mental and DFT approach. R. Venkatraman, P. Ray 716. Synthesis and anion binding properties of a fluorescent tripodal N-dansylamide derived from 1,3,5-tris(aminomethyl)-2,4,6-triethylbenzene. R. A. Currie, A. T. Pau, K. Kavallieratos 717. Stereochemical determination of small molecules using ECCD. M. Tanasova, C. Olmsted, Q. Yang, B. Borhan 718. Functional macrocycles and oligomers from 1,4-triazoles. H. Juwarker, S. L. Craig 719. Dynamic force spectroscopy of coordina­ tion-based reversible polymer building blocks. F. R. Kersey, S. L. Craig 720. Synthesis and characterization of discotic liquid crystalline hydrazone compounds. J. H. Park, M. J. Jeong, J. Y. Chang 721. Investigation of coiled-coils as fusion protein surface mimics. P. Travisano, A. J. Kennan 722. Preparation and investigation of unnatural polar sidechains in designed coiled-coils. M. L. Diss, A. J. Kennan 723. Binding mode of DiSC2(5) with duplex DNA determined by two-dimensional NMR. K. C. Hannah, R. R. Gil, B. Armitage 724. ZT-65B, a hairpin polyamide that binds to the inverted CCAAT box (ICB) site of the human multidrug resistant (mdrl) gene: Design, DNA binding, and biological studies. Z. Taherbhai, S. Bailey, A. Sutterfield, K. Buchmueller, B. Nguyen, M. Kotecha, D. Hochhauser, J. Hartley, D. Wilson, M.Lee 725. Effect of 5'-T elongation on the self assembly of G-quadruplex DNA. C. Antonacci, R. D. Sheardy, C. H. Marzabadi 726. Studies on the self-assembly of guanosine analogues in aqueous media. M. Garcia-Aniaga, S. Méndez, J. M. Rivera 727. Discrete self-assembled As(lll) complexes. W. J. Vickaryous, D. W. Johnson 728. Synthesis and supramolecular utility of mellitic triimides. K. G. Rose, D. Jaber, D. G. Hamilton 729. Controlling beta sheet stability in models of the amyloid β peptide. E. R. Witt, W. E. Allen 730. Cyclic modular β-sheets: Divalent struc­ tures based on β-amyloid. R. J. Woods, J. S. Nowick 731. Chemical models of protein β-sheets that dimerize in water through interchain β-sheet interactions. J. S. Nowick, O. Khakshoor 732. Nanometer-scale molecular rods. J. S. Nowick, C. M. Gothard 733. Size-controlled palladium nanoparticle catalysts using dendron assembly for semihydrogenation and one-pot synthesis. M. Murata, Y. Tanaka, T. Mizugaki, K. Ebitani, K. Kaneda 734. Self-assembled graphitic nanotubes from chiral hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronenes. W. Jin, T. Fukushima, M. Niki, A. Kosaka, N. Ishii, T. Aida 735. Lipid nanotubes with cationic inner sur­ faces self-assembled by unsymmetrical bolaamphiphiles. N. Kameta, M. Masuda, T. Shimizu 736. Oligovelcraplexes using tr-ir-stacking and metal coordination. K. Paek, M. Kwak, E.Lee 737. Self-assembly of amphiphilic calix[4]arenes with liquid crystalline properties. O. M. Martin, S. Mecozzi 738. Synthesis of a diureidocalix[4]arene for investigation as a molecular capsule. S. N. Reid, S. B. Shuker 739. Synthesis of magic ring catenanes by olefin metathesis. E. N. Guidry, S. J. Cantrill, R. H. Grubbs 740. Preparation and study of resorcinarenebased multidentate ligands. P. Frischmann, C. LeBaron, J. J. Pak 741. Binding properties of cavitand-based water soluble receptors. C. H. Haas, S. M. Biros, J. Rebek Jr.

TECH-95

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 742. Resorcin[4]arene cavitand-adenosine nucleoside hybrid. G. Zhao, J. W. Gonzalez, C. G. Martinez, L. M. Gutierrez Tunstad 743. Triquinoxaline cavitand crown ethers. G. Zhao, Y. Cai, J. W. Gonzalez, L. M. Gutierrez-Tunstad 744. Molecular recognition and catalysis with metal-salen-complex monofunctionalized cavitands. F. H. Zelder, S. Richeter, J. Rebek Jr. 745. Introverted functionality in cavitand recep­ tors in water. S. M. Butterfield, J. Rebek Jr. 746. Wurster's Crownophanes: Synthesis and properties of para-phenylenediamine based redox-active macrocydes. J. W. Sibert IV, G. R. Hundt 747. Synthesis and properties of water-soluble cyclophanes bearing saccharide residues. 0. Hayashida, I. Hamachi 748. Encapsulation effects catalysis of the quatemization of quinuclidine. B. W. Purse, A. Gissot, J. Rebek Jr. 749. Supramolecular catalysis of sigmatropic rearrangements: Rate acceleration through encapsulation. D. Fiedler, A. Zahl, R. van Eldik, R. G. Bergman, Κ. N. Raymond 750. Supramolecular interactions in fluorophenyl derivatives of propargylic alcohols. M. A. Hyacinth, M. Chruszcz, L. Bin, M. Sabat, L. Pu 751. Enantioselective organocatalysis with ambifunctional 6,6'-disubstituted 2,2'-dihydroxybiphenyls. P. R. Blakemore, M. A. Sephton, J. H. Pink 752. Chiral nucleophilic podand catalysts for asymmetric phosphoryl transfer. A. Rolfe, S. Jones 753. Phosphonylation of allylic substrates and enantiomeric resolution of chiral allyl phosphonic acids using 31 P NMR. 0. K. Vaden, D. A. Knight 754. Total synthesis of BIRT-377 via organocatalytic asymmetric amination. N. S. Chowdari, C. F. Barbas III 755. Organocatalytic asymmetric synthesis of aminoalcohols, diamines and diamino acids. N. S. Chowdari, R. Thayumanavan, F. Tanaka, C. F. Barbas III 756. Organocatalytic direct asymmetric Michael reactions of α-aminoaldehyde with β-nitroolefins: Facile synthesis of unnatural β-disubstituted a-aminoacid. R. Thayumanavan, F. Tanaka, C. F. Barbas III 757. Direct organocatalytic de novo carbohy­ drate synthesis. D. Enders, C. Grondai 758. The direct catalytic asymmetric alphaaminomethylation of ketones. I. Ibrahem, J. Casas, A. Cordova 759. Amino acids catalyze the asymmetric incorporation of molecular oxygen to organic compounds. M. Engqvist, H. Sundén, 1. Ibrahem, J. Casas, A. Cordova 760. Amino acids catalyze the asymmetric formation of hexose carbohydrates. M. Engqvist, H. Sundén, I. Ibrahem, J. Casas, A. Cordova 761. Thiourea-catalyzed asymmetric aza-BaylisHillman reaction: Isolation of reaction intermediate leads to mechanistic insight. I. T. Raheem, E. N. Jacobsen 762. Peptide-catalyzed asymmetric control of nitroalkane conjugate addition. B. R. Linton, C. M. Aderman, C. A. Evans, S. J. Miller 763. New cyclic chiral pseudo-peptides as organocatalysis. I. Gutierrez Landa, G. Haberhauer 764. Combining chiral structures in novel asymmetric phase transfer catalysts. D. K. MacFariand, W. E. Kowtoniuk 765. Rationally engineered chiral phase-transfer catalysts in the alkytation of substituted 2-alkyl -1-indanones. T. A. Ramirez, T. Vasques, R. E. Plata, J. Wu, A. Bhattacharya 766. Enantioselectivity of lipase-catalyzed esterification and transesterification for resolution of (R,S)-2-octanol in nonaqueous media. X. Shi, M. Zong, Y. Guo

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

96-TECH

767. Dynamic kinetic resolution of racemates using membrane-separated catalysts. E. Gibbins, J. L. Irwin, A. G. Livingston, J. C. Muir, D. A. Patterson, C. Roengpithya, P. C. Taylor 768. Enzymatic dynamic asymmetric transformation: An efficient entry to enantiopure piperidines. R. U. Braun, K. Leijondahl, J-E. Backvall 769. Stereoselective enol tosylation: Preparation of trisubstituted alpha, beta-unsaturated esters. J. M. Baxter, D. Steinhuebel, M. Palucki, I. W. Davies 770. A chemo- and diastereoselective elimination reaction. T. L. Minger, M. Mitton-Fry, T. Sammakia 771. Regioselective hydrogenolysis of bis(amethylbenzyl)amines affected by trifluoromethyl or fluorine substituent on aromatic ring. M. Kanai, M. Yasumoto, Y. Kuriyama, K. Inomiya, M. Ishida, A. Ishii 772. Rapid determination of the enantiomeric excess of sulfoxides. C. M. Sprout, C. T. Seto 773. Development of novel chiral spiro-type ligands. T. Tsujihara, P. Koranne, K. Wakita, C. Muthiah, J. Yogo, S. Takizawa, H. Sasai 774. Chemoenzymatic synthesis of chiral bipyridine ligands and their application in asymmetric oxidation, reduction and cyclopropanation reactions. T. Belhocine, D. R. Boyd, D. M. Murphy, N. D. Sharma, C. C. R. Allen 775. Efficient and modular syntheses of new chiral nonracemic C^-symmetric 2,2'-bipyridyl and pyridylphosphine ligands: Applications in catalytic asymmetric synthesis. M. P. A. Lyle, P. D. Wilson 776. Synthesis of optically active atropisomeric aminophosphine and its application to catalytic asymmetric reaction. T. Mino, Y. Tanaka, M. Sakamoto, T. Fujita 777. Efficient approach to chiral ferrocenyl ligands via asymmetric hydrogénation of ferrocenyl ketone. A. S. C. Chan, W. S. Lam, S. H. L. Kok, F. L Lam, G. H. Y. Cheung, J. Wu, T. T. L. Au-Yeung, C. H. Yeung 778. P-Chirogenic ligand synthesis and catalysis. E. F. Clarke, L. J. Higham, D. G. Gilheany 779. Diarylketimine linker for solid phase organic synthesis: Applications to asymmetric diethyl zinc addtions. U. B. Tadikonda, B. D. Dangel, R. Polt 780. Enantioselective aldol reaction using soluble-polymer supported chiral lithium amide. K. Wu, P. G. Williard 781. Steric and electronic effects in the asymmetric hydroacylation reaction of o-alkenylbenzaldehydes. A. T. Morehead Jr., A. L. Watkins 782. Asymmetric palladium-catalyzed C-0 and C-N bond formations using non-racemic allylic hydroxy phosphonates. C. D. Spilling, A. He, A. Thanavaro 783. Highly enantioselective Nozaki-HiyamaKishi reactions of allylic and vinylic halides. A. Berkessel, D. Menche, M. Schroder 784. Asymmetric Nozaki-Hiyama-Kishi reactions. J. M. Covino, J. Fontanez, Q. Xu, E. Rozners 785. Application of biphenol based fine-tunable phosphoramidite ligands to the catalytic asymmetric allylic alkylation. B. D. Chapsal, I. Ojima 786. Preparation and functionalization of enantiopure secondary boronic esters. W. J. Moran, J. P. Morken 787. Asymmetric dihydroxylation of aliènes. S. A. Fleming, R. Liu, J. T. Redd, S. M. Carroll 788. Asymmetric synthesis of 1,2-diol and its application to the synthesis of Flutriafol. H-D. Kim, T-H. Kim, S-R. Park 789. Asymmetric synthesis of diverse cyclopropyl tamoxifen analogs via a rhodium carbenoid transformation and microwaveassisted Suzuki reactions. J. E. France, A. Ni, H. M. L. Davies 790. Asymmetric catalysts for the hydrogénation of ketones. Y. Xu, M. Wills, G. Woodward, G. Docherty 791. Enantioselective reduction of ketones with trichlorosilane. A. V. Malkov, A. J. P. Stewart-Liddon, P. Kocovsky, D. Haigh 792. One-pot imine formation/asymmetric reduction to form N-heterocycles. G. Williams, M. Wills, R. Pike, C. Wade

793. Unprecedented enantioselective reduction of N-unsubstituted imines: Catalytic asymmetric synthesis of trifluoromethylated amines. F. Gosselin, P. D. O'Shea, S. Roy, R. Reamer, C-Y. Chen, R. P. Volante 794. A concise synthesis of (-)-Lentiginosine via regioselective and stereoselective introduction of amino group using chlorosulfonyl isocyanate. I. S. Kim, C. H. Jin, S. J. Kim, Y. H. Jung 795. Stereoselective synthesis of cycloalkylamines via intramolecular amidoalkylation of Ν,Ο-acetal TMS ether possessing allylsilane. Y-G. Suh, J-W. Jung, S-Y. Seo, S. M. Han, Y-S. Lee, S-H. Kim, S-M. Paek, S. N. Kim 796. Progress toward a convergent synthesis of ustiloxin D. P. Li, C. D. Evans, M. M. Joulli 797. An efficient, enantioselective synthesis of (S)-oxybutynin using a 4-methyl-1,3-dioxane chiral auxiliary. D. R. Clark, W. F. Bailey 798. Synthesis of asperdiol derivatives and their anticancer activity. N. A. Avilés, J. Figueroa, A. D. Rodriguez 799. Synthesis, diastereomer identification and enantiomer resolution of non-steroidal estrogenic carboxylic acids for in-depth structurephysiology correlation study. S. Xie, Y. Hou, C. Y. Meyers 800. Synthesis and structural charaterization of intermediates towards the preparation of a polyphosphonate ester containing L-dopa. D. M. Chamely-Wiik, C. E. Carraher Jr., J. E. Haky, G. Kamel 801. Development of chiral Bronsted acidcatalyzed asymmetric Morita-Baylis-Hillman reactions for the synthesis of clerodane diterpenes. S. A. Rodgen, S. E. Schaus 802. Catalysis of highly stereoselective Mannich-type reactions of aldehydes and ketones with alpha-imino esters by a pyrrolidine sulfonamide: Synthesis of unnatural alpha-amino acids. W. Wang, J. Wang, H. Li 803. Synthesis of enantiopure beta-substituted omega-unsaturated amino acids. X. Gu, B. J. Min, J. P. Cain, V. J. Hruby 804. Enantioselective nitrile anion cyclization to substituted pyrrolidines: A highly efficient synthesis of (3S, 4fl)-N-tert-butyl-4-arylpyrrolidine-3-carboxylic acid. J. Y. L. Chung, R. J. Cvetovich, J. S. Amato, J. C. McWilliams, R. Reamer, L. DiMichele 805. Process research and scale up for the practical fluorination method for the preparation of (3R)-amino-(4R)-fluoromethyl pyrrolidine. S. Takei 806. Efficient procedures for the preparation of 1-tert-butyl-4-chloropiperidine: Generation of an N-tert-butyl group by the reaction of a dimethyliminium salt with methylmagnesium chloride. M. McLaughlin 807. Design, synthesis and structural characterization of novel antitumor agents. V. Dragutan, I. Dragutan, P. Filip, T. Oh, B. Wrackmeyer, L. R. Sherman 808. An efficient process for the preparation of Lck inhibitor. A. K. Gupta, D. R. Hill, D. Plata, A. V. Bhatia 809. Synthesis of mitochondrially targeted antioxidants. E. Grosstephan, H. Schierembergg, S. Morse, J. R. Connor, X. Zhang, M. Haaf 810. Preparation of anti-atheronal antibody Gd-complexes as novel contrast agents for cardiovascular imaging. L. Eltepu, P. Wentworth Jr. 811. Synthesis of carba^-L-fructopyranose and carbacyclic analogs of topiramate. M. H. Parker, B. E. Maryanoff, A. B. Reitz 812. Withdrawn. 813. Total syntheses of the novel (±)-2-methoxy-4-oxatetradecanoic acid and (S)-2methoxy-4-oxatetradecanoic acid. R. O'Neill, N. M. Carballeira 814. Synthesis of lipid mediators derived from ω-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids. N. A. Petasis, J. Uddin, R. Yang, C. N. Serhan 815. Synthesis of new acetylenic fatty acids and their potential as antifungal compounds. D. J. Sanabria, L. Giménez, C. Suerez, C. Cruz, Ν. Μ. Carballeira 816. Synthesis of sphingoids: A cross meta­ thesis approach. A. N. Rai, A. Basu 817. Synthesis of diene ceramides with organozirconium reagents. S-U. Kim, T. U. Abeytunga, R. L Polt 818. New synthetic routes to the phosphonate analogues of nucleotides. V. K. Brel, P. J. Stang

819. O-Selectivity and utility of phosphorylation mediated by phosphite triester intermediates in the N-unprotected phosphoramidite method. A. Ohkubo, H. Taguchi, K. Seio, M. Sekine 820. Direct glycosylate: Synthesis of a-indoline nucleosides. T. Chandra, K. L. Brown 821. Synthesis of a dimethylindole nucleotide for the semisynthesis of B-3 deaza-cyanocobalamin. T. Chandra, K. L. Brown 822. Synthesis of novel C-nucleosides for the expansion of the genetic alphabet. K. W. Wellington, S. A. Benner 823. N7-Carbocyclic purine nucleosides. A. Akdag, S. W. Schneller 824. Synthesis and conformational analysis of 4-N-carbamoyldeoxycytidine derivatives. K. Miyata, R. Tamamushi, A. Ohkubo, H. Taguchi, K. Seio, M. Sekine 825. Scaffolds for the development of nucleo­ sides with the ability to form four hydrogen bonds. H. I. Illangkoon, S. A. Benner 826. Artificially expanded genetic information system: New base pair with alternative hydrogen bonding pattern. Z. Yang, D. Hutter, P. Sheng, S. A. Benner 827. Modification of guanine:cytosine base pairing and the effect on charge migration through DNA. N. W. Schlientz, G. B. Schuster 828. Photoactivatable RNA functions. D. D. Young, A. Deiters 829. Caged oligo(deoxy)nucleotides: Controlling biological processes with light. L. Krock, G. Mayer, A. Heckel 830. Pyrene fluorescence as a general RNA folding probe. M. K. Smalley, S. K. Silverman 831. Enantiopure amines and amino acids: Technology and processes. N. Sereinig 832. Conformational behavior of bis(amino acid) derivatives of 1,4-diamino-2-butyne. T. P. Curran, M. V. Silva, K. A. Marques 833. Convenient method of synthesizing [2-2H]isopentenyl pyrophosphate analogues and determination of the stereoselectivity of isopentenyl pyrophosphate isomerase. C-L. Kao, W. Kittleman, H. W. Liu 834. Efficient synthesis of phosphinyl peptidomimetics. Z. Chen, A. S. Kende, E. Hu, F. H. Ebetino 835. Synthesis of peptoids/peptide-peptoid hybrids containing a phosphonic acid moiety in the side-chain. T. Hara, R. Hayashi, H. Yamaguchi, E. Appella, H. Kodama, D. H. Appella 836. Development of novel peptidomimetic inhibitors of the Bcl-XI/Bak protein-peptide interaction. J. D. Sadowsky, S. H. Gellman, Y. Tomita 837. Synthesis of alpha-helix proteomimetics based on inverse electron demand DielsAlder chemistry. S. M. Biros, S. Gu, L. Kroeck, J. Rebek Jr. 838. Increased intracellular delivery of β-peptides upon structural rigidification. T. B. Potocky, A. K. Menon, S. H. Gellman 839. Sequence-structure relationships in α/βpeptide oligomers. M. A. Schmitt, S. H. Gellman 840. Progress toward new biologically active β-peptides. E. P. English, S. H. Gellman 841. Facile synthesis of Ε-olefin isosteres for beta-strand backbone modification in pin-WW domain and beta-amyloid peptide. Y. Fu, J. Kelly 842. Novel linker strategies for the expedited synthesis of labeled peptides. V. Kumar, J. Beythien, P. White, P. Schneeberger, R. Steinauer 843. Studies toward the total synthesis of Katanosin B. A. Guzman-Martinez, R. B. Lamer, M. S. VanNieuwenhze 844. Studies toward the synthesis of mersacidin: Synthesis of the A and CD ring sys­ tems. R. S. Narayan, M. S. VanNieuwenhze 845. N-Methylsansalvamide synthesis. A. Kekec, K. Cook, J. V. C. Johnston, S. R. McAlpine 846. Protein design: Engineering a Rhodopsinsurrogate retinal-binding protein. C. Vasileiou, M. Rabago-Smith, R. Crist, S. Vaezeslami, S. Goins, J. H. Geiger, B. Borhan 847. Total chemical synthesis of glycopeptides and glycoproteins. M. Bejugam, S. Flitsch 848. Improved activity by glycosylation of nonribosomal peptide antibiotics. D. A. Thayer, C-H. Wong

ORGN 849. Substrate microarray for assaying lipolytic enzymes. J. Grognux, J-L. Reymond 850. Protease profiling using a FRET peptide cocktail. Y. Yongzheng, J-L. Reymond 851. Solid-phase synthesis of the mixirins: Cyclic lipopeptides with anti-tumour activity. J. P. Malkinson 852. Mechanism of activation of alpha-chymotrypsin by the polymer monomethoxypolyethylene glycol in organic solvents. B. Castillo Cruz, K. Griebenow, G. L. Barletta 853. Towards homogeneous catalysis in organic solvent: PEG-modified subtilisin Carlsberg as a case study. Y. Pacheco Moctezuma, G. Barletta, K. Griebenow 854. Stability of enzymes in organic solvents: A structural perspective. M. D. Kolipaka, G. L. Barletta, A. A. Ferrer 855. In-vivo directed evolution of DNA-binding proteins in yeast. J . A. Shin, A. Schwartz Mittelman, J. Xu, G. Chen, H. K. Chow 856. Targeting E. coli PBP1b transglycosylase. L J. Whalen, C-H. Wong 857. Unique macrocyclization catalyzed by amine oxidase in the lankacidin biosynthe­ sis. K. Arakawa, K. Kodama, H. Kinashi 858. Electrostatic control of 4-OT tautomerase specificity and catalysis. N. Metanis, P. E. Dawson, E. Keinan 859. Enzymatic formation of multiple triterpenes by mutation of tyrosine 510 of the oxidosqualene-lanosterol cyclase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. C-H. Chang, T-K. Wu 860. Development of arsenic-derivatized dyes as multi-purpose affinity reagents for the identification of protein complexes. M. U. Mayer, L. Shi, H. Cao, B. Chen, T. C. Squier 861. Position-specific incorporation of a fluorophore-quencher pair into a single protein through orthogonal 4-base codon/anticodon pairs. M. Taki, T. Hohsaka, M. Sisido 862. Nucleic acid triggered probe activation by the Staudinger ligation reaction. J . Cai, X. Li, X. Yue, J. S. Taylor 863. Ethidium homodimer III: New reagent for recognition of cell viability: Synthesis and DNA binding affinity. N. N. Barashkov, F. Mao, D. Cen THURSDAY MORNING Section A Convention Center Ballroom 20A-B

11:40 875. Synthesis, characterization and stereochemistry of pretzelanes and a cyclic bis[2]catenane. Y. Liu, P. A. Bonvallet, S. Vignon, S. I. Khan, J. F. Stoddart Section Β Convention Center Ballroom 20 C-D New Reactions and Methodology M. Y. Lebedev,

Molecular Recognition and Serf-Assembly

Section C

J. M. Rivera,

Convention Center Room 11A

Presiding

8:00 864. Design, synthesis, and properties of the hydrogen bond surrogate-based artificial alpha-helices. P. S. Arora, R. Chapman, G. Dimartino, D. Wang 8:20 865. Redox-controlled assembly of nitroaromatic/arylurea hydrogen-bonded complexes. D. K. Smith, S. L. Martin, C. Chan-Leonor 8:40 866. New architectures arising from complementary quadruple hydrogen bond­ ing motifs. O. A. Scherman, R. P. Sijbesma, E. W. Meijer 9:00 867. Buried solvent determines both anion binding selectivity and binding stoichiometry with hydrogen bonding receptors. S. A. Kularatne, D. H. Bums 9:20 868. Hydrocarbon binding inside a hexameric pyrogallolarene capsule. L. C. Palmer, J. Rebek Jr. 9:40 869. Subtle intramolecular interactions revealed using a cylindrical molecular cap­ sule. D. Rechavi, A. Scarso, J. Rebek Jr. 10:00 870. Efficient synthesis of water-soluble calixarenes using click chemistry. E-H. Ryu, Y. Zhao 10:20 871. Environmentally responsive molecular baskets. Y. Zhao, E-H. Ryu 10:40 872. Remarkably diverse binding modes of a [2]rotaxane. A-M. Fuller, D. A. Leigh, P. J. Lusby, A. M. Z. Slawin, D. B. Walker 11:00 873. Rotaxane-in-a-bottle: The synthesis of novel [2]rotaxanes using a mechanically interlocking auxiliary. D. A. Leigh, J. S. Hannam, W. R. Kwochka 11:20 874. Selective syntheses of a square planar palladium [2]catenate and its consti­ tutional and topological isomers. A-M. L Fuller, D. A. Leigh, P. J. Lusby, A. M. Z. Slawin, D. B. Walker

Presiding

8:00 876. New approaches to 2-alkylidene oxetanes. A. R. Howell, P. S. Sabila 8:20 877. Imidazolium-based indium(lll) tetrahalides: Recyclable catalysts for efficient coupling of carbon dioxide with epoxides to form cyclic carbonates. R. S. Varma, Y. J . Kim 8:40 878. Enantioselective alkynylations of aromatic and aliphatic aldehydes catalyzed by terpene-derived chiral amino alcohols. B. Singaram, C. C. Watts, P. Thoniyot, L. Hirayama, T. Romano 9:00 879. Frontiers in electroorganic synthesis. G. A. N. Felton, N. L. Bauld 9:20 880. Site-selective modification of the interior and exterior surfaces of MS2 viral capsids. J. M. Hooker, E. W. Kovacs, M. B. Francis 9:40 881. Regioselective synthesis of 2,6dimethyltetralin: Key precursor to 2,6-DMN. Y. G. Kim, B. H. Kim, J. G. Lee, W. K. Kim, T. E. Yim, S-K. Hong 10:00 882. Preparative scale potential of solid state photochemical decarbonylation in natural product and specialty chemical synthesis. C. J. Mortko, M. A. GarciaGaribay 10:20 883. Organocatalytic electrophilic fluorination of aldehydes. D. D. Steiner, C. F. Barbas III 10:40 884. HOFCH 3 CN: The best oxygen transfer agent organic chemistry has to offer. S. Rozen 11:00 885. Applications of mixed organoboranes for the alkylation of quinones. T. E. Cole, D. Zillman, G. Hincapie 11:20 886. Synthesis, screening and applica­ tions of new amino-boronate bifunctional catalysts. A. Whiting, A. Blatch, R. L. Giles, L. Patrick 11:40 887. /pso-Nitrosation of arylboronic acids: Chlorotrimethylsilane and silver nitrite as an efficient reagent system. G. K. S. Prakash, C. Panja, T. Mathew, G. A. Olah

Physical Organic Chemistry: Calculations, Mechanisms, Photochemistry, and High-Energy Species A. Banerjee,

10:20 895. Noncovalent complexes of nonclassical ions. M. D. Bojin, D. J. Tantillo 10:40 896. Changes in proton-NMR spectra of TDBC and similar dyes accompanying the formation of the J-band in their absorption and emission spectra. I. A. Struganova 11:00 897. Synthesis, characterization, and physicochemical properties of novel multiheaded anionic surfactants. R. V. Macri, R. D. Gandour 11:20 898. Synthesis and characterization of a new series of tri-headed anionic surfactants. E. W. Sugandhi, R. D. Gandour 11:40 899. Conservation of helical asymmetry in chiral interactions. D. Z. Wang Section D Convention Center Room 10 Metal-Mediated Reactions and Syntheses M. Hunsen,

Presiding

8:00 900. No-D 1 H NMR study of the pathway for n-BuLi "oxidation" of 1,5-cyclooctadiene to dilithium cyclooctatetraene dianion [Li 2 COT 2 1. T. R. Hoye, R. C. Hoye, J. E. Kabrhel 8:20 901. Mechanisms of alkylation of lithiated N-alkylimines. A. Ramirez, S. J. Zuend, D. B. Collum 8:40 902. LDA-mediated ortholithiation: Mixed aggregation in ethereal and amine solvents. K. Singh, D. B. Collum 9:00 903. Stereoselectivities and impact by DMS in the conjugate additions of a simple monosilylcopper reagent. M. Bergdahl, J. Dambacher 9:20 904. Three-component coupling reactions of silylglyoxylates, alkynes, and aldehydes: A chemoselective one-step glycolate aldol construction. D. A. Nicewicz, J. S. Johnson 9:40 905. Enantioselective indium-mediated allylation of hydrazones. G. R. Cook, R. Kargbo, B. Maity 10:00 906. Enantioselective palladium/indiummediated allylation of aldehydes. G. R. Cook, W. Xu, L. Sun 10:20 907. Hydrozirconation-transmetalationimine additions of aliènes as a new route to functionalized homoallylic amines. P. Wipf, J. G. Pierce 10:40 908. Novel metathesis catalysts and immobilization strategies. M. R. Buchmeiser, L. Yang, M. Mayr, R. Krôll 11:00 909. Novel RCM approaches for the rapid assembly of oxygen and nitrogen heterocycles. F. P. J. T. Rutjes, K. F. W. Hekking, M. Moelands, F. L. van Delft 11:20 910. Towards a better Ru olefin metathesis catalyst. A. Chlenov, S. H. Hong, R. H. Grubbs 11:40 9 1 1 . Stereoselective synthesis of polyene natural products. S. J. R. Twiddle, A. Whiting, A. P. Lightfoot

Presiding

8:00 888. Mechanism of /V,N-ethylenebisstearamide pyrolysis and formation of CO, C 0 2 , C H 4 and C 2 H 4 in the presence of iron/carbon powder under vacuum at 300 °C < Τ < 700 °C. G. Poskrebyshev, M. M. Baum, J. A. Moss, D. Appelian 8:20 889. Dications of tetrabenzo[5.5]fulvalenes. The relationship between oxidation potentials and antiaromaticity of 2,7 and 3,6 -substituted tetrabenzo[5.5]fulvalenes. C. Tirla, N. S. Mills, A. Rakowitz, A. L. M. Bria, C. Μ. Μ. Hurd 8:40 890. Reconsidering the role of thiamin diphosphate in decarboxylation-C Advan­ tages of avoiding delocalization. Q. Hu, R. Kluger, J. Lau 9:00 891. Contributions by resonance and inductive effects toward the acidity of X=CHY-H (X,Y=CH 2 , NH, O). J. M. Karty 9:20 892. Why organic chemists shouldn't use the B3LYP model for many-carbon mol­ ecules: Computational errors in hydrocar­ bons. T. M. Gilbert, C. E. Check 9:40 893. Synthesis and chemical properties of nitro and aminoimidazole derivatives of nitrogen mustard. I. Weidlich, S. Sobiak 10:00 894. Withdrawn.

From Bench to Pilot Plant: Sponsored by Teledyne Isco, Inc Cosponsored with MEDI THURSDAY AFTERNOON Section A Convention Center Ballroom 20A-B

2:40 917. Rapid access to unexplored chemical space with metallc-organic compounds: Discovery of picomolar protein kinase inhibitors. E. Meggers 3:00 918. Fluorescence sensing of glucose with boronic acid substituted quenchers and ionic dyes. D. B. Cordes, S. Gamsey, Ζ. Sharrett, A. Miller, P. Thoniyot, R. A. Wessling, B. Singaram 3:20 919. Endocytic drug delivery by a syn­ thetic receptor: Enabling vancomycin to eliminate bacterial pathogens within mam­ malian cells. S. Boonyarattanakalin, B. R. Peterson 3:40 920. Differential receptors create patterns that distinguish various proteins. A. T. Wright, M. J. Griffin, J. T. McDevitt, E. V. Anslyn 4:00 921.1,3-Propanedithiol: New tricks for an old ligand. R. J. T. Houk, K. J. Wallace, E. V. Anslyn 4:20 922. Qualitative test strips for IndicatorDisplacement Assays. E. V. Anslyn, B. T. Nguyen, S. L. Wiskur 4:40 923. A simple colorimetric method for quantification of mM concentrations of glucose at physiological conditions. S. Boduroglu, J. Hu Section Β Convention Center Ballroom 20 C-D New Reactions and Methodology Τ. Ε. Cole,

Presiding

1:00 924. Polymers as chemical reagents: Friedel-Crafts alkylation with alcohols. J. D'Angelo, A. Onorato, A. Kumar, C. Delude, G. A. Sotzing, M. B. Smith 1:20 925. Polymers as chemical reagents: Oxidation of alcohols and related reactions. J. D'Angelo, R. Sawyer, A. Kumar, C. McClusky, G. A. Sotzing, M. B. Smith 1:40 926. Withdrawn. 2:00 927. Rapid synthesis and purification of sulfahydantion library using microwaveassisted organic synthesis and automated flash chromatography. S. Ghassemi 2:20 928. Nucleophilic attack of 2-sulfinyl acrylates: A general approach to sulfonic acid anions. A. L. Schwan, J. S. O'Donnell 2:40 929. Synthesis of allylsilanes by reductive lithiation of thioethers. L Desaubry, S. Streiff, N. Ribeiro 3:00 930. New reactions of selenocarboxylates. E. Darout, S. Knapp 3:20 931. Stereoselective formation of quater­ nary centers utilizing azetines. R. L. Moore, N. B. Ambhaikar, M. Herald, C. MacNevin, D. C. Liotta 3:40 932. Biomimetic strategies for catalytic carbonyl anion reactions. A. Bharadwaj, A. E. Mattson, K. Scheldt 4:00 933. Optically active propargyl amines via the enantioselective conjugate addition of S-alkynyMO-TMS-9borabicyclo[3.3.2]decanes to Λί-acyl imines. A. Gonzalez, E. Canales, J. A. Soderquist 4:20 934. Three-component Mannich-type reaction for selective tyrosine bioconjugation. N. S. Joshi, L. R. Whitaker, M. B. Francis 4:40 935. New multi-component reactions of 2-methyleneaziridines. J. J. Shlers, H. C. Twin, M. Shipman, J. F. Hayes Section C

Molecular Recognition and Serf-Assembly Y. Zhao,

Presiding

1:00 912. Modulating the supramolecular structure and properties of G-quadruplexes by using 8-phenyl-2'-deoxyguanosine analogues. J . M. Rivera, V. Gubala 1:20 913. Role of kinetics in supramolecular networks. W. C. Yount, D. M. Loveless, S. L. Craig 1:40 914. Modular approaches to multivalent and bioactive materials using supramolecular polymers. P. Y. W. Dankers, E. W. Meijer 2:00 915. Non-natural backbone modifications in peptide based supramolecular designs. W. S. Home, J. H. van Maarseveen, M. K. Yadav, C. D. Stout, M. R. Ghadiri 2:20 916. Rational design of catalytic peptide networks. G. Ashkenasy, M. R. Ghadiri

Convention Center Room 11A Physical Organic Chemistry: Calculations, Mechanisms, Photochemistry, and High-Energy Species I. A. Struganova,

Presiding

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

TECH-97

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 1:00 936. Synthesis and reactivity of a chlorinated 1,8-bis(diarylmethylium) naphthalenediyl dication. H. Wang, F. P. Gabbai 1:20 937. Understanding isomeric preferences: Ene-diamine vs. imine-amine. B. J. E. Reich, E. E. Greenwald, A. K. Justice, B. T. Beckstead, S. W. North, S. A. Miller 1:40 938. Photochemistry of 2-nitrobenzyl vinyl ethers: Oxygen-induced C=C bond cleavage. A. Banerjee, P. K. Yong 2:00 939. Stepwise sequential and parallel photoinduced charge separation in a porphyrin-triquinone tetrad. J. W. Springer, G. Kodis, L. de la Garza, A. L. Moore, T. A. Moore, D. Gust 2:20 940. Preparation and properties of dibenzothiophene based sulfilimines. V. Desikan, Y. Liu, J. P. Toscano, W. S. Jenks 2:40 941. Triplet-sensitized photolysis of oxy carbonyl azides. R. S. Murthy, B. S. Ault, A. D. Gudmundsdottir 3:00 942. Sulfonium salts for deep UV photolithography: Synthesis and mechanism of photoacid generation. C. N. Sanrame, G. Menard, J. F. Cameron, J. C. Scaiano 3:20 943. Impact of pore confinement on the pyrolysis reactivity of phenethyl phenyl ether. M. K. Kidder, A. C. Buchanan III, P. F. Britt 3:40 944. Thermochemistry of n-dehydrophenylnitrenes (n = 2, 3, or 4). T. E. Munsch, P. G. Wenthold Section D Convention Center Room 10 Metal-Mediated Reactions and Syntheses M. Bergdahl, Presiding 1:00 945. Development of catalytic Nazarov cyclizations to form vicinal stereocenters: Application to the total synthesis of Merrilactone A. W. He, X. Sun, T. A. Atesin, P. A. Caruana, A. A. Frontier 1:20 946. Pyridinium chlorochromate (PCC) catalyzed oxidation of alcohols and aldehydes. M. Hunsen 1:40 947. Highly compatible ruthenium and enzyme catalysts for efficient dynamic kinetic resolution of sec-alcohols at ambient temperature: Insights into the mechanism. B. Martin-Matute, M. Edin, K. Bogâr, J-E. Bàckvall 2:00 948. Novel transformation of furans promoted by electron-rich Re, Mo complexes. F. You, W. D. Harman 2:20 949. Withdrawn. 2:40 950. Molybdenum pentachloride: A powerful reagent for oxidative transformations. S. R. Waldvogel, B. Kramer, D. Mirk, A. lanni, M. Bomkamp 3:00 951. Mechanistic investigation of Cu(l) catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition reaction. V. O. Rodionov, V. V. Fokin, M. G. Finn 3:20 952. Cycloisomerization of 1,6-enynes via rhodium vinylidene-mediated catalysis. C. Lee, H. Kim 3:40 953. New mild catalytic one-pot process for Curtius rearrangement. O. Leogane, H. Lebel 4:00 954. General and efficient aziridination of alkenes with bromamine-T catalyzed by cobalt porphyrins. G-Y. Gao, J. D. Harden, X. P. Zhang 4:20 955. Convenient synthesis of enamides via Ru-catalyzed addition of amides to alkynes. L J. Goossen, J. E. Rauhaus, G. Deng 4:40 956. Transition metal-based Lewis acid and base ambiphilic catalysts of iridium hydride complexes: Multicomponent synthesis of glutarimides. H. Takaya, K. Yoshida, K. Isozaki, H. Terai, S-l. Murahashi

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

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~~

Division of Petroleum Chemistry J. D. Allison, Program Chair

OTHER SYMPOSIA OF INTEREST; Catafy*i*fet1 ^ Chefflie^ i$m H$l» WedLthu» Digfaee?lftgCtwmt»^Syii»ositgftlri Honor of ttrt&Ba^ {see *&?,We$ SOCIAL EVENTS: DfemenTue Execa8»Oonai«ei»«eelfngiSat Memowship Commutée Meeting; Sat fWamirïllI f un imlUlill n' ttilniH.it».-Bat

FPuyrant CotKnilttM& liions Set Soda* How Tue BUSINESS MEETING: Tue SUNDAY MORNING Section A Manchester Grand Hyatt Madeleine C-D Symposium on Gas Hydrates and Clathrates Cosponsored with FUEL D. Mahajan, B. P. McGrail, and C. E. Taylor, Organizers 8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 1. Methane hydrate exploration at the mid Chilean coast: A geophysical and geochemical survey. R. B. Coffin, J. Pohlman, J. Gardner, R. Downer, W. Wood, J. Gettrust, J. Diaz 9:10 2. A new method for gas hydrate equilibrium measurements in porous media using resonant ultrasound spectroscopy. B. P. McGrail, S. Ahmed, H. Phale 9:35 3. Continuous formation of gas hydrate by static mixing. H. Tajima, A. Yamasaki, F. Kiyono 10:00 Intermission. 10:10 4. U.S. DOE methane hydrate R&D program. R. Boswell 10:45 5. Control of the formation process of hydrates under constant volume condition. F. Kiyono, H. Tajima, K. Ogasawara, A. Yamasaki 11:10 6. Effect of amphiphilic compounds on the hydrate formation kinetics. Y. Kuji, T. Daimaru, Y. Yanagisawa, A. Yamasaki Section Β Manchester Grand Hyatt Randle A Solid Acid Alkylation and Isomerization K. W. Plumlee, Organizer 9:00 Introductory Remarks. 9:05 7. Chemical transformations using tung­ sten blue. A. W. Apblett, B. P. Kiran 9:30 8. Isomerization of n-hexane over sul­ fated zirconia promoted by noble metals. E. A. Blekkan, T. Loften 9:55 9. Methylation of biphenyl to 4-methylbiphenyl over NH4F modified nanosized HZSM-C5. Y. Wang, X. Guo, C. Zhang, X. Wang, C. Song 10:20 Intermission. 10:30 10. Ammoximation of methyl ethyl ketone to methyl ethyl ketone oxime over TS-1.LXia, P.Li, X.Guo, S.Xu 10:55 11. New method to the synthesis of 2-ethylanthraquinone over Η-β zeolite. R. Xu, X. Guo, G. Wang, Z. Zhang, C. Wang, Y. Wang

SUNDAY AFTERNOON Section A Manchester Grand Hyatt Madeleine C-D Symposium on Gas Hydrates and Clathrates Cosponsored with FUEL D. Mahajan, B. P. McGrail, and C. E. Taylor, Organizers 1:00 Introductory Remarks. 1:05 12. Effects of gas hydrates on the chemi­ cal and physical properties of seawater. C-C. A. Lai 1:40 13. Formation and dissolution of a CO2 hydrate composite for ocean carbon sequestration. D. E. Riestenberg, M. O. Gborigi, L. Liang, M. J. Lance, J. Gabitto, C. Tsouris 2:05 14. Gas hydrates and clathrates: Flow assurance, enviromental and economic perspectives and the Nigerian liquified natural gas project. J. C. Igwe, B. C. Gbaruko, P. N. Gbaruko, R. C. Nwokoma 2:30 Intermission. 2:40 15. Hydrate decomposition by the depressurization technique: Effect of the sharp interface assumption. S. Gerami, M. Pooladi-Darvish 3:05 16. Hydrate-sediment interactions in a novel high-pressure apparatus. M. Eaton, D. Mahajan, R. Flood, T. Koga, Μ. Η. Rafailovich 3:30 17. Hydrogen clathrate hydrate - novel hydrogen storage material: Crystal structure, kinetics, and phase diagram. K. A. Lokshin, Y. Zhao, D. He, W. Mao, H-K. Mao, R. J. Hemley, M. V. Lobanov, M. Greenblatt 3:55 18. The future of hydrate analysis with speed and simplicity: Beyond mobile labora­ tory. J. T. Kwan, Y. M. Makogon, H. J. Ng Section Β Manchester Grand Hyatt Randle A George A. Olah Award in Hydrocarbon or Petroleum Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Enrique Iglesia Cosponsored with CATL

9:00 27. Long-term laboratory studies of meth­ ane hydrate utilization by anaerobic meth­ ane oxidizing microbes. D. H. Bartlett, M. Kastner, L. Palekar, A. Obraztsova, G. Robertson, A. G. Dickson 9:25 28. Mesoscale research of gas hydrates. S. D. McCallum, D. E. Riestenberg, C. J. Rawn, T. J. Phelps 9:50 Intermission. 10:00 29. Neutron diffraction studies of gas hydrates. A. J. Schultz, X. Wang 10:25 30. Morphology of methane hydrate host sediments. K. W. Jones, H. Feng, S. Tomov, W. J. Winters, M. Eaton, D. Mahajan 10:50 31. Methane hydrate formation and dissociation in a partially saturated sand. T. J. Kneafsey, L. Tomutsa, C. Taylor, A. Gupta, G. J. Moridis, B. Freifeld, Y. Seol Section Β Manchester Grand Hyatt Randle A George A. Olah Award in Hydrocarbon or Petroleum Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Enrique Iglesia Cosponsored with CATL S. L. Soled and A. Bell, Organizers 9:00 32. Scientific and technological issues related to the production of Ultra Low Sulfur Diesel (ULSD). H. Topsoe, A. Carlsson, M. Brorson, B. S. Clausen, P. L. Hansen, R. C. Egeberg, G. Hytoft, N-Y. Topsoe, K. G. Knudsen, J. Lauritsen, F. Besenbacher, B. Hinnemann, P. G. Moses, A. Logadottir, J. K. Norskov 9:30 33. Mechanisms of hydrodenitrogenation and hydrodesulfurization. R. Prins 10:00 34. Sulfur and nitrogen sensitivity of supported Pt hydrogénation catalysts. J. A. Lercher 10:30 Intermission. 10:40 35. Catalytic and enzymatic hydrogen production. J. K. Norskov, B. Hinnemann 11:10 36. Predicting hydrocarbon chemistry: A path forward. W. H. Green Jr. 11:40 37. Ab initio simulation of electrocatalysis: Direct methanol oxidation. M. Neurock, S. Wasileski MONDAY AFTERNOON

S. L. Soled and A. Bell, Organizers

Section A

1:30 19. Molecular mechanism of BaeyerVilliger oxidations with H202 on a solid Lewis acid catalyst. A. Corma, M. Boronat, M. Renz 2:00 20. Isotopic transient analysis of CO oxidation kinetics over supported Au cata­ lysts. R. J. Davis, J. Calla 2:30 21. Catalysis by supported gold: Roles of cationic and zerovalent gold. B. C. Gates, J. C. Fierro-Gonzalez 3:00 Intermission. 3:10 22. Heterogeneous Re-based catalysts for olefin metathesis. S. Scott, A. Moses, H. Leifeste, S. Chattopadhay, C. Raab, B. F. Chmelka, N. Ramsayhe, J. Eckert 3:40 23. Can immobilized, molecular Pd com­ plexes function as recyclable Heck catalysts: A case study and literature analysis. C. W. Jones 4:10 24. Direct conversion of methane into C1 oxygenates. J. L. G. Fierro 4:40 25. Signaling in Τ lymphocytes: An example of spatially organized catalytic reactors. A. K. Chakraborty

Manchester Grand Hyatt Madeleine C-D

MONDAY MORNING Section A Manchester Grand Hyatt Madeleine C-D Symposium on Gas Hydrates and Clathrates Cosponsored with FUEL D. Mahajan, B. P. McGrail, and C. E. Taylor, Organizers 8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 26. Effect of bubble size and density on methane conversion to hydrate. E. P. Ladner, J. Lekse, C. E. Taylor

Symposium on Gas Hydrates and Clathrates Cosponsored with FUEL D. Mahajan, B. P. McGrail, and C. E. Taylor, Organizers 1:00 Introductory Remarks. 1:05 38. Physical properties of sediment containing methane gas hydrate. W. J. Winters, W. F. Waite, D. H. Mason, L. Y. Gilbert 1:40 39. Investigations into surfactant/gashydrate relationship. R. E. Rogers, G. Zhang, J. S. Dearman, C. E. Woods, T. Ding 2:05 40. Methane hydrate research at NETL: Research to make methane production from hydrates a reality. D. D. Link, N. English, C. Taylor 2:30 Intermission. 2:40 41. Study of the critical gas saturation during methane hydrate dissociation at the single-pore scale. I. N. Tsimpanogiannis, Y. C. Yortsos, P. C. Uchtner 3:05 42. Molecular computations for predictions of clathrate-hydrate nucleation and phase-behavior of multi-component hydrates. B. J. Anderson, R. Radhakrishnan, J. W. Tester, B. L Trout 3:30 43. Molecular dynamics simulation of methane hydrates at NETL. N. J. English, C. E. Taylor, R. P. Warzinski, E. Rosenbaum Section Β Manchester Grand Hyatt Randle A George A. Olah Award in Hydrocarbon or Petroleum Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Enrique Iglesia Cosponsored with CATL S. L. Soled and A. Bell, Organizers

98-TECH

ORGN/PETR

2:55 88. Combinatorial methods for the discov­ ery of novel catalysts for the WGS reaction. C. J. Brooks, A. G. Hagemeyer, K. Yaccato, R. Carhart, M. Herrmann, A. Lesik, P. Strasser, A. F. Volpe Jr., H. W. Turner, H. Weinberg 3:20 89. Selective reforming catalysis-catalyst testing and reactor design. S. Vasileiadis 3:45 90. Modeling, informatics and data pipe­ lining in combinatorial development of NOx catalysts. M. J. Doyle 4:10 9 1 . Colorimetric assay for the high throughput screening of NOx storage cata­ lysts. J-H. Park, M. S. Han, S. J. Park, l-S. Nam, G. G. Yeo, J. K. Kil, D. H. Kim 4:35 92. Preparation and catalytic activity of bulk Ni-Mo-W catalyst for ultra clean fuels. C. Yin, H. Zhao, R. Zhao, C. Liu 5:00 Concluding Remarks.

11:15 106. The role of accumulated carbon in deactivating cobalt catalysts during FT synthesis in a slurry-bubble-column reactor. V. Gruver, R. Young, J. Engman, H. J. Robota 11:40 107. Development of bimodal cobalt catalysts for Fischer-Tropsch synthesis. N. Tsubaki, Y. Zhang, Y. Yoneyama

Section Β

8:00 108. Model catalyst studies on FischerTropsch materials. H. Freund 8:25 109. Conversion of waste plastic to lubricating base oil. S. J. Miller, N. Shah, G. P. Huffman 8:50 110. Ultrasonically-assisted catalysis processing of crude oil and heavy residues. K. M. Denslow, A. A. Diaz, M. Alnajjar, J. A. Franz, G. Posakony, L. Bond, K. Judd, W. Weimer, S. Gajewski

Division of Petroleum Chemistry Poster Session

67. Study on the catalytic desulfurization of n-butyl-sulfide over HZSM-5 zeolite in the presence of activated hydrogen substance. L Luo, H. li, Q. miao, D. Xia 68. Study on the transformation reaction of thiophene over HZSM-5 zeolite. L. Luo, H. Li, D. Xia 69. Study on Ti02-modified Pd/AI203 catalysts for selective hydrogénation. J . Nan, C. Liu 70. The characteristic and desulfurization properties of HZSM-5 zeolite catalyst in the presence of activated hydrogen substance. L Luo, H. Li, D. Xia 7 1 . To obtain acetone by spontaneous hydration of acetylene. N. I. Fayzullayev, R. R. Umirzakov 72. Characterization of sulfided NiMoP/AI203 hydrotreating catalysts. A. Duan 73. Leaching conditions of novel fixed-bed Raney nickel for hydrogénation of benzene. H. Zhao 74. Preparation of amorphous Ru-Zn-B/AI2o3 catalyst and its application in benzene selective hydrogénation. H. Xie, Y. Liu, C.Liu 75. Probe to part factors of preparing of the new catalyst in LPG sweetening. Y. Wang, D. Xia, Y. Xiang, Y. Tian 76. Studying preparation conditions of Ni catalyst to selective hydrogénation of C4 fraction. F. Zhang, X. Huang 77. Synthesis and characterization of cetyltrimethylammionium thiomolybdates. D. Liu, Y. Li, R. Zhao, C. Liu

J. D. Allison,

Section Β

2:20 94. Complete oxidation of methane on Pd single crystal catalysts. F. H. Ribeiro, J. Han, G. Zhu, D. Y. Zemlianov 2:50 95. Quantitative XANES to identify active catalytic phases for oxidative carbonylation of phenol over Pd/C-Cu20. J . S. Lee, W. B. Kim 3:20 Intermission. 3:50 96. In situ UV-visible spectroscopic stud­ ies of supported metal oxides during cata­ lytic oxidation of alkanes and NO x decompo­ sition. M. D. Argyle, K. Chen, E. Iglesia, A. T. Bell 4:20 97. Microprocess technology for FischerTropsch gas-to-liquids. Y. Wang, J. Hu, C. Cao, T. J. Mazanec 4:50 98. Biomass conversion: New opportuni­ ties for chemical catalysis. L. E. Manzer 5:20 99. From evenly-bent carbon nanotubes to faceted AIN nanotubes. Z. Hu, Y. Chen

1:50 44. Award Address (George A. Olah Award in Hydrocarbon or Petroleum Chemistry, sponsored by George A. Olah Endowment). George Olah Award Lecture. E. Iglesia 2:50 45. Role of rare earth cations in Y zeolite for hydrocarbon cracking. R. J. Madon, M. Sanchez-Castillo, J. A. Dumesic 3:20 Intermission. 3:30 46. Improving distillate fuel quality. M. Daage 4:00 47. Combined deep hydrogénation and ring opening of poly-aromatic hydrocarbons for diesel quality improvement. D. E. Resasco, P. Do, R. Santana, S. Jongpatiwut, M. Santikunaporn, A. Beltramone 4:30 48. Modeling propane aromatization over ZSM-5-based catalysts. W. N. Delgass, A. Bhan, G. Krishnamurthy, S-H. Hsu, B. Krishnamurthy, G. Blau, J. M. Caruthers, V. Venkatasubramanian 5:00 49. Structure of active site and a-oxygen formation on Fe/ZSM-5. C. Li TUESDAY MORNING Section A Convention Center Sails Pavilion

Organizer

9:00-11:00 50. Biodesulfurization of DBT by immobilized cells of Pseudomonas stutzeri UP-1. H. Yingfei, K. Ying, Y. Jinrong, X. Wei, S. Deqing 5 1 . Asphaltenes obtention, separation and characterization from two different Mexican crude oil samples. S. Suarez-Torres, E. S. Santos, E. Buenrostro-Gonzales, E. G. Lejarazo, J. M. Cardenas 52. Catalytic performance of cobalt catalyst and effect of reaction conditions in hydroformylation of mixed C8 olefins. D. He, L. Wei, G. Dong 53. Crystal structure of mixed paraffins and rheological behavior of model waxy oils. X. Guo, R. K. Prud'homme 54. Ab initio molecular dynamics study of ionic clathrate hydrates. T. B. Peery, L. R. Pratt 55. Detection of microbial contamination of United States Air Force aviation fuel using 16Sr DNA amplification and the Ruggedized Advanced Pathogen Identification Device (R.A.P.I.D.). M. E. Rauch-Johnson, M. J. Sackenheim, S. M. Rozenzhak 56. Development of a new dry desulphurization process utilizing waste cement. A. lizuka, Y. Katsuyama, A. Yamasaki, Y. Yanagisawa 57. Development of laboratory-scale apparatus for measuring methane flux from a methane hydrate. K. Ogasawara, A. Yamasaki, F. Kiyono 58. Technics investigation of C4 fraction selective hydrogénation to remove of butadiene. F. Zhang, X. Huang 59. Dimerization and metathesis of ethene to propene on nickel ion-loaded mesoporous silica. M. Iwamoto 60. Hydrodesulfurization performance of an ex-situ presulfided ΜοΝίΡ/β-ΑΙ203 hydrotreating catalyst. Y. Li, X. Liu, D. Liu, C.Liu 61. Hydroformylation of mixed C8-olefins to mixed C9-aldehyde over novel Rh-based catalytic systems. D. He, D. Pang, Q. Zhu 62. Growth kinetics of ethane hydrate from a seawater solution at an ethane gas inter­ face. J. P. Osegovic, S. R. Tatro, S. A. Holman, A. L. Ames, M. D. Max 63. Optimization of synthesis of aliphatic nitrils from alcohols and ammonia. Κ. Μ. Muradov 64. Preparation of highly loaded, presulfided MoS2/p-AI203 catalyst by precursor of ammonium tetrathiomolybdate for the deeply hydrodesulfurization of dibenzothiophene. C. Yongming 65. Selective hydrogénation of FCC C4 fraction with Ni catalyst. F. Zhang, X. Huang 66. Study of acetylating reaction of acetylene by gas chromatographic method. N. I. Fayzullayev, R. R. Umirzakov, S. B. Pardaeva

Manchester Grand Hyatt Randle Β George A. Olah Award in Hydrocarbon or Petroleum Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Enrique Iglesia Cosponsored with CATL S. L. Soled and A. Bell,

Organizers

9:00 78. Design of heterogeneous catalysts with organic-inorganic hybrid materials. M. E. Davis 9:30 79. Inference on zeolite structure and catalytic function by combinations of physi­ cal characterisation, catalytic testing and group comparison. S. I. Zones, A. Corma, I. Chan, A. Burton, C-Y. Chen 10:00 80. Design and synthesis of hybrid organic-inorganic catalysts using nanoscale templates. A. Katz 10:30 Intermission. 10:40 8 1 . Supported metal catalysts: Some interesting new leads in an old field. S. L. Soled, A. Malek, S. Miseo, J. E. Baumgartner, C. Kliewer, M. Afeworki, P. A. Stevens 11:10 82. Single site catalysts: A vehicle for identifying what factors control catalyst activity and selectivity. A. T. Bell 11:40 83. Studies of oxygen activation on dense perovskite oxide membranes using isotopic transients. C. A. Mims, L. Hu TUESDAY AFTERNOON Section A Manchester Grand Hyatt Madeleine C-D Combinatorial Methods for Catalyst Development Cosponsored with FUEL A. M. Gaffney and D. L. King,

Organizers

1:00 Introductory Remarks. 1:05 84. Infrared thermography and medium throughput activity studies of methanol oxidative decomposition for hydrogen gen­ eration. E. E. Wolf, S. J. Schuyten 1:30 85. High throughput experimentation for selective chlorination of aromatic hydrocar­ bons. D. Hancu, R. E. Colborn, R. J. Kilmer 1:55 86. Combinatorial catalysis applications: Highly active and air-stable catalysts for C-C, C-N, C-S, C-O, and C-B bond forma­ tions via Cross-Coupling reactions of aryl halides. G. Li 2:20 87. High-throughput experimentation and microkinetic modeling of ammonia decom­ position on Ru supported catalysts. B. J. Feist, D. G. Vlachos, J. Lauterbach 2:45 Intermission.

Manchester Grand Hyatt Randle Β George A. Olah Award in Hydrocarbon or Petroleum Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Enrique Iglesia Cosponsored with CATL S. L. Soled and A. Bell,

Organizers

1:50 93. Ethylene epoxidation on silver: From fundamentals to rational catalyst design. M. A. Barteau

WEDNESDAY MORNING

Section Β Manchester Grand Hyatt Randle Β Chemistry of Petroleum and Emerging Technologies J . F. Schabron and J . D. Allison, Organizers

9:15 111. Pyrolases: Thermostable, alkali tolerant enzyme breakers for reducing the viscosity of hydraulic fracturing fluids. A. R. Esteghlalian, D. M. T. Cruz, G. Janssen, J. lademarco, G. Hazlewood 9:40 112. Catalytic reaction and separation coupling for increased production of petro­ chemical materials. Z. Ziaka-Vasileiadou 10:05 Intermission. 10:15 113. Crystallization of paraffins with polyethylene butène) as revealed by X-ray diffraction. X. Guo, B. A. Pethica, J. S. Huang, R. K. Prud'homme 10:40 114. Diffusion mechanism of p-xylene in nanoporous catalyst: A molecular dynamics simulation study. T. Nanok, P. A. Bopp, J. Limtrakul 11:05 115. Study on alkylation reaction of thiophenic compounds for desulfurization of FCC gasoline on zeolite catalysts. Y. Xu, J. Zhang 11:30 116. Measurement and predicting methods of surface tension of Xinjiang oil fractions. Y. Zhang, C. Wang Catalysis in Fuel Chemistry Hydrogen Production and Storage Cosponsored with FUEL, and CATL

Section A Manchester Grand Hyatt Madeleine C-D International Symposium on Fischer-Tropsch Catalysts and Catalysis

E. V. Murphree Award in Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Mark E. Davis Cosponsored with IEC, COLL, and CATL

Β. Η. Davis and M. L. Occelli,

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON

Organizers

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 100. A history of the BP Fischer-Tropsch catalyst from laboratory to full scale demon­ stration in Alaska and beyond. J. J. H. M. Font Freide, J. P. Collins, B. Nay, C. Sharp 9:00 101. A new water gas shift catalyst for coal to liquid application. X. D. Hu, R. J. O'Brien, J. Ladebeck 9:25 102. Comparing Fischer-Tropsch synthe­ sis on iron- and cobalt catalysts. H. Schulz 9:50 103. Direct DME synthesis from natural gas: 100 ton-DME/day demonstration plant project. T. Ogawa, N. Inoue, T. Shikada, O. Inokoshi, Y. Ohno 10:15 Intermission. 10:25 104. Concepts for reduction in C 0 2 emissions in GTL facilities. D. J. O'Rear, F. Goede 10:50 105. Effect of Mo loading and support type on oxygenates produced during Fis­ cher-Tropsch synthesis over Fe-Mo-Cu-K catalysts supported on activated carbon. W-P. Ma, E. L. Kugler, D. B. Dadyburjor

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

Section A Manchester Grand Hyatt Madeleine C-D International Symposium on Fischer-Tropsch Catalysts and Catalysis Β. Η. Davis and M. L. Occelli,

Organizers

1:00 117. Enhanced synthesis activity upon regenerating a used, unpromoted, cobalt Fischer-Tropsch synthesis catalyst. H. J. Robota 1:25 118. Fischer Tropsch synthesis: Influence of support on the impact of water for cobaltbased catalysts. G. Jacobs, T. K. Das, J. Li, M. Luo, P. M. Patterson 1:50 119. Fischer-Tropsch synthesis on differ­ ent alumina supported Co catalysts. A. Holmen, 0 . Borg, S. Storsaeter, V. Fraseth, R. Myrstad, O. A. Lindvàg, E. Bergene, E. Rytter, S. Eri 2:15 120. Fischer-Tropsch synthesis: A review of water effects on the performances of unsupported and supported cobalt catalysts. A. K. Dalai, B. Davis 2:40 Intermission. 2:50 121. Formation and characterization of nanozones in iron catalysts for FischerTropsch synthesis. U. M. Graham 3:15 122. Synthetic lubricants: Advances in Japan up to 1945 based on Fischer-Tropsch derived liquids. E. N. Givens, S. C. LeViness, B. H. Davis

TECH-99

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 3:40 123. Syntroleum catalyst regeneration process for a gas-to-liquid plant. R. Huang, X. Zhan, K. Agee, K. B. Arcuri, J. Inga 4:05 124. ZrFe intermetallides for FTS: Before and after encapsulation in alumina-contain­ ing matrices. S. F. Tikhov, Y. N. DyatJova, A. E. Kuzmin, V. I. Kurkin, V. A. Sadykov, E. V. Slivinsky, E. I. Bogolepova, S. V. Tsybulya, A. V. Kalinkin, V. B. Fenelonov, V. P. Mordovin, A. N. Salanov, V. I. Zaikovskii SectionB Manchester Grand Hyatt Randle Β

10:45 139. The correlation between double bond isomerization, water gas shift and acid production during Rscher-Tropsch synthe­ sis. M. J. Janse van Vuuren, G. N. S. Govender, R. Kotze, G. J. Masters, T. P. Pete 11:10 140. Utility of a kinetic model in monitor­ ing catalyst deactivation. X. Zhan, H. J. Robota, Κ. Β. Arcuri Catalysis in Fuel Chemistry HDS, FCC, (De)HydrogenatJon Cosponsored with FUEL, and CATL THURSDAY AFTERNOON Section A

Chemistry of Petroleum and Emerging Technologies

Manchester Grand Hyatt Madeleine C-D

J. F. Schabron, Organizer 1:00 125. Monitoring residua pyrolysis with ultrasonic spectroscopy. J. F. Schabron, J. F. Rovani Jr. 1:25 126. Time-resolved SANS measurements of asphaltene aggregation kinetics in crude oil mixtures. T. G. Mason, M. Lin 1:50 127. Direct measurement of asphalt surface tension using NMR imaging. F. P. Miknis, A. T. Pauli, A. Beemer, B. Wilde

2:15 128. Application of a generalized regular solution model in the oil compatibility deter­ mination. K. Akbarzadeh, P. Rahimi, T. de Bruijn, I. A. Wiehe, H. W. Yarranton 2:40 129. Assessment of physical property prediction based on asphalt average molecular structures. A. T. Pauli, F. P. Miknis, A. G. Beemer, J. J. Miller 3:05 Intermission. 3:15 130. Impact of a surfactant on the mois­ ture susceptibility of asphalt mixes. K. P. Thomas, J. F. McKay, J. F. Branthaver 3:40 131. Fractionation of bitumen by distilla­ tion, Sara analysis and gel permeation chromatography. B. Fuhr, K. Scott, H. Dettman, S. Salmon 4:05 132. Detailed molecular characterization of naphthenic acids in Athabasca bitumen. P. Rahimi, R. P. Rodgers, A. G. Marshall, A. Teclemariam, K. Akbarzadeh, T. de Bruijn 4:30 133. The hydrodesulfurization of 4,6dimethyldibenzothiophene and dibenzothiophene over sulfurized NiMo/g-AI203 catalyst. Y. Xu Catalysis in Fuel Chemistry Nanostructured Catalytic Materials & Reactivity Cosponsored with FUEL, and CATL

International Symposium on Rscher-Tropsch Catalysts and Catalysis Β. Η. Davis and M. L. Occelli, Organizers 1:30 141. Study of carbon monoxide hydrogénation over Au supported on zinc oxide catalysts. G. J. Hutchings, Y. Zhao, A. Mpela, D. I. Enache, S. H. Taylor, M. S. Scurrell 1:55 142. Re-Co bimetallic catalysts in CO hydrogénation: The role of support and nanostructure on catalytic properties. L Guczi, D. C. Bazin 2:20 143. Catalytic performance of Samariabased catalysts in isosynthesis. L. Shi, G. Dong, D. He 2:45 146. Influences of preparation parameters on catalytic performance of Sm203 catalyst in isosynthesis. G. Dong, L. Shi, D. He 3:10 Intermission. 3:20 145. Fischer Tropsch synthesis: Effect of magnesia on alumina supported cobalt catalyst. Y. Zhang, H. Xiong, J. Li 3:45 144. Fischer-Tropsch synthesis: Catalytic performance of zirconia modified cobalt/ alumina. H. Xiong, Y. Zhang, J. U Catalysis in Fuel Chemistry NOx Reduction and Oxidation Chemistry Cosponsored with FUEL, and CATL

PHYS Division of Physical Chemistry B. J. Garrison, Program Chair

E. V. Murphree Award in Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Mark E. Davis Cosponsored with IEC, COLL, and CATL

OTHER SYMPOSIA OF INTEREST:

THURSDAY MORNING

Adamson Award Symposium Honoring m Robert J. Hamers (see COLL, Sun, Mon) |)

Section A Manchester Grand Hyatt Madeleine C-D International Symposium on Rscher-Tropsch Catalysts and Catalysis Β. Η. Davis and M. L. Occelli, Organizers 8:30 134. Locating promoters in cobalt Rs­ cher-Tropsch catalysts using SuperSTEM microscopy. C. M. Lok, M. D. Shannon, J. L. Casci 8:55 135. Magnetic separation of nm iron catalysts from Fischer-Tropsch wax. R.R.Oder 9:20 136. Mesoporous silica supported cobalt catalysts for Fischer-Tropsch synthesis: Reducibility of cobalt oxides and catalytic activity. D-J. Kim, B. Dunn, P. Cole, G. C. Turpin, R. D. Ernst, R. J. Pugmire, M. Kang, H. I. Lee, J. M. Kim, E. M. Eyring 9:45 137. Prereforming for Fischer-Tropsch synthesis. J. R. Rostrup-Nieisen, J. Sehested, P. S. Christensen, J. Jacobsen, S. Helveg 10:10 Intermission. 10:20 138. QA and optimization issues during development of the Statoil FT catalyst. E. Rytter, D. Schanke, S. Eri, H. Wigum, T. H. Skagseth, N. Sincadu

100-TECH

Reaction, Modification, and/or Deposi- jj tion at Surfaces (see COLL, Mon, Tue, Û John Pople Memorial Symposium (see ; COMP, Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu) The Rise and Fall of Chlorofluorocarbons (see HIST, Mon) Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Physical Chemistry (see CHED, \ Mon) | Gas-Phase Ion Chemistry in Analytical j Mass Spectrometry (see ANYL, Thu) j SUNDAY MORNING Section A Convention Center Room14A Dynamics and Conductivity of Nanoparticles and their Assemblies Conductance T. Lian, Organizer G. V. Hartland, Organizer, Presiding

8:20 1. Single charge transport studies in silicon nanowires. Z. Zhong, Y. Fang, C. Yang, W. Lu, C. M. Lieber 9:00 2. Single electron tunneling and manipulation of nanoparticles on surfaces at room temperature. G-Y. Liu, G. Yang, L. Tan, S. Chen 9:40 3. Isolation, charging, and tunneling spectroscopy of a 1.1-nm (Au)44(SC6H5)28 cluster complex. R. C. Price, T. G. Schaaff, R. L. Whetten 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 4. Bipolar conductance through single molecules and assemblies. W. Ho 11:00 5. Measurements of precise nanoparticles and nanoparticle assemblies. P. S. Weiss, R. K. Smith, S. Nanayakkara SectionB Convention Center Room14B Applications of Physical Chemistry to Environmental and Biogeochemical Surfaces and Interfaces Cosponsored with ENVR, and GEOC Κ. Τ. Mueller, Organizer P. A. O'Day, Organizer, Presiding 8:20 6. Kinetics and thermodynamics of Sr and Mg interactions with calcite during growth: Deciphering compositional signa­ tures and controls on shape modification. P. M. Dove, L. E. Wasylenki, J. J. De Yoreo 9:00 7. Prediction of alkaline earth speciation on mineral surfaces in salt solutions. D. A. Sverjensky 9:40 8. Measurement of surface parameters via 19F NMR of adsorbed organofluorine probe molecules. S. J. Tavener, V. L. Budarin 10:20 Intermission. 10:40 9. Sorption of aqueous heavy metals by mineral surfaces: Insights from quantum chemistry, spectroscopy and surface complexation modeling. D. M. Sherman, C. L. Peacock, J. P. Cutting 11:20 10. Solid-state NMR studies of surfaces in the environment. N. M. Washton, S. L. Brantley, Κ. Τ. Mueller 11:40 11. Determining the rates and mecha­ nisms of organic matter interactions in the environment. P. A. Maurice SectjonC Convention Center Room15A Novel Directions in Photonics: Nanophotonics and Biophotonics Nanophotonics and Near Field Interactions Cosponsored with COLL P. N. Prasad and G. C. Schatz, Organizers J. A. Piper, Presiding 8:30 12. Nanostructured electro-optic materi­ als: Theory, synthesis, and characterization. L R. Dation 9:00 13. Effects of branching in substituted conjugated chromophores on photophysical properties and two-photon absorption. S. Tretiak, C. Katan, M. Blanchard-Desce 9:20 14. Anisotropic solvation of conjugated polymers with varying degree of conjugation in a nematic liquid crystal. S. Link, D. Hu, W-S. Chang, G. D. Scholes, P. F. Barbara 9:40 15. Nano-LED of MEH-PPV. H. Yamamoto, J. Wilkinson, J. P. Long, Ζ. Η. Kafafi 10:00 16. Side chain effect on stacking of perylene-based molecules. L. Zang, K. Balakrishnan, R. Oitker, A. Datar 10:20 Intermission. 10:40 17. Potential of nanoaperture arrays in photonics and spectroscopy. K. L. Rowlen 11:10 18. Theoretical modeling of nanoscale confined light: From metal nanoparticles to nanoholes. S. K. Gray 11:40 19. Nonlinear and near field effects of tip-enhanced Raman microscopy for nanoimaging. S. Kawata

Section D Convention Center Room15B Water: Structure, Dynamics and Reactions Across the Phase Diagram Water Across the Phase Diagram G. A. Kimmel, Organizer T. Head-Gordon, Organizer, Presiding 8:40 20. Water near the low temperature end of its liquid state: What is going on? C. A. Angell 9:20 21. Structure of crystalline phases of ice - from ice-l to ice-XII: Static distortion and proton ordering. J-L. Kuo, M. L. Klein 9:40 22. Relation between dynamics and phase behavior in supercooled and glassy water. F. W. Starr 10:20 Intermission. 10:40 23. Density fluctuations and natural length scales of frustration in water: Responses to stress and connections to anomalies. T. M. Truskett 11:20 24. Molecular beam studies of nano­ scale films of Amorphous Solid Water. B. D. Kay, P. Ayotte, J. L. Daschbach, Z. Dohnalek, G. A. Kimmel, R. S. Smith, G. R. Teeter Section Ε Convention Center Room16A Hydrogen Bonds: Developments in Experiment and Theory Hydrogen Bonding in Clusters K. D. Jordan, Organizer T. S. Zwier, Organizer, Presiding 8:20 25. Η-bonding in dimers and trimers of nucleic acid bases and base mimics: Intermolecular frequencies and force constants. S. Leutwyler 9:00 26. Structural, spectral and excited state features of water hydrogen bonding net­ works: Results of ab-initio calculations and interaction potentials. S. S. Xantheas, G. S. Fanourgakis, K. Kowalski, A. Lagutschenkov, G. Niedner-Schatteburg 9:40 27. Charge redistribution in hydrogen bonded systems. K. R. Leopold, C. S. Brauer, M. B. Craddock, G. Sedo, E. M. Grumstrup, M. D. Marshall, H. O. Leung 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 28. Probing hydrogen bonds in biomolecules using infrared laser spectroscopy in helium nanodroplets. R. E. Miller 11:00 29. Quantum chemical studies of amideamide hydrogen bonds: From formamide to proteins. J. D. Hirst 11:20 30. Hydrogen bonded directed chemis­ try: Ion-molecule reactions within mass selected gas phase clusters. J. F. Garvey 11:40 31. A "first principles" potential energy surface for hydrogen bonding in liquid water. N. Goldman, C. J. Leforestier, L. E. Fried, R. J. Saykally Section F Convention Center Room 16B Growth and Catalysis of Metal Overiayers Growth of Metal on Oxides Cosponsored with COLL H. Jonsson, Organizer D. A. Chen, Organizer, Presiding

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

PETR/PHYS

8:20 32. Surface science studies of strong metal-support interactions: Reactivity and atomically-resolved structures for Pd on titania(110). M. Bowker 8:50 33. Catalysis and surface reactivity at the atomic scale. F. Besenbacher 9:20 34. Growth and properties of ZnO-supported copper nanoclusters. U. Diebold 9:50 35. Structure and dynamics of model metallic clusters. C. Mottet, J. Goniakowski, R. Ferrando 10:20 Intermission. 10:40 36. Adsorption and diffusion of small Pd clusters on MgO (100): A DFT approach. L Xu, G. Henkelman, C. T. Campbell, H.Jonsson 11:00 37. An empirical potential for simulations of Pd growth on MgO(100). G. Henkelman, L. Xu, C. T. Campbell, H. Jonsson Adamson Award Symposium Honoring Robert J. Hamers Photochemistry, Dynamics, Surface Chemistry Cosponsored with COLL John Pople Memorial Symposium Cosponsored with COMP SUNDAY AFTERNOON Section A Convention Center Room 14A Dynamics and Conductivity of Nanoparticles and their Assemblies Nanotubes, Wires and Rods G. V. Hartland and T. Lian, S. A. Kandel,

Organizers

Presiding

1:20 38. Carrier dynamics in single-wall car­ bon nanotubes. F. Wang, G. Dukovic, L. E. Brus, T. F. Heinz 2:00 39. Electronics and optoelectronics with single carbon nanotubes. P. Avouris 2:40 40. Spectroscopic analysis of excitons in solubilized single-walled carbon nanotubes. M. Jones, C. Engtrakul, M. J. Heben, G. Rumbles 3:00 4 1 . Wiring and electronic properties of single metal nanorods. D. Lim, T. Baldacchini, C. LaFratta, J. T. Fourkas, Y. Peng, M. J. Naughton 3:40 Intermission. 4:00 42. Dielectrophoretic fabrication of inter­ connects from nanoparticulate building blocks between targeted points in a circuit. B. N. Flanders, B. Ozturk, I. Talukdar 4:20 43. Horizontal growth and in situ assem­ bly of oriented zinc oxide nanowires. B. Nikoobakht, C. A. Michaels, M. D. Vaudin, S. Stranick 4:40 44. Coherent excitation of vibrational modes in nanospheres and nanorods. M. Hu, H. Petrova, X. Wang, G. V. Hartland Section Β Convention Center Room14B Applications of Physical Chemistry to Environmental and Biogeochemical Research Solutions Cosponsored with ENVR, and GEOC Κ. Τ. Mueller and P. A. O'Day, S. J. Tavener,

Organizers

Presiding

1:20 45. Reductive degradation kinetics of polychloronated biphenyls induced by ioniz­ ing radiation in aqueous and aqueous micellar solutions, and transformer oil. M. Al-Sheikhly 1:40 46. Probing structural environments of aqueous ions using soft X-rays. S. C. B. Myneni, D. C. Edwards, M. B. Hay 2:20 47. Ion-pairing in aqueous solution and at the gibbsite-water interface: Comparisons of alkaline earth and heavy metal behavior through molecular dynamics simulations. L. J. Criscenti, R. T. Cygan 3:00 48. Calculation of reaction energies in solution: successes and conundrums. J. A. Tossell 3:40 Intermission.

4:00 49. First-principles simulation of solvation structure and deprotonation reactions in very nonideal solutions. E. J. Bylaska, M. Valiev, S. Bogatko, J. H. Weare 4:40 50. Electronic structure studies of ener­ getic ionic liquids. D. D. Zorn, M. S. Gordon 5:00 5 1 . Computational studies of the dynam­ ics of green-chemistry ionic solvents. C. J. Margulis

Section Ε Convention Center Room 16A Hydrogen Bonds: Developments in Experiment and Theory Hydrogen Bonding Near Electrons and Ions T. S. Zwier and K. D. Jordan,

Organizers

Section C K. D. Jordan, Organizer, Convention Center Room 15A Novel Directions in Photonics: Nanophotonics and Biophotonics Plenary Cosponsored with COLL G. C. Schatz,

Organizer

P. N. Prasad, Organizer,

Presiding

1:10 Introductory Remarks. 1:20 52. Optics in small systems. G. M. Whitesides, D. Vezenov, B. Mayers, R. Conroy, D. B. Wolfe, M. Prentiss, P. Garstecki 2:10 53. Functional polymers: from 2-photon absorbers to semiconducting materials. J. M. J. Fréchet, M. A. Oar 2:30 54. Nature as a model for supramolecular photonic and electronic materials. V. Percec 3:00 55. Ultrafast transient-absorption studies of spatially confined conjugated oligomers. D. Bussian, A. Mikhailovsky, B. Liu, G. C. Bazan, S. K. Buratto 3:20 Intermission. 3:40 56. An NSF perspective on opportunities in materials research and education. D. L. Nelson 4:10 57. The nanophotonics program at AFOSR. C. Y-C. Lee 4:40 58. Peer review of bioimaging and bioengineering grant applications at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). S. A. Amero Section D Convention Center Room 15B Water: Structure, Dynamics and Reactions Across the Phase Diagram Water Across the Phase Diagram G. A. Kimmel and T. Head-Gordon, Organizers C. A. Angell,

Presiding

1:20 59. First principles Monte Carlo calculation of the vapor-liquid coexistence curve of water. J. I. Siepmann, M. J. McGrath, l-F. W. Kuo, C. J. Mundy 2:00 60. Calculated free energies and structures of aqueous systems in extreme conditions. D. J. Doren, R. H. Wood, W. Liu, H. Dong 2:20 6 1 . Covalency in the superionic phase of water. N. Goldman, L. E. Fried 2:40 62. Kinetics and mechanisms in hightemperature water. P. E. Savage, J. T. Henrikson, S. E. Hunter 3:20 Intermission. 3:40 63. Spectroscopic characterization of microscopic hydrogen bonding disparities in supercritical water. U. Bergmann 4:00 64. Evolution of structure of amorphous ice: From LDA through HDA to VHDA. R. Martonak, D. Donadio, M. Parrinello 4:40 65. Characterization of the TIP4P-Ew model in the near- and super-critical region. H. W. Horn 5:20 66. Computational free energy studies of new ice polymorphs which exhibit greater stability than Ice Ih. C. J. Fennell, J. D. Gezelter

1:20 67. How water clusters accommodate an excess electron. M. Johnson 2:00 68. Structure and hydrogen bonding at the surfaces of aqueous salt, base, and acid solutions. P. Jungwirth, D. J. Tobias, M. Mucha, T. Frigato 2:40 69. Resonance Raman spectroscopic studies of the solvated electron in alcohols. C. M. Stuart, M. J. Tauber, R. A. Mathies 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 70. Infrared spectroscopy of cation-water clusters: Models for hydrogen bonding and solvation. R. S. Walters, Μ. Κ. Tsai, K. D. Jordan, M. A. Duncan 4:00 7 1 . Challenges and new approaches in theoretical modeling of aqueous proton transport processes. M. E. Tuckerman 4:40 72. Spectroscopic signatures of the shared hydrogen vibrations in H 5 0 2 + and H 3 0 2 ". A. B. McCoy, X. Huang, S. Carter, J. M. Bowman

Section Β Convention Center Room 14B Applications of Physical Chemistry to Environmental and Biogeochemical Research Photochemistry, Aerosols, and Clusters Cosponsored with ENVR, and GEOC P. A. O'Day,

Organizer

Section F

Κ. Τ. Mueller, Organizer,

Convention Center Room16B

8:20 85. Efficient low-temperature oxidation of carbon-cluster anions by S 0 2 : Atmospheric soot and pulmonary implications. R. L. Whetten, A. J. Leavitt, R. B. Wyrwas Jr., W. T. Wallace, M. G. Arredondo, F. A. Khan, D. S. Serrano 8:40 86. Novel applications of surface science towards environmental research: Model systems for studying heterogeneous photocatalysis. A. Orlov, M. S. Tikhov, F. J. Williams, D. J. Watson, R. M. Lambert 9:00 87. Mechanistic evaluation of arsenite oxidation during T i 0 2 photocatalysis. T. Xu, P. V. Kamat, K. O'Shea 9:20 88. Interactions of water with size-se­ lected, nanometer-sized soot aerosol par­ ticles. J. T. Roberts, H. Ajo 9:40 89. Direct imaging of atmospheric photodissociation dynamics: Halogen reservoirs and intermediates. H. Kim, Ε. Ε. Greenwald, J. Park, S. W. North 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 90. Reactions at aqueous surfaces: Alkenes, oleic acid, ozone and ammonium sulfate. H. C. Allen, S. Gopalakrishnan, L. L. Van Loon 11:00 9 1 . Molecular dynamics simulations of organic aerosol proxies containing unsatur­ ated fatty acids. J. S. Vieceli, N. Potter, D. J. Tobias 11:20 92. Cluster dynamics: Insights into prenucleation embryos and solvation effects on atmospheric reactions. A. W. Castleman Jr.

Growth and Catalysis of Metal Overlayers Growth of Metals on Oxides Cosponsored with COLL H. Jonsson and D. A. Chen, M. Bowker,

Organizers

Presiding

1:30 73. Structure-function relationships in catalysis by metal alloys: From single crys­ tals to nanoparticles. K. Luo, C-W. Yi, T. Wei, D. Kumar, M-S. Chen, Z. Yan, Y. Cai, D. W. Goodman 2:00 74. Identifying promising catalytic materi­ als using Density Functional Theory. J. Greeley, R. Nabar, A. U. Nilekar, M. S. Han, M. Mavrikakis 2:30 75. Nucleation, growth, and sintering of 1B metal particles on rutile TiO 2 (110): Role of defects, adsorbates, and dopants. G. S. Hwang, D. Pillay, Y. Wang 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 76. Size, shape and sintering of Ag and Au nanoclusters on titania using STM. S. K. Buratto, X. Tong, L. Benz, A. Kolmakov, P. R. Kemper, M. T. Bowers, H. Metiu 3:40 77. True nature of the alumina "reactive sponge" and making maximally dispersed supported metals. D. R. Jennison 4:10 78. Towards design of metal-oxide inter­ faces via defect control. A. Bogicevic

Presiding

Section C Adamson Award Symposium Honoring Robert J. Hamers Functionalization of Semiconductor Surfaces Cosponsored with COLL

Convention Center Room15A

John Pople Memorial Symposium

Novel Directions in Photonics: Nanophotonics and Biophotonics Photonic Crystals Cosponsored with COLL

Cosponsored with COMP P. N. Prasad and G. C. Schatz,

Organizers

MONDAY MORNING C. Burda,

Presiding

Section A Convention Center Room 14A Dynamics and Conductivity of Nanoparticles and their Assemblies Interfacial Structure and Dynamics G. V. Hartland,

Organizer

T. Lian, Organizer,

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

Presiding

9:00 80. Transport through a molecule or a dot: Capacitance, hysteresis, DNA and switching. M. A. Ratner 9:40 8 1 . Theory of electron injection from an excited dye molecule to the conduction band of a semiconductor. M. Tachiya, K. L. Sebastian 10:20 Intermission. 10:40 82. Ultrafast dynamics of Ti0 2 -based photovoltaics: Hot injection and chromophore design. J. K. McCusker 11:20 83. Mechanisms of ultrafast electron injection in dye-sensitized nanostructured semiconductors. G. Benko, R. Smith, F. Trif, A. Yartsev, V. Sundstrom 12:00 84. Ultrafast spacer controlled interfacial electron transfer: Comparison between experimental data and theory. F. Willig, R. Ernstorfer, L. Gundlach, S. Felber, R. Eichberger, M. J. Lindqvist, P. Persson, L. Wang, V. May

Presiding

8:20 79. Chemical and physical probes of interfaces for charge transport. X-Y. Zhu

8:20 93. Photonic band gap materials: Engi­ neering the fundamental properties of light. S. John 8:50 94. Biological colloidal crystals: Using protein templates for nanostructures. V. L Colvin 9:20 95. Plasmonics: Optical frequencies but with X-ray wavelengths. E. Yablonovitch 9:50 96. Holographic photopolymerization of photonic structures for field-enhanced appli­ cations. R. Vaia, R. Jakubiak, T. J. Bunning, V. P. Tondiglia, L. V. Natarajan, R. L. Sutherland, P. Lloyd 10:20 Intermission.

TECH-101

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 10:40 97. Polymer based photonic band gap structures: 3d interference lithography, self assembly and 2 photon properties. E. L. Thomas, J. Yoon, W. Lee, S. Kooi, P. Markowicz, P. N. Prasad 11:10 98. Nanowire photonic circuit elements. C. J. Barrelet, A. B. Greytak, C. M. Lieber 11:30 99. Nonlinear photonic crystals. P. N. Prasad, P. P. Markowicz

Section F Convention Center Room 16B Biophysical Aspects of Protein and Peptide Aggregation: Experiment and Theory General Aspects of Protein Aggregation J. E. Straub,

Organizer

Section D D. Thirumalai, Organizer,

Convention Center Room15B Water: Structure, Dynamics and Reactions Across the Phase Diagram Liquid Water: Structure and Dynamics G. A. Kimmel and T. Head-Gordon, Organizers J. I. Siepmann,

Presiding

8:20 100. Probing the response of liquid water to non-thermal reactions: Persistent free rotation of a diatomic reaction product. A. C. Moskun, A. Jailaubekov, S. E. Bradforth 8:40 101. Probing hydrogen bonding in water and ice using X-ray and electron spectroscopy. A. Nilsson 9:20 102. First-principles simulations of water Recent progress and open challenges. G. Galli 10:00 103. Ultrafast memory loss and energy redistribution in the hydrogen bond network of liquid H 2 0 . B. D. Bruner, M. L. Cowan, N. Huse, J. R. Dwyer, B. Chugh, E. T. J. Nibbering, T. Elsâsser, R. J. D. Miller 10:20 Intermission. 10:40 104. Temperature dependence of quantum isotope effects in liquid water. R. T. Hart Jr., C. J. Benmore, S. Kohara, J. Neuefeind, B. Tomberli, P. Egelstaff 11:00 105. Probing ultrafast hydrogen bond dynamics on water's energy landscape. J. J. Loparo, C. J. Fecko, J. D. Eaves, S. T. Roberts, P. L. Geissler, A. Tokmakoff 11:20 106. Linear and nonlinear vibrational spectroscopy of liquid water. J. L. Skinner Section Ε Convention Center Room 16A Hydrogen Bonds: Developments in Experiment and Theory Hydrogen Bonding at Interfaces T. S. Zwier and K. D. Jordan, A. Luzar,

Organizers

Presiding

8:20 107. Understanding the structure and bonding of water at aqueous surfaces and interfaces. G. L. Richmond 9:00 108. Computational studies of ions at interfaces of hydrogen bonded liquids. L. X. Dang 9:40 109. The role of hydrogen bonding at interfaces. J. D. Madura 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 110. Interfacial reactions in pure and salty glycerol. A. H. Muenter, J. L. DeZwaan, G. M. Nathanson 11:00 111. Treating hydrogen bonding in the modeling of water and aqueous solvation. K. A. Dill 11:40 590. Interfacial spectroscopic studies of aqueous phase acids and salts: sodium chloride, bromide, iodide, and ammonium and sulfate. H. C. Allen, D. Liu, L. Levering, S. Gopalakrishnan

Presiding

8:20 Introductory Remarks. 8:25 113. Protein misfolding and its links with human disease. C. M. Dobson 9:05 114. Comparison of folding and amyloid fibril formation of β2-ιτιίοκκ|Ιο^Ιίη. Υ. Goto 9:45 115. Mechanism of alpha-synuclein aggregation and fibrillation. A. L Fink, J. Kaylor, N. Bodner 10:25 Intermission. 10:40 116. Mechanisms of and therapeutic strategies against misfolding diseases. J. W. Kelly 11:20 117. Folding and aggregation pathways of human gD-crystallin, a two-domain b-sheet protein involved in cataracts. J. King, S. Flaugh, M. Kosinski-Collins

Convention Center Room 14B Applications of Physical Chemistry to Environmental and Biogeochemical Research Photochemistry, Aerosols, and Clusters Cosponsored with ENVR, and GEOC Κ. Τ. Mueller and P. A. O'Day,

Convention Center Room 3 NMR Recent Developments in Magnetic Resonance: Liquid and Solid State Applications, Theoretical Methodology, and Emerging Techniques L. J. Mueller and R. Stark,

Organizers

M. P. Augustine, Organizer,

Presiding

Developments at the Interface of Magnetic Resonance and Optical Coherence. 8:20 118. Optical pumping in bulk GaAs. J. A. Reimer, A. Paravastu 8:50 119. Novel advances with hyperpolarized gases in magnetic resonance imaging. G. E. Pavlovskaya, Z. Cleveland, C. Horton-Garcia, K. Stupic, C. LeNoir, T. Meersmann 9:20 120. Enhancing the NMR signatures of weak intermolecular interactions using laser-polarized xenon and liquid crystalline matrices. B. M. Goodson, X. Li, K. Chaffee, I. Saha, C. Newberry, P. Nikolaou, N. Whiting, M. Marjanska 9:50 Intermission. Resolution and Sensitivity Improvement through Tailored Excitation. 10:10 121. High frequency dynamic nuclear polarization. R. G. Griffin 10:40 122. Two photon NMR and NQR. C. Michal, P. Eles 11:10 123. Development and application of T2-selective radio frequency pulses. S. D. Bush Adamson Award Symposium Honoring Robert J. Hamers Patterning of Semiconductor Surfaces Cosponsored with COLL John Pople Memorial Symposium Cosponsored with COMP The Rise and Fall of Chlorofluorocarbons The Rise of CFCs Cosponsored with HIST, CHED, and ENVR

Section A Convention Center Room 14A Dynamics and Conductivity of Nanoparticles and their Assemblies Interfacial Structure and Dynamics

Organizers

Presiding

1:20 130. Charged molecular clusters in air: Potential roles in atmospheric processes. R. P. Turco 2:00 131. Application of cavity enhanced, optical heterodyne spectroscopy to tropospheric isotope chemistry. P. Chen, D. Robichaud, M. Okumura 2:20 132. Aerosols in the atmosphere: Their characterization using optical techniques. A. R. Ravishankara, T. Baynard, D. Lack, E. R. Lovejoy 3:00 133. Hydroxyl radical initiated oxidation of olefins in tropospheric conditions: A theoreti­ cal study. E. E. Greenwald, Y. Georgievskii, S. J. Klippenstein, S. W. North 3:20 Intermission. 3:40 134. S 0 2 and C 0 2 adsorption and hydro­ gen bonding interactions with water at the vapor/water interface. T. L. Tarbuck, G. Richmond 4:00 135. Chemistry of secondary aerosol formation from the atmospheric oxidation of hydrocarbons. P. J. Ziemann 4:40 136. Ion chemistry important for the ionosphere and atmospheric discharges: Kinetics of nitrogen and oxygen containing species at high temperatures. A. A. Viggiano, A. Midey Jr., P. Zhang, S. Irie, K. Morokuma 5:20 137. Reaction kinetics and mechanistic aspects of Η-atom reactions with alkyl iodides and hydrogen halides. S. Vasileiadis, S. Benson Section C Convention Center Room15A Water: Structure, Dynamics and Reactions Across the Phase Diagram Water Solutions: Structure and Dynamics G. A. Kimmel and T. Head-Gordon, Organizers A. Nilsson,

4:20 143. Competitive interactions of water and cyclohexene on the structure of an amphipathic solvent. D. T. Bowron, S. Diaz-Moreno 5:00 144. Proton solvation and motion in water ices and their interfaces. J. P. Cowin, M. J. ledema Section D Convention Center Room 15B Growth and Catalysis of Metal Overiayers Chemistry on Oxide-supported Metal Clusters Cosponsored with COLL H. Jonsson and D. A. C h e n , G. S. Hwang,

A. W. Castleman Jr.,

MONDAY AFTERNOON

Presiding

1:20 138. Structure and dynamics within the water pool of reverse micelles. B. M. Ladanyi, M. R. Harpham, N. E. Levinger, K. W. Herwig 2:00 139. Three perspectives on water—as a solid, a solvent, and a ligand. S. Rick 2:40 140. Water-mediated interactions relevant to protein structure and function. S. Garde 3:20 Intermission. 3:40 141. Ab initio molecular dynamics of rigid water: molecular geometry, ion hydration, and thermodynamics. K. Leung, S. B. Rempe 4:00 142. Dynamics of surface water in zirco­ nium oxide. E. Mamontov, D. A. Neumann

Presiding

Organizers

Presiding

1:20 145. Supported metal aggregates: Growth, structure and chemistry. H-J. Freund 1:50 146. Pd nanoparticles on a-AI2O3(0001) and MgO(100): Model catalysts for alkane activation. C. T. Campbell 2:20 147. Modification of reaction properties on both the overlayer and the support: Rh supported on CeO x thin films. D. R. Mullins, J. Zhou 2:50 148. Deposition and catalytic activity of size-selected gold and iridium clusters on titania and alumina. S. L Anderson 3:20 Intermission. 3:40 149. Review and future directions on the puzzle of adsorption and catalysis of carbon monoxide on supported palladium nanopar­ ticles. S. Ichikawa 4:00 150. Growth and catalytic activity of nanoscaled Palladium Films. Z. Dohnalek, J. Kim, B. D. Kay 4:30 151. Modeling the role of spillover and diffusion in nitric oxide detection by gold nanoparticles on W 0 3 sensors. J. Wang, F. Amar, B. Frederick Section Ε Convention Center Room 16A Biophysical Aspects of Protein and Peptide Aggregation: Experiment and Theory Prions J. E. Straub and D. Thirumalai, W. A. Eaton,

Organizers

Presiding

1:20 152. Sequence - independence of the prion domain of Ure2p. R. B. Wickner, E. D. Ross, Μ. Μ. Pierce, A. Bax, A. P. Minton, U. Baxa, M. Terry, Η. Κ. Edskes 2:00 153. Glancing at the early-steps of con­ formational transition in prion proteins through MD simulations. R. I. Dima, D. Thirumalai 2:40 154. Structural dissection of a peptide aggregation mechanism: Making the con­ nections from side-chain/side-chain interac­ tions to strand organization to aggregate morphology. S. A. Petty, T. Adalsteinsson, S. M. Decatur 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 155. Most infectious prion protein oligo­ mer. J. R. Silveira, B. Caughey 4:00 156. Mapping the early steps in amyl­ oidosis. V. Daggett 4:40 157. Mechanism of cross-species prion transmission: A single conformation compat­ ible with two highly divergent yeast prion proteins. J . S. Weissman Section F Convention Center Room16B NMR Recent Developments in Magnetic Resonance: Liquid and Solid State Applications, Theoretical Methodology, and Emerging Techniques M. P. Augustine and L. J . Mueller, Organizers R. Stark, Organizer,

G. V. Hartland and T. Lian, G. Rumbles,

102-TECH

Section Β

Section G

Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Physical Chemistry Cosponsored with CHED, and SOCED

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

1:20 124. Interfacial electron transfer and conductance: Similarities and differences. M. D. Newton 2:00 125. Nanoscale self-organization of polymers and adsorbed nanoparticles. S. J. Sibener 2:40 126. Dynamics and structure of fullerenes on gold surfaces. S. Guo, D. P. Fogarty, P. M. Nagel, S. Van Lue, S. A. Kandel 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 127. Dynamics of electrons at interfaces on the femtosecond timescale. C. B. Harris, P. Szymanski, A. D. Miller, S. Garrett-Roe, S. T. Shipman, M. L. Strader, A. Yang 4:00 128. Structure and dynamics at buried interfaces in nanoscale systems. H-L. Dai 4:40 129. Laser studies of nanoparticle-water interfaces. Κ. Β. Eisenthal

Presiding

Organizers Structural Insights into Protein Recognition and the Molecular Basis of Disease.

PHYS

1:20 158. NMR on the Atkins Diet: Introducing protein functionality into carbohydrates. A. J . Shaka, B. Bendiak, G. S. Armstrong, V. A. Mandelshtam, A. Dermenci 1:50 159. NMR methods for studying protein folding. R. B. Hill, G. R. Thuduppathy, A. Monahan, S. Casares, A. Majumdar 2:20 160. NMR Structures of alpha defensins. M. J . Cocco 2:50 Intermission. NMR Applications in Organic and Inorganic Chemistry. 3:10 161. Biaxial nematic liquid crystals com­ prised of nonlinear molecules. L. A. Madsen, T. Dingemans, E. T. Samulski 3:40 162. Fast rotation of methyl groups in crystals of ortho-methyldibenzocycloalkanones. D. Cizmeciyan, H. M. Yonutas, S. D. Karlen, M. Garcia-Garibay 4:10 163. Spin-Phonon coupling: Raman scattering relaxation of high Ζ nuclei in solids. K. W. Stewart, J. B. Grutzner Adamson Award Symposium Honoring Robert J. Harriers Biochemical and Electrochemical Surfaces/Interfaces Cosponsored with COLL John Pople Memorial Symposium Cosponsored with COMP The Rise and Fall of Chlorofluorocarbons The Fall of CFCs Cosponsored with HIST, CHED, and ENVR

TUESDAY AFTERNOON Section A Convention Center Room 8 Physical Chemistry Awards B. J. Garrison, Organizer,

Presiding

1:20 168. Award Address (ACS Award in the Chemistry of Materials, sponsored by E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company). Chemis­ try and physics of semiconductor nanocrystals. L. Brus 2:00 169. Award Address (ACS Award for Creative Advances in Environmental Sci­ ence and Technology, sponsored by Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. in memory of Joseph J. Breen). Chemistry-climate cou­ pling: The importance of chemistry in cli­ mate issues. A. R. Ravishankara 2:40 170. Award Address (Joel Henry Hildebrand Award in the Theoretical and Experi­ mental Chemistry of Liquids, sponsored by ExxonMobil Research and Engineering Company and ExxonMobil Chemical Com­ pany). Solvation and electronic funnels: Polar environment impacts on conical inter­ sections. J. T. Hynes ACS Award Lectures Cosponsored with COLL John Pople Memorial Symposium

M O N D A Y EVENING

Cosponsored with COMP

Section A

WEDNESDAY MORNING

Convention Center Sails Pavilion

Section A Convention Center Room 14A

Sci-Mix B. J. Garrison,

Dynamics and Conductivity of Nanoparticles and their Assemblies Semiconductor Nanoparticles

Organizer

8:00-10:00 270-271, 275, 283, 288, 290, 294-295, 298299, 304, 313, 317-318, 320, 323, 325, 332-333, 354-358, 364, 370-374, 381, 384, 388, 392, 396, 400-401, 406, 408, 415, 424, 426, 432, 435, 440, 443, 454, 465, 467, 476, 479-480, 486, 488, 490-492, 495, 497, 503-505. See subsequent listings. Reaction, Modification, and/or Deposition at Surfaces Poster Presentations Cosponsored with COLL TUESDAY MORNING Section A Convention Center Room 8 Physical Chemistry Awards B. J . Garrison, Organizer,

Presiding

8:40 164. Award Address (E. Bright Wilson Award in Spectroscopy, sponsored by Rohm and Haas Company). Dynamical molecular structure - past, present, and future. E. Hirota 9:20 165. Award Address (ACS Award in Theoretical Chemistry, sponsored by IBM Corporation). Application of time dependent quantum mechanics to spectroscopy and nanophysics. E. J. Heller 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 166. Award Address (ACS Award in Pure Chemistry, sponsored by Alpha Chi Sigma Fraternity and the Alpha Chi Sigma Educational Foundation). Chemistry and physics aspects of semiconductor nanowires. P. Yang 11:00 167. Award Address (Peter Debye Award in Physical Chemistry, sponsored by E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company). Chemical dynamics with ultrafast x-rays. S. R. Leone John Pople Memorial Symposium Cosponsored with COMP Reaction, Modification, and/or Deposition at Surfaces Functionalization of Semiconductor and Biochemical Surfaces Cosponsored with COLL

G. V. Hartland and T. Lian, D. F. Kelley,

Organizers

Presiding

8:20 171. All-inorganic, "hybrid" approaches to functional nanocrystal-based structures and devices. V. I. Klimov 9:00 172. Conductivity of charged semicon­ ductor nanocrystal assemblies. P. Guyot-Sionnest, D. Yu, B. Wehrenberg 9:40 173. Exciton delocalization and superradiance in tetracene nanoparticles. C. J. Bardeen, S-H. Lim, T. G. Bjorklund, F. C. Spano 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 174. Photoconductivity of arrays of semiconductor nanocrystals determined by THz spectroscopy. J. E. Murphy, M. C. Beard, R. J. Ellingson, O. I. Micic, A. J. Nozik 11:00 175. Exciton spin dynamics in CdSe quantum dots. G. D. Scholes, V. M. Huxter, V. Kovalevskij 11:20 176. Observation of extremely high efficiency exciton multiplication in semicon­ ductor nanocrystals. R. D. Schaller, V. I. Klimov

9:20 179. Nuclear magnetic resonance studies of the sorption of environmental contami­ nants like phenanthrene onto soil organic matter. L. Sun, D. Raftery, P. G. Hatcher 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 180. Application of NMR techniques to the study of organic coprecipitates in calcite. B. L Phillips, Y. J. Lee, R. J. Reeder 11:00 181. Metal sulfide cluster complexes: structure, reactivity and environmental impact. G. W. Luther III, D. Rickard

Convention Center Room 15A Novel Directions in Photonics: Nanophotonics and Biophotonics Nanophotonics and Plasmonics Cosponsored with COLL

P. N. Prasad, Organizer G. C. Schatz, Organizer, Presiding 8:20 182. Colloidal metal nanoparticles for optical and biological applications. C. J. Murphy 8:50 183. Tailoring the shape and structure of metal nanostructures for surface plasmonic applications. Y. Xia, B. Wiley, J. Chen, Y.Sun 9:20 184. Improving the mismatch between light and nanoscale objects with gold bowtie nanoantennas. P. J. Schuck, D. P. Fromm, A. Sundaramurthy, G. S. Kino, W. E. Moemer 9:40 185. Metal nanoparticles with ligand layer shells: Enhanced sensitivity through struc­ tured partial coverage. M. M. Miller, A. A. Lazarides 10:00 186. Optical field enhancement via waveguides and surface plasmons in lightemitting diodes detected by near-field scan­ ning optical microscopy. L. Stebounova, G. Walker, F. Chen, A. V. Itagi, J. Bain, D. D. Standi, T. E. Schlesinger, B. B. Akhremitchev 10:20 Intermission. 10:40 187. Radiative decay engineering: Principles and biomedical applications of metal enhanced fluorescence. J. R. Lakowicz 11:10 188. Gold nanorods. Formation, optical properties and nanostructuring. L. M. Liz-Marzan, J. Pérez-Juste, P. Mulvaney 11:30 190. Biological sensing with silver nanoparticles and nanoparticle arrays: Theoretical studies. G. C. Schatz, S. Zou 11:50 189. Chirped CARS spectromicroscopy. K. P. Knutsen, J. C. Johnson, B. Messer, R. J. Saykally Section D Convention Center Room15B Water: Structure, Dynamics and Reactions Across the Phase Diagram Water at Soft Interfaces G. A. Kimmel and T. Head-Gordon, Organizers Β. Μ. Ladanyi,

Applications of Physical Chemistry to Environmental and Biogeochemical Research Organics and Sulfides Cosponsored with ENVR, and GEOC P. A. O'Day,

Organizer

Κ. Τ. Mueller, Organizer,

Presiding

8:20 177. Hexavalent chromium interaction with organic adlayers at silica/water inter­ faces studied by second harmonic and broadband sum frequency generation. F. Geiger 8:40 178. 2 H NMR studies of solution- and solid-phase intermolecular interactions between monoaromatic compounds and natural organic matter. M. A. Nanny, M. A. Eastman, L. C. Brothers, H. Lei

Section Ε Convention Center Room16A

Section C

Presiding

Section Β Convention Center Room14B

11:00 195. Preferential adsorption of small inorganic ions at the liquid water surface. P. B. Petersen, R. J. Saykally 11:20 196. Molecular dynamics simulation studies of structure and dynamics on the surface of aqueous electrolyte solutions. D. J. Tobias, P. Jungwirth

8:20 191. What is thin film water, and does it matter? G. E. Ewing 9:00 192. Relationships between structure, interaction forces and dynamics in molecularly thin water films. J. Israelachvili 9:40 193. Dissection of the hydrogen bonding network dynamics near biological model interfaces. D. Russo, G. L. B. Hura, R. K. Murarka, T. Head-Gordon 10:20 Intermission. 10:40 194. Solute-solvent charge transfer in aqueous solution. M. Dal Peraro, S. Raugei, P. Carloni, M. L Klein

Hydrogen Bonds: Developments in Experiment and Theory Hydrogen Bonding in Reactions: Proton and Η-atom Transfer T. S. Zwier and K. D. Jordan, J. Rice,

Organizers

Presiding

8:20 197. Impact of nuclear quantum effects on hydrogen bonding and proton transfer reactions. S. Hammes-Schiffer 9:00 198. Linking protein flexibility to tunneling in dehydrogenases. J. P. Klinman, Z-X. Liang 9:40 199. Vibrational state-selected excitedstate double-proton transfer in the 7-azaindole dimers. H. Sekiya, K. Sakota 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 200. Computer simulation of excess protons in aqueous systems. G. A. Voth 11:00 201. Time-resolved study of excited state proton transfer in the green fluorescent protein and its mutants. D. Huppert 11:40 202. Water assisted dehalogenation reactions of selected isopolyhalomethanes, halomethanols and haloformaldehydes. D. L Phillips, W. M. Kwok, C. Zhao, X. Guan, Y. Du, Y-L. Li, D-Q. Wang Section F Convention Center Room16B Growth and Catalysis of Metal Overlayers Catalysis on Supported Clusters and Overlayers Cosponsored with COLL H. Jonsson and D. A. Chen, G. Henkelman,

Organizers

Presiding

8:20 203. Catalysis at three-phase boundaries: CO oxidation at Au/Ti02 and R 0 2 / R . B. Hammer, L. M. Molina, W. X. Li 8:50 204. Towards understanding propene epoxidation by Au/Ti02 catalyst. H. Metiu, S. Chretien, G. Mills, M. Moskovits, S. K. Buratto 9:20 205. Vapor phase synthesis of gold nanoparticle catalysts for low temperature CO oxidation. M. S. El-Shall, K. S. Saoud 9:40 206. Ammonia synthesis from first prin­ ciples. J . K. Norskov, K. Honkala, I. Remediakis, A. Logadottir, C. Christensen, A. Hellman, S. Dahl, A. Carisson 10:10 Intermission. 10:30 207. Hydrogénation and dehydrogenation on Ni modified Pt(111). A. J. Gellman, Y. Pingping 10:50 208. Investigation of Pd adlayers on Au(111). S. Pandelov, J. Meier, W. Schindler, U. Stimming 11:20 209. Monolayer vanadia-titania catalysts: Growth, structure, and NO catalytic reduction from DFT calculations. A. Selloni, A. Vittadini 11:50 210. Towards developing kinetic generalities for catalytic reactions on solid surfaces. S. Ichikawa Section G Convention Center Ballroom 20C Biophysical Aspects of Protein and Peptide Aggregation: Experiment and Theory Amyloid Beta-Protein

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

D. Thirumalai,

Organizer

J. E. Straub, Organizer,

Presiding

8:20 211. Fibril type assemblies from a coarse-grained model of aggregation. N. J. Fawzi, E. H. Yap, T. Head-Gordon

TECH-103

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 8:40 212. Lamination of b-sheets in the Alzheimer's Disease protein fibril. J. Dong, K. Lu, P. Liu, A. Lakdawala, D. Lynn 9:20 213. Structural and thermodynamic characteristics of oligomeric intermediates involved in amyloid formation. S. Gnanakaran, R. Nussinov, A. E. Garcia 9:40 Intermission. 10:00 214. Following the aggregation of amyloid-forming peptides by computer simulations. P. Derreumaux, N. Mousseau 10:40 215. Excitonic signatures in 2-D infrared spectra of beta-sheet-forming peptides. C. H. Londergan, J. Wang, P. H. Axelsen, R. M. Hochstrasser 11:00 216. Metal binding structural motifs in the abeta peptide of Alzheimer's Disease. M. G. Zagorski, L. Hou

Convention Center Ballroom 20D NMR Recent Developments in Magnetic Resonance: Liquid and Solid State Applications, Theoretical Methodology, and Emerging Techniques M. P. Augustine and L. J. Mueller, Organizers R. Stark, Organizer,

Presiding

Science Fact in Magnetic Resonance: Lévitation, Controlled Chaos, Cantilevers, and other Magic. 8:20 217. Lévitation and the path to ultrasensitive nuclear magnetic resonance. M. C. Butler, V. A. Norton, D. P. Weitekamp 8:50 218. Contrast enhancement by the butterfly effect and chaos control in high-field MRI. S. Y. Huang, D. D. Whitmore, E. W. Scamman, J. D. Walls, C. N. Mejia, Y-Y. Lin 9:20 219. Ultrasensitive magnetic resonance imaging by mechanical detection. J. A. Marohn, S. R. Gamer, S. Kuehn, J. M. Dawlaty, N. E. Jenkins 9:50 Intermission. Structure Beyond the Diffraction Limit. 10:10 220. NMR and the strong hydrogen bond. G. S. Harbison, J. N. Woodford, X. Zhao, Y-S. Kye, P. Rossi, V. Barsegov 10:40 221. Magic-angle spinning NMR of uniformly labeled proteins. C. M. Rienstra, W. T. Franks, B. J. Wylie, D. H. Zhou, Y. Li, K. D. Kloepper, S. A. Stellfox, M. Hudock 11:10 222. Measuring correlated structural distribution in non-crystalline solids. P. Grandinetti, T. Clark, J. F. Stebbins John Pople Memorial Symposium Cosponsored with COMP Reaction, Modification, and/or Deposition at Surfaces Catalysis at Nanoparticles, Clusters, and Surfaces Cosponsored with COLL WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Section A Convention Center Room 14A Dynamics and Conductivity of Nanoparticles and their Assemblies Semiconductor Nanoparticles G. V. Hartland and T. Lian,

Organizers

Convention Center Room 15B

Section G

T. S. Zwier and K. D. Jordan,

Applications of Physical Chemistry to Environmental and Biogeochemical Research Surfaces and Interfaces Cosponsored with ENVR, and GEOC Κ. Τ. Mueller and P. A. O'Day,

Organizers

Presiding

1:20 229. Dynamics at mineral-water inter­ faces. S. R. Higgins, X. Hu, S. Bose 2:00 230. Applying NMR methodology to the study of paramagnetic soil minerals. C. P. Grey, U. G. Nielsen, Y. Paik, B. Phillips, R. J. Reeder, M. Schoonen 2:40 231. Connecting spectroscopy and com­ putational chemistry to study interfacial phenomena. J. D. Kubicki, K. D. Kwon, J. Narayanasamy 3:20 Intermission. 3:40 232. Charging behavior at single crystal oxide/water interfaces determined by optical second harmonic generation spectroscopy. J. P. Fitts, X. Shang, M. L. Machesky, D. J. Wesolowski, J. D. Kubicki, G. W. Flynn, T. F. Heinz, K. B. Eisenthal 4:20 233. Structure of the hydroxylated alphaF e 2 0 3 (0001 ) surface: Surface X-ray diffrac­ tion and density functional theory results. T. P. Trainor, A. M. Chaka, P. Eng, J. G. Catalano, G. Waychunas, G. E. Brown Jr., M. Newville 4:40 234. Direct observations of the mineralwater interface with high resolution X-ray scattering. P. Fenter, Z. Zhang, C. Park, N. C. Sturchio, M. J. Bedzyk Section C Convention Center Room15A Novel Directions in Photonics: Nanophotonics and Biophotonics Biophotonics and Confined Structures Cosponsored with COLL P. N. Prasad and G. C. Schatz,

Organizers

Presiding

1:30 235. Bifunctional agents for optical imag­ ing and photomedicine. R. K. Pandey 2:00 236. Nanoshells: Optimizing nanophotonic properties for probing living sys­ tems. N. J. Halas 2:30 237. Nanoparticulate, multiplexed quanti­ tation tags for biology based on surface enhanced raman scattering. M. J. Natan 3:00 238. Supramolecular photonic wire via helical encapsulation of chromophore. O-K. Kim, J. Je, G. Jemigan, J. Melinger, H. Ricks, M. Pepitone 3:20 Intermission. 3:40 239. F-V/SMS: A new technique for studying the structure and dynamics of single molecules and nanoparticles. P. F. Barbara, S-J. Park, A. J. Gesquiere, W-S. Chang, S. Link 4:10 240. Quantum dots for photodynamic therapy. C. Burda, R. Krolicki, S. Dayal, A. C. S. Samia, M. E. Kenney, N. L. Oleinick 4:30 241. New Nanocrystal assemblies for photonic structures. A. P. Alivisatos

A. B. McCoy,

Organizers

Presiding

1:20 242. Direct and indirect proton transfer dynamics in acid-base neutralization reac­ tions. O. F. Mohammed, M. Rini, B-Z. Magnes, D. Pines, E. Pines, E. T. J. Nibbering 2:00 243. Hydrogen-bonding complexes in non-polar media: Toward liquid-phase "clus­ ter chemistry"? E. Pines 2:20 Intermission. 2:40 244. Nanoscopic water dynamics probed with ultrafast infrared vibrational echo and pump-probe experiments. M. D. Fayer 3:20 245. Quantum dynamics of water. P. J. Rossky 4:00 246. Short, strong, symmetric hydrogen bonds: Vibrational inelastic neutron scatter­ ing studies. B. S. Hudson, D. Braden, D. G. Allis, N. Verdal, H. Hu, T. A. Jenkins Section Ε Convention Center Room16A Growth and Catalysis of Metal Overlayers Understanding Metal, Metal Oxide and Metal Carbide Interfaces Cosponsored with COLL D. A. Chen,

Organizer

H. Jonsson, Organizer,

Presiding

1:20 247. Growth of metal and metal com­ pound nanoparticles on surfaces. J. Hrbek 1:50 248. Characterization of molybdenum carbide nanoparticles formed on Au(111 ) using reactive-layer assisted deposition. J. M. Horn, Z. Song, D. V. Potapenko, J. Hrbek, M. G. White 2:10 249. Design of strongly interacting metalceramic and ceramic-ceramic interfaces. E. A. Carter 2:40 250. Structure and photochemistry at oxide/oxide heterojunctions. S. A. Chambers 3:10 Intermission. 3:30 251. Copper wetting and nucleation on oxides, polymers and silicates: The impor­ tance of surface hydroxylation. J. A. Kelber 3:50 252. Calorimetric measurement of heats of adsorption and adhesion energies for metals on polymers. S. F. Diaz Jr., J. Zhu, J. J. W. Harris, C. T. Campbell 4:10 253. Microcalorimetric studies of adsorp­ tion energies on thicker single crystals: Pb on NiAI(110). J. Zhu, S. F. Diaz, L. R. Heeb, C. T. Campbell 4:30 254. Surface scattering studies of sup­ ported gold nanocluster chemistry. C. B. Mullins Section F Convention Center Room 16B Biophysical Aspects of Protein and Peptide Aggregation: Experiment and Theory Amyloid Beta-Protein J. E. Straub and D. Thirumalai, D. Klimov,

Organizers

Presiding

Presiding

1:20 223. Photoinduced electron storage and transfer properties of metal-semiconductor composites. P. V. Kamat, T. Hirakawa 2:00 224. Exciton relaxation and charge separation dynamics in GaSe and InSe nanoparticle aggregates. D. F. Kelley, H. Tu, S. Yang, K. Mogyorosi 2:40 225. Fluorescence from individual PbS quantum dots. J. J. Peterson, T. D. Krauss 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 226. Ultrafast dynamics in core and core shell nanocrystals. S. J. Rosenthal 4:00 227. Properties of solution based semiconductor nanowires. K. Hull, J. Grebinski, V. Protasenko, M. Kuno

104-TECH

Convention Center Room 14B

J. R. Lakowicz,

4:00 260. In silico study of amyloid betaprotein. H. E. Stanley

Section D

Hydrogen Bonds: Developments in Experiment and Theory Hydrogen Bond Dynamics

Section Β

F. M. Geiger,

Section H

G. D. Scholes,

4:20 228. Synthesis and characterization of Cu(ll) doped ZnSe nanoparticles. E. M. Olano, T. Norman Jr., C. D. Grant, T. W. H. van Buuren, E. W. Castner Jr., J. Z. Zhang

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

1:20 255. Alzheimer's disease cosmology: Observation of the "big bang" in amyloid formation. D. B. Teplow 2:00 256. Initial conformational changes of transthyretin triggering amyloid formation. S. Huo 2:20 257. Probing α-synuclein structure using fluorescence energy transfer kinetics: Impli­ cations for Parkinson's disease. J . C. Lee, H. B. Gray, R. Langen, J. R. Winkler 2:40 Intermission. 3:00 258. Mechanisms of amyloid formation. Ε. Τ. Powers 3:40 259. Molecular dynamics simulations of amyloid fibrils. N-V. Buchete, R. Tycko, G. Hummer

Convention Center Ballroom 20C NMR Recent Developments in Magnetic Resonance: Liquid and Solid State Applications, Theoretical Methodology, and Emerging Techniques IV M. P. Augustine and R. Stark, L. J . Mueller, Organizer,

Organizers

Presiding

The RNA World. 1:20 261. Structural and functional studies of human telomerase and yeast RNase III. J. Feigon 1:50 262. Studies of the dynamics and ther­ modynamics of CD44-HA interaction. N. H. Pawley, R. Michalczyk 2:20 263. Adaptability and dynamics in RNA ligand interactions: The malachite green binding aptamer. T. Dieckmann 2:50 Intermission. Better Living Through Chemistry: NMR Applications in Catalysis, Pharmaceuticals, and Materials. 3:10 264. NMR and MD approaches to the study of interfacial interactions in the aging of filled silicone elastomers. R. S. Maxwell, S. C. Chinn, R. H. Gee, M. Patel, B. Balazs 3:40 265. Analysis of pharmaceuticals using solid-state NMR spectroscopy. E. J. Munson, D. Barich, J. Lubach, L. Schieber, B. Nelson 4:10 266. Transfer of orthodeuterium induced polarization to heteronuclei. J. Bargon, R. R. Rizi, U. Bommerich, A. Limbacher, T. Jonischkeit 4:40 267. Adsorbate clustering, proton trans­ fer, and electric field gradients in zeolites. J. F. Haw, P. W. Kletnieks, J. O. Ehresmann John Pople Memorial Symposium Cosponsored with COMP Reaction, Modification, and/or Deposition at Surfaces Oxide Surfaces Cosponsored with COLL W E D N E S D A Y EVENING Section A Convention Center HallD Physical Chemistry Posters Theory B. J. Garrison, Organizer,

Presiding

7:30-10:00 268. η-Heptane under pressure: Structure and dynamics from molecular simulations. B. Sundaram, M. Krishnan 269. Withdrawn. 270. Ab initio free energies of enzymatic reac­ tions using model potentials. E. Rosta, A. Warshel 271. Ab initio study of the cyclooctatetraenyl radical. A. L. Cooksy, M. G. MorenoArmenta 272. Computational studies of metal atomhydrocarbon reactions. E. D. Glendening 273. Computational studies of sulfur trioxidewater complexes employing ab initio and density functional methods with correlationconsistent basis sets. M. T. Van der Hoven, J. M. Standard 274. Corrections to the microcanonical hardsphere virial expansion for small numbers of particles and for small enclosures in both periodic and reflecting boundary conditions. R. B. Shirts, S. R. Burt, A. M. Johnson 275. Mystery solved: Why particles of different mass have different temperatures in molecular dynamics simulations when using periodic boundary conditions. R. B. Shirts, S. R. Burt, A. M. Johnson 276. Density functional study of the chlorine + peroxymethyl radical reaction. H. R. Mayne, R. P. Johnson, B. C. Sive

PHYS 277. Density functional theoretical studies on the aromatic nitrile binding to Au cluster. S. Hwang, S-W. Joo 278. Determining binary interaction parameters for s c C 0 2 mixtures using the Peng-Robin­ son equation of state with modified van der Waals mixing rules. A. Gahlmann, S. F. Knackstedt, S. G. Mayer 279. Effect of ions on the dipole moment and electronic properties of water: Insight from initio molecular dynamics. I. Ivanov, M. Dal Peraro, S. Raugei, B. Chen, M. L. Klein 280. Electronic polarization in the enzymatic pocket of ODCase through first principles molecular dynamics simulation. I. F. W. Kuo, C. J. Mundy 281. Energetic and geometric insights of methoxide in methanol CH 3 0"(CH 3 OH) n , for η = 1-20. V. F. DeTuri, Μ. Κ. Sprague 282. Experimental unimolecular rate constants for 2,3-HF and 2,3-HCI elimination from chemically activated CF 3 CFCICH 2 CI. 0 . Zaluzhna, J. G. Simmons, G. L. Heard, Β. Ε. Holmes 283. Exploration of basis sets for calculation of intermolecular interactions. E. Jakubikova, A. K. Rappé, E. R. Bernstein 284. Reactions of neutral vanadium oxide clusters with S 0 2 . E. Jakubikova, Y. Matsuda, S. L. Cahill, E. R. Bernstein 285. Exploring excited state potential energy surfaces using analytic MCSCF derivatives. T. J. Dudley, M. W. Schmidt, M. S. Gordon 286. G3 and density functional theory investigations of the structures and energies of SFnCI, n=1-5, and their anions. J. M. Van Doren, Τ. Μ. Miller, A. A. Viggiano 287. Investigation of the reaction of the methyl­ ene amidogen radical with the hydroxyl radical. L. K. Norton, C. A. Deakyne, D. L. Thompson 288. Microscopic theory of solvation in quadrupolar solvents. A. Milischuk, D. Matyushov 289. Nonstationary bath spectrum and the anomalous Brownian motion in a changing medium. A. V. Popov, R. Hernandez 290. ONIOM(QM:MM) calculation of Chicken SWS1 visual pigment and its S90C mutant. K. Ohmiya, K. Morokuma, S. Yokoyama 291. PhotochemCAD 2: A program for photo­ chemical calculations with a database of absorption and fluorescence spectra. J. Dixon, M. Taniguchi, J. S. Lindsey 292. Quantum chemical and master equation simulations of isoprene ozonolysis. K. T. Kuwata, L. K. Valin, A. D. Converse 293. Theoretical studies of tunneling in alkoxy and alkylperoxy radicals. T. S. Dibble, Κ. Τ. Kuwata, Ε. Β. Petersen 294. Quantum dynamical simulations of liquid water with the TTM2-F interaction potential. G. S. Fanourgakis, G. K. Schenter, S. S. Xantheas 295. Quantum state distributions for reactive and inelastic Η + D 2 collisions. A. E. Pomerantz, F. Ausfelder, R. N. Zare, J. C. Juanes-Marcos, S. C. Althorpe, V. Sâez Râbanos, F. J. Aoiz, L Banares, J. F. Castillo 2 % . Rotational energy transfer in helium metal hydride collisions. B. K. Taylor, D. A. Kebir, J. E. Distefano, R. J. Gates 297. Structural and transport properties of the soft sticky dipole (SSD) and related single point water models. C. J. Fennell, J. D. Gezelter 298. Systematic investigation of the theoretical approach required to study the solvation of neutral and zwitterionic glycine. C. M. Aikens, M. S. Gordon 299. Theoretical studies of 1 -D ceside chains. P. A. Morganelli, A. S. Ichimura 300. Theoretical and experimental investigations of the carbon-nitric heterofullerene (C n . x N x n=28). J. Song, M. Vaziri 301. Theoretical kinetics for the reaction of ethanol and the hydroxyl radical. J . W. Kim, F-M. Tao 302. Theoretical study of molecular structures and properties of the complete series of bromophenols. H. Lee, J. Han, F-M. Tao 303. Theoretical study of proton transfer in the ammonia-acetic acid system and the effect of water molecules in the gas phase. C. Chanthamontri, F-M. Tao 304. Theoretical study of serine dipeptide conformations. B. S. Seyedgavadi, F-M. Tao 305. Theoretical study of the existence of FKrSiF3 and FKrGeF3. S. Yockel, A. Garg, A. K. Wilson

306. Theoretical unimolecular rate constants and intermolecular kinetic isotope effects for chemically activated CF 3 CFCICH 3 , CF 3 CFCICH 2 D, CF 3 CFCICHD 2 , and CF 3 CFCICD 3 . J. G. Simmons, G. L Heard, Β. Ε. Holmes 307. Theoretical study of Ni and Cu island growth on Ti02(110). N. A. Nguyen, 0 . I. Ayanru, E. D. Goodridge, M. A. Gomez 308. Unimolecular rate constants for the 1,2and 1,1-HF elimination from chemically activated 1,1,1,2,2-pentafluoroethane. H. N. Schiebel, W. C. Everett, G. L. Heard, Β. Ε. Holmes 309. Ab initio investigation of water loss from ethylnitrophenol cations via a multistep intramolecular hydrogen bond mechanism. J. S. Riley 310. A new method for large-scale Monte Carlo simulations of water and aqueous solutions. B. G. Cheney, C. H. Mak 311. Ab initio studies of aqueous anions and ion pairs. S. B. Rempe, K. Leung 312. Computational study of ion solvation at aqueous interfaces and in nanoscale drop­ lets. C. D. Wick, L. X. Dang 313. Monte Carlo simulation of water/1-butanol/ 2-ethoxyethan-1-ol mixtures at vapor/liquid interfaces. J. M. Stubbs, J. I. Siepmann 314. Temperature dependence of nuclear quadrupole coupling constants from carparrinello molecular dynamics simulations. D. Sebastiani, J. Schmidt Section Β Convention Center HallD Physical Chemistry Posters Spectroscopic Methods B. J. Garrison, Organizer,

Presiding

7:30-10:00 315. Withdrawn. 316. Assigning stereochemistry using ab initio NMR shifts. K. W. Wiitala, C. J. Cramer, T. R. Hoye 317. Characterization of the nonlinear behavior of the chlorite-sulfite pH oscillator. G. A. Frerichs, J. M. Zastrow, J. T. Shatto, R. Bardhan, V. Talwar 318. Comparing liquid and solid-state NMR structures of a transmembrane peptide. J. K. Rainey, B. D. Sykes 319. Construction of laboratory built D-band (130 GHz) pulsed and CW EPR spectrom­ eter. A. Gunn, M. Brynda, R. D. Britt 320. Cosurfactant implications on solvation dynamics in CTAB reverse micelle systems. B. L Gourley, G. R. Bullock, Ν. Ε. Levinger 321. Strontium incorporation and dehydration in secondary zeolites from bulk and microfocused EXAFS. S. Choi, P. Α. Ο Day, J. Field, J. Chorover 322. Dispersed fluorescence spectroscopy of primary and secondary alkoxy radicals. 1. Sioutis, J. Jin, G. Tarczay, S. Gopalakrishnan, A. Bezant, T. A. Miller 323. Effects of partially quenched orbital angu­ lar momentum on the microwave spectrum and magnetic hyperfine splitting in the OH-water complex. C. S. Brauer, G. Sedo, E. M. Grumstrup, K. R. Leopold, M. D. Marshall, H. O. Leung 324. Effects of zero-point and thermal vibra­ tional averaging on computed NMR proper­ ties of a model compound for purine nucleo­ sides. J. N. Woodford, G. S. Harbison 325. Electron-hole pair relaxation dynamics in binary and ternary copper-based semicon­ ductor quantum dots. Y. Lou, X. Chen, X. Qiu, C. Burda 326. ESE-EPR study of the 3-fluorotyrosine substituted cyanobacterial photosystem II (PSII). M. Brynda, J. M. Peloquin, B. A. Diner, R. D. Britt 327. Density functional theory study on the model tyrosine radical and Tyrosyl-Histidine complex mimicking YD and YZ radicals in photosystem II. M. Brynda, R. D. Britt 328. Fruit of the vine or pickle juice? D. Sobieski, M. P. Augustine 329. Intermolecular spectrum of liquid biphenyl studied by optical Kerr effect spectroscopy. J. R. Rajian, B-R. Hyun, E. L Quitevis

330. Investigation of reactivity and electronic structure of palladium monolayers on gold. S. Pandelov, A. Folske, J. Meier, U. Stimming, H-H. Streblow 331. Investigation of the solvent cage effect using ultrafast pump-probe spectroscopy. A. B. Oelkers, D. R. Tyler 332. IR spectroscopy of methanol and methyl radical in a supersonic molecular beam. H. Fu, Y. Hu, E. R. Bernstein 333. Kinetics of solvent association with sur­ faces investigated using IR spectroscopy. J. M. Seefeldt, J. H. Gutow 334. Lithographically patterned microcoils for high sensitivity NMR chemical and biological detection. J. L Herberg, R. Maxwell, S. Chinn, V. Malba, A. F. Bernhardt 335. Measurement of the mid-IR spectra of nand i-propyl peroxy radicals. S. L. Nickolaisen, D. Mah, C. Baca, K. Wardlaw 336. Molecular reorientational dynamics of the ionic liquid 1-Methyl-3-Nonylimidazolium Hexafluorphosphate using 13C Nmr relax­ ation data. W. R. Carper, P. G. Wahlbeck, A. Dôlle, J. H. Antony, D. Mertens, P. Wasserscheid 337. Natural abundance 13C-13C correlation spectroscopy in solids. D. W. Elliott, J. Struppe, R. A. Olsen, G. M. Leskowitz, L. J. Mueller 338. New laboratory built 31 GHz (Ka-band) pulsed EPR spectrometer. M. Dicus, G. Yeagle, R. D. Britt 339. NMR investigation of porous and nanocrystalline silicon. J. Giuliani, R. Carter, S. Harley, M. Augustine 340. Paramagnetic NMR relaxation due S > 1/2 metal ions: Dependence on the form of the electron spin Hamiltonian. N. J. Schaefle, R. R. Sharp 341. Paramagnetic NMR relaxation of the S = 2 complex manganese (III) meso-tetra(4sulfonatophenyl)porphine. N. J. Schaefle, R. R. Sharp 342. PFG 1 H NMR studies of water diffusion in zeolite beds. S. K. Mclntyre, T. M. Alam 343. Physical mechanism of antifreeze proteins to ice growth inhibition. Y. Ba, Y. Mao 344. Probe head design for pulsed EPR at 31 GHz. G. Yeagle, R. D. Britt 345. Probing organization in model lipid biomembranes with INEPT based spin diffusion and selective excitation 3 1 Ρ MAS NMR. G. P. Holland, T. M. Alam 346. Real time dynamics of HeBr2 vibrational predissociation. J. A. Abbondondola, J. A. Cabrera, C. Bieler, W. E. van der Veer, K. Janda 347. Resonance Raman spectroscopy of di­ methyl disulfide. M. R. Wedlock 348. Rotational analysis of the van der Waals complex Ar-propane. K. I. Peterson, D. P. Pullman, W. Lin, S. E. Novick 349. Solid-state NMR observables of metal complexes: A quantum chemical investiga­ tion. Y. Zhang, E. Oldfield 350. Spectroscopic study of polyoxoanion occluded within modified MCM-41. X. zhang, H. Guo, D. L. Akins 351. State selected unimolecular dissociation of HOONO. J. Matthews 352. Structure, dynamics and spectroscopy of solvated ions. V-A. Glezakou, G. K. Schenter 353. Studying metal ion binding sites with lanthanide luminescence and magnetic circular dichroism. A. Kirmiz, D. Saiki, J. Erker, M. Augustine 354. Surfactant charge effects on the location, vibrational spectra, and relaxation dynamics of anionic probes in reverse micelles. G. M. Sando, K. Dahl, J. C. Owrutsky 355. The infrared, Raman and inelastic neutron scattering spectra of dodecahedrane: An Ih molecule in Th site symmetry. B. S. Hudson, D. G. Allis, S. F. Parker, A. J. Ramirez-Cuesta, H. Herman, H. Prinzbach 356. Toward an understanding of surfaceenhanced Raman spectra collected from gold surfaces exposed to aqueous solutions of cyanide ions. M. B. Jacobs, P. W. Jagodzinski 357. Two-dimensional infrared spectra of dipeptides in trehalose glass. C. H. Londergan, R. M. Hochstrasser

358. Ultrafast x-ray absorption fine structure (UXAFS) measurements of solvated transi­ tion metal complexes: Seeing atomic motions in solution. T. Lee, F. Benesch, J. A. Lessing, E. Welch, M. Grant, C. Rose-Petruck 359. Using residual quadrupolar couplings to study ion binding site structure in biomolecules. S. Vyas, N. Kruegger, M. Augustine 360. High speed double quantum 1 H MAS NMR spectroscopy investigation of water dynamics in materials. T. M. Alam, M. Nyman, G. P. Holland 361. Pyrazole and pyrrole clusters in slit jet expansions. C. Rice, I. Dauster, M. A. Suhm Section C Convention Center HallD Physical Chemistry Posters Nanochemistry, Surface Chemistry, Photochemistry B. J . Garrison, Organizer,

Presiding

7:30-10:00 362. Dynamics and chemistry of 0 2 on T i 0 2 (110) rutile. Y. Wang, D. Pillay, G. S. Hwang 363. Role of oxygen species in nucleation, growth, and sintering of Au. D. Pillay, G. S. Hwang 364. Molecular chirality and charge helicity in charge transfer through self-assembled helical monolayers. J . Wei, G. Bird, C. Schafmeister, A. Paul, D. H. Waldeck 365. Determination of hydroxyl radicals in electrochemical oxidation for environmental remediation. M. Zhou Sr., Q. Dai, L. Lei 366. Electrochemical methods for the destruc­ tion of o-chlorophenol. M. Zhou, Q. Dai, LLei 367. Removal of p-nitrophenol from wastewater by advanced electrochemical oxidation process. M. Zhou, Q. Dai, L. Lei 368. Adsorption and dissociation of 0 2 on NiTi alloy (100) surface from first principle. X. Liu, C. Meng, C. Liu 369. AFM studies of fibril growth: β-2-Microglobulin. S. Guo, Y. Sun, G. Walker, B. B. Akhremitchev 370. Bending of multiple He-Ne laser beams in supercritical C 0 2 : Experiment and model. E. Rothe 371. Broadband CARS microscopy for func­ tional imaging of cells. M. T. Cicerone 372. Comparison of acetyl- and methoxycarbonyinitrenes by computational methods and laser flash photolysis study of benzoylnitrene. J . Liu, S. Mandel, C. M. Hadad, M. S. Platz 373. Decomposition of monochloramine and formation of NH2, NHCI, NHCI02 and [C03NHCI]- radicals under radiation. G. Poskrebyshev, P. Neta, R. E. Huie 374. Designing nanophotonic aperture arrays for chemical and biological sensing. P. Kaur, D. Waldeck, G. C. Walker, Z. Sun, Y. S. Jung, H. K. Kim 375. Determination and prediction of heavyatom dynamic isotope effects. K. Kelly, J. Hirschi, D. A. Singleton 376. Determination of relaxation process thermodynamical parameters in some organic compounds of aromatic row and its solu­ tions by light scattering method. S. A. Abdurahmanova, S. S. Dustov 377. Development of response surface model­ ing of total molar volume for direct determi­ nation of infinite dilution partial molar vol­ ume, binary pai interactions and excess volumes from dilute multi-component data alone. M. Tjahjono, L. Guo, M. V. Garland 378. Direct measurement of surface complex loading and surface dipole, and their effect on simple device behavior. J . Guo, N. Koch, J. Schwartz, S. L. Bernasek 379. Doped titania nanomaterials for visible light photocatalysis. X. Chen, S. Halasz, C. Burda

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

TECH-105

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 380. Development of novel heterostructured nanomaterials for thermoelectric applications. X. Qiu, C. Burda 381. Photophysical and photochemical properties of new nano-based structures for photodynamic therapy. R. Krolicki, J. Berlin, M. E. Kenney, C. Burda 382. Dynamjcs study of OH(v) + N 0 2 HOONO -> OH(v') + N 0 2 reaction. Y. Liu, J. R. Barker, L L. Lohr 383. Effect of surface composition and state of Cu-Ni Alloy on Electrochemical reduction of Nitrobenzene to p-Aminophenol. J. Zhao, X. Yang, H. Xu, L. Wang, C. Song, F. Wang 384. Effects of chemical and physical parameters on the growth kinetics of gold nanorods. 0 . R. Miranda, R. Jean-Gilles, T. S. Ahmadi 385. High resolution photoelectron spectra of carbon cluster anions and their monohydrides. M. J . Nee, A. Osterwalder, J. Zhou, D. M. Neumark 386. Hole state dynamics in functionalized semiconductor nanostructures. L. G. C. Rego, S. G. Abuabara, V. S. Batista 387. Hydrogen absorption of carbon nanotubes under high pressure studied by magnetic resonance techniques. K. Shen 388. Identification of the reactive intermediates produced on photolysis of 8-azidoadenosine, their lifetimes and absolute reactivities in water and buffer solution. D. Polshakov, S. Rai, R. M. Wilson, E. T. Mack, M. Platz 389. Influence of metal-solvent binding of C-F bond activation using a tungsten organometallic. M. C. Asplund, A. M. Johnson, J. A. Jakeman 390. Wavelength dependent quantum yield measurements for the photochemistry of A2E. M. C. Asplund, J. D. Anderson, D. J. Cameron, H. R. Vollmer-Snarr 391. Influences of C 0 2 addition in feed on reaction equilibrium in CO hydrogénation to i-C4 hydrocarbons. D. He, Y. Li, Q. Zhu 392. Infrared, visible/UV and theoretical studies of oxidation reactions of CrCI 2 0 2 and OVCI 3 . B. S. Ault, N. Goldberg, K. A. Antle, M. Hoops, D. A. Kayser 393. Intermolecular electron transfer from Naphthalene derivatives in the higher triplet excited states. M. Sakamoto, C. Xichen, M. Hara, M. Fujitsuka, T. Majima 394. Kinetics of chlorine atom reactions with napthalene and alkylnaphthalenes. G. Aleman, C. Malolepsy, C. Quant, X. Peng 395. Kinetics of CI atom reaction with chlorotoluenes. R. Aguilera, G. Nagasundaram, G. Dadson, J. Lee, S. Hewitt 396. Kinetics of photoinduces charge carriers in conducting polymers using time-resolved FT-IR. Y-H. Cha 397. Kinetics studies of the atmospheric oxidation of alkynes. L. Y. Yeung, M. J. Pennino, A. M. Miller, M. J. Elrod 398. Laser assisted formation of carbon-based toroids. X. Zhang, M. E. Lyn, A. Narayan, S. Kowaleski, B. Koplitz 399. Mechanistic study of Ru(lll) catalysed oxidation of diethanolamine and triethanolamine by Br(V) in presence of perchloric acid. A. K. Singh, A. Oo, S. P. Singh, A. K. Singh 400. Nonadiabatic dynamics of H 2 in supercritical C 0 2 . T. C. Castonguay 401. Novel nano-bio-photonic structures enabling multimodal imaging. S. Dayal, K. Azizuddin, N. Olenick, C. Burda 402. Optical properties of dyle labelled DNA gold nanoparticle constructs. L Peteanu, M. Ranasinghe, A. Jaquins-Gerstl 403. Photodissociation of CBr 4 at 267nm using ion velocity imaging. J. R. Greene, D. Xu, J. Huang, W. M. Jackson, J. S. Francisco 404. Plasma formation during single-bubble cavitation. D. J. Flannigan, K. S. Suslick 405. Probing geometric and spectroscopic structures of aqueous metal species adsorbed at mineral-water interfaces with resonant anomalous x-ray reflectivity. C. Park, P. Fenter, J. R. Regalbuto, N. C. Sturchio 406. Reactions of Criegee intermediates with water vapor and formic acid and their roles in the formation of secondary organic aerosols. P. M. S. Johnson, F-M. Tao 407. Robust estimators for photochemistry systems. M. A. Pinsky, H. C. Cho, W. R. Stockwell 408. Single molecule tracking on quantum dot-conjugated phospholipids. C. A. Naumann, B. A. Young, M. J. Murcia

106-TECH

409. Single-molecule michaelis-menten kinetics with dynamic disorder. B. J. Cherayil, W. Min, X. S. Xie 410. Structural and electronic properties of epitaxial core-shell nanowire heterostructures. R. N. Musin, X-Q. Wang 411. Structure of adsorbed ions at the rutile T i 0 2 (110)-aqueous interface with crystal truncation rod measurements. Z. Zhang, P. Fenter, M. J. Bedzyk, N. C. Sturchio, M. L. Machesky, D. J. Wesolowski 412. Subambient thermophysical behavior of 5d transition metal hexafluorides and evaluation of magnetic, electronic and phase effects. D. A. Johnson, A. S. Clark, E. F. Westrum, Β. Η. Justice 413. Surface enhanced raman scattering of p-dimethylaminocinnamaldehyde on silver and gold nanoparticles. B. Gilbert, K. Dunlap, C. A. Dondlinger, A. Severson 414. Surface plasmon-coupled emission of quantum dots. J. Malicka, I. Gryczynski, W. Jiang, H. Fischer, W. C. W. Chan, Z. Gryczynski, W. Grudzinski, J. R. Lakowicz 415. Thermochemistry in environmental/biogeochemical research: Metal binding by polysaccharides. J. E. Mihalick, L. A. Miller, A. M. Fox 416. Time dependent dynamics of NenBr2 (n = 1,2). J. A. Cabrera, C. Bieler, W. E. van der Veer, K. Janda 417. Trapping and characterization of micronsized single polystyrene particles. M. D. Schuder, A. J. Trevitt, B. L. Poad, E. J. Bieske 418. UV single photon photodissociation of HMX/RDX from excited electronic states. Y. Guo, M. Greenfield, E. R. Bernstein 419. Correlating charging and discharging dynamics with fluorescence blinking in single quantum dots. A. Munro, D. S. Ginger Jr. 420. Photoelectron imaging of nanoparticles with vacuum ultraviolet radiation. M. Ahmed, K. R. Wilson, J. Shu, D. S. Peterka, E. Ruehl, S. R. Leone 421. Accurate methods for the energetics, structure, and dynamics of AI nanoparticles. N. E. Schultz, A. W. Jasper, D. G. Truhlar 422. Mesoscopic organization of alcohols by surface enhanced infrared absorption. E. M. Kosower, G. Markovich, G. Borz Section D Convention Center HallD Physical Chemistry Posters Water, Hydrogen Bonding, Proton Transfer, and Electron Transfer B. J. Garrison, Organizer,

Presiding

7:30-10:00 423. Structure-activity relationship: The case of C 0 2 and hydrogen absorption on Zn-ZnO(OOOI). B. Hokkanen, J. Wang, E. Johnson, U. Burghaus 424. A Study of hydrogen bonding properties in 1,3 - cyclohexanedione: Ab inito calcula­ tions, neutron scattering spectroscopy of the crystalline solid and 1H NMR studies of aggregation in solution. Y. Lan, B. S. Hudson 425. Bulk and interfacial properties of simple alcohols using fluctuating charge models. S. A. Patel, C. L Brooks III 426. Clustering of ortho-hydrogen to nitrous oxide in cryogenic solid para-hydrogen. B. D. Lorenz, D. T. Anderson 427. Conditional probability distributions and effective nuclear charges of hydrogenic orbitals. J. J. Diamond Jr. 428. Dynamical effects of proton donor-accep­ tor mode and solvent in nonadiabatic pro­ ton-coupled electron transfer reactions. E. R. Hatcher, A. V. Soudackov, S. Hammes-Schiffer 429. Electron transfer within cofacial and linear assemblies of perylenediimide molecules. M. J. Tauber, J. M. Giaimo, L E. Sinks, M. R. Wasielewski 430. Enantiomer and racemate solubility in aprotic and protic achiral solvents. S. A. Studniarz 431. Finding the proton classical spectra for KTa03 and SrZr03. N. D. A. Addo, S. Jindal, D. Valentin

432. Hydrogen bonding effect on vibrational absorbance and vibrational circular dichroism spectra of â-aryloxylpropanoic acids, a density functional theory study. J . He, P. L. Polavarapu 433. Hydrogen bonding in aqueous solutions. T. M. Chang 434. Internal dynamics and overall rotation of atom-diatomic molecule van der Waals complexes. F. J . Lin 435. Investigating the effect of hydrogen bonding on benzoic acid in supercritical carbon dioxide with various co-solvents. S. F. Knackstedt, A. Gahlmann, S. G. Mayer 436. Modeling the synthesis of the acceptor for applications in co-crystals. C. E. Scott, M. A. Gomez 437. On the role of van der Waals interaction in chemical reactivity at ultracold temperatures. B. Naduvalath 438. Oxygen rich species: Areas of growth and advancement. B. Elliott, A. I. Boldyrev, A. N. Alexandrova, H. J. Zhai, X. Yang, X. Wang, L-S. Wang 439. Role of distortions in proton conduction through KTa03 and SrZr03. S. Jindal, N. D. Addo, D. Valentin, M. A. Gomez 440. Solvent friction effect on intramolecular electron transfer. M. Liu, D. Waldeck 441. Study of hydrogen-bonded complexes of nitrophenols with ammonia using density functional theory, correlations of molecular properties with pKa values of nitrophenols. W. Kajonkijya, R. Lai, F-M. Tao 442. Stepwise hydration, and multi-body deprotonation with steep negative temperature dependence, in the aromatic ions-water systems. M. S. El-Shall, Y. M. Ibrahim, R. M. Mabrouki, M. Meot-Ner 443. Ion mobility for probing the structures of styrene oligomers and the mechanism of thermal polymerization in the gas phase. M. S. El-Shall, E. H. Alsharaeh, Y. M. Ibrahim 444. Treating proton transfer within larger systems quantum mechanically. P. Peart, M. Gomez 445. Unimolecular elimination of HOH from chemically activated CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 OH and CD 3 CH 2 CH 2 OH. A. G. Midgett, W. C. Everett, Β. Ε. Holmes 446. Water evaporation kinetics. Diffusion limited rate. S. L. Phillips, M. T. Davis 447. Dynamics of electron transfer, trapping, and solvation in crystalline ice layers on Ru(001). J. Stabler, C. Gahl, U. Bovensiepen, M. Wolf 448. Ultrafast dynamics of core-excited water. D. Nordlund, H. Ogasawara, M. Odelius, O. Takahashi, J. Gyllenpalm, M. Nagasono, L. G. M. Pettersson, A. Nilsson 449. Electron transfer across a single moleculenanoparticle junction. W. Goh, J. Guo, R. Yuan, T. Lian 450. Mixed OH/water coadsorption at Pt(111). C. M. Clay, S. Haq, S. D. Barrett, A. Hodgson, G. Held 451. Anharmonic couplings underlying ultrafast vibrational dynamics of intermolecular hydro­ gen bonds in liquids. M. L. Cowan, N. Huse, B. D. Bruner, J. Dreyer, E. T. J. Nibbering, R. J. D. Miller, T. Elsàsser 452. Low-energy electron-stimulated luminescence and desorption from thin layers of solid water on Pt(111). N. G. Petrik, G. A. Kimmel 453. Argon predissociation spectroscopy of the small protonated water clusters in the 10002000 cm" 1 region: Using the shared proton bands to explore the evolution of eigen vs zundel forms of the H + (H 2 0) n , (n=2-6) cations. J. M. Headrick, E. G. Diken, J. C. Bopp, M. Johnson 454. Computational approach to the role of hydrogen bonds in controlling the conformation of antimicrobial oligomers. R. J. Doerksen 455. Do donors and acceptors act differently on the relaxation of hydrogen bonds in liquid water? A molecular dynamics simulation study. H. Zhang, J. Mijovic 456. Excited-state proton transfer in chiral environments. K. M. Solntsev, J. Bell, L M. Tolbert, D. Huppert 457. Photochemistry of afunctional photoacids: 6-Hydroxyquinoline-N-oxides and 10-hydroxycamptothecin. Κ. Μ. Solntsev, L. M. Tolbert, D. Huppert, S. Ashkenazi 458. Optimization ion-exchange extraction of multivalence ions from sewage. A. M. Kurbanov, I. Y. Kamilov

459. Guanine quartet networks stabilized by cooperative hydrogen bonds. R. Otero, M. Schôck, L. M. Molina, E. Laegsgaard, I. Stensgaard, B. Hammer, F. Besenbacher 460. Η-bond influenced adlayer structure: An UHV-RAIRS/XPS/STM study of isonicotinic acid absorption on Ag(111). H. Li, B. Xu, J. E. Reutt-Robey 461. Η-bonding changes mediate deprotonation of a conserved arginine in membrane H + pumps. M. S. Braiman, Y. Xiao 462. Halogen bonding between I- and organoiodine pseudohalides: Crystallographic and computational analysis. T. Hanks, R. B. Walsh, W. T. Pennington, A. E. Milligan 463. High or low barriers: The case of a cyclic water trimer. M. Mandziuk 464. Hydrogen bonding and vibrational spec­ troscopy: A theoretical study. G. M. Chaban 465. Intramolecular hydrogen bonding network in Myo-lnositol phosphates: Patterns and proton transfer. P. Yang, R. E. Brown 466. Is there a hydrogen bond radius? E. Arunan 467. Matrix-isolation FT-IR and theoretical investigations of the benzene-hydrogen peroxide complex. T. M. Halasinski, A. B. Jegede, R. L. Zuvich, A. A. Colon 468. Is there a universal hydrogen bond accep­ tor scale based on infrared jet spectros­ copy? L. Biemann, C. Cézard, M. A. Suhm 469. OH-stretching redshifts in alcohol dimers: Jet spectroscopy and modeling. C. Cézard, C. Emmeluth, M. A. Suhm 470. Proton dynamics in short Ν-Η--0 hydrogen bonds. M. A. Haiti, L. L. Daemen, J. Eckert, H. Haiti, I. Bruedgam, J. Stare, D. Hadzi 471. Proton transfer between chloroform and methoxide in methanol solvent. V. F. DeTuri 472. Search for single-well hydrogen bonds in solution. C. L. Perrin, J. S. Lau 473. Self-consistent polarization-neglect of diatomic differential overlap: Improved hydrogen bonding within approximate molecular orbital theory. D. T. Chang, G. K. Schenter, B. C. Garrett 474. Strong asymmetric hydrogen bonds: Quantum calculations and experiment. G. S. Harbison, J. N. Woodford, X. Zhao, Y-S. Kye, J. Zhou, A. I. Kolesnikov 475. Vapor-phase fabrication of H-bonding molecular networks exhibiting very large electro-optic responses. A. Facchetti, E. Annoni, L Beverina, M. Morone, P. Zhu, T. J. Marks, G. A. Pagani 476. Vibrational spectral diffusion of azide anion in water. S. Li, C. Lawrence, J. Skinner Section Ε Convention Center HallD Physical Chemistry Posters Biophysics B. J. Garrison, Organizer,

Presiding

7:30-10:00 477. A photoacoustic calorimetry study of ligand-binding and excited-state relaxation dynamics in hemocyanin subunits. G. Lalanne 478. Aggregation of amyloid beta peptide in the presence of 4-hydroxynonenal. S. J. Siegel, J. G. Bieschke, J. W. Kelly 479. Characterization of long wavelength emis­ sion from DNA Photolyase. I. DeVries, J. P. M. Schelvis, Υ. Μ. Gindt 480. Combining spectroscopic measurements with simulation methods to examine the dynamic changes that accompany matura­ tion in a series of related antibodies. I. F. Thorpe, J. Zimmermann, F. E. Romesberg, C. L Brooks III 481. Conformational analysis of pH sensitive lipid polar head groups designed for drug delivery systems. S. A. Nedd, N. Matsunaga 482. Diffusional quenching of Tb +3 -cs124-DTPA emission by TEMPO. S. A. Rivera, M. F. Shubsda, B. S. Hudson

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

PHYS 483. Anhydrous caffeine: Deuteration, X-ray and neutron powder studies. S. A. Rivera, A. Huq, N. Verdal, P. W. Stephens, B. S. Hudson 484. Dynamics of water-protein interactions as studied by dielectric relaxation spectroscopy (DRS). J. Mijovic, Y. Bian, R. Gross, B. Chen 485. Exploring microscopic simulation methods for ion transport energetics in gramicidin. M. Kato, A. Warshel 486. Fluorescent method for evaluation of binding affinity of ethidium homodimer-lll to DNA. N. N. Barashkov, F. Mao, D. Cen 487. Interaction of Be with carboxylates in proteins and influence of the dielectric environment. J. A. Snyder 488. Interaction of transition metals with over­ lapping histidine residues in model peptides. Z. Liu, K. Chen, N. R. Kallenbach 489. Interactions of n-alkyl-2-pyrrolidinone surfactants with lipid bilayers. Y. Kopkalli, M. J. Rosen, L. Davenport 490. Investigating the effect of the zwitterion/ lactone equilibrium of Rhodamine Β on the cybotactic region of the acetonitrile/scC0 2 co-solvent. S. G. Mayer, A. Gahlmann, K. D. Kester 491. Kinetics and mechanism of β-sheet align­ ment and fibril nucleation by a prion peptide. S. A. Petty, S. M. Decatur 492. Solvent effects on the stability and forma­ tion of prion peptide aggregates. N. A. Hanick, S. A. Petty, S. M. Decatur 493. Kinetics of β-sheet and aggregate forma­ tion by a peptide derived from the prion protein. A. Tyrell, C. A. Pevtsova, S. A. Petty, S. M. Decatur 494. Modeling the conformational preference of peptide helices held by flexible amino acid linkers. D. F. Ngassa 495. Molecular dynamics simulations of sphere­ like virus capsids. H. D. Nguyen, C. L. Brooks III 496. Molecular interaction between organophosphorus acid anhydrolase (OPAA) and diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP). J. Zheng, C. A. Constantine, V. K. Rastogi, T-C. Cheng, J. J. DeFrank, R. M. Leblanc 497. Reduction potential of DNA Photolyase is modulated by substrate binding. Y. M. Gindt, T. H. Huang, M. Coughlin, W. McNamara, K. L. Thoren, J. P. M. Schelvis 498. Spectroscopic studies of tautomerization mechanisms in Watson-Crick A-T base pair models. O. K. Abou-Zied 499. Steady state thermodynamics of Phycocyanin folding and oligomerization. K. L. Thoren, K. Connell, T. Robinson, D. Shellhamer, H. Tuscon, Y. M. Gindt 500. Structure and stability of gas-phase gly­ cine tripeptide conformers: A density func­ tional study. S. J. Gudowski, F-M. Tao 501. Withdrawn. 502. Surface adsorption of reduced Cyto­ chrome c on fused silica. M-C. Su, T. L. Benz, G. C. Campanello, V. S. Fahrenbach, S. A. Mistry, G. C. Hoops, T. A. Hopkins 503. The folding and aggregation of lattice model 64-mers: Thermodynamics of multi­ chain systems. T. Cellmer, D. Bratko, J. M. Prausnitz, H. W. Blanch 504. The role of B10 in hemoglobin I and hemoglobin II from Lucina pectinata by femtosecond ultrfast studies. M. M. Rodriguez, J. Lopez Garriga 505. Theoretical investigation of the conforma­ tional and energetic preferences of alanine and glycine in the presence of explicit water molecules. S. Xu, M. Lewis, F-M. Tao 506. Vibrational dynamics of individual residues of a polypeptide by 2D IR. C. Fang, Y. S. Kim, R. M. Hochstrasser 507. Biophysical properties of the blood. A. A. C. Angus 508. Collective dynamics transition with solva­ tion of lysozyme. J. R. Knab, J-Y. Chen, A. G. Markelz 509. Experimental observation of a power law memory kernel for conformational fluctuation within a single protein molecule. W. Min, G. Luo, B. J. Cherayil, S. Kou, X. S. Xie

510. Fluorescence correlation spectroscopic analysis of the monomer/dimer equilibrium of a red fluorescent mutant of Cph1. A. E. Miller, A. J. Fischer, C. W. Hollars, R. J. Saykally, T. R. Huser, J. C. Lagarias 511. Glycosaminoglycans promote gelsolin amyloidogenesis. J . Y. Suk, E. T. Powers, J. W. Kelly 512. How does the Hsp70 molecular chaperone prevent misfolding and support folding? High resolution insights. S. Cavagnero 513. Investigation of thioflavin Τ dye orientation in amyloid fibrils via near-field scanning optical microscopy. C. C. Kitts, D. A. Vanden Bout 514. Mechanism of amyloid fibril formation: deep UV Raman spectroscopic study. M. Xu, V. V. Ermolenkov, W. He, I. K. Lednev 515. Reversible folding and aggregation of genetically engineered biopolymers. I. K. Lednev, L. A. Popova, V. V. Ermolenkov, S. Higashiya, N. I. Topilina, J. T. Welch 516. Molecular analyses and design for the stabilization of therapeutic proteins against aggregation. B. M. Baynes, D. I. C. Wang, B. L. Trout 517. Molecular force spectroscopy of aggre­ gated states of fibronectin on substrates with well defined surface chemistries. P. Y. Meadows, G. C. Walker 518. Molecular mechanism of inhibitors to prevent amyloid fibril growth as monitored by molecular dynamics simulations, Case study: Molecular interaction between N-methylated peptides (Αβ16-20ιτι) and Alz­ heimer's β-Amyloid fibrils (Αβ 16-22). P. Soto, J-E. Shea 519. Multiplexed electrical detection of cancer marker proteins and single viruses by nanowire FET arrays. G. Zheng, F. Patolsky, C. M. Lieber 520. Oxidative metabolites accelerate Αβ 1-40 aggregation by a two step mechanism, the first, a downhill aggregation step, eliminates the requirement for nucleation. J. G. Bieschke, Q. Zhang, S. Siegel, E. T. Powers, J. W. Kelly 521. Oxidative metabolites that accelerate alpha synuclein fibrillization in vitro are elevated in diseased brains. D. A. Bosco, D. M. Fowler, J. Nieva, Q. Zhang, E. T. Powers, P. Wentworth Jr., J. W. Kelly 522. Protein aggregation: Collagen assembly in silico. D. J. Anderson, I. Vinogradov, M. C. Goh 523. Single molecule force spectroscopy of alpha-synuclein 12-mer. C. Ray, B. B. Akhremitchev 524. Thermodynamics of interactions between glucose and maltose binding protein. S. Ding, D-C. Chow

10:20 Intermission. 10:40 529. Ultrafast dynamical properties of nanoparticles of different shapes. M. A. El-Sayed 11:20 530. Chemical sensing with nanorods of different materials: Which one is better? S. Zou, N. Mangeret, G. C. Schatz Section Β Convention Center Room14B Applications of Physical Chemistry to Environmental and Biogeochemical Research Environmental Biogeochemistry Cosponsored with ENVR, and GEOC Κ. Τ. Mueller and P. A. O'Day, F. M. Geiger,

Section A Convention Center Room 14A Dynamics and Conductivity of Nanoparticles and their Assemblies Metal Nanoparticles and Assemblies G. V. Hartland and T. Lian, M. Kuno,

Organizers

Presiding

8:20 525. Barcoded nanowires for bioanalysis. C. D. Keating 9:00 526. Physical, optical, chemical and biochemical properties of striped metal nanoparticles. M. J. Natan 9:20 527. Detection of chemical and biological molecules using SERS based on gold nanoparticles and aggregates. J. Z. Zhang, A. Schwartzberg, T. Oshiro, T. R. Huser, C. E. Talley 10:00 528. Tip-enhanced spectroscopy from ordered silver nanoparticle arrays. E. L. Orazem, D. Bussian, S. Cross, J. P. Schmidt, M. A. Summers, S. K. Buratto

Presiding

8:20 531. Structural chemistry, reactivity, and environmental occurrence of bacteriogenic manganese oxides. J. R. Bargar, S. M. Webb, C. C. Fuller, Β. Μ. Tebo 9:00 532. Redox metalloprotein interaction with oxide minerals. C. M. Eggleston, N. Khare 9:40 533. NMR studies of beryllium sequestra­ tion in biological and environmental sys­ tems. A. M. Sawvel, M. Sutton, S. C. Chinn, R. Maxwell 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 534. Mechanisms and rates of iron oxide dissolution in biological iron acquisi­ tion. S. Kraemer, P. U. Reichard, R. Kretzschmar 11:00 535. Exploring biofilms with two-photon laser scanning microscopy. P. L. Houston, Z. Hu, G. Hidalgo, A. Hay, M. L. Shuler, H. D. Abrufïa, W. C. Ghiorse, L. W. Lion 11:20 536. The role of organic molecules and microbial organisms in metal ion sorption processes. G. E. Brown Jr., T. H. Yoon, S. B. Johnson, A. S. Templeton, T. P. Trainor, K. Benzerara, B. C. Bostick, T. Kendelewicz, C. S. Doyle, A. M. Spormann Section C Convention Center Room 15A Novel Directions in Photonics: Nanophotonics and Biophotonics Biophotonics Cosponsored with COLL P. N. Prasad and G. C. Schatz, K. L. Rowlen,

THURSDAY MORNING

Organizers

Organizers

Presiding

8:20 545. Water structuring in phase transitions and in chemical reactions at sulfur sites in proteins. R. Radhakrishnan, J-W. Chu, B. L. Trout 9:00 546. Electron-activated processes in thin films of halogenated molecules co-deposited with water (ice): Dissociation, reactions, and desorption dynamics. T. E. Madey, N. S. Faradzhev, D. O. Kusmierek, D. Menzel, C. C. Perry, H. Fairbrother 9:40 547. Non thermal charge transfer reactions in pure and mixed water ice films stimulated by slow electron impact. L. Sanche, A. Bass 10:20 Intermission. 10:40 548. Probing reactions on low-temperature water ice using low-energy electron stimulated desorption. T. M. Orlando 11:20 549. Electron-stimulated reactions in thin water films on Pt(111). G. A. Kimmel, N. G. Petrik 11:40 550. Reactions of H atom and hydrated electron in supercritical water. D. M. Battels Section Ε Convention Center Room16A Hydrogen Bonds: Developments in Experiment and Theory Hydrogen Bonding in Biological Systems T. S. Zwier and K. D. Jordan, E. Pines,

Organizers

Presiding

8:20 551. Model systems for thermodynamic analysis of beta-sheet secondary structure. S. H. Gellman 9:00 552. Biomolecular hydrogen bonds: What have we learnt from hydrogen bond scalar couplings? S. Grzesiek 9:40 553. Hydrogen bonding in neat water and neat N-methyl acetamide. G. Martyna 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 554. The mechanism of conductance by water, glycerol, and ammonia channels. R. M. Stroud 11:00 555. Deuterium isotope effects of DNA and RNA Watson-Crick base pairs. A. C. LiWang 11:40 556. Detection of inter-residue hydrogen bonds in polysaccharides by AFM. Q. Zhang, J. Jaroniec, G. Lee, P. Marszalek Section F Convention Center Room16B

Presiding

8:20 537. Bioconjugated quantum dots and nanoparticle probes for molecular and cellular imaging. S. Nie 8:50 538. New advances in CARS microscopy. X. S. Xie 9:20 539. Tunable resonance hyper-Raman spectroscopy of nonlinear optical chromophores. A. M. Kelley, L. C. T. Shoute 9:40 540. Sensing capabilities of whispering gallery mode resonances in glass spheres. S. Zou, G. C. Schatz 10:00 541. Patterned porous silicon structures for microphotonics. D. J . Gargas, O. Muresan, D. J. Sirbuly, S. K. Buratto 10:20 Intermission. 10:40 542. Photonic and magnetic explorers for bio-analysis, cellular imaging and nanomedicine. R. Kopelman 11:10 543. Developments of time-resolved fluorescence detection of target organisms in highly autofluorescent backgrounds based on novel metal chelate immunoconjugates. J. A. Piper, R. Connally 11:40 544. The evolution of protein dynamics. J. Zimmermann, E. L. Oakman, X. Shi, P. Abbyad, S. G. Boxer, I. F. Thorpe, C. L. Brooks III, F. Romesberg Section D Convention Center Room15B

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

B. D. Kay,

Water: Structure, Dynamics and Reactions Across the Phase Diagram Stimulated Reactions in Water G. A. Kimmel and T. Head-Gordon, Organizers

Biophysical Aspects of Protein and Peptide Aggregation: Experiment and Theory Amyloid Beta-Protein J. E. Straub and D. Thirumalai, C. K. Hall,

Organizers

Presiding

8:20 557. Helix-turn-helix peptides that form α-helical fibrils: Modulation of fibril structure by turn sequences. K. L. Lazar, H. Miller-Auer, G. S. Getz, J. P. Orgel, S. C. Meredith 9:00 558. Assembly of Abeta16-22 peptides into oligomers: A molecular dynamics study. D. K. Klimov, J. E. Straub, D. Thirumalai 9:40 559. Molecular dynamics study of the dimerization of amyloidogenic tetrapeptides. A. Baumketner, J-E. Shea 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 560. Modeling amyloid conformations. R. Nussinov 11:00 561. Fiber x-ray diffraction studies of amyloid assemblies. D. A. Kirschner, H. Inouye Section G Convention Center Ballroom 20C NMR Recent Developments in Magnetic Resonance: Liquid and Solid State Applications, Theoretical Methodology, and Emerging Techniques V L. J. Mueller and R. Stark,

Organizers

M. P. Augustine, Organizer,

Presiding

TECH-107

TECHNICAL PROGRAM Resolution and Sensitivity Improvement through Hardware and Software Design. 8:20 562. A high throughput increased sensi­ tivity method of collecting and processing liquid phase NMR data. H. S. Taylor, C. Kunikeev 8:50 563. Toroid cavity NMR detectors for in situ investigations in magnetic, electric, and centrifugal fields. R. E. Gerald II, R. J. Klingler, J. W. Rathke, R. Diaz 9:20 564. Dielectric Resonance in NMR Imag­ ing and Spectroscopy. J. Tropp 9:50 Intermission. Applications of the Spectroscopic Ruler in Biology and Materials. 10:10 565. New strategies for resonance assignment in large proteins and protein complexes. J. H. Prestegard 10:40 566. Protein structural dynamics from residual dipolar couplings measured in multiple alignment media. J. Tolman 11:10 567. NMR techniques for the measure­ ment of orientational order and dynamics in ultra-thin liquid polymer films. M. H. Sherwood, J. W. Logan Gas-Phase Ion Chemistry in Analytical Mass Spectrometry Cosponsored with ANYL John Pople Memorial Symposium Cosponsored with COM Ρ Reaction, Modification, and/or Deposition at Surfaces Patterning, Lithography & Polymer Surfaces Cosponsored with COLL

1:20 574. Role of Si-ΑΙ order disorder on the behavior of zeolite solid solutions: Integrat­ ing calorimetric, spectroscopic, statistical mechanical, and phase equilibrium studies. P. S. Neuhoff 2:00 575. Density functional theory treatment of the behavior of TNT in soil environments. L. F. Alzate, C. M. Ramos, Y. M. Colon, A. A. Santana, M. E. Castro, S. P. Hernandez-Rivera, N. Mina 2:20 576. Applications of nanocrystalline zeolites to environmental protection. W. Song, G. Li, C. Jones, V. H. Grassian, S. C. Larsen 3:00 577. Sulfate, selenate and silicate adsorption on oxides. K. Fukushi, D. A. Sverjensky 3:20 Intermission. 3:40 578. X-ray absorption spectroscopic studies of arsenic species in Bangladesh sediments. A. Foster 4:20 579. Surface X-ray scattering and spec­ troscopy studies of U(VI) adsorption on corundum and hematite single-crystal sur­ faces. J. G. Catalano, T. P. Trainor, P. Eng, G. Waychunas, G. E. Brown Jr. 4:40 580. Multinuclear NMR investigation of nanofilters for selective metal extraction. R. Maxwell, A. M. Sawvel, S. C. Chinn, W. L. Bourcier Section C Convention Center Room 15A

THURSDAY AFTERNOON

Water: Structure, Dynamics and Reactions Across the Phase Diagram Water at Metal Interfaces

Section A

T. Head-Gordon,

Convention Center Room 14A

G. A. Kimmel, Organizer,

Dynamics and Conductivity of Nanoparticles and their Assemblies Single Molecule/Particle Spectroscopy T. Lian,

Organizer

G. V. Hartland, Organizer,

Presiding

Organizer Presiding

1:20 581. Structural inferences from theory and spectroscopy of a water monolayer on Ru(0001)*. P. J. Feibelman 2:00 582. Structure and electron dynamics of the wetting layer of water on Ru(0001). M. Wolf 2:40 583. Water and mixed OH/water coadsorption at metal surfaces. A. Hodgson, C. M. Clay, G. Zimbitas, S. Haq, G. R. Darling 3:20 Intermission. 3:40 584. The initial stages of wetting of metal surfaces. M. Salmeron 4:20 585. Water clusters formation and ice layers on metal surfaces. M. Asscher 5:00 586. Electron dynamics at ice-metal interfaces induced by femtosecond laser pulses. U. Bovensiepen, C. Gahl, J. Stâhler, M. Wolf

1:20 568. Time dependent fluorescence and blinking dynamics in semiconductor quan­ tum dots. D. J. Nesbitt, V. Fomenko 2:00 569. Intermittent single-molecule interfacial electron transfer dynamics. V. Biju, M. Micic, D. Hu, H. P. Lu 2:40 570. Photoionization dynamics of helium nanodroplets. D. S. Peterka, J. H. Kim, C. C. Wang, M. Ahmed, D. M. Neumark 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 571. Single molecule spectroscopy of organic light-emitting diodes. Y. J. Lee, S-J. Park, A. J. Gesquiere, P. F. Barbara 3:40 572. Single molecule spectroscopy stud­ ies of energy transfer in a diblock copoly­ mer. J. K. Grey, Y. J. Lee, P. F. Barbara 4:00 573. Spectroscopy and imaging of counterion-dependent porphyrin aggregates. J. L McHale, F. J. Knorr, S. C. Doan, D. E. Aston

Hydrogen Bonds: Developments in Experiment and Theory Hydrogen Bonding in Solids, Surfaces, and the Environment

Section Β

T. S. Zwier and K. D. Jordan,

Convention Center Room 14B

Organizer

P. A. O'Day, Organizer,

Presiding

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

108-TECH

Convention Center Room 15B

P. Jungwirth,

Applications of Physical Chemistry to Environmental and Biogeochemical Research Environmental Availability Cosponsored with ENVR, and GEOC Κ. Τ. Mueller,

Section D

Organizers

Presiding

1:20 587. Lateral Η-bonding in surface-bound carboxylic acid groups at aqueous-solid interfaces studied by second harmonic and broadband sum frequency generation. F. M. Geiger, C. T. Konek, M. J. Musorrafiti, A. B. Voges, H. A. Al-Abadleh 2:00 588. Hydrogen bond topology and proton ordering phase transitions in ice. S. J. Singer, C. J. Knight, J-L Kuo, T. K. Hirsch, L. Ojamae, M. L. Klein 2:40 589. Self organization of 9-acridine car­ boxylic acid films on Ag(111): Morphology selected Η-bonding motifs. J. E. Reutt-Robey, B. Xu, D. Evans, B. Varughese 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 112. Stepwise hydration reactions of selected bisulfate and NaCI clusters. R. L Whetten, R. B. Wyrwas Jr., S. L. Gordon, J. Bietz

4:00 591. Confinement effect on gas solubility in water. A. Luzar, D. Bratko 4:20 592. Hydrogen bonding in lipid bilayers containing phosphatidylcholine and choles­ terol molecules. M. Berkowitz, S. A. Pandit, D. Bostick 4:40 593. Internal hydrogen bonding and the overtone action spectrum of cis-cis HOONO: A twisted tale. A. B. McCoy, J. S. Francisco, J. L. Fry, A. K. Mollner, P. O. Wennberg, S. P. Sander, M. Okumura

Division of Polymer Chemistry D. Kiserow, Program Chair SUNDAY MORNING Section A

Section Ε

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 5

Convention Center Room 16A Biophysical Aspects of Protein and Peptide Aggregation: Experiment and Theory General Aspects of Protein Aggregation ... Other Systems J. E. Straub and D. Thirumalai, R. Nussinov,

iillllllili

Organizers

D. E. Morse, M. Muraoka, K. Shiba, D. W. Smith Jr., M. E. Van Dyke, D. Pum, and I. Yamashita, Organizers S. J. Clarson, Organizer,

Presiding

1:20 594. Rate of forming sickle fiber domains depends on 80th power of protein concen­ tration. G. W. Christoph, J. Hofrichter, W. A. Eaton 2:00 595. Identifying the mechanism for amy­ loid formation using single molecule spec­ troscopy. T. C. Messina, J. T. Giurleo, D. S. Talaga 2:20 596. A role for the α-helix in aberrant protein aggregation. V. Munoz 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 597. Molecular dynamics simulations of protein fibrillization. C. K. Hall, H. D. Nguyen, A. J. Marchut, V. A. Wagoner 4:00 598. Amyloid formation by Amylin and Amylin derived polypeptides. S. M. Tracz, A. Abendini, M. Driscoll, M. R. Nilsson, D. P. Raleigh 4:40 Concluding Remarks. Section F Convention Center Room 16B NMR Recent Developments in Magnetic Resonance: Liquid and Solid State Applications, Theoretical Methodology, and Emerging Techniques M. P. Augustine and R. Stark, L. J. Mueller, Organizer,

Biological and Synthetic Macromolecules For Emerging Nanotechnologies

Organizers

Presiding

In the Membrane and the Conformation of Small Peptides. 1:20 599. NMR of membrane proteins. S. J. Opella 1:50 600. High resolution structural studies of lung surfactant peptides interacting with lipid phases of varying composition. J. R. Long, V. Antharam, F. Mills, M. Samuel-Landtiser 2:20 601. Peptide structure in condensed phases by solid-state NMR. M. Mehta 2:50 Intermission. Structural Basis for Recognition in Biology and the Environment. 3:10 602. Advances and applications of 87 Sr solid-state NMR. Κ. Τ. Mueller, G. M. Bowers 3:40 603. Characterization of the interaction of heparin with peptides that neutralize the anticoagulant acitivity of heparin. D. L. Rabenstein, J. Wang 4:10 604. NMR diffusion measurements for mapping binding interactions. C. K. Larive, B. A. Becker, L. H. Lucas Gas-Phase Ion Chemistry in Analytical Mass Spectrometry Cosponsored with ANYL Reaction, Modification, and/or Deposition at Surfaces Self-Assembled Monolayers and Organic Films Cosponsored with COLL

Presiding

8:30 1. From polymer chemistry to nanotechnology: The return of the renaissance scien­ tist? T. E. Harper, C. Roman Vas 9:00 2. Biological path for nanofabrication of size- and shape-controlled nanoparticle synthesis. I. Yamashita 9:30 3. Selectively derivatized single wall carbon nanotube networks via peptidemediated, non-covalent modification. M. J. Pender, J. Hartgerink, B. Maruyama, R. R. Naik, M. O. Stone, R. Vaia 9:50 4. Towards walking macromolecules: Synthesis of the motor. S. Manfred, N. Gunari, A. Janshoff, K. Fischer, C. Li 10:10 Intermission. 10:30 5. Nanostructure properties character­ ized using soft X-ray spectroscopy. T. W. H. van Buuren, C. Bostedt, T. M. Willey, R. W. Meulenberg, P. G. Allen, L. Terminello 11:00 6. Template-free synthesis of a highly doped photoconductive thin film of Co2+(OH)1.97(NO3)0.03 with exceptionally long minority carrier half-life. Κ. Μ. Roth, D. E. Morse 11:20 7. Mineralization by the peptide aptamer against Ti. K-l. Sano, H. Sasaki, K. Shiba 11:40 8. Fabrications and applications of enzyme-incorporated peptide nanotubes and magnetic nanocrystal-coated peptide nanotubes. L. Yu, I. A. Banerjee, X. Gao, H. Matsui Section Β San Diego Marriott Columbia 3 General Papers Polymer Synthesis D. Garcia, M. lovu,

Organizer Presiding

8:30 9. Graft copolymerization onto cellulose from binary mixture of monomers. K. C. Gupta, K. Khandekar 8:50 10. Ti-catalyzed living ring opening poly­ merization of cyclic esters initiated from epoxides and aldehydes. A. D. Asandei, G. Saha, Y. Chen 9:10 11. Water compatible polymers from the ROMP copolymerisation of peptide- and PEG-functionalised norbornene derivatives. A. L Parry, S. C. G. Biagini 9:30 12. Synthesis and characterization of well-defined DNA base-containing block copolymer. H. Tang, J. Sun, M. Radosz, Y. Shen 9:50 13. Branched polymers by chemoenzymatic self condensing vinyl polymerization. A. Heise, J. Peeters, E. W. Meijer, A. R. A. Palmans, C. E. Koning 10:10 14. Synthesis of hyperbranched fluoropolymers by self-condensing vinyl copoly­ merization. C. Cheng, K. L. Wooley 10:30 15. Grignard Metathesis (GRIM) method for the synthesis of regioregular poly(3alkylthiophenes) with well-defined molecular weights. M. lovu, E. Sheina, R. D. McCullough

PHYS/POLY

10:50 16. Influence of amphiphilic poly(2oxazoline)s on activity and selectivity of the aqueous two-phase hydroformylation of 1-octene. M. Bortenschlager, A. Wittmann, N. Schôllhorn, R. Weberskirch, O. Nuyken 11:10 17. Ionic liquid supported catalyst for ATRP of MMA. S. Ding, J. Tang, M. Radosz, Y. Shen 11:30 18. ABA Amphiphilic block copolymers with comb-like segments from ATRP: Selfassembly in aqueous and electrolyte solutions. G. G. Durand, S. J. Holder, C. T. Yeoh 11:50 19. Controlled stereoselective cyclopolymerization of polar hepta-1,6-diynes using RuX 2 (NHC)(=CHR) (NHC = 1,3-dimesityldihydroimidazolin-2-ylidene; X = CI, CF 3 COO; R = 2-(2-PrO)-C 6 H 4 ; 2,4,5(MeO) 3 -C 6 H 2 ) and RuCI 2 (PCy 3 ) 2 (NHC)(=CHPh). M. R. Buchmeiser, T. S. Halbach, J. Krause, O. Nuyken 12:10 20. Efficient synthesis of oligomeric bibenzimidazoles. J . Yin, R. L. Elsenbaumer Section C San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 3 ACS Award For Team Innovation P. Dhal, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 2 1 . Simple solutions. G. M. Whitesides 9:15 22. Nanostructured materials designed as host vessels for partitioning of guests. K. L Wooley, G. O. Brown 9:55 Intermission. 10:10 23. Self-assembly of amphiphilic block copolypeptides: The role of chain conformation. T. J. Deming 10:50 24. PolyNSAIDs: biodegradable polymers for localized drug delivery. K. E. Uhrich 11:30 25. Medical uses of hyaluronan. R. J. Miller

1:30 3 1 . New poly(glycoamidoamine)s promote DNA nanoparticle formation and efficient intracellular gene delivery. T. M. Reineke, Y. Liu 2:00 32. Drug-loaded degradable nano-particles for the rescue of tissues under hypoxia condition and promote angiogenesis. N. Zhang, G. Wright, X. Wen 2:30 33. Enhanced MR imaging of electrospun tissue engineering scaffolds by surface functionalization with gadolinium diethylenetriamine pentacetic acid. R. A. Kraft, C. Hamilton, J. Stitzel, M. Komura, S. J. Lee, G. Lim, B. Harrison, N. Levi, R. Czerw, S. Soker, J. Yoo, A. Atala 2:50 34. Fabrication, mechanics, and biocompatibility of a nanofiber tissue engineering scaffold. J. Stitzel, S. J. Lee, J. Yoo, N. Levi, J. Berry, R. Czerw, M. Komura, G. Lim, S. Soker, A. Atala 3:10 35. Regulation of heparin release from functionalized vascular graft using a novel quantum nanomaterial. G. Lim, S. J. Lee, B. Harrison, S. Webster, R. Czerw, J. Yoo, S. Soker, A. Atala 3:30 Intermission. 3:50 36. Tissue engineering scaffolds from self-assembled human hair keratins. S. J. Lee, M. E. Van Dyke 4:10 37. Synthesis, characterization and drug release properties of poly(methyl methacrylate-b-isobutylene-b-methyl methacrylate) and poly(hydroxyethyl methacrylate-bisobutylene-b-hydroxyethyl methacrylate). M. Schwarz, G. Cheng, J. C. Cho, R. Faust, R. Richard, S. Ranade, M. Boden, K. Chan 4:30 38. Ultrathin polymer layers for the control of cell adhesion: From biocompatible surfaces to living cell chips. J. Ruhe, A. Worz, B-J. Chang, O. Prucker, M. A. Biesalski 4:50 39. Synthesis of water soluble conjugated poly (para phenylene)s for biosensor applications. V. Muthalagu, H. Li, S. Valiyaveettil

San Diego Marriott Columbia 3

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 6

General Papers Polymer Characterization

W. T. Ford and F. Papadimitrakopoulos, Organizers, Presiding 9:00 Introductory Remarks. 9:05 26. Analytical tools for the assessment of purity of single-walled carbon nanotubes: Application to synthesis and purification (tutorial). M. E. Itkis, R. C. Haddon 9:45 27. Carbon nanotubes: Synthesis, properties and new directions (Tutorial). H. Dai 10:25 Intermission. 10:40 28. Catalytic synthesis of single-walled carbon nanotubes: Comparison of different production methods and critical analysis of proposed mechanisms (Tutorial). D. E. Resasco, L. Balzano, G. Lolli, L. Zhang 11:20 29. Mechanism study on cobalt cluster size control in Co-MCM-41 during single wall carbon nanotubes synthesis by CO disproportionation. L. Pfefferle, G. Haller, Y. Chen, D. Ciuparu, S. Lim, Y. Yang 11:50 30. Can photochemistry save nanotechnology? D. Tomanek SUNDAY AFTERNOON Section A San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 5 Biological and Synthetic Macromolecules For Emerging Nanotechnologies S. J. Clarson, M. Muraoka, D. E. Morse, K. Shiba, D. W. Smith Jr., I. Yamashita, and D. Pum, Organizers M. E. Van Dyke, Organizer,

Presiding

D. Garcia,

Section C San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 3 ACS Award For Team Innovation P. Dhal,

Organizer

T. Jozefiak,

Presiding

1:30 52. Synthetic strategies to prepare pro­ tein-polymer conjugates for applications in biomedicine. H. D. Maynard 2:10 53. Living radical polymerisation: A route to functional polymers for healthcare appli­ cations. D. H. Haddleton 2:50 Intermission. 3:05 54. Polymer therapeutics designed to treat breast and prostate cancer. R. Duncan 3:45 55. Award Address (ACS Award for Team Innovation, sponsored by Corporation Associates). Polymeric pharmaceuticals to treat obesity. S. R. Holmes-Farley 4:25 56. Scale-up, manufacturing and clinical investigation of the anti-obesity product, GT389-255. W. H. Mandeville

Organizer

N. A. A. Rossi,

Presiding

1:30 40. Thermal characteristics of poly(1,3cyclohexadiene)s. K. Hong, T. Huang, P. F. Britt, M. Pyda, J. W. Mays 1:50 4 1 . Synthesis and characterization of novel block copolymers microgels of 2-Acrylamido-2-methylpropanesulfonic Acid and N-isopropylacrylamide. M. M. Guo 2:10 42. Monitoring structural evolution during vinyl/dimethacrylate copolymerization with frequency dependent dielectric sensoring. Z. Guo, D. Kranbuehl, P. Best, H. Sautereau 2:30 43. New rearrangement process involving cleavage of siloxane bond and formation of dimethylsilane. S. Rubinsztajn, J. A. Cella, J. Chojnowski, W. Fortuniak, J. Kurjata 2:50 44. Temperature- and concentrationdependent kinetics in living isobutylene polymerization. J. E. Puskas, S. W. P. Chan, K. B. McAuley 3:10 45. Main-chain thermotropic liquid-crystal­ line ionene polymers based on trans-1,2bis(4-pyridyl)ethylene. H. Han, P. R. Vantine, A. K. Nedeltchev, P. K. Bhowmik 3:30 46. New epoxy bis-phosphonate crosslinker for durable fire retardancy on cotton. S. Chang, N. D. Sachinvala, N. Prévost, D. V. Parikh, P. A. Sawhney, A. A. Lambert III, C. C. Grimm, W. L. Jarrett Jr. 3:50 47. Oligo(ethylene oxide)-functionalized siloxanes: Decreasing viscosity and increasing conductivity. N. A. A. Rossi, Z. Zhang, Q. Wang, K. Amine, R. West

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

Section Β

Polymer Surfaces And Interfaces Tutorial

Carbon Nanotubes, Polymers, And Complex Fluids Characterization, Separation and Processing. Tutorial Cosponsored with PMSE F. Papadimitrakopoulos and W. T. Ford, Organizers D. Tomanek and R. C. Haddon,

Presiding

1:30 57. Functionalization of carbon nano­ tubes: Synthesis and applications (Tutorial). M. Prato 2:10 58. Optical spectroscopy of single-walled carbon nanotubes (Tutorial). R. B. Weisman 2:50 Intermission. 3:10 59. Purification and separation of carbon nanotubes (Tutorial). F. Papadimitrakopoulos 3:50 60. Spectroscopic studies of redox and self-assembly chemistry of single-walled carbon nanotubes. S. K. Doom, M. O'Connell, E. E. Eibergen, S. Sivaram 4:20 6 1 . SWNTs in superacids. M. Pasquali, V. A. Davis, L. Ericson, A. N. G. ParraVasquez, H. Fan, Y. Wang, V. Prieto, J. A. Longoria, S. Ramesh, R. K. Saini, C. Kittrell, W. E. Billups, W. W. Adams, R. Hauge, R. E. Smalley 4:50 62. Polymerizations of 3- and 4-phenoxybenzoic acids onto carbon nanotube via electrophilic substitution reaction in polyphosphoric acid. S-J. Oh, H-J. Lee, D-K. Keum, S-W. Lee, S-Y. Park, L. S. Tan, J. B. Baek MONDAY MORNING Section A San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 5 Biological and Synthetic Macromolecules For Emerging Nanotechnologies S. J . Clarson, M. Muraoka, D. E. Morse, K. Shiba, D. W. Smith Jr., I. Yamashita, M. E. Van Dyke, and D. Pum, Organizers M. D. Schulte,

8:30 63. Interfacial alternating free-radical copolymerization: A new route to liquid-core capsules. C. Scott, D. Wu, C. C. Ho, C. C. Co 9:00 64. Synthesis and characterization of novel alpha-functional polymers for poly(peptide) therapeutics applications. V. Ladmiral, L. Monaghan, G. Mantovani, D. H. Haddleton 9:20 65. Peptide-templated polymer nanostructures. M. A. Biesalski, J. Couet, S. Duman, J. J. S.Samuel, S. Santer, A. Kopyshev 9:40 66. Complex copolymers: Stretching the synthetic boundries via a novel cascade approach. M. Malkoch, R. Thibault, E. Drockenmuller, M. Messerschmidt, B. Voit, C. J. Hawker 10:00 67. Smart assembly of peptide based hybrid block copolymers. J. C. M. van Hest, J. Smeenk, K. Koch, L. Ayres 10:20 Intermission. 10:40 68. Morphology and formation of interdigitated membrane polymeric vesicles from polyethylene oxide polybutylene oxide diblock, ABA, and BAB triblocks copoly­ mers. G. Battaglia, A. J. Ryan 11:00 69. Supramolecular organization of oligo-aramide rod-coil-block-copolymers in solution. R. Abbel, T. Schleuss, H. Frey, R. Berger, U. Rietzler, A. F. M. Kilbinger 11:20 70. Functional nano-sized assemblies from amphiphilic biohybrid macromolecules. J. J. L. M. Cornelissen, A. J. Dirks, I. C. Reynhout, J. Opsteen, N. Hatzakis, J. Sly, A. E. Rowan, J. C. M. van Hest, R. J. M. Nolte 11:40 7 1 . Synthesis of active ester polymers and block copolymers via controlled radical polymerization. P. Theato, M. Eberhardt, N. Metz, R. Zentel

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 4

Section D San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 6

Section Β

Section D

Carbon Nanotubes, Polymers, And Complex Fluids Synthesis and Applications of Carbon Nanotubes. Tutorial Cosponsored with PMSE

4:10 48. Energy transfer in gold nanoparticles capped with α-functionalized thiophene dendrons. S. Deng, A. Baba, J. Locklin, R. Advincula 4:30 49. Difluoromethanesulfonic acid function­ alized Poly(Styrene). B. Duan, D. A. Schorzman, G. E. Wnek, K. J. Wynne 4:50 50. Effect of temperature on interaction of cyclodextirn and telechelic associative polymer. D. Liao, S. Dai, K. C. Tarn 5:10 5 1 . Preparation of the composite latex of polyacrylate modified by fluorine and silicon. P. Chen Sr., Y. Chen, Y. Wang Jr.

F. D. Blum and R. M. Laine,

Organizers

F. D. Blum and R. M. Laine,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:40 72. Polymer adsorption: The ups and downs. T. Cosgrove 9:20 73. Spectroscopic characterization of interfacial polymers. F. D. Blum 10:00 Intermission. 10:10 74. Polymer brushes: Structure and properties, with emphasis on polyelectrolyte layers. M. V. Tirrell 10:50 75. Polymer-based nanostructures: Assembly to applications. T. P. Russell 11:30 76. Adhesion between polymers. H. R. Brown Section C San Diego Marriott Manchester 1-2 ACS Award In Polymer Chemistry J. S. Moore, Organizer,

Presiding

8:25 Introductory Remarks. 8:30 77. Precisely making and breaking poly­ mer chains. K. Matyjaszewski 8:55 78. Dynamic oligomerization and poly­ merization. J. S. Moore 9:20 79. Multi-step non-covalent synthesis. E. W. Meijer 9:45 80. Nanoobjects having complex shapes, facilitated during assembly and via subse­ quent manipulation. K. L. Wooley, Z. Chen, H. Cui, K. D. Hales, T. Kowalewski, K. S. Murthy, D. J. Pochan, K. Qi 10:10 Intermission. 10:20 8 1 . Chiral nanostructures by self-assem­ bly. T. Aida 10:45 82. Functional architectures by selfassembly. R. J. M. Nolte 11:10 83. Helical porous protein mimics. V. Percec 11:35 84. Designing functional polymers as delivery vehicles for therapeutics. J. M. J. Fréchet

Presiding

TECH-109

TECHNICAL PROGRAM Section D San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 6 Carbon Nanotubes, Polymers, And Complex Fluids Devices and Applications Cosponsored with PMSE F. Papadimitrakopoulos and W. T. Ford, Organizers M. Pasquali and M. Prato,

Presiding

8:30 85. Synthesis of silicon nanowires and novel nano-dendrite structures. O. Zhou 9:00 86. Applications of singlewalled carbon nanotubes-polypyrrole nanocomposites to supercapacitors and gas sensors. Y. H. Lee 9:30 87. Solution phase, near infrared optical sensors based on single walled carbon nanotubes. P. W. Barone, S. Baik, D. A. Heller, M. S. Strano 9:50 Intermission. 10:15 88. Photovoltaic cells based on dis­ persed polymer-carbon nanotube heterojunctions. E. Kymakis 10:45 89. Electronic effects in scanning tunnel­ ing microscopy of metal-filled multiwalled carbon nanotubes. R. Czerw, D. Carrol, J.Liu 11:15 90. Confocal Raman spectroscopy of bent carbon nanotubes. C. Jiang, H. Ko, V. V. Tsukruk 11:35 9 1 . Opening and closing of single-wall carbon nanotubes. H. Geng, X. Zhang, S. Mao, A. Kleinhammes, Y. Wu, O. Zhou Polymer Nanocomposites Novel Materials and Processes Cosponsored with PMSE MONDAY AFTERNOON Section A San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 5 Biological and Synthetic Macromolecules For Emerging Nanotechnologies M. Muraoka, D. E. Morse, K. Shiba, D. W. Smith Jr., I. Yamashita, M. E. Van Dyke, and D. Pum, Organizers S. J. Clarson, Organizer,

Presiding

1:30 92. From organic structures to materials with form. C. C. Perry 2:00 93. Biogenic nanostructured silica forma­ tion in diatoms: Proteins, genes, and struc­ ture. M. Hildebrand 2:30 94. Effects of the environment on mor­ phology of the silica cell wall of freshwater diatoms. M. S. Kannan 3:00 95. (Bio)macromolecule mediated synthe­ sis of silica and germania. S. J. Clarson, S. V. Patwardhan 3:20 Intermission. 3:40 96. Of proteins and silica: Novel immobi­ lized and encapsulated enzyme systems for biocatalysis. V. V. Guliants 4:10 97. The role(s) of synthetic and biological macromolecules in (bio)silicification. S. V. Patwardhan, D. Belton, C. C. Perry 4:40 98. Surface patterning of silica nanostructures using bio-inspired templates and directed synthesis. M. J. Doktycz, E. A. Coffman, A. V. Melechko, D. P. Allison, M. L. Simpson Section Β San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 4 Polymer Surfaces And Interfaces Modeling, Blocks, and Brushes F. D. Blum and R. M. Laine,

Organizers

R. C. Advincula and G. J. Fleer,

Presiding

1:30 99. Concentration and solvency effects on polymer depletion and the resulting pair interaction of colloidal particles in a solution of non-adsorbing polymer. G. J. Fleer, R. Tuinier 2:00 100. Modeling the dynamic interactions between polymeric membranes and target species. M. Mihailescu, A. C. Balazs

11Q-TECH

2:30 101. Quantitative molecular design of functional polymer surfaces. J. T. Koberstein, D. Cho, D. Wong 3:00 Intermission. 3:10 102. Direct measurement of attraction between identical polyelectrolyte brush layers in the presence of multivalent ions. F. Li, P. Schorr, M. V. Tirrell, J. W. Mays 3:40 103. Two-dimensional self-assembly of dendritic-linear block copolymers. I. C. Lee, C. W. Frank, A. Wursch, J. L. Hedrick 4:10 104. Investigating the chemistry and adsorption of multiply bound polymer chains (MBPC). M. D. Dadmun, J. W. Mays, M. Kilbey, G. D. Smith, R. C. Advincula 4:30 105. Selective interaction of hydrophilic and hydrophobic blocks of polystyrene-poly2-vinylpyridine with surfaces studied by force spectroscopy. P. Y. Meadows, J. E. Bemis, G. C. Walker 4:50 106. Silicone-urea copolymers with a gradient interphase between PDMS and urea. I. Yilgor, E. Yilgor, J. Sheth, G. Wilkes 5:10 107. Domain memory effect in mixed brushes. S. Santer (Prokhorova), A. Kopyshev, H-K. Yung, J. Ruehe Section C San Diego Marriott Manchester 1 -2 Biomimetic Polymers Folding and Function D. T. McQuade, D. H. Appella,

Organizer Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 108. Connecting structure with function in designed peptides. M. L. Waters 2:15 109. Structure and function in foldamers. S. H. Gellman 2:55 Intermission. 3:15 193. Efforts to expand the genetic code. F. E. Romesberg 3:55 111. Sequence-specific peptoid heteropolymers: Combinatorial synthesis and screening. R. N. Zuckermann Section D

TUESDAY MORNING

San Diego Marriott San Diego Β

Section A

ACS Award In Polymer Chemistry J. S. Moore,

Organizer

E. L. Thomas and M. V. Tirrell,

Presiding

1:30 121. Azide labeling of proteins and cells. D. A. Tirrell 1:55 122. Cooperative DNA binding and assembly by a bZip-peptide-amphiphile. M. V. Tirrell 2:20 123. Molecular nanostructures: Assembly modeling. M. A. Ratner, G. C. Schatz, S. Tsonchev 2:45 124. Charge induced pattern formation on surfaces of cylindrical micelles of cationicanionic peptide-amphiphiles. M. Olvera de la Cruz 3:10 Intermission. 3:20 125. Polymer photonic crystals. E. L. Thomas, T. Gorishnyy, C. Ullal, M. Maldovan, G. Fytas 3:45 126. Anisotropic nanostructures: Synthe­ sis, assembly, and function. C. A. Mirkin 4:10 127. Bubbles. G. M. Whitesides, P. Garstecki, M. Fuerstman, S. Takeuchi, M. Hashimoto, E. Kumacheva, H. A. Stone 4:35 128. Olefin metathesis for the assembly of complex structures. R. H. Grubbs 5:00 Award Introduction. 5:05 129. Award Address (ACS Award in Polymer Chemistry, sponsored by Exxon­ Mobil Chemical Company). Self-assembly of polymeric objects: Form and function. S. I. Stupp Section F San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 2 Degradable Polymers And Materials Cosponsored with I EC K. Khemani and C. Scholz,

Carbon Nanotubes, Polymers, And Complex Fluids Polymer Composites and Other Aspects Cosponsored with PMSE F. Papadimitrakopoulos and W. T. Ford, Organizers Presiding

1:30 112. Manipulating carbon nanotubes with nucleic acids. M. Zheng 2:00 113. Functionalization of carbon nano­ tubes with polymers. L. Dai, D. W. Chang, F. Y. Yang 2:20 114. Polyimide-functionalized carbon nanotubes for nanocomposite thin films. L. Qu, Y. Lin, D. Hill, B. Zhou, W. Wang, A. Kitaygorodskiy, X. Sun, M. Suarez, J. W. Connell, L F. Allard, Y-P. Sun 2:50 115. Small angle neutron scattering from labeled single wall carbon nanotubes. B. J. Bauer, E. K. Hobbie, M. L. Becker 3:10 Intermission. 3:25 116. Quantitative assessing bundling effect by resonance Raman scattering. Z. Luo, S-Y. Ju, S. N. Kim, R. Li, F. Papadimitrakopoulos 3:45 117. Modeling of the conductivity of a composite nanotube-polystyrene made with a latex-based process. N. Grossiord, O. Regev, J. Loos, B. Voogt, H. E. Miltner, B. van Mêle, C. E. Koning 4:05 118. Quantitative assessing contamination effect by resonance Raman scattering. S. N. Kim, Z. Luo, F. Papadimitrakopoulos, S-Y. Ju, R. Li 4:25 119. NMR Study of organization of diacetylenic amine on single-wall carbon nanotubes. S-Y. Ju, M. Utz, Z. Luo, F. Papadimitrakopoulos 4:45 120. SWNT/PMMA dispersion study. J. Liu, T. Liu, S. Kumar

Organizers

1:30 130. Reactively compatibilized degrad­ able microcomposites. J. Dorgan, B. Braun 2:00 131. Degradable aromatic-aliphatic block copolyesters based on AA/BB polymers and poly(lactic acid). T. R. Cooper, R. Storey 2:30 132. Biodegradable foam derived from poly(lactic acid)/starch. J-F. Zhang, X. S. Sun 3:00 Intermission. 3:15 133. Preparation and properties of biode­ gradable starch/clay nanocomposite. Y. Z. Menceloglu, F. Celebi, C. M. Inan 3:45 134. Lipase-catalyzed synthesis of polyhydric alcohol-poly(ricinoleic acid) ester star polymers. D. G. Hayes 4:15 135. Zinc alkoxide-mediated polymeriza­ tion of oi-methyl^-pentyl-3-propiolactone. K. M. Schreck, M. A. Hillmyer 4:45 136. Synthesis and characterization of biodegradable copolyesters obtained by one-step route using catalysis by decamolybdate anion. A. Martinez-Richa, J. E. Baez Polymer Nanocomposites Characterization Techniques Cosponsored with PMSE M O N D A Y EVENING Section A Convention Center Sails Pavilion Sci-Mix D. Kiserow,

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 5 Biological and Synthetic Macromolecules For Emerging Nanotechnologies

Z. S. Petrovic and K. W. Farminer, Presiding

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 6

D. Carrol and Y. Lee,

Section Ε

Organizer

8:00-10:00 215-217, 221-223, 225-226, 230-234, 238, 245, 248-249, 251, 255, 258-259, 262, 273, 282, 284, 286, 301-302, 305-306, 310, 317, 325, 329, 333-335, 337, 349, 354, 356, 366-367, 381-383, 391, 393, 400, 403-404, 414. See subsequent listings.

S. J. Clarson, M. Muraoka, D. E. Morse, K. Shiba, D. W. Smith Jr., I. Yamashita, and D. Pum, Organizers M. E. Van Dyke, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 137. Nanostructure in polysilsesquioxanes. D. A. Loy, J. H. Small, K. J. Shea 9:00 138. Perfect and nearly perfect nanoconstruction sites for polyfunctional nanoparticles and nanocomposites from silsesquioxanes. R. Laine, M. Roll, M. Asuncion, C. Brick, S. Sulaimann, R. Tamaki 9:30 139. Polymer nanocomposites containing Polyhedral Oligomeric Silsesquioxanes (POSS). J. M. Mabry, T. S. Haddad, S. A. Svejda 10:00 140. POSS: Silica "nanoparticles" for functional coatings. A. R. Esker, K. J. Dawson, S. M. Huffer, J. Deng, U. Karabiyik, B. D. Viers, M. K. FergusonMcPherson, J. R. Morris, M. Mao, W. A. Ducker, S. K. Satija 10:30 Intermission. 10:50 141. Nanocomposties with PDMS. T. Cosgrove, N. Benton, C. Roberts, R. Richardson, R. G. Schmidt, G. V. Gordon, M. Yoshitake 11:20 142. New materials for two photon fabrication applications. S. J. Clarson, A. V. Jadhav, R. Kannan, L-S. Tan, S. Oztemiz 11:40 143. Stability of polymer/polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane (POSS) bilayers confined in thin film geometries. R. Paul, A. R. Esker Section Β San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 4 Polymer Surfaces And Interfaces Dynamics and Interfacial Glass Transition F. D. Blum and R. M. Laine, P. A. Mirau and Ε. Κ. Lin,

Organizers

Presiding

8:30 144. Segmental dynamics in poly(methyl acrylate)-d 3 on strongly and weakly adsorb­ ing silica surfaces. B. Metin, F. D. Blum 8:50 145. Aging phenomena in PMMA thin films. K. Fukao, A. Sakamoto 9:20 146. Polymer surfaces and interfaces studied by positron annihilation spectros­ copy. Y. C. Jean, J. Zhang, H. Chen, G. Liu, Y.Li 9:50 147. X-ray and neutron reflectivity mea­ surements of polymer thin films and inter­ faces. E. K. Lin, C. Soles, W-L. Wu 10:20 Intermission. 10:30 148. Impacts of polymer molecular structure, diluents, free surfaces, and inter­ faces on the Tg-nanoconfinement effect: Novel studies by fluorescence. C. J. Ellison, M. K. Mundra, J. M. Torkelson 11:00 149. NMR characterization of the struc­ ture and dynamics of polymer interfaces in clay nanocomposites. P. A. Mirau, R. Vaia, J. Garber 11:30 150. NMR and modulated differential scanning calorimetry of adsorbed poly(methyl acrylate) on silica. F. D. Blum, B. Metin 12:00 151. In-plane diffusion of polymers in ultra-thin films measured by pulsed-field gradient NMR. J. W. Logan, M. H. Sherwood

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

POLY

Section C

Biomimetic Polymers Biologically Activity

11:00 167. Surface coating and precision cleaning with liquid and supercritical carbon dioxide: Applications of a Dry-Fluid technol­ ogy platform. J. McClain 11:30 168. Functionalized polyesters and polycarbonates for biomaterials applications. V. V. Sheares, D. A. Olson, B. F. Pierce

D. T. McQuade,

Section F

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 3

D. H. Appella,

Organizer Presiding

9:00 Introductory Remarks. 9:05 152. Synthesis of Gpna monomer and oligomers, and evaluation of their cellular uptake and antisense effects. D. Ly 9:45 153. Defining the structural determinants of chondroitin sulfate bioactivity. L. C. Hsieh-Wilson 10:25 Intermission. 10:45 154. Biologically-active nanostructures derived from functionalized polymerization initiators. K. L. Wooley, M. L. Becker, M. J. Joralemon, D. Pan, K. Qi, J. L. Turner 11:25 155. Towards synthetic collagen. R. T. Raines Section D San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 6 Degradable Polymers And Materials Cosponsored with E C K. Khemani and C. Scholz,

Organizers

J. Dorgan and K. C. Gupta,

Presiding

8:30 156. Phenol alkylated soybean oil. Z. S. Petrovic, K. H. Hong, M. lonescu, W. Shirley 9:00 157. Modifications of soybean oil using novel ozone based chemistry. K. W. Farminer, D. Graiver, R. Narayan, P. Tran 9:30 158. Research, development and commercialization of guayule latex: The natural solution to latex allergy. K. Cornish 10:00 Intermission. 10:15 159. Synthesis and biodégradation of plant protein composites. P. Ye, L. Reitz, C. Horan, R. S. Parnas 10:45 160. Oxidation of lignin-based chemicals and their uses as thermoset resin monomers. A. P. Somlai, A. Detwiler, M. D. Gawryla, D. Akinbade, M. T. Bell, Y. Lee, D. A. Schiraldi 11:15 161. Use of N-heterocyclic carbene compounds for the production of degradeable polymeric materials. A. P. Dove, A. Sentman, D. Culkin, J. Hedrick, R. M. Waymouth 11:45 162. Synthesis of well-defined (biodegradable polymeric materials with disulfide bonds by atom transfer radical polymerization. N. V. Tsarevsky, K. Matyjaszewski Section Ε San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 1 ACS Award For Creative Invention V. Ashby,

Organizer

J. S. Moore,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:40 163. Advances in self-healing polymers. J. S. Moore, J. D. Rule, C. Hickenboth, N. Sottos, S. White 9:10 164. Does branching really matter: From gene transfer agents and submicron fiber formation to sensors and elastomers? T. E. Long, S. Unal, M. G. McKee, A. R. Fornof, J. Layman, A. Willis, A. N. Rudisin, B. D. Mather, J. Sheth, B. J. Akle, D. J. Leo, G. L Wilkes 9:40 165. Application of complex macromolecular architectures for advanced micro­ electronic materials. J. L. Hedrick 10:10 Intermission. 10:30 166. New materials design concepts at the interfaces with catalysis and biology. Z. Guan

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 2 Carl S. Marvel Creative Polymer Chemistry Award Molecular Sensors E. L Thomas, Organizer,

Presiding

8:55 Introductory Remarks. 9:00 169. Polymer electronics for ultra-sensi­ tive chemical/biological sensors. T. M. Swager 9:30 170. Synthesis of polymers with con­ trolled structures using olefin metathesis initiators. R. H. Grubbs 10:00 Intermission. 10:15 171. Designing fundamental electronic functions via self-assembly. V. Percec 10:45 172. Supramolecular chemistry with multimetallic annuli. M. J. MacLachlan 11:15 173. Encapsulated catalysts: A new tool for multistep synthesis. D. T. McQuade 11:45 174. Functional pi-electron materials with main group elements. S. Yamaguchi

2:00 184. Surface-interfacial morphologies from non-spherical colloidal dispersions: Synthesis and stimuli-responsive film forma­ tion. W. R. Dreher, D. J. Lestage, M. W. Urban 2:20 185. Polymer depletion forces and surfac­ tant adsorption. J. A. Zasadzinski, H. W. Taeusch 2:50 Intermission. 3:00 186. Biomaterial and adhesive properties of nano-patterned surfaces. M. M. Santore, A. M. Toscano, N. Kozlova 3:30 187. Polymer surface chemistry for tissue engineering: Combined wound healing and drug delivery. J-W. Lee, C. M. Mahoney, J. Yu, J. A. Gardella Jr. 4:00 188. Intercellular communication in the adaptive immune system. A. K. Chakraborty 4:30 189. Sulphate end functionalized heparin mimetic biodegradable poly(trimethylenecarbonate). B. Atthoff, F. Nederberg, J. Hilborn, T. Bowden 4:50 190. DNA-based reversible polymers in solution and on surfaces. J . Xu, S. Craig 5:10 191. Biotin/Streptavidin recognition on polymer brushes and self-assembled mono­ layers. K. Qi, C. Zhou, A. V. Walker, K. L. Wooley, S. B. Jhaveri, D. Y. Sogah, M. Malkoch, M. Beinhoff, K. R. Carter, C. J. Hawker

D. T. McQuade, Organizer,

Section A

S. J. Clarson, M. Muraoka, D. E. Morse, K. Shiba, D. W. Smith Jr., I. Yamashita, M. E. Van Dyke, and D. Pum, Organizers

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 192. New chemical tools for protein modification. M. B. Francis 2:15 110. Biologically active polymeric multiva­ lent ligands. L. L. Kiessling 2:55 Intermission. 3:15 194. Toward non-natural polymers that fold and function. D. T. Mcquade, J-I. Park, S. L. Roth 3:55 195. Design of size-expanded genetic systems. E. T. Kool

M. D. Schulte,

Section D

Presiding

Section Β San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 4

Presiding

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 6 Degradable Polymers And Materials Cosponsored with I EC K. Khemani and C. Scholz, M. Vert and G. N. Tew,

Organizers

Presiding

1:30 196. Degradable polymers: Are sources and chemistries important? G. Swift, R. Baciu 2:00 197. UVA and UVB irradiation of heterophasic propylene-ethylene copolymers: Visualizing stabilization and early stages of degradation using electron spin resonance imaging (ESRI). S. Schlick, K. Kruczala 2:30 198. Photodegradable polymers contain­ ing metal-metal bonds along their back­ bones: Mechanistic study of how tensile stress affects the rate of polymer photodegradation. D. R. Tyler, R. Chen, B. C. Daglen 3:00 Intermission. 3:15 199. Regulation of genes relevant to microbial degradation of xenobiotic poly­ mers. F. Kawai, A. Tani, K. Kimbara 3:45 200. Dendrimer disassembly: Strategies and application. D. McGrath 4:15 201. Cutinase: A new tool for biomodifi­ cation of synthetic fibers. A. Cavaco-Paulo 4:45 202. Recycling through depolymerization strategies: The decomposition of polyguanidines. Β. Μ. Novak

Polymer Surfaces And Interfaces Structured and Bio-Related Films F. D. Blum and R. M. Laine,

Organizers

J. A. Zasadzinski and J. A. Gardella, Presiding 1:30 183. Chain conformation of adsorbed ethylene random copolymers. M. McAlduff, L. Reven

V. Sheares Ashby,

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:40 203. Creating new materials by ATRP. K. Matyjaszewski 2:10 204. Soft lithography and nanofabrication. G. M. Whitesides, B. Gates, B. Mayers, Q.Xu 2:40 205. Effect of organoclay structure on the formation of polymer nanocomposites. D. R. Paul 3:10 Intermission. 3:30 206. CCVmediated clay-polymer com­ posites. Q. Zhao, E. T. Samulski 4:00 207. Ionic disulfonated poly(arylene ether sulfone) copolymer (BPSH) transducers as electromechanical system components for sensors and actuators. J. E. McGrath, K. B. Wiles, B. J. Akle, M. Bennett, D. J. Leo 4:30 208. Award Address (ACS Award for Creative Invention, sponsored by Corpora­ tion Associates). Fluoropolymers for use in next generation microfluidic devices, micromolding/soft lithographic techniques, and as proton exchange membranes and inks for use in fuel cells. J. M. DeSimone

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 2

TUESDAY AFTERNOON

1:30 175. Hyperbranched, high-strength, segmented polyurea elastomers. I. Yilgor, E. Yilgor 2:00 176. Dendrimer folding in aqueous media. J. R. Parquette, A. Hofacker 2:30 177. Synthesis and application of Click functionalized dendrimers as cross-linkers for nanoparticle delivery agents. R. K. O'Reilly, M. J. Joralemon, C. J. Hawker, K. L. Wooley 2:50 178. Linear-hyperbranched amphiphilic block copolymers self-assembled into welldefined superstructures. E. Barriau, A. Garcia Marcos, K. Fischer, H. Kautz, M. Schmidt, H. Frey 3:10 Intermission. 3:30 179. Poly(styrene-block- 2-methyltetrahydrofuran-2,5-diyl): A synthetic analogue to ion channels proteins. T. W. Smith, S. Rieth 4:00 180. Dendronized polymers by combina­ tion of the macromonomer route and the {prime}{prime}graft-to" approach. A. M. Nystrôm, A. Huit 4:20 181. Dendrimers based on melamine for drug delivery. E. E. Simanek 4:40 182. Protein macroinitiators for atom transfer radical polymerization. D. Bontempo, H. D. Maynard

ACS Award For Creative Invention

Section F San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 3 Biomimetic Polymers Transcription and Translation

Biological and Synthetic Macromolecules For Emerging Nanotechnologies

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 1

Section C

Polymer Nanocomposites Structure-Property Relationships - Theory and Modeling Cosponsored with PMSE

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 5

Section Ε

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

Carl S. Marvel Creative Polymer Chemistry Award Novel Chemistries E. L. Thomas,

Organizer

B. E. W. Meijer,

Presiding

1:30 209. Exploiting click chemistry in the design of new materials. C. J. Hawker, M. Malkoch, R. K. O'Reilly, E. Drockenmuller, R. Thibault, J. Hunt, W. Liu, K. Schleicher, K. L. Wooley 2:00 210. Polymeric microsphere sensor arrays as a platform for cross reactive sensing. D. R. Walt, S. Bencic 2:30 211. Shear-induced layer-by-layer molecular assembly method. J . Kim 3:00 Intermission. 3:30 212. Plastronics: Block copolymer nanowires, end-group assembly, and FETs. R. D. McCullough, T. Kowalewski, M. C. lovu, M. Jeffries-EL, G. Sauvé, R. Zhang, J. Cooper, D. W. Laird, J. Liu 4:00 213. Extending the concept of low bandgap conjugated polymers. F. Wudl, R. C. Chiechi, H. Wang, C. SchaffnerHamann, J. Yamada, M. Bendikov 4:30 214. Redox-induced conformational change in conjugated oligomers. M. J. Marsella Polymer Nanocomposites Structure-Property Relationships Experimental Cosponsored with PMSE T U E S D A Y EVENING Section A Convention Center Sails Pavilion Biological And Synthetic Macromolecules For Emerging Nanotechnologies S. J. Clarson, Organizer,

Presiding

6:00-8:00 215. Modification of com derived polymers for commodity and biomedical applications: Poly(lactide depsipeptide)s, polyhydroxyalkanoate-b-polylactides and oligoethyleneend-capped-polylactides. D. Haynes, N. Abayasinghe, D. W. Smith Jr. 216. Study of the delivery of the hydrophobic drugs by fluoroalkyl terminated polyethylene glycol hydrogels using NMR and ESR Spectroscopy. A. Prabhutendolkar, E. Mathias, D. Y. Ba

TECH-111

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 217. Synthetic fibers for connecting muscle to bone, muscle to muscle, or muscle to device. J. E. Franklin, S. J. Clarson, D. B. Melvin, A. J. Melvin, M. T. Bryne 218. A new β-cyclodextrin/oligoamine dendrimer for DNA delivery. G. Zhang, S. Srinivasachari, T. M. Reineke 219. Antibacterial nanocomposites: A novel delivery medium. B. Dizman, J. C. Badger, L. J. Mathias 220. Chitosan/poly(vinyl alcohol) nanofibers. L Li, Y-L. Hsieh 221. Cobalt oxide nanoparticle synthesis using cage-shaped protein cavity. R. Tsukamoto, K. Iwahori, M. Muraoka, I. Yamashita 222. Combination of LFRP and click chemistry for orthogonal modification of well-defined terpolymers. R. Thibault, M. Malkoch, Ε. Drockenmuller, M. Messerschmidt, B. Voit, C. J. Hawker 223. Conformational analysis of poly-N-isopropyl-acrylamide brushes by force spectros­ copy. N. Gunari, C. Li, K. Fischer, A. Janshoff, M. Schmidt 224. Cylindrical polypeptide brushes. B. Zhang, K. Fischer, M. Schmidt 225. Effects of metabolic inhibitors on polyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimer-mediated endocytosis: Active tranport vs. passive transport. S. Hong, J. L. Peters, P. R. Leroueil, A. U. Bielinska, J. R. Baker Jr., B. G. Orr, M. M. Banaszak Holl 226. Fabrication of inorganic nanoparticle array on a solid wafer from cage-shaped proteins. S. Yoshii, I. Yamashita 227. Light sensitive polymeric nano-micelles: Chemo-enzymatic synthesis and character­ ization. R. Tyagi, R. Kumar, V. S. Parmar, J. Kumar, A. C. Watterson 228. Synthesis and cell viability studies of polyhedral oligosilsesquioxane - polycaprolactone hybrid materials. S. Skaria, S. R. Schricker 229. Synthesis of a macrocyclic biarylene ether sulfone using Ni(0) catalyst. S. Chatterjee Ganguly, H. W. Gibson 230. Synthesis of hybrid nanomaterials of cage-shaped protein with synthetic polymer. M. Muraoka, N. Kishimoto, I. Yamashita 231. The peculiar features of amphiphilic carbosilane dendrimers - surfactant interaction depends on hydrophilic outer shell density. A. S. Tereshchenko, E. V. Getmanova, N. F. Bakeev, A. V. Pertsov, A. M. Muzafarov Section Β

240. Synthesis of poly(e-lysine)-grafted dextrans and their pH- and thermosensitive hydrogelation with cyclodextrins. H. S. Choi, K. Yamamoto, T. Ooya, N. Yui 241. Targeting the quadruplex-forming repres­ sor element of c-myc using PNA. S. Roy, D. H. Ly, B. A. Armitage Section C Convention Center Sails Pavilion Carbon Nanotubes, Polymers, And Complex Fluids Cosponsored with PMSE F. Papadimitrakopoulos, Presiding

Organizer,

6:00-8:00 242. Characterization of layer-by-layer assembled carbon nanotube/polyelectrolyte films. S. Gupta, G. Huang, H. Lu, A. A. Mamedov 243. Probing the activity of single walled carbon nanotube - enzyme complexes. P. W. Barone, S. Baik, M. S. Strano 244. Separation of single wall carbon nano­ tubes. F. Papadimitrakopoulos, Z. Luo, S. N. Kim, S-Y. Ju, R. Li, S. Vaddiraju 245. Solubilization of single-walled carbon nanotubes using Aerosol-OT. S. C. Wang, H. Yang, D. L. Akins 246. An investigation on acid-treated carbon nanotubes. Y-T. Shieh, G-L. Liu 247. Assembly of carbon nanotube arrays. H. Ko, C. Jiang, V. V. Tsukruk 248. Functionalization of carbon nanotubes with substituted benzoic acids via Fiedel-Crafts reaction in polyphosphoric acid. H-J. Lee, S-J. Oh, D-K. Keum, L. S. Tan, J. B. Baek 249. Functionalization of single-walled carbon nanotubes with well-defined polymers. A. Adronov, C. M. Homenick, Y. Liu, Z. Yao 250. Grafting of well-defined polymers from the surface of functionalized single-walled car­ bon nanotubes via atom transfer radical polymerization and visualization of the polymer-nanotube hybrids by atomic force microscopy. N. V. Tsarevsky, W. Wu, J. L. Hudson, T. Kowalewski, J. M. Tour, K. Matyjaszewski 251. Single-walled carbon nanotubes grafted with a cationic polyelectrolyte. M. N. Tchoul, W. T. Ford, M. K. Gheith, J. P. Wicksted, M. Motamedi 252. Styrenic nanocomposite containing welldispersed carbon nanotubes. R. C-C. Tsiang, l-C. Liu

259. In vitro degradation of star-shaped PCL-bD,L-PLGA50 copolymer microsphere. C-M. Dong Sr., K-Y. Qiu Sr., Z-W. Gu Sr., X-D. Feng Sr. 260. In vitro release behavior of D,L-PLGA50based copolymer microsphere. C-M. Dong, K-Y. Qiu Sr., Z-W. Gu Sr., X-D. Feng Sr. 261. Molecular characterization of a poly(3hydroxybutyrate) depolymerase from a filamentous fungus, Pénicillium funiculosum. K-l. Kasuya, Y. Tezuka, N. Ishii, Y. Yamagata, Y. Hamai, M. Shiraki, T. Saito 262. Patterning of cells on bioresist for tissue engineering applications: Lithographic approach. Y. Umar, M. Thiyagaragan, C. Halberstadt, K. E. Gonsalves 263. Polymer composites reinforced by defatted soy flour. L. Jong 264. Porous materials derived from poly(ecaprolactone)-poly(methyl methacrylate) based interpenetrating polymer networks by selective aminolysis and photolysis. R. Balaji, S. Boileau, P. Guérin, D. Grande 265. Preparation of alginate/half-acetylation chitosan blend fibers. L. Fan, Y. Du, Β. Zhang, J. Yang, X. Wang, J. Cai 266. Preparation of rapidly degradable poly(Llactic acid) nanofiber non-woven mat via electrospinning. Y. Osanai, Ο. Η. Kwon, H. Uyama 267. Strength enhancement of wheat protein based biodegradable polymer materials. X. Zhang 268. Synthesis and physical characterization of novel biodegradable polyesters for nucleic acid delivery. C-C. Lee, L. E. Prevette, M. L. Lynch, T. M. Reineke 269. Synthesis and polymerization of derivatized lactide monomers. N. J. Vogeley, G. L. Baker, M. R. Smith III 270. Synthesis of biodegradable polymers from Itaconic Anhydride and Stearyl Methacry­ late. S. Shang, R. A. Weiss, S. J. Huang 271. Synthesis, characterization and degrada­ tion of poly(ester-anhydride) based on polycaprolactone. F. Fay, I. Linossier, V. Langlois, K. Vallée-Rehel, E. Renard, P. Guérin Section Ε Convention Center Sails Pavilion General Papers Polymer Characterization and Synthesis D. Garcia,

Convention Center Sails Pavilion

Section D Convention Center Sails Pavilion

Biomimetic Polymers D. T. McQuade, Organizer,

Presiding

6:00-8:00 232. A maltose biosensor constructed from a maltose binding protein immobilized in polyethylene glycol) hydrogel. W. Cai, J. B. Pitner, G. Vonk 233. Adsorption of non-fouling polymers functionalized with mussel adhesive protein mimetic peptides: Computational predictions and experimental observations. S. Grubjesic, J. L. Dalsin, F. Fang, I. Szleifer, P. B. Messersmith 234. Beta-sheet forming lipopeptides as tem­ plates for the mineralization of CaC0 3 . S. Cavalli, D. Popescu, E. Tellers, M. Overhand, N. A. J. M. Sommerdijk, A. Kros 235. Importance of water structure for molecu­ lar design of biocompatible polymer hydrogel. T. Morisaku, T. Ikehara, J. Watanabe, M. Takai, K. Ishihara 236. Interaction between vancomycin and the helical polymer bearing D-alanyl-D-alanine pendants. L. Wang, Z. Yang, H. Gu, L. M. Lai, B. Z. Tang, B. Xu 237. Invasion of an RNA quadruplex by complementary and homologous peptide nucleic acids probes. V. L. Marin, B. A. Armitage 238. Molecularly imprinted arrays implemented for analyte identification. Ν. Τ. Greene, J-D. Lee, J-l. Hong, K. D. Shimizu 239. Preparation of gradient polyethylene sur­ face with biofunctional groups. M. S. Kim, K. S. Seo, K. D. Hong, S. K. Kim, G. Khang, T. G. Lee, D. W. Moon, H. B. Lee

112-TECH

Degradable Polymers And Materials K. Khemani and C. Scholz, Presiding

Organizers,

6:00-8:00 253. Alternative routes to degradable poly(hydrazide) derivatives. G. C. D. Metral, J. C. Tiller 254. Biodegradable copolymers based on polycaprolactone for antifouling paints. F. Fay, V. Langlois, K. Vallée-Rehel, E. Renard, I. Linossier, P. Guérin 255. Chemical durability studies of model compounds and Nation under conditions which mimic fuel cell operations. C. Zhou, T. A. Zawodzinski, D. A. Schiraldi 256. Controlled melt/solid polycondensation of L- and D-lactic acids to obtain stereoblock poly(lactic acid). K. Fukushima, Y. Kimura 257. Effects of temperature and salinity on films prepared from polyurethane dispersions. F. C. Thadison, D. A. Wicks 258. Improvement of crystallinity and heat resistance of Poly (lactic acid) by Pyrophyllite. Y. Kita, K. Yoshida

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

Presiding

6:00-8:00 272. UV curable coatings for improved gas barrier properties of poly(ethylene terephthalate). E. Kaya, T. J. Smith, B. R. Nayak, L. J. Mathias 273. DNA Molecules for single polymer physics, rheology and biophysics research. S. Laib, R. Robertson, D. E. Smith 274. Well-defined ethylene-co-vinyl ether poly­ mers. T. W. Baughman, E. van der Aa, S. E. Lehman Jr., K. B. Wagener 275. Fluorosilicone o-ring equilibrium force determination study. R. Bernstein 276. Development of fructose biofuel cells. Y. A. Ansari, S. D. Minteer 277. Methylene-bridged polysilsesquioxanes: Substitution of a methylene spacer within a silicate matrix. K. J. Shea, J. Tran, D. A. Loy, J. H. Small 278. Reproducibility of the carbon black and S b 0 2 doped titanium dioxide filled silicone rubber heaters. E. S. Park 279. Smart polymer coatings as new platforms for heavy metal sensing and sequestration. S. Brown, D. Porter, L. Potts, Η. N. Gray 280. Studies on effect of the removal of chlo­ ride ion in ionic liquids by extraction method with dichloromethane. X. Song, C. Li, S. Liu, H. Li, F. Gu 281. Studies on the process of crosslinking of polyvinyl alcohol)-borate aqueous solution. D. Zhao, D. Zhang, M. Zhang, R. Zhang, G. Gao, X. Song, Y. Li, Q. Li, F. Liu 282. Conjugated push-pull systems by snap together modules. W. G. Skene, S. Dufresne 283. Corrosion prevention of cold rolled steel using water dispersible tanninsulfonic aciddoped polyaniline (TANI-PANI). K. K. Taylor, N. Cavin, J. Dilday, A. Gunter, C. Cole, R. Soora, B. C. Berry, T. Viswanathan

284. Pt-catalyzed chemical modification of PDMS with vinylheptaphenylcyclotetrasiloxane. T. M. Gàdda, W. P. Weber 285. Near infrared (NIR) studies of PVC film photo-degradation. D. Garcia, M. Cibulsky 2 8 6 . 1 3 C NMR analysis of the oxidative degradation of selectively labeled polypropylene. D. M. Mowery, R. A. Assink, D. K. Derzon, R. L. Clough, S. B. Klamo, R. Bernstein 287. Supramolecular chemistry of surface modified polypropylene imine dendrimers by NMR spectroscopy. D. Banerjee, S. Baiagern, M. H. P. van Genderen, M. A. C. Broeren, E. W. Meijer, P. L. Rinaldi 288. Preparation and spectroscopic characterization of silica-gel monoliths containing rare-earth porphyrin complex. L. Wei 289. Effect of plasticizer on PVAc-d 3 dynamics using deuterium solid state NMR. R. R. Nambiar, F. D. Blum 290. Studies on the viscoelastic properties of ultrahigh molecular weight partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide. D. Zhao, M. Zhang, D. Zhang, H. Xu, P. Xu, R. Wu, G. Gao, F.Liu 291. Nonisothermal crystallization kinetics of PA1010/TPU blends. S. Zhang, G. Wang, L. Wang, Z. Wu 292. The morphology of compatibilized polyethersulfones and polycarbonates blends. D. Jiang, X. Chen V, Y. Yang, J. Chen, W. Ou, Z. Jiang 293. Morphology control of poly(p-mercaptobenzoyl) by modification of oligomer endgroup. K. Kimura, D. Nakajima, K. Kobashi, S-l. Kohama, Y. Yamashita, T. Uchida 294. Morphology of poly(p-oxycinnamoyl) formed by hydrodynamically induced crystallization during solution polymerization. K. Kimura, M. Muraoka, Y. Yamashita, T. Uchida 295. Development of enzyme immobilization polymers for a soybean oil powered fuel cell. J. Kerr, S. D. Minteer 296. Graphite/ICP composites of high conductivity. S. E. Bourdo, T. Viswanathan 297. Highly conductive oligoethyleneoxy-functionalized silanes. Z. Zhang, N. A. A. Rossi, C. Olson, Q. Wang, K. Amine, R. West 298. Proton conductivity and properties of sulfonated polyarylenethioethersulfone copolymer as polymer electrolyte membrane materials. Z. Bai, J. L. Cloud, T. D. Dang 299. Synthesis and properties of a new conducting PPP derivative- thiophene copolymer. I. T. Kim, S. W. Lee, S. Y. Kim, J. S. Lee, G. B. Park 300. Advanced polyester dielectrics for high energy density capacitor applications. T. D. Dang, N. Venkatasubramanian, L. D. Williams, S. Fries-Carr, E. Fossum 301. Ambipolar carbonyl-functionalyzed oligothiophene semiconductors. A. Facchetti, M-H. Yoon, S. DiBenedetto, T. J. Marks 302. Ampholyte hydrogels based on methacrylates: Swelling behaviour and release studies. A. Licea-Claverie, R. Santos-Rosas, L. S. Palazuelos-Armijo, J. M. CornejoBravo, K. F. Arndt 303. Compatibility of polyamide 1010/ esterbased thermoplastic polyurethane elastomer blends. S. Zhang, G. Wang, L. Zhang, Z.Wu 304. Study on the coordination equilibrium of copper and ethylenediamine in ionic liquid. X. Song, H. Li, J. Li, J. Liu, Z. Li, S. Liu, C. Li, P. Wu 305. Supramolecular liquid crystalline polymers based on functionalized azopyridines. D. C. Rogness, P. J. Riedel, K. N. Wiegel 306. Physical aging of poly(ether sulfone) from enthalpy relaxation measurements. X. Zhou, Z. Jiang 307. Progress of study in cultured skin substitutes. L. Cui, Z. Han, Q. Zhang, J. Zhao, L. Wang 308. Main-chain viologen polymers with organic counterions exhibiting thermotropic liquidcrystalline properties. P. R. Vantine, H. Han, A. K. Nedeltchev, P. K. Bhowmik 309. Model studies towards emission-free cross-linking of unsaturated polyester resins. T. Straub, A. M. P. Koskinen 310. Molecular imprinting polymers for the detection of nerve gas agents. P. Taranekar, R. C. Advincula 311. Morphology study on supramolecular diblock copolymers associated via hydrogen-bonded molecular duplexes. W. Kim, H. Yang, X. Yang, C. Y. Ryu, M. Li, B. Gong

POLY

312. Thermo-responsive gels. L Wang, J. Zhao, Q. Zhang, Z. Han 313. Ultra-thin layer-by-layer films incorporating a photocrosslinkable polyelectrolyte: Swell­ ing and crosslinking. M. D. Millan, T. M. Fulghum, P. Diep, C. Oncescu, R. Byers, P. Waenkaew, R. C. Advincula, S. Kemper, V. Tran, L. Juarez-Guzman, S. Reed, J. Young, W. Blanton 314. Synthesis of polymerizable photosensitizer and photopolymerization kinetics study. J. Wang, L. J. Mathias 315. Temperature-dependant fluorescence study of ethylene-propylene random copoly­ mers in solution: Evidence for microcrystallization. M. Zhang, J. Duhamel, M. van Duin 316. Novel polyimides for optical applications. L M. Burke Jr., A. J. Jing, S. Z. D. Cheng, F. W. Harris 317. Fluorescence study of maleated ethylenepropylene copolymers: Evidence for succinimide induced polar associations. M. Zhang, J. Duhamel 318. Quantum mechanical approaches for predicting copolymer systems. S. B. Allin 319. Computer simulation study of three-dimen­ sional polymer solutions (I). Q. Zhang, L. Wang, J. Zhao, L. Cui 320. Computer simulation study of three-dimen­ sional polymer solution(ll). Q. Zhang, L. Liu 321. Synthesis and characterization of hyperbranched poly(arylene-ether-ketone-imide)s containing phenylethynyl groups. D. H. Wang, F. E. Arnold Jr., L-S. Tan 322. Syndiotactic polystyrene preparation cata­ lyzed by dinuclear (cyclopentadienyl)(aryloxy)titanium(IV) complexes with polymethylene bridge. S. K. Noh, W. Jung, Κ. Ε. Shin, W. S. Lyoo, D-H. Lee 323. Synthesis and characterization of poly(pyridinium salt)s with organic counterions exhibiting thermotropic liquid-crystalline properties. P. K. Bhowmik, H. Han, A. K. Nedeltchev, Z. Wang 324. A facile synthesis route to thiol functionalized â,ù-telechelic polymers via reversible addition fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization. D. L Patton, M. Mullings, R. C. Advincula 325. Aminooxy-functionalized semitelechelic polymers synthesized by atom transfer radical polymerization. K. L. Heredia, H. D. Maynard 326. Anionic synthesis of poly[2-(N,N-dialkylaminomethyl)-1,3-butadienes] as gene delivery vectors. Y. Yang, V. V. Sheares 327. Approaches to conjugated macromolecules via electrophilic carbohydrate reagents. D. J. Sandman, M. Keddy, R. Gumey, B. Tran 328. Synthesis and characterization of regular alt-copoly(carbosiloxane)s from oligodiphenylsiloxanes and decamethylpentasiloxane. T. M. Gadda, W. P. Weber 329. Synthesis of telechelic star shaped octabranched PDMS and preparation of thin films thereof. T. M. Gàdda, G. Cai, W. P. Weber 330. Novel pentamethylcyclopentadienyl titanium tris(p-substituted phenoxy) for syndiospecific polymerization of styrene in bulk. Z. Shen, R. Wang, W. Zhou, F. Zhu, S. Lin 331. Laccase polymerization of amino-phenol compounds. A. Zille, F. Munteanu, G. M. Guebitz, C-P. Artur 332. A novel method for preparing olefin oligomer synthetic lubricants. Z. Sun, C. Li 333. Synthesis and characterization of tri-block copolymers containing regioregular poly(3alkylthiophene). J. R. Cooper, P. Sreedharan, M. C. lovu, R. McCullough 334. Synthesis and characterization of aliphatic and aromatic hybrid nylons with high hydrocarbon content. K. Xu, W. Jerrett, L. J. Mathias 335. Synthesis of a new hyperbranched polymer by SCVP. L. Liu, Y. Li, G. Wang 336. Synthesis of narrow polydispersity polymers by precipitation polymerization. M. S. Nadupparambil, V. C. Malshe 337. Synthesis of novel methacrylate polymers containing norfloxacin. B. Dizman, L. J. Mathias 338. Simultaneous control of molecular weight and tacticity of poly(methyl methacrylate) by atom transfer radical polymerization in fluoroalcohol. Y. Miura, T. Satoh, H. Kaga, T. Kakuchi

339. Synthesis of poly(ethylene glycol)-blockpolyester copolymers as thermo-sensitive hydrogels. K. S. Seo, M. S. Kim, G. Khang, S. H. Cho, H. B. Lee 340. Synthethsis and characterization of novel sulfonated poly(arylene ether ketone) copolymers containing aromatic nitriles. J. Pang, H. Zhang, Z. Jiang 341. Synthesis of novel water-soluble fullerene antioxidants. B. C. Berry, R. Shekhawat, T. Viswanathan 342. Novel copolymers of vinyl acetate with trisubstituted ethylenes: Methoxy ring-substituted methyl 2-cyano-3-phenyl-2-propenoates. G. B. Kharas, A. L. Crawford, C. A. Diener, K. J. Payne, M. N. T. Sanidad, M. W. Sims, S. Yazdani, D. Leung, J. Loumbardias, X. Tian, K. Watson 343. One-pot synthesis, characterization, and catenation of 6-vinylsilyl-5-silacyclohepta1,3-dienes. B-H. Kim, B-S. Pyo, H-G. Woo, S-W. Lee 344. Phthalonitrile-terminated hyperbranched poly(arylene-ether-ketone-imide): Synthesis and its blending with 4,4'-bis(3,4-dicyanophenoxy)biphenyl. D. H. Wang, J. B. Baek, L-S. Tan 345. Polymerization of N- vinyl formamide by using an initiator 2,2'-Azobis[2-(2-imidazolin2-yl) propane] dihydrochloride. J. Banerjee, A. Srivastava, K. Behari 346. Preparation and analysis of initiator-core polyurea microcapsules using pentamines and diamines as shell components. S. J. Popwell, B. H. McFarland, J. Pojman Sr. 347. Preparation and properties of films prepared by reaction of 1,9-bis(glycidyloxypropyl)pentasiloxanes with a,o-bis(3-aminopropyl)-PDMS. N. S. Lee, W. P. Weber 348. Preparations and omamens of magnetic particles. J. Zhao, L. Wang, Q. Zhang, Z.Han 349. Reactions of borane with trimethylsilyl diazomethane and ethyl diazoacetate. J. Bai, K. J. Shea 350. Studies of the hydrosilylation reactions of dihydrosilanes with 1,3-diethynyltetramethyldisiloxane. C. L. Kepler, Β. Β. Hueholt 351. Mechanism and kinetics of the nickelassisted cross-coupling polymerizations of regioregular 3-alkyl-functionalized polythiophenes. E. E. Sheina, M. C. lovu, R. D. McCullough 352. Mechanism of formation of helical confor­ mation in radical polymerization of menthylacrylates near ceiling temperature. H. Tanaka, M. Niwa 353. Multifunctional photo-initiator for acrylate and methacrylate polymerization. B. R. Nayak, L. J. Mathias 354. Development of a simple route to hyper­ branched poly(arylene ether sulfone)s. P. Himmelberg, E. Fossum 355. Direct copolymerization of sulfonated poly(arylene ether ketone) with a pendant 3,5-ditrifluoromethylphenyl group. H. Zhang, J. Pang, Z. Jiang 356. Facile synthesis of poly(phenylene-ether) dendrimers from unprotected AB 2 -building block using thionyl chloride as a condensing agent. N. Yamazaki, I. Washio, Y. Shibasaki, M. Ueda 357. Investigation of the difluoromethyl group as an activator for nucleophilic aromatic substitution. R. W. Kopitzke, R. Gunawidjaja 358. Living radical polymerization of acrylic monomers mediated by organo-cobalt porphyrin complexes in the presence of azo radical sources. X. Fu, Z. Lu, M. Fryd, Β. Β. Wayland 359. Living ring opening grafting copolymeriza­ tion of cyclic esters from poly(methyl methacrylate-co-glycidyl methacrylate). A. D. Asandei, G. Saha 360. Main-chain thermotropic liquid-crystalline ionene polymers based on 1,2-bis(4-pyridyl)ethane. P. K. Bhowmik, P. R. Vantine, A. K. Nedeltchev, H. Han 361. Using NaOH solution as a reaction medium for synthesis and recycle of watermiscible room temperature ionic liquids. X. Song, S. Liu, C. Li, H. Li, F. Gu, J. Wang 362. Ultrathin films of electrochemicallycrosslinked poly(vinylcarbazole) and gold nanoparticle as composite material. C. Huang, P. Taranekar, J. Y. Park, Y. Park, R. C. Advincula 363. Gold nanoparticles stabilized by a star block copolymer and simultaneous polymer­ ization of a dithiophenylpyrrole monomer. M. D. Millan, P. Taranekar, P. Waenkaew, R. C. Advincula

364. Covalent and non-covalent nanocapsules based on hyperbranched polyethylenimine (PEI). Z. Shen, Y. Chen, H. Frey, S-E. Stiriba 365. Green chemistry approach to gold and palladium nanostructures. N. N. Mallikarjuna, A. Wu, H. Kolla, S. K. Manohar 366. Preparation of carbonized nanodots from controlled star block copolymers containing crosslinkable diacetylenic group. B. J . Kim, J. Y. Chang 367. Encapsulation of nanosized Ti02 by polyacrylamid via inverse emulsion polymer­ ization. D. Zhang Jr., D. Zhao, M. Zhang, L. Guo, X. Song, Y. Li, Q. Li, F. Liu 368. Withdrawn. 369. Preparation and characterization of Ti02 nanoparticles in water-in-oil emulsions. D. Zhang, R. Wu, X. Song, Y. Li, Q. Li, D. Zhao, X. Leng, F. Liu 370. Preparation of Ag-polyacrylamide hybrid microspheres via inverse emulsion polymer­ ization. D. Zhang Jr., X. Song Sr., Y. Li Jr., Q. Li Jr., F. Liang Sr., X. Liu Jr., J. Fang, F.Liu 371. Preparation of silver-polymer nanocomposites through electrostatic attaction. R. Zhang Sr., D. Zhang, H. Mao, M. Zhang, D. Zhao, R. Wu, L. Guo, J. Fang, X. Liu, F.Liu 372. Preparation of zinc sulfide-polystyrene nanocomposites. L. Guo, R. Wu, X. Song, Y. Li, Q. Li, D. Zhang, R. Zhang, F. Liu 373. Novel polymeric nanoparticles with the Eu(lll)-complex. J. S. Choi, J. S. Lim, C. I. Lee, D. H. Suh 374. Preparation of BPNO3/Span80-tween80/ toluene microemulsion and its application in synthesis of Ti02 nanoparticles. X. Song, F. Gu, Q. Li, F. Liang, D. Zhang, Y. Li, Q. Li, F.Liu 375. Synthesis of silica /poly(acrylate) nano­ composites. L. Chen, S. Chen, Y. Gu 376. "Anchor Wrapping" of polymer up nanom­ eter-sized Sio2. R. Wu, L. Guo, D. Zhang, R. Zhang, X. Song, Y. Li, Q. Li, F. Liu 377. Amphiphilic graft copolymers of SBS with acrylamide. H-Q. Xie, J-C. Deng, J-S. Guo, D.Xie 378. Chemical structure and antitumor activity of sulfated derivatives of water-insoluble polysaccharide isolated from Poria cocos. Y. Wang Jr., Y. Chen, C. Zhang Sr. 379. Synthesis, characterization, and thermal stability enhancement of poly(vinylsilane)s. B-H. Kim, B-S. Pyo, H-G. Woo, Y-M. Hwang 380. Synthesis, luminescence of terpyridinecontaining PPE/PPV hybrid conjugated polymers and their zinc complexes. Q. Chu, Y. Pang Section F Convention Center Sails Pavilion Polymer Surfaces And Interfaces F. D. Blum and R. M. Laine, Presiding

Organizers,

6:00-8:00 381. A comparison of ATRP and RAFT surface initiated polymerization from planar polyelec­ trolyte multilayer thin films with surface macroinitiators to form polymer brushes. T. M. Fulghum, M. D. Millan, C. Oncescu, R. Byers, R. C. Advincula 382. Copolymers and blends of methyl acrylate and acrylic isobutyl POSS nanomaterials. M. B. Nair, F. D. Blum 383. Counter-ion distribution and polyelectrolyte mobility in polyelectrolyte multilayers. H. L. Tan, T. Krebs, G. Andersson, H. Morgner, P. G. Van Patten 384. Deuterium NMR studies of segmental dynamics of anopore-adsorbed poly(methyl acrylate). M. O. Okuom, F. D. Blum 385. Electrochemical crosslinking of oligofluorene-capped CdSe nanoparticles via electro­ chemical cross-linking. A. Ikarashi, D. L. Patton, A. Baba, J. Locklin, R. C. Advincula, K. Kato, K. Shinbo, F. Kaneko 386. Electrochemical dip-pen nanolithography (EDPN) on a polyfluorene precursor polyionene/PSS layer-by-layer ultrathin film. A. Baba, R. Xu, W. Knoll, R. C. Advincula

387. Estimation of bound carbonyls in PMMAr-PS copolymers adsorbed on silica. P. K. Challa, B. Zhang, F. D. Blum 388. Fabrication, optical properties, and model­ ing of gold nanoparticle/polyelectrolyte layer-by-layer ultrathin films. R. Xu, A. Baba, J. Locklin, K. Tamada, R. C. Advincula 389. Formation of thiol-terminated polyguanidine monolayer films on gold. Y. Lu, H-Z. Tang, Β. Μ. Novak 390. Hybridization of poly(amido amine) den­ drimers with an azacrown core and long alkyl chain spacers on solid substrate and at liquid interface. M. Ujihara 391. Investigating the direct grafting of organic functionality from nanoparticle surfaces: Aromatic coupling reactions. Y. Park, J. Locklin, D. L. Patton, R. C. Advincula 392. Macromolecular exchange and self-ex­ change in polyelectrolyte multilayers. H. Jumaa, J. B. Schlenoff 393. Patterned nonfouling polymer thin films grown by surface-initiated polymerization from a biomimetic initiator. X. Fan, L. Lin, J. L. Dalsin, P. B. Messersmith 394. Patterned poly(oligoethylene glycol acry­ late) brushes on silica substrates. H. Tu, C. E. Heitzman, R. C. Evans, P. V. Braun 395. Polymer surface-induced crystallization of amorphous calcium carbonate film. K. Cho, J . T. Han, X. Xu, H. S. Lim 396. Surface modification of silica particles by controlled radical polymerization. P. Antoni, D. Nystrom, E. Malmstrom, M. Johansson, A. Huit 397. Surface segregation and bulk thermody­ namics in blends of linear and highly branched polymers. J . S. Lee, R. P. Quirk, M. D. Foster, B. Hammouda, C. F. Majkrzak Section G Convention Center Sails Pavilion Smart Polymer Films, Composites, And Devices G. A. Gaddy and M. S. Bratcher, Organizers, Presiding 6:00-8:00 398. Hierarchical design and development of shape memory polymer nanocomposites. R. D. Hreha, B. M. Harmon, K. M. Muckley, E. Havens, T. H. Tong 399. Fabricate the super-hydrophobic surface via spin-coating polymer solution on glass. C-K. Huang 400. Conductive pet film with polyaniline sul­ fonic acid/polyester binder composite. S. Konagaya 401. Effect of structural changes of organic modifiers of montmorillonite on the mechani­ cal properties of nitrite rubber nanocompos­ ites. M. Han, S. A. Park, E. Kim 402. Influence of titanium tetrabutoxide amounts on hardness and modulus of transparent films based on silsesquioxanes. P. Chen, J. Liu, L. Hu, J. Cui 403. Phase separation of excimer-forming fluorescent dyes and amorphous polymers: A versatile mechanism for sensor applica­ tions. B. R. Crenshaw, K. Smith, C. Weder 404. Preparation and characterization of bio­ compatible smart core-shell polymeric microgels. M. F. Leung, J. Zhu, F. W. Harris, P. Li 405. Preparation and properties of polydimethylsiloxane nanocomposite containing Cad­ mium Selenide nanoparticles. D. W. Kang, H. J. Kang, O. Kim, J. Y. Kim 406. Scratch profile of SSO-films based on trialkoxysilenes modified with TEOS and TTBO. P. Chen, S. Zhao, L. Hu, J. Cui 407. Synthesis and characterization of dual functionalized Laponite clay. J. Wang, P. A. Wheeler, W. L. Jarrett Jr., L. J. Mathias 408. Synthesis and characterization of hollow Titania nanospheres using a cationic colloi­ dal particle as a template. T. H. Kim, J. P. Kang, Y. K. Kwon

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

TECH-113

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 409. Synthesis of an amphiphilic triblock copolymer with a conjugated oligofluorene rod segment-l. H. S. Kim, H. J. Kim, Y. K. Kwon 410. Synthesis of an amphiphilic triblock copolymer with a conjugated oligofluorene rod segment-ll. H. J. Kim, H. S. Kim, S. T. Kim, Y. K. Kwon 411. Synthesis of rod-coil diblock copolymers of polyfluorostyrene-b-poly(methyl methacrylate) by atom transfer radical polymerization. S. T. Kim, H. J. Kim, Y. S. Ko, Y. K. Kwon 412. Unsymmetrical switching in the visible and NIR of spray coatable polymer electrochro­ mic devices. A. L Dyer, A. A. Argun, B. D. Reeves, C. R. G. Grenier, J. R. Reynolds 413. Oligo(fluorenyl)pyridine ligands and their iridium complexes: Synthesis, photophysical properties and electrophosphorescent devices. M. Tavasli, S. Bettington, M. R. Bryce, A. P. Monkman, H. A. AI Attar, F. B. Dias, S. King 414. Nanocomposite multilayer of Regioregular poly (3-propanoic acid thiophene)/Gold nanoparticle using the Layer-by-Layer selfassembly technique. H. Ikarashi, J. Locklin, A. Baba, R. C. Advincula, K. Shinbo, K. Kato, F. Kaneko 415. Adsorption of P2VP-dPS-P2VP triblock copolymers onto reactive monolayers: Towards multiply bound polymer chains. J. Y. Park, D. L Patton, M. Uu, J. W. Mays, M. D. Dadmun, R. C. Advincula WEDNESDAY MORNING

F. D. Blum and R. M. Laine, D. A h n and H. R. Brown,

Organizers

Presiding

8:30 425. Effects of contact time on the interfacial adhesion of miscible glassy and semicrystalline polymer layers. R. L. McSwain, K. R. Shull 8:50 426. Model studies for the interfacial adhesion in polypropylene/polyamide lami­ nates. I. Ozen, Y. Zou, C. Rustal, K. Dirnberger, H-G. Fritz, C. D. Eisenbach 9:10 427. Single-molecule studies of selfrepairing polymer bridges. F. R. Kersey, J. A. Keith, S. L. Craig 9:30 428. Properties and adhesion of thin films made by copper catalysed cycloaddition. N. Le Baut, H. R. Brown, M. G. Finn, D. D. Diaz, S. Punna 10:00 Intermission. 10:10 429. Instability and fracture in thin con­ fined elastic films. M. K. Chaudhury 10:40 430. Tuning adhesion with bicomponent polymeric brushes. H. Retsos, G. Gorodyska, A. Kiriy, M. Stamm, C. Creton 11:10 431. Correlating adhesion with local composition at silicone elastomer-polymer interfaces. D. Ahn, N. E. Shephard, P. A. Rolley, C. S. McMillan 11:35 432. Reactive modification of polymer interfaces: Formation of loops. M. D. Dadmun, J. K. Rice, J. W. Mays, H. Ji, G. D. Smith, D. Bedrov 12:00 433. Adhesion between polymeric fluids using a probe method. R. Schach, C. Creton

Section A

Section C

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 1

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 3

Biological and Synthetic Macromolecules For Emerging Nanotechnologies

Biomimetic Polymers Unnatural Biopolymers and Biopolymers from Unnatural Sources

M. Muraoka, D. E. Morse, K. Shiba, D. W . Smith Jr., I. Yamashita, M. E. Van Dyke, and D. Pum, Organizers S. J . Clarson, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 416. Enzyme-catalyzed esterification of cellulosics, guar, and polyethers. H. N. Cheng, Q-M. Gu 9:00 417. Photophysics of fullerene-doped macromolecules: Nonlinear absorbers, diffractive elements, and spatial light modu­ lators. N. V. Kamanina 9:20 418. Structural tailoring of polyelectrolytes and their potential role in nanotechnology. S. Champ, Y. Liu, S. Behrens 9:40 419. Protein nanotube-based device fabrication: Smart immbobilization and metallization via biomineralization. I. A. Banerjee, L. Yu, R. I. MacCuspie, N. Nueraji, H. Matsui 10:00 420. DNA photonics. J. A. Hagen, S. J. Clarson, J. G. Grote 10:20 Intermission. 10:40 421. Rational fabrication of polymeric nanostructures using soft lithography. B. W. Maynor, J. Rolland, A. E. Exner, J. M. DeSimone 11:00 422. Nano-porous ultra-high specific surface polyacrylonitrile fiber. L Zhang, Y-L. Hsieh 11:20 423. High performance laminates for advanced applications. H. W. Ahn 11:40 424. Fluorinated dimethacrylate mono­ mers and their effects on polymer dispersed liquid crystals. M. D. Schulte, S. J. Clarson, L V. Natarajan, T. J. Bunning 12:00 Concluding Remarks. SectionB San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 4 Polymer Surfaces And Interfaces Adhesion

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

114-TECH

D. T. McQuade, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 434. Polycarbonates from limonene oxide and carbon dioxide. G. W. Coates, C. M. Byrne 9:15 435. Biomimetic Design of synthetic polymers having high order structures: Modular multi-domain polymers having a peptidomimetic beta-sheet. J. Roland, Z.Guan 9:55 Intermission. 10:05 436. Bio-tailored amphiphilic graft copolymers. B. Parrish, K. Breitenkamp, R. B. Breitenkamp, M. Kade, T. Emrick 10:45 437. Synthetic filamentous phages from self-assembling biocompatible diblock copolymers. Y. Geng, P. Dalhaimer, D. Discher 11:25 438. Photocrosslinking of protein elas­ tomers. D. A. Tirrell, I. S. Carrico Section D

10:45 443. Radicals detected by electron spin resonance (ESR) in UV-irradiated Nafion membranes: The effect of counterions and H202. S. Schlick, M. K. Kadirov 11:15 444. Total luminescence intensity and Chromatographic fingerprinting: Tools for early degradation detection and classifica­ tion of degradable polyethylene films. L. E. Burman, A-C. Albertsson 11:45 445. State of the art: Biobased and biodegradable polymer technologies. R. Narayan Section Ε San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 6 Smart Polymer Films, Composites, And Devices Chromic Materials G. A. Gaddy and E. P. Locke, G. Mills,

Organizers

Section Β

Presiding

S. Crouch-Baker, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 446. Developing active polymers for smart electrochromic devices. J. R. Reynolds 9:15 447. Poly(imide-benzidine) electrochromic materials: Limiting factors on speed and stability. V. Cammarata, W. Zhu, J. Liang 9:55 Intermission. 10:15 448. Synthesis, thermal, and optical properties of end-capped oligothiophenes for use in organic electronics. S. A. Ponomarenko, S. Kirchmeyer, L. Brassât, A. Elschner, J. C. Simpson 10:55 449. Electrospinning of electrochromic conductive polymeric nanofibers. S-Y. Jang, M-S. Khil, V. Seshadri, M. Marquez, P. T. Mather, G. A. Sotzing 11:15 450. Creating polymer chameleons: Smart blends with self-assessing capabilities. B. R. Crenshaw, M. Bumworth, J. Kunzelman, J. Mendez, K. Smith, C. Weder 11:35 451. Microoptical components fabricated from polymer multilayers. O. Prucker, J. Dehnert, A. Mercan, W. Mônch, H. Zappe, J. Ruhe 11:55 452. Polymer dispersed liquid crystal (PDLC) modulator for thin film transistor (TFT) array inspection. X. Chen 12:15 453. In-plane-wwitching electrochromic device using conductive polymers. K. Kojima Polymer Nanocomposites Nanotubes for Nanocomposites Cosponsored with PMSE WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Section A San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 1

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 5

General Papers Polymer Characterization D. Garcia,

Polymer Surfaces And Interfaces Patterning and Particles F. D. Blum and R. M. Laine, W. Ford and R. M. Laine,

Organizers

Presiding

1:30 466. Withdrawn. 2:00 467. NMR and SANS Studies of nano­ particle polymer interactions. T. Cosgrove, R. Hughes, P. Reynolds, E. Stattersfield, A. Howe, A. Nelson 2:30 468. Libraries of nanosized, polyfunctional platforms and nanocomposites from cubic silsesquioxanes. R. M. Laine, C. Brick, M. Asuncion, M. Roll, S. Sulaiman, M. Lee, V. Kennedy 3:00 Intermission. 3:10 469. Well-defined polymers prepared by ATRP at surfaces. K. Matyjaszewski, J. Pietrasik, L. Bombalski, B. Cusick, T. Kowalewski, J. Pyun 3:40 470. Tapping mode AFM evidence for an amorphous reticular phase in a condensa­ tion cured hybrid elastomer: Alpha,omegadihydroxypoly(dimethylsiloxane)/poly(diethoxysiloxane)/fumed silica nanoparticles. K. J. Wynne, T. Fujiwara, T. Ogoshi, S. Inagi, Y. Chujo, M. Bertolucci, G. Galli, E. Chiellini 4:05 471. AFM evidence for surface heteroge­ neity of polystyrene latex particles. S. Tan, R. L Sherman Jr., W. T. Ford 4:30 472. Gradient chemical micropatterns: Reference substrates for surface nanometrology. D. Julthongpiput, M. J. Fasolka, E. J. Amis 4:50 473. Advances in nanocontact molding for the patterning of polythiophene. E. C. Hagberg, K. R. Carter 5:10 474. Intelligent design of combinatorial polymer surfaces using surface grafting and patterning. K. L. Beers, C. Xu, T. Wu, M. J. Fasolka

Organizer

J. R. Klaehn,

B. Novak and S. Schlick,

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 4

Section C

Degradable Polymers And Materials Cosponsored with IEC K. Khemani and C. Scholz,

3:30 460. Novel crosslinkable polymers for application in organic light-emitting devices. O. Nuyken, K. Meerholz, S. Jungermann, D. Muller, N. ReckefuB 3:50 461. Transport properties of thermoresponsive polymeric gels modified with colloi­ dal gold nanoparticles. E. A. Kazimierska, M. Ciszkowska 4:10 462. Preparation of porous PMMA mono­ lith containing silica nanoparticles in super­ critical C02. B. Yue, J. Yang, C-Y. Huang, R. N. Davé, R. Pfeffer 4:30 463. Fabrication and characterization of self-assembled nanoparticles/polymer brush films. K. Kawamura, T. Kano 4:50 464. Fine-tuning of conjugated materials' properties by simple module connections. W. G. Skene, S. Dufresne 5:10 465. Induction of helicity to isotactic and optically pure poly[(1-methyl-1-naphthylsilylene) (o-phenylene)methylene] by noncovalently linked /a-cyclodextrin. S. Y. Park, Y. Kawakami

Presiding

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 3

Organizers Presiding

8:30 439. Mechanical properties of triblock PLA-PEO-PLA hydrogels. G. N. Tew, S. R. Bhatia, K. Aamer, S. Agrawal, N. Sanabria Delong 9:00 440. Sol-gel transition behavior of aque­ ous suspensions consisting of enantiomeric A-B and B-A-B block copolymers of polylactides (PLLA or PDLA:A) and poly(oxyethylene) (PEG:B). J. Nakano, T. Fujiwara, I. Teraoka, Y. Kimura 9:30 441. Hydrolysis-triggered self-degradation of polycaprolactone-block-poly(ethylene oxide) worm micelle. Y. Geng, D. Dishcer 10:00 Intermission. 10:15 442. Degradable polycations as tools to study polyelectrolyte complexes and to release the polyanion. L. Leclercq, T. Etrych, M. Boustta, M. Vert

1:30 454. Welding of polyaniline nanofibers by a camera flash. J. Huang, R. B. Kaner 1:50 455. New soluble N-substituted polybenzimidazoles by post-polymerization modification. J. R. Klaehn, T. A. Luther, C. J. Orme, M. G. Jones, A. K. Wertsching, Ε. S. Peterson 2:10 456. Wholly aromatic sulfonated polyarylenethioether sulfone copolymers as pern for fuel cells. T. D. Dang, Z. Bai, M. F. Durstock, S. J. Rodrigues, T. L. Reitz 2:30 457. Zwitterionic superabsorbant poly­ mers. J. T. Ippoliti, J. J. Vlaminck, M. Hillmyer 2:50 458. Temperature effect on hydrophobic and inclusive associations in polymer net­ works. X. Guo, R. K. Prud'homme, S. F. Lincoln, S. A. Khan 3:10 459. Molecular design of low-loss electrooptic polymers. P. Gopalan, V. E. Campbell

Biomimetic Polymers Session E. Non-Natural Nucleotides D. T. McQuade, G. N. Tew,

Organizer

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 475. General strategies to highly functionalized peptide nucleic acids without compro­ mising nucleic acid binding affinity. D. H. Appelle 2:15 476. Homologous hybridization of guanine-rich peptide nucleic acids to DNA and RNA quadruplexes. B. A. Armitage, S. Roy, V. L Marin, D. H. Ly

POLY 2:55 Intermission. 3:15 477. Nucleobase directed template poly­ merizations. H. J. Spijker, T. J. Dirks, F. L. van Delft, J. C. M. van Hest 3:55 478. Self-assembly of nucleobase con­ taining monomers. S. J. Rowan, S. Sivakova

THURSDAY MORNING Section A San Diego Marriott Columbia 1 General Papers Polymer Synthesis

Section D

D. Garcia,

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 5

Organizer

Β. Η. McFarland, Degradable Polymers And Materials Cosponsored with I EC K. Khemani and C. Scholz,

Organizers

D. Grande and D. L. Kaplan,

Presiding

1:30 479. Chromatographic analysis as a tool for predicting material performance. A-C. Albertsson, M. Groning, M. Hakkarainen 2:00 480. Characterization of environmentally friendly polymers by inverse gas chromatog­ raphy: II, Blends of amylopectin and polycaprolactone. Z. Y. Al-Saigh 2:30 481. Microbial polyesters characterization by multistage mass spectrometry. M. M. Kowalczuk, G. Adamus 3:00 Intermission. 3:15 482. Colored bacterial polyhydroxybutyric acid by using oligoethoxylated anthraquinone. H. Budde, M. Jentzsch, J . Kressler 3:45 483. Crystal structure of the type II PHA depolymerase. T. Hisano, Y. Tezuka, K-l. Kasuya, T. Kobayashi, M. Shiraki, T. Iwata, Y. Doi, T. Saito, K. Miki 4:15 484. Metabolic engineering of Escherichia coli for short-chain-length-medium-chainlength polyhydroxyalkanoate biosynthesis. C. T. Nomura, T. Tanaka, K. Taguchi, H. Abe, Y. Doi 4:45 485. Structure and biodegradability of strong fibers and films of microbial polyes­ ters. T. Iwata Section Ε San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 6 Smart Polymer Films, Composites, And Devices Enabling Materials E. P. Locke and G. A. Gaddy,

Presiding

8:30 492. Synthesis and properties of poly­ aniline crosslinked with aryl azides. A. V. Jadhav, A. D. Gudmundsdottir 8:50 493. Synthesis and characterization of new hexafluoroisopropylidene-linked benzophenone polymers. C. A. Jones III, D. D. Andjelkovic, V. V. Sheares 9:10 494. Synthesis and characterization of anthracene polymer with Lawesson's reagent. A. K. Nedeltchev, H. Han, P. K. Bhowmik 9:30 495. Thermal instability of 2-phenylprop2-yl phenyldithioacetate and macro-deriva­ tives in RAFT polymerisations. S. J. Holder, G. T. Street, D. Illsley 9:50 496. Supported piano-stool catalysts for styrene and ethylene-styrene polymeriza­ tions. J. F. Craymer, E. B. Coughlin 10:10 497. Synthesis and self-assembly of [60]fullerene end-capped stimuli-responsive block copolymer in aqueous medium. P. Ravi, S. Dai, K. C. Tarn 10:30 498. N-Heterocyclic carbenes: Organocatalysts for ring-opening polymerization of lactide. D. A. Culkin, S. Csihony, W. Jeong, A. C. Sentman, G. W. Nyce, A. P. Dove, R. Pratt, J. L. Hedrick, R. M. Waymouth 10:50 499. Poly(isobutylene-f)-styrene) copoly­ mer from an initiator containing a latent radical initiating site. L. K. Breland, J. C. Murphy, R. F. Storey 11:10 500. Preparation and characterization of macro- and monomers for azide and alkyne cycloaddition polymerization. S. Chang, N. T. Prévost, N. D. Sachinvala, D. V. Parikh, A. A. Lambert III, P. A. Sawhney, W. L. Jarrett Jr. 11:30 501. Preparation of initiator-core microcapsules and their use in frontal polymerization. B. H. McFarland, J. Pojman Sr. 11:50 502. New polyurethanes containing azomethinediol derived from 2,6-diaminopyridine . I. A. Mohammed, I. J 12:10 503. Emulsifier-free latex of fluorinated acrylate copolymer. Y. Chen III, C. Zhang Sr., Y. Wang Jr.

Presiding

M. D. Alexander Jr., Organizer,

Presiding

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 4

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:40 486. Electrically conducting polyacrylonitrile/single wall carbon nanotube composite films. H. Guo, T. V. Sreekumar, T. Liu, S. Kumar

Polymer Surfaces And Interfaces Wetting and Films F. D. Blum and R. M. Laine,

Organizers

2:10 487. Polyaniline with fluoroalcohol addi­ tives as hydrazine sensors. S. Virji, R. B. Kaner, Β. Η. Weiller 2:40 488. Synthesis and characterization of polyethylene glycol) based discrete hydrogels. S. M. Trey, D. A. Wicks 3:10 Intermission. 3:40 489. Polymer-dispersed aqueous materi­ als. K. C. Leard, J. Pojman Sr. 4:10 490. Synthesis and antibacterial activities of novel methacrylate polymers with pen­ dant quaternary ammonium compounds. B. Dizman, M. O. Elasri, L. J. Mathias 4:40 491. Poly (2, 5-bis(N-methyl-N-hexylamino) phenylene vinylene), a new smart conjugated polymer coating: Synthesis, properties, corrosion prevention using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy study. P. Zarras, N. Prokopuk, N. Anderson, C. Webber, A. J. Guenthner, J. D. Stenger-Smith

W. T. S. Huck and P. Neogi,

Presiding

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

Section C San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 3 Biomimetic Polymers Active Polymers D. T. McQuade, G. N. Tew,

Organizer

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 514. Photocontrolling the helix-coil transi­ tion: Azobenzene-containing foldamers. S. Hecht, A. Khan, C. Kaiser 9:15 515. Unique features of triblock copoly­ mers that allow for the formation of unusual solution-state morphologies. Z. Chen, H. Cui, K. D. Hales, K. Qi, K. L Wooley, D. J. Pochan 9:55 Intermission. 10:10 516. Micellar assemblies of amphiphilic copolymers as functional materials. R. B. Grubbs, K. B. Aubrecht, J. K. Wegrzyn, T. Stephan, R. N. Lau 10:50 517. Phenylene ethynylene structures as versatile biomimetic scaffolds. G. N. Tew, L. Amt, T. Jones 11:30 518. Molecular chaperonins for stimuliresponsive nanomachines. T. Aida, Κ. Kinbara, S-l. Muramatsu Section D San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 5 Degradable Polymers And Materials Cosponsored with I EC K. Khemani and C. Scholz,

Organizers

M. M. Kowalczuk and J . Kressler,

Organizers Section Β

G. V. Glinecki,

10:50 510. Fabrication and morphology char­ acterization of thin films from novel hydoxylated polymethacrylates. A. Jayaraman, R. Ravindranath, S. Jagadesan, S. Valiyaveettil 11:10 511. Grafting liquid crystalline polymers from cellulose using ATRP. R. Westlund, A. Carlmark, I. M. Saez, E. Malmstrôm 11:30 512. Multiply-bound polymer chains of α,ω-thiol telechelics: Surface adsorption properties. D. L. Patton, M. Mullings, A. Rogers, A. Baba, R. C. Advincula 11:50 513. Cyanoacrylate fuming from model fingerprint systems. S. Wargacki, M. D. Dadmun, L Lewis

8:30 504. Generation of superhydrophobic surfaces by electrospinning process. K. Acatay, E. Simsek, C. Ow-Yang, Y. Z. Menceloglu 8:50 505. Hybrid networks generated from star polysiloxanes/linear PDMS: Preparation of minimally adhesive polymer surfaces. M. A. Grunlan, N. S. Lee, W. P. Weber 9:10 506. Dynamics of thin liquid films contain­ ing non-adsorbing polymers. P. Neogi, S. Saritha 9:35 507. Polymer brushes: From synthesis to "smart surfaces{prime}{prime}. W. T. S. Huck, A. A. Brown, S. Edmondson, N. S. Khan 10:00 Intermission. 10:10 508. Wetting - one molecule at a time. S. S. Sheiko, H. Xu, D. Shirvaniants, K. Matyjaszewski, M. Rubinstein 10:30 509. Tailor-made surfaces by photo­ chemical attachment of polymer films to oxide surfaces: New pathways towards protective coating. J. Pahnke, J. Ruehe

Presiding

8:30 519. Value-added materials from complex microbial exopolysaccharides. G. Castro, B. Panilaitis, R. Kandar, D. L. Kaplan 9:00 520. A new class of "bulk erodible" polyanhydrides. M. P. Torres, B. Narasimhan, S. Mallapragada 9:30 521. Assembly of bioactive, haparinderivatized polymer hydrogels for protein delivery. N. Yamaguchi, K. L. Kiick 10:00 Intermission. 10:15 522. Multifunctional polyesters as key components in the design of nanostructured drug delivery and mesoporous materials. D. Grande, G. Rohman, V. Langlois, E. Renard, L Timbart, P. Guérin 10:45 523. Effect of addition of anions and cations on oral controlled characteristics of chitosan cross-linked microspheres. K. C. Gupta, F. H. Jabrail 11:15 524. Dependence of in vitro degradation of a poly(glycolide-co-lactide) fiber on load and temperature. M. Deng, J. Zhou, G. Chen 11:45 525. Crosslinking of synthetic biodegradable polymers by ^-irradiation. S-l. Moon, F. Jin, S-H. Hyon, S. Tsutsumi

Section Ε San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 6 Smart Polymer Films, Composites, And Devices Actuator Materials

M. D. Alexander Jr. and J . W . Schultz, Organizers M. C. Maher,

Presiding

M. S. Bratcher, Organizer,

Presiding

8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 526. Polymer nanocomposites as adap­ tive materials: Carbon nanotube - polyurethane stress recovery systems. R. Vaia, H. Koemer, D. Powers, P. A. Mirau, M. D. Alexander Jr., M. Arlen 9:15 527. Light-responsive polyimide films containing palladium crystallite arrays of nanometer dimensions. G. Mills 9:55 Intermission. 10:25 528. Shape memory polymer nanocom­ posites: Multifunctional materials for revolu­ tionary applications. E. Havens, B. A. Dietsch, T. H. Tong, P. J. Hood 11:05 529. Piezoelectric -polymer films for the design of nano acoustic sensors. A. Gandelman, L. Tan, R. Miles, K. Minerly, W. E.Jones 11:25 530. Position control of a viscoelastic liquid crystal elastomer actuator. D. L. Thomsen III, R. G. Bryant, P. Keller, C. C. Topping THURSDAY AFTERNOON Section A San Diego Marriott Columbia 1 Smart Polymer Films, Composites, And Devices Self- and Direct-assembling Materials M. S. Bratcher and S. Crouch-Baker, Organizers T. J . Manning,

Presiding

J . W . Schultz, Organizer,

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 531. Functional multilayer thin films prepared with polyelectrolytes and other charged species. J. C. Grunlan 2:25 532. Creating and micropatteming func­ tional polymer surfaces. J. T. Koberstein, F. Pan, P. Wang, Y. Chen 3:15 Intermission. 3:45 533. Structure-property investigation of nanorods of amphiphilic poly(p-phenylenes) from collapsed Langmuir monolayers. S. Valiyaveettil, R. Ravindranath, A. Baba, S. Jagadesan, R. C. Advincula, W. Knoll 4:15 534. Self assembled, ultra-hydrophobic micro/nano-textured surfaces. A. M. Rawlett, J. A. Oriicki, A. S. Karikari 4:45 535. Smart polyelectrolyte nanocompos­ ites with temperature mediated permeability. J. A. Jaber, J. B. Schlenoff Section Β San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 4 Polymer Surfaces And Interfaces Patterning and Nanocomposites R. M. Laine, J. Pyun,

Organizer

Presiding

F. D. Blum, Organizer,

Presiding

1:30 536. Synthesis of magnetic nanocomposite materials composed of functional copoly­ mers and cobalt nanoparticles. M. Judd, B. Korth, J . Pyun 1:50 537. Simple adsorption-based separation of PS and PS-PMMA diblock copolymer using nanoporous silica. J. Han, C. Y. Ryu 2:10 538. Large-scale alignment of thin-film nanostructured block copolymers by zonecasting and their conversions into carbons. C. Tang, A. Tracz, M. Kruk, K. Matyjaszewski, T. Kowalewski 2:30 539. Raft polymerization of methyl meth­ acrylate from silica nanoparticles. C. Li, B. Benicewicz 2:50 540. UV-curable nanocomposite coatings. L. Fogelstrôm, P. Antoni, E. E. Malmstrôm, A. Huit

TECH-115

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 1 3:10 Intermission. 3:20 541. Multiple loop formation by epoxyterminated polystyrene telechelics on selfassembled monolayers of 11 -mercaptoundecanoic acid over gold. R. Mehta, M. D. Dadmun, H. Ji, J. W. Mays 3:40 542. Synthesis of gold nanoparticles attached to polypyrrole nanofibers. S. K. Pillalamarri, F. D. Blum, M. F. Bertino 4:00 543. Surface elastic modulus of barnacle adhesive and release characteristics from silicone surfaces. Y. Sun, S. Guo, C. Kavanagh, G. Swain, G. C. Walker 4:20 544. How to make polyesters more prone to cell adhesion. B. Atthoff, J. Hilbom 4:40 545. Effect of periluoroacrylate ratio on the generation of stable superhydrophobic surfaces displaying low contact angle hys­ teresis. E. Simsek, K. Acatay, Y. Menceloglu

Division of Polymeric Materials: Science and Engineering R. N . D e M a r t i n o , Program

Chair

OTHER SYMPOSIA O F INTEREST: Btotogjcal and Synthetic Macromolecutes For Emerging Nanotechnologies {see POLY, Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed)

Section C

Carbon Nanotubes, Polymers, And Complex Fluids (see POLY, Sun, Mon, Tue)

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 3

Biosensors and Sensors: Nanostructures (see ANYL, Sun, Mon)

Biomimetic Polymers Polyelectrolytes

SOCIAL EVENTS: Breakfast: Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu Hospitality Room: Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu

D. T. McQuade, Organizer,

Presiding

1:30 Introductory Remarks. 1:35 546. Enhanced reactivity of co-immobi­ lized enzymes on nanoparticles with biomi­ metic phospholipid polymer surface for medical diagnosis. J. Watanabe, K. Ishihara 2:05 547. Comparison between the effect of calcium ions on the osmotic properties of synthetic and biopolymer gels. F. Horkay, P. J. Basser, A. M. Hecht, E. Geissler 2:35 Intermission. 2:50 548. Biodegradable, and biomimetic phosphoryl choline ionomers. F. Nederberg, T. Bowden, J. Hilbom 3:20 549. Polyelectrolytes containing azobenzene as rhodopsin mimics. C. Barrett, K. G. Yager, O. M. Tanchak, O. Mermut 3:50 550. Design of stimuli-responsive supramolecular assembly based on coop­ erative host-guest interactions. H. S. Choi, T. Ooya, N. Yui

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 5 Degradable Polymers And Materials Cosponsored with I EC C. Scholz and K. Khemani, Presiding

Organizers,

1:30 551. PEG- and peptide-tailored aliphatic polyesters synthesized by "click" cycloaddi­ tion chemistry. B. Parrish, R. B. Breitenkamp, T. Emrick 2:00 552. A versatile route to novel functionalized aliphatic polyesters for biomedical applications. D. A. Olson, V. V. Sheares 2:30 553. Structure-property correlation for carbohydrate-derived side-chain polyethers as new protein-resistant biomaterials. M. Metzke, Z. Guan 3:00 Intermission. 3:15 554. Synthesis and characterization of rapidly biodegrading poly(D,L-lactide-coglycolide) anhydrides. J. S. Wiggins, R. F. Storey 3:45 555. Retardation of polymer degradation using a new class of biocatalytically synthe­ sized macromolecular antioxidants. A. Cholli, V. Kumar, A. Dhawan, R. Kumar, S. Yang

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

116-TECH

Luncheon: Mon Poster Session: Tue Program Committee Meeting: Tue

Reception: Mon ScMWbuMon B U S I N E S S M E E T I N G : Wed SUNDAY MORNING Section A San Diego Marriott Torrey 1-2 General Papers/New Concepts in Polymeric Materials Synthesis R. N. DeMartino, Ν. Β. Bowden,

Section D

Carbon Nanotubes, Polymers, And Complex Fluids Synthesis and Applications of Carbon Nanotubes. Tutorial Cosponsored with POLY

Section Β

Organizer

Presiding

8:00 1. Studies on graft copolymerization of 4—vinyl pyridine onto xanthan gum. R. Kumar, K. Behari 8:20 2. Synthesis and luminescent properties of aromatic-thiophene copolymers. S. H. Wu, R. C-C. Tsiang 8:40 3. Synthesis and self-assembly of bottlebrush block copolymers. Ν. Β. Bowden, M. B. Runge, S. Dutta 9:00 4. Synthesis of well-defined sulfonated polystyrene and block copolymers with η-butyl acrylate by controlled radical poly­ merization. K-Y. Baek, N. P. Balsara 9:20 5. Nitric acid dehydration using mixed perfluoro sulfonate/carboxylate ionomer membranes. R. L. Ames, E. A. Bluhm, J. D. Way, R. P. Singh, J. E. Hensley, D. M. Knauss 9:40 6. Oligomeric cyanate ester and phthalonitrile resins: Novel high performance polymers with advanced properties. M. Laskoski, D. D. Dominguez, T. M. Keller 10:00 Intermission. 10:30 7. Impact of hydrogen abstraction on monomer reactivity for novel acrylic sys­ tems. H. Kilambi, E. Beckel, J. W. Stansbury, C. N. Bowman 10:50 8. Branched aliphatic polycarbonates. P. C. Lôwenhielm, H. Lonnberg, H. Claesson, A. Huit 11:10 9. Conjugated materials through simple snap together modules. S. Dufresne, W. G. Skene 11:30 10. TiCp2CI-catalyzed living radical polymerization of styrene monomers initiated by epoxide radical ring opening. A. D. Asandei, I. W. Moran 11:50 11. Design and synthesis of improved PPV based-DBAB-type block copolymers for potential photovoltaic application. C. Zhang, J. Haliburton, S. Choi, S. Maaref, S-S. Sun

San Diego Marriott Columbia 1

SUNDAY AFTERNOON

Polymers and Medical Devices Drug Delivery and Coatings

Section A S. V. Ranade and S. E. Vamer, Presiding

Organizers,

8:00 Introductory Remarks. 8:05 12. New approach to biomaterials design. J. Kohn 8:25 13. Injectable siloxane intraocular lenses. J. G. Hilbom, Y. Liu 8:45 17. Therapeutic polyanhydrides for drug delivery. K. E. Uhrich, R. C. Schmeltzer, A. Prudencio, K. Whitaker 9:05 15. Composition dependant in-vitro release kinetics from PolyNSAIDsTM through the copolymer design for a new class of ester-anhydride polymers. M. B. Hicks, B. J. Pudil, S. Kanamathareddy, S. Goodrich, A. J. East, A. Letton 9:25 16. Hydrogel-based multifunctional deliv­ ery devices for oral protein administration. H. He, J. Guan, D. Hansford, L. J. Lee 9:45 14. New bioabsorbable polymer coating for drug-eluting stent applications. H. Zhang, B. J. McCarthy, S. M. Gopalan, I. P. Sizinai, K. DeFife, B. G. Turnell, D. Darabbeigi 10:05 Intermission. 10:25 18. Antimicrobial coatings via polymeric surface modifying additives. K. J. Wynne, U. Makal, D. Ohman, L. Wood 10:45 19. Vapor phase polymerization of organosilicons for biopassivation coatings. W. S. O'Shaughnessy, D. J. Edell, K. K. Gleason 11:05 20. Triblock copolymer-derived nanospheres: Potential vector for drug delivery. L. Sheihet, R. A. Dubin, D. I. Devore, J. Kohn 11:25 2 1 . Bio-functional polymer coatings based on chemical vapor deposition. J. Lahann 11:45 22. Controlled delivery of paclitaxel from stent coatings using poly (hydroxystyrene-bisobutylene-b-hydroxystyrene) and its acetylated derivative. S. Ranade, L. Sipos, A. Som, R. Faust, R. Richard, M. Boden, M. Schwarz, K. Chan Section C San Diego Marriott Torrey 3 General Papers/New Concepts in Polymeric Materials Bio-Related Materials R. N. DeMartino,

San Diego Marriott Torrey 1-2 General Papers/New Concepts in Polymeric Materials Nanostructures R. N. DeMartino, K. C. Cole,

Organizer

Presiding

1:30 32. Characterization and properties of hybrid nanoparticle "inactive and active" metal polymer films. E. Espuche, L. David, J. L. Afeld, J. M. Compton, D. E. Kranbuehl 1:50 33. Reverse exfoliation in PA-6 nanocomposite induced by blending with ethylenevinyl alcohol copolymer. T. S. Ellis 2:10 34. Synthesis and characterization of mesostructured PPV/silica nanocomposite thin films. Y. Yang, R. Koehn, J. Huang, Y-B. Jiang, J. D. Bullock, A. Mace, C. J. Brinker 2:30 35. Unsaturated polyester/organo-clay nanocomposites: A fundamental approach. I. Mironi-Harpaz, M. Narkis, A. Siegmann 2:50 36. Unusual morphologies of micelles and shell-crosslinked nanoparticles from one-pot poly(styrene-a/f-maleic anhydride)b/odc-polystyrene copolymers. S. Harrisson, K. Qi, K. L. Wooley 3:10 Intermission. 3:40 37. Layered polymer nanoparticles pro­ duced from rapid expansion of supercritical solutions and solid-state polymerization. N. Levit, O. Guney-Altay, D. Pestov, G. Tepper 4:00 38. Nanocomposite membranes based on UV-curable crosslinked polytetrafluoroethylene and acid functionalized zeolite nanocrystals for fuel cell applications. Z. Chen, B. A. Holmberg, Y. Yan 4:20 39. Nanostructured organosilicates from self-assembled block copolymers/silsesquioxanes mixtures. E. Freer, J. N. Cha, J. L. Hedrick, R. D. Miller, H-C. Kim 4:40 40. Novel water-soluble chitosan derivatives/CdS, Zns QDs nanocomposite: Syn­ thesis, character and photoluminescence properties. X. Wang, Y. Du, F. Huang, L Fan 5:00 4 1 . Fabrication and properties of blown films based on polypropylene-clay nanocom­ posite. F. Perrin-Sarazin, G. Dorval-Douville, K. C. Cole

Organizer Section Β

S. D. Minteer,

Presiding

8:30 23. Amphiphilic block copolymers at lipid mono and bilayers. H. Hussain, E. Amado, J. Kressler, K. Busse, H. Budde, A. Blume 8:50 24. Polyelectrolyte-supported asymmetric lipid bilayer coating on colloids via layer-bylayer assembly. K. Katagiri, F. Caruso 9:10 25. Role of surface chemistry in protein chip: A rational approach for an ideal sys­ tem. P. K. Ajikumar, N. Jin Kiat, J. Y. Lee, H.Too 9:30 26. Molecularly imprinted poly(methylene green) electrodes for the determination of theophylline. Y. V. Ulyanova, S. D. Minteer 9:50 27. Surface modification and self-assem­ bly studies of bionanoparticles. Q. Wang, S. Long, Y. Lin, A. Boker, J. He, T. P. Russell 10:10 Intermission. 10:40 28. Polymer multilayer films with azobenzene for photoactive biosurfaces. C. Barrett, O. Mermut 11:00 29. Dynamics of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) aqueous solution. M. Sun, J. Mijovic 11:20 30. Single-stranded DNA monolayers: Charging behavior and capacitance response. R. Levicky, G. Shen, Y. Weng, K. Shepard 11:40 3 1 . C0 2 Y. Shen, J. Tang, H. Tang, W. Sun, M. Radosz

San Diego Marriott Columbia 1 Polymers and Medical Devices Biocompatibility S. V. Ranade and S. E. Varner, Presiding

Organizers,

1:00 Introductory Remarks. 1:05 42. Thermally-sensitive, PNIPAAmcoated nanobeads are used in microfluidic devices for affinity separations, immunoas­ says and enzyme bioprocesses. A. S. Hoffman, P. S. Stayton, N. Malmstadt, J. Hoffman 1:25 43. Biocompatibility, meeting a key func­ tional requirement of next generation medi­ cal devices. M. N. Helmus 1:45 44. U.S. FDA perspective on the regula­ tions of cyanoacrylate polymer tissue adhesives in clinical applications. G. J. Mattamal 2:05 45. Nanoscale characterization of sol­ vent-induced surface morphology of poly(styrene-b-isobutylene-b-styrene) triblock copolymer. V. Pizziconi, D. Lincoln, A. Vuppu, S. Ranade 2:25 46. Selective attachment of neurons and glia to biochemically modified substrate and electrode surfaces. M. E. Thompson, C. Phipps, P. Wahjudi, W. Soussou, M. Baudry, T. Berger, A. Bansal, A. Madhukar

POLY/PMSE

2:45 47. Design of potent polyvalent inhibitors of anthrax toxin. K. V. Gujraty, A. G. Joshi, S. Basha, J. Mogridge, R. S. Kane 3:05 Intermission. 3:25 48. Ultrathin films of electrochemicallycrosslinked modified PAMAM dendrimers and PVK as sensor materials for nerve agent detection. P. Taranekar, A. Baba, J. Y. Park, T. M. Fulghum, R. C. Advincula 3:45 49. Effects of annealing on tensile strength and creep resistance of ultra high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE). H. Sun, R. S. Cooke, K. J. Wynne 4:05 50. Polarized protein membrane for superior cell-seeding properties. B. Atthoff, J. G. Hilbom 4:25 5 1 . Improved and mild polymerization method for facile structural modification for biodegradable polymer drugs. Y. H. Choe, S. Kanamathareddy, S. Goodrich, A. J. East, A. Letton 4:45 52. Requirements of polymers for suc­ cessful medical device use. A. Gupta

9:30 67. Multiphoton polymerization in 3-D photonic crystals. P. V. Braun, S. A. Pruzinsky, W. Lee 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 68. Dendrimer nanocomposite materials. D. W. Wright, M. R. Knecht, S. A. Miller 10:50 69. Free-suspended nanocomposite membranes as microsensors. C. Jiang, V. V. Tsukruk 11:20 70. Bottom-up assembly of ZnO nanorods on surfaces using organic templates. J. W. P. Hsu, Z. R. Tian, N. C. Simmons, C. M. Matzke, J. A. Voigt, J. Liu

Section C

J. M. J. Fréchet, Organizer,

San Diego Marriott Torrey 3 Application of Polymers in Manufacturing of Integrated Circuits CMP, Low K, Packaging; Novell Materials A. Tregub,

Organizer

G. Goloverda, Organizer,

Presiding

1:00 Introductory Remarks. 1:10 53. Polymer challenges for future inte­ grated circuit technologies. C. M. Garner 1:40 54. Nanocomposites for IC applications. M. H. Choi, E. P. Giannelis 2:10 55. Adhesion in thin film structures for emerging technologies. R. H. Dauskardt 2:40 56. AFM study of forces between polyurethane pads and ceria nanoparticles. Q. K. Ong, I. Sokolov, N. Chechik, D. James 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 57. Advances in characterization of polymer consumables for chemical mechani­ cal planarization. A. Oehler, M. Mansour, A. Tregub 3:40 58. Chemical mechanical polishing of polymeric low-k dielectric films. U. B. Patri, Y. Hong, S. V. Babu 4:10 59. Chemical vapor deposition of nanoporous dielectric films. Q. Wu, A. Ross, K. K. Gleason 4:40 60. Polycarbosilane-based films for interlayer dielectric applications. Z. Wu, P. Wang, T-M. Lu, L. V. Interrante 5:00 6 1 . Novel amorphous templates for ordered mesostructured films. R. A. Pai, J. J. Watkins, G. Bhatnagar, J. Testa, S. Agarwal 5:20 62. Rearrangements of multiblock copoly­ mer polymer brushes. W. J. Brittain 5:40 63. Thermal characterization of a no-flow underfill material for flip-chip applications. Y.He Carbon Nanotubes, Polymers, And Complex Fluids Characterization, Separation and Processing. Tutorial Cosponsored with POLY MONDAY MORNING Section A San Diego Marriott Torrey 1-2 Polymer Nanocomposites Novel Materials and Processes Cosponsored with POLY R. Vaia and R. Krishnamoorti, Presiding

Organizers,

8:00 64. Functional nanocomposites from the self-assembly of metal-containing block copolymers. I. Manners 8:30 65. Novel building blocks for multifunc­ tional nanocomposites. Y. Xia, D. Li, Y. Wang, U. Jeong 9:00 66. Scalable synthesis, alignment and applications of a new class of polymer microrods. O. D. Velev, R. G. Alargova, V. N. Paunov

Section Β San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 3 Applied Polymer Science Award Symposium in Honor of Craig J. Hawker C. G. Willson,

Presiding Presiding

8:50 Introductory Remarks. 9:00 7 1 . Macroporous polymer monoliths from design to applications. J. M. J. Fréchet, F. Svec 9:30 72. New polymer materials for high resolution imaging applications. C. G. Willson 10:00 73. Supramolecular polymeric systems from telechelic macromonomers with noncovalent binding motifs. S. J. Rowan, J. B. Beck, S. Sivakova 10:30 74. "Clicking" with ATRP. K. Matyjaszewski 11:00 75. Quadruple hydrogen-bonded supramolecular polymers: Complementarity versus self-complementarity. E. W. Meijer, R. P. Sijbesma 11:30 76. New applications of polyelectrolyte nanoscale assemblies constructed layer by layer. P. T. Hammond Section C

Section Β

Presiding

Carbon Nanotubes, Polymers, And Complex Fluids Devices and Applications Cosponsored with POLY

Organizer

A. Tregub, Organizer,

Presiding

8:00 Introductory Remarks. 8:10 77. Predicting the properties of organic electronic materials from first principles. L. Kronik 8:40 78. Directed assembly of imaging materials for nanolithography. P. F. Nealey 9:10 79. Lithography based on calix[4]resorcinarene and related molecular glasses. S. W. Chang, N. Felix, D. Yang, A. Ramakrishnan, C. K. Ober 9:40 80. New fluoropolymers for next generation photolithographic techniques. C. D. Wood, J. M. DeSimone 10:10 Intermission. 10:30 8 1 . Photosensitive polyimide based on poly(amic acid) and thermal imidization at 200 °C with photo-base generator. K-l. Fukukawa, Y. Shibasaki, M. Ueda 10:50 82. Production of a novel polymer film for use in advanced lithography. P. Zimmerman, C. van Peski, D. Miller, R. Callahan 11:15 83. Photoresists for C0 2 -based nextgeneration microlithography. M. K. Boggiano, J. M. DeSimone 11:45 84. Challenges for lithographic materials. R. P. Meagley 12:10 85. Responsive nanostructured polymer materials for lithography. S. Minko 12:35 86. Nanocomposite polymer pellicles for 157 nm photolithography. I. Luzinov, V. Klep, B. Zdyrko, G. Chumanov, D. D. Evanoff Jr., P. Zimmerman

General Papers/New Concepts in Polymeric Materials Composites and Layered Structures R. N. DeMartino,

K. L. Wooley,

Presiding

J. M. J. Fréchet, Organizer,

R. Vaia and R. Krishnamoorti, V. V. Tsukruk and Ε. Κ. Hobbie,

Presiding

1:30 103. Synthesis of polymers with controlled structures using olefin metathesis. R. H. Grubbs 2:00 104. New concepts in supramolecular polymer chemistry. V. Percec 2:30 105. Sticking molecules together: The influence of non-covalent interactions on macromolecular performance. T. E. Long, K. Yamauchi, S. R. Trenor, C. L. Elkins, B. D. Mather, M. G. McKee, K. Viswanathan, A. S. Karikari, T. Park, Τ. Ο Ward 3:00 106. Molecular architecture effects on the properties of polymers. M. E. Mackay 3:30 107. Photocurable resists for imprint lithography. K. R. Carter 4:00 108. Organic catalysis: A new strategy for living polymerization. J. L. Hedrick, R. Waymouth, A. Sentman, G. W. Nyce, D. Culkin, A. P. Dove, R. Pratt 4:30 109. Modifying interfacial interactions. T. P. Russell, D. Ryu, E. Drockenmuller, C. J. Hawker 5:00 110. Award Address (ACS Award in Applied Polymer Science, sponsored by Eastman Chemical Company). Designing high value added polymeric materials for nanometer-scale commercial applications. C. J. Hawker Section C

R. N. DeMartino, Polymer Nanocomposites Characterization Techniques Cosponsored with POLY Organizers Presiding

1:30 97. Composition and thickness of apatite nanocrystals in bone from novel solid-state NMR experiments. K. Schmidt-Rohr, A. Rawal 2:00 98. High resolution electron microscopy of layered silicate/epoxy nanocomposites. L. F. Drummy, H. Koerner, A. Tan, K. Farmer, B. L. Farmer, R. A. Vaia 2:30 99. Interfacial activity of nanoparticles: From membranes to thin films. T. P. Russell, T. Emrick, A. Dinsmore, Y. Lin, J. He, K. Sill, H. Skaff 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 100. Use of optical probes and laser scanning confocal fluorescence microscopy for high throughput characterization of dispersion in polymer layered silicate nano­ composites. J. W. Gilman Sr., R. D. Davis, S. Bellayer, P. H. Maupin, D. Raghavan, J. Langat, S. Bourbigot, X. Flambard, D. Fox, P. Trulove, H. C. De Long 3:50 101. Rheology of molten polystyrene/ carbon nanofiber composites. J. Xu, K. W. Koelling, Y. Wang, S. E. Bechtel, M. G. Forest 4:20 102. How nano are nanocomposites? D. W. Schaefer

Z. Bai,

Organizer

Presiding

1:30 111. Preparation and characterization of metallized polyimide films containing thioether linkage. D. Wu, F. Song, Z. Bai 1:50 112. Probing polyelectrolyte chain interdiffusion in multilayer thin films with neutron reflectometry. H. Jumaa, J. B. Schlenoff 2:10 113. Relationship between processing and micromechanics of regenerated cellu­ lose fibres. S. J. Eichhorn, K. Kong 2:30 114. Thermo-oxidative protection of high performance organic fibers by inorganicorganic hybrid network polymers. M. K. Kolel-Veetil, T. M. Keller 2:50 Intermission. 3:20 115. Thin films of block copolymers as planar optical waveguides. D. H. Kim, J. W. F. Robertson, O-J. Lee, U. Jeong, J. I. Lee, C. J. Hawker, T. P. Russell, J. K. Kim, W. Knoll 3:40 116. Improving the lifetime, simplicity, and power of an ethanol biofuel cell by employ­ ing ammonium treated Nation membranes to immobilize PQQ-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase. B. L. Treu, S. D. Minteer 4:00 117. Effect of heat setting temperatures on mechanical properties and dye diffusion of polyamide fibers. N. Vasanthan 4:20 118. Effect of physical aging on polymer thin films. Y. Huang, D. R. Paul 4:40 119. Alterative option to change the pore size of ultrafiltration membranes. J-J. Qin, Y-M. Cao, Y. Li 5:00 120. Characterization of oxygen biocathodes employing tetrabutylammonium bro­ mide treated Nation immobilization mem­ branes. S. Topcagic, S. D. Minteer Carbon Nanotubes, Polymers, And Complex Fluids Polymer Composites and Other Aspects Cosponsored with POLY

Section D San Diego Marriott San Diego Β

Applied Polymer Science Award Symposium in Honor of Craig J. Hawker Session 2

General Papers/New Concepts in Polymeric Materials Films and Fibers

San Diego Marriott Torrey 1 -2

Application of Polymers in Manufacturing of Integrated Circuits Polymer Materials for Lithography

San Diego Marriott Marriott Hall 3

San Diego Marriott Torrey 3

MONDAY AFTERNOON Section A

San Diego Marriott Torrey 3

G. Goloverda,

D. A. Schiraldi,

8:30 87. Real-time evaluation of holographic gratings by organic-inorganic hybrid materi­ als capable of photoinitiated cationic poly­ merization. Y. Cho, C. Shin, N. Kim, Y. Kawakami 8:50 88. Self-assembling polymeric and oligomeric borole materials. W. Niu, B. M. Rambo, M. D. Smith, J. J. Lavigne 9:10 89. Shear induced polyvinyl alcohol)/ single wall carbon nanotube composite fiber formation in solution. M. L. Minus, S. Kumar 9:30 90. Jet-blowing: A solvent free process for forming fiber mats of polytetrafluoroethylene. B. Gu, S. Borkar, A. Sen, B. Y. Jackson, J. V. Badding 9:50 Intermission. 10:20 9 1 . Miscibility and mechanical properties of a novel low Tg inorganic glass/polyamide 6 hybrid. K. Urman, J. Otaigbe 10:40 92. Polymer/clay aerogel composites. S. A. Bandi, D. Schiraldi 11:00 93. Encapsulation of phenolic and polyphenols compounds in mesoporous silica to form novel structured phenolic silica composites. G. Tan, C. D. Ford, T. Zheng, L Liu, N. Sahiner, V. T. John, G. L. McPherson, V. Agarwal, A. Bose, J. He 11:20 94. Hydrogel networks for in situ iron particle synthesis with magnetic properties. N. Sahiner, R. Graves, T. Mandai, G. McPherson, V. T. John, G. Tan 11:40 95. Layered cellular structures in atactic/ syndiotactic polystyrene blend. X. Liao, A. V. Nawaby, Y. P. Handa 12:00 96. Polymer/copper composites for marine antifouling applications. D. A. Schiraldi, F. Dong, L. Wine

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

Organizer

TECH-117

TECHNICAL PROGRAM M O N D A Y EVENING

Section C

TUESDAY AFTERNOON

Section A

San Diego Marriott Torrey 3

Section A

Convention Center Sails Pavilion

Confinement Effects on Relaxation Properties of Polymers Geometric Confinement, Nanocomposites

Sci-Mix R. N. DeMartino, Organizer,

Presiding

8:00-10:00 172, 175-176, 182-185, 189, 191-194, 197, 199, 201, 203-204, 206, 208, 213, 215-220, 223, 225, 228, 234-235, 239, 246, 248, 252-254, 256, 260-261, 264. See subse­ quent listings. TUESDAY MORNING Section A San Diego Marriott Torrey 1-2 Polymer Nanocomposites Structure-Property Relationships - Theory and Modeling Cosponsored with POLY R. Krishnamoorti and R. Vaia,

Organizers

S. H. Anastasiadis and E. Manias, Presiding 8:30 121. Mechanics of polymer nanocompos­ ites. M. Boyce, D. M. Parks, N. Sheng, A. Pantano, M. Garg 9:00 122. Polymer nanocomposites: Computer simulations of the reinforcing mechanisms of filler particles. S. K. Kumar 9:30 123. Some simulations on filler reinforce­ ment in elastomers. R. H. Abouhussein, J. E. Mark 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 124. Deformation and failure of polymerlayered silicate nanocomposites: Course grained computer simulations. B. L Farmer, K. L. Anderson, R. Vaia, E. Manias 10:50 125. Anisotropy and heterogeneity of nematic polymer nano-composite film prop­ erties. M. G. Forest, R. Zhou, Q. Wang, X. Zheng, R. Upton 11:20 126. Using nanocomposite coatings to heal surface defects. A. C. Balazs, S. Tyagi, J. Y. Lee, G. Buxton

Polymeric Semiconductors for Thin-Film Electronics Synthetic Methods and New Materials Organizers,

8:30 127. Material and interface engineering for high-performance light-emitting diodes. A. K-Y. Jen, Y. Niu, M. S. Liu, H. Yip, M-S. Kang, H. Ma, B. Chen, J. Luo, T. Kim, J-W. Ka, Y - L Tung, Y. Chi, C. Shu 9:00 128. Electropatteming and nanopatteming of conjugated polymer ultrathin films: The precursor polymer approach. R. C. Advincula 9:20 129. Poly(N-alkylthienopyrroles) and regioregular poly(3-alkoxythiophene)s: Towards soluble, chiral, conjugated poly­ mers with a stable oxidized state. G. Koeckelberghs, L. De Cremer, M. Vangheluwe, W. Vanormelingen, T. Verbiest, A. Persoons, C. Samyn 9:40 130. Role of strong electron acceptors in promoting pi-stacking in substituted oligothiophenes. M. M. Bader, P-T. Pham, J. P. Macjewiski, J. Q. Chen, E. H. Elandaloussi, M. D. Ward, C. D. Frisbie 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 131. Cation and anion stabilization in conjugated polymers. F. Wudl, R. C. Chiechi 10:50 132. Internal compensation as a route to interfaces between dissimilarly doped conju­ gated polymers. M. C. Lonergan, C. H. W. Cheng, F. Lin, L. Gao 11:10 133. Properties of lithium-doped siloxane-phosphonate conducting polymers. S. Gallagher, T. M. Nahir, C. Phelps 11:30 134. Synthesis, processing and proper­ ties of conjugated polymer networks. A. Kokil, P. Yao, D. Wilger, M. Kinami, C. Rademaker, C. Weder

Presiding

Section D

Polymer Nanocomposites Structure-Property Relationships Experimental Cosponsored with POLY R. Krishnamoorti and R. Vaia,

Organizers

S. K. Kumar and A. C. Balazs,

Presiding

1:30 151. Nanocomposites from poly(ethyleneco-methacrylic acid) ionomers: Effect of surfactant structure on morphology and properties. R. K. Shah, D. R. Paul 2:00 152. Controlling the miscibility of polyolefin/layered silicates nanocomposites by altering the polymer/surface interactions. I. Altintzi, K. Chrissopoulou, S. H. Anastasiadis, M. Pitsikalis, N. Hadjichristidis, N. Theophilou, E. P. Giannelis 2:30 153. Polymer nanocomposites for the real world: Achievement of well dispersed nanofiller sheets, nanotubes, and nanoparticles by solid-state shear pulverization. K. G. Kasimatis, J. A. Nowell, L. M. Dykes, W. R. Burghardt, R. Thillaiyan, L. C. Brinson, R. Andrews, J. M. Torkelson 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 154. Nanocomposites and nanofluids. D. Shah, P. Maiti, A. Bouriinos, Q. Zhang, L. A. Archer, E. P. Giannelis 3:50 155. Polymer/layered-inorganic nanocomposites: Limitations of mechanical improvement for high-stiffness polymers. E. Manias 4:20 156. Glass transition behavior of polystyrene filled with surface modified silica nanocomposite. A. Bansal, C. Li, H. Yang, B. Benicewicz, S. K. Kumar, L. S. Schadler Section Β San Diego Marriott San Diego Β

San Diego Marriott Manchester 1 -2 Cooperative Research Award Symposium in Honor of Frank W. Harris, Stephen Z. D. Cheng and Bruce Winker

Polymeric Semiconductors for Thin-Film Electronics Fabrication and Patterning Methods L. Loo and M. L. Chabinyc, Presiding

Organizers,

Presiding

D. A. Schiraldi, Organizer,

San Diego Marriott San Diego Β

118-TECH

Organizers

8:25 Introductory Remarks. 8:30 135. Molecular dynamics of polymers confined to nanoporous glasses. A. Schônhals 9:00 136. Structural recovery in confined polymer films and nanocomposites above and below the bulk glass transition temperature: Novel studies by fluorescence and differential scanning calorimetry. R. D. Priestley, P. Rittigstein, L. J. Broadbelt, J. M. Torkelson 9:30 137. True nanoscopic investigation of polymer cooperation lengths on cooling towards the glass transition. R. M. Overney, S. E. Sills 10:00 Intermission. 10:15 138. Dynamics under severe confinement in intercalated polymer/layered silicates nanocomposites. K. Chrissopoulou, S. H. Anastasiadis, E. P. Giannelis, B. Frick 10:45 139. Segmental dynamics of polymers in extreme (1-2nm slit-pore) confinements. E. Manias 11:15 140. Atomic force microscopy electrostatic nanolithography (AFMEN): Manipulation of thin polymer films under extreme electrostatic potentials. S. F. Lyuksyutov, S. B. Juhl, P. B. Paramonov, R. Vaia 11:45 141. Low molecular weight polyisoprene (PI)/ silicate nanocomposites as studied by dielectric relaxation spectroscopy (DRS) and dynamic mechanical spectroscopy (DMS). J. Mijovic, H. Lee

S. R. Turner,

Section Β

L. Loo and M. L. Chabinyc, Presiding

P. Cebe and J . Runt,

A. Jonas and A. M. Jonas,

San Diego Marriott Torrey 1-2

Presiding

8:00 Introductory Remarks. 8:05 142. Micron and nanometer sized contact pattern replication: Advanced stamping and molding. K. R. Carter 8:30 143. Design of polymer materials with tailored optical properties. C. Weder 8:55 144. Advances in proton exchange membranes for fuel cells. J. E. McGrath 9:20 145. Fluoropolymers for integrated optics and photonics. D. W. Smith Jr. 9:45 146. Overview of quinoxaline polymers. P. M. Hergenrother 10:10 Intermission. 10:25 147. Stressed liquid crystals for fast photonic applications. J. L. West, A. V. Glushchenko, Y. Reznikov, M. Zhang 10:50 148. Harvesting the fruit of universityindustry collaborations: Biréfringent polymer thin film compensators for LCDs. B. Winker 11:20 149. How a search for organo-soluble polyimides led to polyimide compensation films for LCDs. F. W. Harris, S. Z. D. Cheng 11:50 150. Design and assembly of polyimide thin film optics to develop negative retardation layers. S. Z. D. Cheng, F. W. Harris

1:30 157. Lithography-free, self-aligned inkjet printing with sub-100 nm resolution. H. Sirringhaus, C. Sele, T. von Weme 2:00 158. Nanometer-thick multilayer gate insulators for molecular and polymeric organic field-effect transistors. A. Facchetti, M-H. Yoon, T. J. Marks 2:20 159. Printed chemical sensors. Y. Xia, C. G. Smith, A. Karwa, Β. Ε. Kahn 2:40 160. Molecular layer epitaxy route to nanolayers-based organic electronics. Y. Ofir, O. Schwartsglass, J. Shappir, S. Yitzchaik 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 161. Polymer transistor display back­ planes: High performance inkjet printed devices. A. C. Arias, S. Ready, R. Lujan, W. S. Wong, Κ. Ε. Paul, M. L. Chabinyc, A. Salleo, R. Apte, R. A. Street 3:50 162. Patterning organic materials using a micropen. Y. Xia, B. E. Kahn, G. A. Fino, W. J. Grande 4:10 163. Patterning organic semiconductors for organic electronic applications. A. L. Briseno, M-M. Ling, M. Roberts, H. Moon, D. Brehm, Z. Bao 4:30 164. Characterization of organic elec­ tronic devices with directly-patternable polyaniline electrodes. K. S. Lee, G. B. Blanchet, F. Gao, Y. L. Loo Section C San Diego Marriott Torrey 3 Confinement Effects on Relaxation Properties of Polymers Blends and Copolymers

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

P. Cebe and J . Runt, S. H. Anastasiadis,

Organizers Presiding

1:30 165. Temperature and pressure effects on the dynamics of polymer blends. G. A. Floudas, K. Mpoukouvalas, S. Zhang, J. Runt, F. Du Prez 2:00 166. Pattern formation in binary blends confined between rough, chemically heter­ ogenous surfaces. A. C. Balazs, R. Verberg, C. Pooley, J. Yeomans 2:30 167. Dynamics of poly(ethylene oxide) and its non-crystalline blends with poly(methyl methacrylate). X. Jin, S. Zhang, J. Runt 3:00 Intermission. 3:15 168. Thickness dependent dielectric relaxation in nano films of vinylidene cya­ nide/vinyl acetate copolymer. T. Furukawa, K. Higashi, W. Yasuda, Y. Takahashi 3:45 169. Using neutron reflectivity to monitor the dynamic of copolymers: Effect of sequence distribution. M. D. Dadmun, S. Kamath, M. A. Arien, W. A. Hamilton 4:15 170. Effect of copolymer sequence distri­ bution on the dynamics of copolymers in a homopolymer matrix. S. Y. Kamath, M. D. Dadmun 4:45 171. Self-organization of acylated chitosans and characteristic morphology. Z. Zong, F. Fan, C. Xue, R. K. Eby, S. Z. D. Cheng, M. Takahashi, Y. Kimura T U E S D A Y EVENING Section A Convention Center Sails Pavilion Joint PMSE/POLY Poster Session R. N. DeMartino, Organizer,

Presiding

6:00-8:00 Polymeric Semiconductors for Thin Film Electronics. 172. Effect of conjugation on the optical perfor­ mance of perylene derivatives. W. Feng Sr., F. Zhou 173. Solvent vapor-mediated poly (3-hexylthiophene) nanowire formation and its effect on field-effect mobility. K. Cho, D. H. Kim, Y. D. Park, Y. Jang, K. Im, T. Chang, Y. H. Kim, D. G. Moon Polymer Nanocomposites. 174. Effects of temperature and solvent quality on the relaxation of a clay sheet: Monte Carlo simulation. R. B. Pandey, K. L. Anderson, H. Heinz, B. L Farmer Confinement Effects on Relaxation Properties of Polymers. 175. High sensitive AC calorimeter for nanom­ eter sized samples. H. Huth, A. Minakov, C. Schick General Papers/New Concepts in Polymeric Materials. 176. Formation of photo-graftable surface from phenolic substrate. Y. Kawanishi, Y. Suzuki, M. Sakuragi 177. Universal effects of solubility and thermal annealing for structure formation in RR poly (3-alkyl thiophene) series. H. Yang, M-M. Ling, T. J. Shin, C. Y. Ryu, Z. Bao 178. Soy protein plastics filled with lignin deriva­ tives. J. Huang, Y. Chen, J . Yu 179. Studies of hydrodynamic properties for characterizing star-shaped poly(ethylene-copropylene). H-M. Huang, l-C. Liu, R. C-C. Tsiang 180. Studies on thermal stability of graft copoly­ mer of vinyl monomers and xanthan gum. A. Srivastava, A. Srivastava, K. Behari 181. Study of chromophore orientation and photorefractive effects in branched electrooptic chromophores. V. E. Campbell, D. J. McGee, A. Caruso, N. Woodward, P. Gopalan 182. Subcritical damped oscillatory concentra­ tion of free radicals in continuous mass polymerization of alphamethylstyrene acrylonitrile and methacrylonitrile terpolymer. K. R. Sharma 183. Supramolecular complexes from CdSe nanocrystals and thiophene dendrons functionalized with 1, 10-phenanthroline. S. Deng, M. D. Millan, R. C. Advincula 184. Surface modification behavior of amphipathic fungal proteins. S. D. Benson, G. C. Cannon, C. L McCormick, S. E. Morgan 185. Surface modification of cellulose sub­ strates by ring-opening polymerization for biocomposite applications. H. Lônnberg, E. E. Malmstrom, A. Huit

PMSE

186. Syndiotactic polystyrene-organoclay nanocomposites: Synthesis via in situ coordina­ tion-insertion polymerization and preliminary characterization. S. Bruzaud, S. Ilinca, J-F. Carpentier, Y. Grohens 187. Synthesis and characterization of anionic LDH/PET nanocomposites by in-situ poly­ merization. W. D. Lee, S-l. Han, S. S. Im 188. Synthesis and characterization of negative type polyamic acid ester with 1-methacryloyloxy-2-propanoate group. M. H. Yi, S. M. Choi, Y. H. Jung, J. D. Ha 189. Synthesis and characterization of novel electroactive aniline trimer-containing organosilane material. Y. Guo, Y. Wei, P. Lelkes, F. K. Ko, S. Li, Q. Feng 190. Synthesis and characterization of PET/Azeolite nanocomposites by in-situ polymer­ ization. Y. H. Shin, W. D. Lee, S. S. Im 191. Synthesis and characterization of starch based nanocomposites. S. Ganguly, S. Ganguli, D. Patterson, D. R. Dean 192. Synthesis and properties of copolymers of polyamides and polyesters with polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxanes: Comparison with blended materials. S. Iyer, S. David 193. Synthesis and properties of high molecular weight poly(beta-propiolactone). A. K. Nanda, R. F. Storey, D. A. Wicks 194. Synthesis and spectral properties of polyurea with luminophor fragments in polymer chain. N. N. Barashkov, I. J. Zvonkina 195. Synthesis of graftted copolymer of cationic guar gum-acrylamide and its flocculation properties. J. Huang, A. Liu 196. Synthesis of non-viral gene delivery carri­ ers based on the block copolymer of PEG and lysine-phenylalanine copolymer. J-K. Hong, Y-R. Choi, M-H. Lee, C-H. Ahn 197. Synthesis of novel poly[6(7),6'(7')-(1,3adamantyl)bis(2-naphthol)] with low dielec­ tric constant. K. Matsumoto, Y. Shibasaki, S. Ando, M. Ueda 198. Synthesis of organotin ethylene glycol polyethers. G. Barot, C. E. Carraher Jr., D. W. Siegmann-Louda 199. Ti-catalyzed living ring opening polymer­ ization of ε-caprolactone initiated from aldehydes. A. D. Asandei, Y. Chen 200. Transparent nanocomposites of plyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxanes. A. Ghosh, A. F. Abu-Ali, S. Iyer, A. T. Detwiler, Y. Zhou, D. A. Schiraldi 201. Uniformity control of polystyrene micro­ spheres in TEMPO-mediated dispersion polymerization employing camphorsulfonic acid. S. E. Shim, S. Oh, K. Kim, S. Choe 202. Vibrational assignments for organotin dihalides and the organotin polyester amines containing ciprofloxacin. A. Zhao, C. E. Carraher Jr., M. Scopelliti, L. Pellerito 203. Zone of zero transfer within a Ziegler Natta polymerization catalyst. K. R. Sharma 204. Nano-charge writing in oligothiophene/ phtalocyanine layer-by-layer ultrathin film. A. Baba, R. Xu, J. Locklin, R. C. Advincula 205. Nanoscale adhesive properties of polymer brushes reversibly assembled along the polymer backbones. J. Kim, Y. Liu, S. L. Craig 206. Naphthalene-tetracarboxylicdiimide deriva­ tives: Structure and electronic properties relationship in model compounds for molecular layer epitaxy. Y. Ofir, M. Nehama, S. Yitzchaik 207. New energetic prepolymer, poly(NEO) and its stable elastomer. J . S. Kim 208. Novel approach to obtain high molecular weight PS via dispersion polymerization using a bifunctional macromonomer. K. Kim, H. Jung, S. E. Shim, S. Choe 209. Novel biodegradable amino acid-contain­ ing anhydride oligomers for orthopedic application. D. Xie, I-D. Chung, A. D. Puckett, J. W. Mays 210. Oligo(ethylene glycol)-functionalized disiloxane: Synthesis and conductivity. Z. Zhang, N. A. A. Rossi, A. Simon, Q. Wang, K. Amine, R. West 211. Online process monitoring of particle size in emulsion polymerisations. J. McConville, K. Tribe, S. O'Donohue, G. Saunders 212. Organic/inorganic composite sphere pre­ pared via sol-gel process. W-H. Weng, C-K. Huang, C-C. Chang, H. Chen 213. Peptide-templated polymer hybrid nanotubes. J. Couet, J. D. J. S. Samuel, A. Kopyshev, S. Santer, M. A. Biesalski 214. pH-lnduced micelle formation of poly(histidine-co-phenylalanine)-b-PEG in an aque­ ous media. W. H. Jo, Y. H. Bae

215. Photopolymerization of clay-polymer nanocomposite systems. K. Owusu-Adorn, C. A. Guymon 216. PMMA-montmorillonite nanocomposites from tyramine modified montmorillonite. S-S. Hou, C-C. Chang 217. Grafting of polymer brushes from layer-bylayer colloidal core-shell particles. T. M. Fulghum, D. L. Patton, R. C. Advincula 218. Polymer/phthalocyanine-modified BaTi03 nanocomposite for embedded capacitor application. L. Li, A. Takahashi, J. Hao, R. Kikuchi, T. Hayakawa, S. Yamada, M-A. Kakimoto 219. Polymeric substrate and storage coeffi­ cient in the thermal management of high speed microprocessors. K. R. Sharma 220. Preparation and characterization of poly(methyl methacrylate) and polystyrene/mica nanocomposite via emulsion polymerization. H-Y. Cheng, G. J. Jiang Sr., J-Y. Hung Jr. 221. Preparation of nanohybrid particles with high electromobility and bistability in low dielectric medium. M. S. Kim, J. Y. Lee, J. Kim, S-S. Lee 222. Preparation of T i 0 2 based microcapsules for electrophoretic ink. J. K. Song, H. J. Myoung, K. Kim, J. H. Sung, H. J. Choi, l-J. Chin 223. Soft lithographic patterning of polymers using perfluoropolyether molds. J. Rolland, Β. W. Maynor, A. E. Exner, J. M. DeSimone 224. Dewetting behavior of immiscible polysty­ rene blends in non-equilibrium state. S. J . Cho, K. Kim, l-J. Chin 225. Dial-in properties of conjugated thiophenes. W. G. Skene, S. Dufresne 226. Display of image contrast agents on bionanoparticles and their potential applications for in vivo imaging. H. N. Barnhill, W. Zhan, H. Tian, Q. Wang 227. Effect of architecture on the self-assembly of block copolymers at interfaces: Linearnanoparticle vs. linear AB diblocks. Y. Kim, J. Pyun, J. M. J. Frechét, C. J. Hawker, C. W. Frank 228. Effect of synthesis parameters on carbon nanofiber-supported platinum particle size. A. Guha, T. A. Zawodzinski Jr., D. A. Schiraldi 229. Effects of hydrolysis on a new biodegradable thermoplastic elastomer functioning as a stent cover. J. O. B. Asplund, J. Sperens, T. Mathisen, J. Hilbom 230. Electrical and mechanical properties of carbon black reinforced high density polyethylene/low density polyethylene composites. Z. Kuçukyavuz, Β. Altyntap 231. Electrospinning of crystalline poly(L-lactic acid) and amorphous poly(ether sulfone) in mixed solvents. Κ. Τ. Park, H-S. Kim, K. Kim, l-J. Chin 232. Encapsulating acetaminophen into poly (L-lactide) microcapsules by W/O/W emul­ sion solvent-evaporation technique. M-K. Lai, R. C-C. Tsiang 233. EVA/tackifier compatibility. M. F. Tse 234. Exfoliated polystyrene clay nanocompos­ ites: Effect of sonication on solvent blending. A. B. Morgan, J. D. Harris 235. Fabrication of novel molecularly imprinted polymer film for specific protein recognition. H. Nishino, M. Gruber, R. Ellson, K. J. Shea 236. First order Markov model representation of chain sequence distribution of alphamethylstyrene acrylonitrile prepared by reversible free radical copolymerization. K. R. Sharma 237. Glass transition temperature in a thin polymer film studied by positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy. J. Zhang, H. Chen, Y. Li, R. Suzuki, T. Ohdaira, Y. C. Jean 238. Heterocoagulation of gold microbeads with carboxylic acid-functionalized polymer nanobeads. S-S. Lee, S. Woo, J. Kim 239. High-efficiency saturated red electrophosphorescent devices based on a novel osmium(ll) complex doped into different host materials. J . Lu, Y. Tao, Y. Tung, Y. Chi, J. Ding, M. Day 240. Improving properties of silicon-containing oligo(ethylene oxide) electrolytes with cyclic carbonate additives. N. A. A. Rossi, Z. Zhang, Q. Wang, K. Amine, R. West 241. Influence of thioether structure on reflec­ tive and conductive properties of metallized polyimide films. R. Jin, Z. Bai, D. Wu, F. Song

242. Inhibition of Balb 3T3 cells by organotin polyesters derived from ticarcillin. D. W. Siegmann-Louda, C. E. Carraher Jr., S. Riley, K. Morie 243. Inhibition of Balb 3T3 cells by organotin polymers containing ciprofloxacin and ceph­ alexin. D. W. Siegmann-Louda, C. E. Carraher Jr., A. Fletcher, Y. Herrera, A. Zhao 244. Integration of biomacromolecules on the patterned surface of self-assembled mono­ layers (SAMs). K. Qi, C. Zhou, D. Pan, A. V. Walker, K. L. Wooley 245. Interaction of polycations with model membranes: Seeing is believing. P. R. Leroueil, S. Hong, M-M. Kober, E. K. Janus, J. R. Baker Jr., B. G. Orr, M. M. Banaszak Holl 246. Interferometric measurements of refractive index dispersion in polymers over the visible and near-infrared spectral range. S. E. Caudill, W. T. Grubbs 247. Investigation of thermally induced phase transitions and degradation of organoclays based on synthetic Somasif clays using in-situ X-ray scattering. M. Y. Gelfer, C. Burger, G. Panek, G. Jeschke, A. Y. Fadeev, M. Si, M. H. Rafailovich, P. Nawani, B. Chu, B. Hsiao 248. Ionic conductivity and DSC studies of siloxane electrolytes. L. J. Lyons, K. Morcom, Y. Schneider, Z. Zhang, N. A. A. Rossi, R. West 249. Lithium/polymer battery electrolytes: The polyethylene oxide)/lithium perchlorate system. J. C. Selser 250. Macromolecular matrix mediated metalliza­ tion of fluorinated and traditional polyimides yielding highly reflective silvered membranes at low metal concentrations. R. E. Southward, D. S. Thompson, L. M. Davis, J. L. Scott, S. T. Broadwater, D. W. Thompson 251. Micelle formation of a nonamphiphilic poly(vinylphenol)-block-polystyrene by a,wdiamine: Thermodynamic and kinetic stud­ ies. E. Yoshida, S. Itsuno, Y. Terada 252. Microwave processing of chopped natural fiber composites and their characterization. N. Sgriccia, M. C. Hawley, M. Misra 253. Minimum radius of spherical pellet to avoid subcritical damped oscillatory concentration. K. R. Sharma 254. Amine functionalized self assembled monolayers on oxide surfaces via the hid­ den amine route. Y. Ofir, N. Zenou, M. Maharizi, S. Yitzchaik 255. Anomalous swelling and ion pairing in PAH and PSS multilayers. J. A. Jaber, J. B. Schlenoff 256. Armoured latex approach to thermoplastic nanocomposites and nanocompomers. H. Weickmann, R. Thomann, R. Miilhaupt 257. Characterization of water in Nylon-6 by near-IR and modulated DSC studies. D. Xu, C. S. P. Sung 258. Characterization of polysiloxane-based nanocomposites: Comparative rheological study. A. Beigbeder, S. Bruzaud, P. Médéric, T. Aubry, Y. Grohens 259. Chitosan- Cu(ll), Zn(ll) and Fe(ll) complexes as antimicrobial agent: Synthesis, characterization and structure-activity study. X. Wang, Y. Du, F. Huang, H. Liu, L. Fan 260. Conjugated organic polymers: Effect of morphology and defects on the emission of Di-alkyl polyfluorenes. L. J. Rozanski, D. A. Vanden Bout 261. Core-shell polyacrylate latex containing silicon in shell. Y. Wang Jr., Y. Chen, C. Zhang 262. Crystalline morphology change of stretched PLLA films. J . Y. Nam, J. K. Lee, D. J. Hwang, H. Y. Won, B. Y. Lee, K. H. Lee 263. Crystallization behavior and nucleation effect of carbon nanotube reinforced polyethylene 2,6-naphthalate) nanocomposites. J. Y. Kim, H. S. Park, S. H. Kim 264. Design and fabrication of highly ordered hybrid inorganic-organic isoporous membranes. D. Nystrôm, P. Antoni, E. E. Malmstrôm, M. Johansson, A. Huit 265. Design, synthesis and characterization of regioregular oligo(3-alkoxy-thiophene) with two carboxyaldehyde end groups. M. Wang, C. Zhang, S-S. Sun 266. Nanoengineered multiscale composites. E. Nyairo, A. Obore, D. R. Dean 267. Initial synthesis of group IVB metallocene polyamine ether polymers containing the antiviral agent acyclovir. T. S. Sabir, C. E. Carraher Jr.

268. lonomers from sulfonated styrene-butadiene rubber without gel as a thermoplastic elastomer. H-Q. Xie, D. Xie, W-S. Xu, Z-P. Ao 269. Low and medium range TOF-EI MALDI mass spectrometry of group IVB metallocene-acyclovir polymers. T. S. Sabir, C. E. Carraher Jr. 270. Porous titania monoliths prepared through sol-gel method using polystyrene foam as template. J . Ren, Z. Du, H. Li 271. Synthesis of organotin pyrimidine polyamines. A. J. Battin, C. E. Carraher Jr. 272. Antiviral activity of cisplatin derivatives of tilorone against reovirus ST3, vaccinia virus, varicella zoster virus (VZV), and herpes simplix virus (HSV-1). M. R. Roner, C. E. Carraher Jr., S. Dhanji 273. Plastification of PVC by blending with the new long-chain polyester. Y. Li, L. Liu 274. Polymers derived from 4-(4'-chlorophenyl)1 H-pyrrole-2-carboxylic acid and 4-(4'fluorophenyl)-H-pyrrole-2-carboxylic acid for lipid lowering. B. S. Burnham, C. E. Carraher Jr., J. D. Berkowitz, K. Morie 275. Synthesis of polymeric derivatives of norfloxacin through reaction with phosphate and phosphonate acid dichlorides. C. E. Carraher Jr., K. Abeygunawardana Carbon Nanotubes, Polymers, And Complex Fluids Cosponsored with POLY WEDNESDAY MORNING Section A San Diego Marriott Torrey 1-2 Polymer Nanocomposites Nanotubes for Nanocomposites Cosponsored with POLY R. Vaia and R. Krishnamoorti, Presiding

Organizers,

8:00 276. Nanoengineered multifunctional materials and their potential for aerospace applications. E. Silverman, J. A. Starkovich 8:30 277. Remarkable mechanics of extremely thin graphite platelets. R. S. Ruoff, W. Ding, R. Piner, S. Stankovich 9:00 278. Solving the matrix dispersion problem for single walled carbon nanotube composites. M. S. Strano 9:30 279. Thermal properties of carbon nanostructures: Results from molecular simulations. D. W. Brenner, Z. Hu, O. A. Shenderova, C. W. Padgett 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 280. Processing phase diagram of carbon-nanotube polymer composites. E. K. Hobbie 10:50 281. Small diameter few-walled carbon nanotubes: An alternative for single walled carbon nanotubes in polymer nanocomposites? C. Qian, H. Qi, B. Gao, O. Zhou, J. Liu 11:20 282. Conductive elastomeric nanocomposites. M. D. Alexander Jr., H. Dowty, B. Black, M. J. Matuszewski, C-S. Wang, G. Hansen, M. Pettit 11:50 283. Carbon nanotubes in composites. M. Meyyappan Section Β San Diego Marriott San Diego Β Polymeric Semiconductors for Thin-Film Electronics Thin-Film Transistors and Memory Devices L. Loo and M. L. Chabinyc, Presiding

Organizers,

8:30 284. Crosspoint memory cells based on organic-metal structures. L. Bozano, R. C. Chiechi, M. Beinhoff, K. R. Carter, J. C. Scott

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

TECH-119

Γ TECHNICAL PROGRAM 9:00 285. Organic semiconductor materials design and thin film growth for high perfor­ mance transistors. Z. Bao 9:30 286. Charge injection in organic fieldeffect transistors. Β. Η. Hamadani, D. Natelson 9:50 287. High performance organic thin film transistors based on cyclohexyl-substituted organic semiconductors. J. Locklin, Z. Bao, R. C. Advincula 10:10 Intermission. 10:25 288. Designing air stable thiophene polymers based on control of conjugation length. I. McCulloch, C. Bailey, M. Giles, K. Genevicius, M. Heeney, M. Shkunov, D. Sparrowe, S. Tiemey, M. Suzuki 10:55 289. Self-assembly and semiconducting properties of solution-processed oligothiophenes containing thermally-labile solubilizing groups. A. R. Murphy, J. M. J. Frechet, P. Chang, V. Subramanian 11:15 290. Two electric force microscope case studies: Charge injection in a triarylamine/ polystyrene thin film and charge trapping in polycrystalline pentacene. J. A. Marohn, W. Silveira, E. M. Muller Section C

Confinement Effects on Relaxation Properties of Polymers Thin Films P. Cebe and J. Runt,

Organizers

Presiding

8:00 291. Dynamics of polymers in confining geometries of different topology. A. Serghei, F. Kremer, L. Hartmann, Y. Mikhailova, K-J. Eichhom, B. Voit 8:30 292. Conformational perturbations of polymer chains confined in 1 or 2 dimen­ sions. A. M. Jonas, C. Bollinne, S. Cuenot, B. Nysten, A. Pallandre 9:00 293. Molecular mobility in freely-standing polymer films. C. B. Roth, J. R. Dutcher 9:30 294. Dynamics and diffusion in thin polymer films. C. L. Soles, J. F. Douglas, W-L. Wu 10:00 Intermission. 10:15 295. Relaxation dynamics of thin poly­ mer films by dielectric relaxation spectros­ copy. K. Fukao 10:45 296. Calorimetric glass transition in polystyrene films of nanometer thickness. C. Schick, H. Huth, A. Minakov 11:15 297. Heat capacity study of nanometer thin films of polymers. L. H. Allen, M. Y. Efremov, E. A. Olson, M. Zhang, Z. Zhang 11:45 298. Anomalous long and short time dynamics in thin films of polystyrene. J. A. Forrest, Z. Fakhraai WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Section A San Diego Marriott Manchester 1 Bionanotechnology - The Interface Between Biology and Polymer Science Nanomaterials in Biology K. Hamad-Schifferli,

Organizer

R. R. Naik and H. Matsui, Presiding

Organizers,

1:00 299. Living templates for the assembly of nanoparticle building blocks into functional architectures. C. A. Mirkin 1:25 300. Synthetically modified viral capsids: Building blocks for nanoscale materials. M. B. Francis 1:50 323. DNA and protein assemblies as nanoscale systems for sensing, machinery functions and nano-circuitry. I. Willner, B. Willner 2:05 302. Nanobiotechnology with S-layers as building blocks. U. B. Sleytr, D. Pum, B. Schuster, M. Sara 2:30 303. Alternate substrate specificity for the silica condensing R5 peptide of C. fusiformis. D. W. Wright, S. Sewell 2:55 Intermission. 3:15 304. Enzyme-polymer composites with high biocatalytic activity and stability. J . Kim

120-TECH

Section Β San Diego Marriott San Diego Β Polymeric Semiconductors for Thin-Film Electronics Photovoltaics and Light Emitting Devices L. Loo and M. L. Chabinyc, Presiding

San Diego Marriott Torrey 3

M. Pyda,

3:30 305. Towards enzyme microcompartmentation in synthetic cells. M. S. Long, M. Helfrich, C. D. Keating 3:55 306. Nanobarcodes as novel biosensing platform for multiplex immunoassay. J. B-H. Tok 4:10 307. Cellular internalization and targeting of nanoparticles. S. M. Rozenzhak, T. M. Caserta, M. O. Stone, R. R. Naik, M. P. Kadakia 4:35 308. Synthesis and functional evaluation of DNA-assembled polyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimer clusters for cancer cell specific targeting. Y-S. Choi, T. Thomas, K. Alina, M. T. Islam, J. R. Baker Jr. 4:50 309. Assembly of Pd particles by selected RNA sequences. L. A. Gugliotti, D. L. Feldheim, B. E. Eaton

Organizers,

1:30 310. Improving exciton and charge trans­ port in organic-inorganic hybrid photovoltaic cells. M. D. McGehee 2:00 311. Dependence of polymer hybrid photovoltaic performance on donor-acceptor morphology. S. A. Carter, S. V. Chasteen, J. O. Haerter, G. Rumbles, J. C. Scott 2:30 312. Polyoxometalate containing hybrid polymers for photovoltaic cells. Z. Peng, M. Lu, J. Kang, B. Xu, B. Xie 2:50 Intermission. 3:10 313. Metal quinolate polymers as materi­ als in polymeric organic light-emitting diodes. A. Meyers, X-Y. Wang, A. Kimyonok, C. R. South, X. Zhan, J-Y. Cho, B. Domercq, B. Kippelen, S. R. Marder, M. Week 3:40 314. Development of large band gap host materials for high-energy phosphorescent emitters. M. S. Liu, Y. Niu, A. K-Y. Jen 4:00 315. Electrochemical doping of MEHPPV. J. M. Léger, A. L. Holt, S. A. Carter Section C San Diego Marriott Torrey 3 Confinement Effects on Relaxation Properties of Polymers Confinement within Self-Similar Structure P. Cebe and J. Runt, C. Schick,

Organizers

Presiding

1:30 316. Restricted dynamics in semicrystalline aromatic polyesters. A. Sanz, A. Nogales, N. Lotti, S. S. Funari, T. A. Ezquerra 2:00 317. Relaxation processes of the amorphous and semicrystalline biodegradable poly(lactic acid) by temperature-modulated calorimetry. M. Pyda 2:30 318. Enthalpy relaxation of rigid amorphous fraction in cold crystallized isotactic polystyrene. H. Xu, P. Cebe 3:00 Intermission. 3:15 319. Effect of confinement of the amorphous phase of polymers in semicrystallline polymers. B. Wunderlich 3:45 320. Crystal nucleation and crystal growth in confined polymers. M. V. Massa, K. Dalnoki-Veress 4:15 321. Can the effect of short chain branch type on the crystallization and structure of ethylene/olefin copolymers be characterized by scattering measurements? Y. A. Akpalu, Z. Xiao, Y. Li, E. J. Amis

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

THURSDAY MORNING Section A San Diego Marriott Manchester 1 Bionanotechnology - The Interface Between Biology and Polymer Science Interface Between Biology and Nanoscale Systems K. Hamad-Schifferli,

Organizer

R. R. Naik and H. Matsui, Presiding

Organizers, Section C

8:00 322. New bio-inspired low-temperature nanofabrication method yields semiconductors for photovoltaic and other applications. D. E. Morse, K. M. Roth, D. Kisailus, M. Murr 8:25 301. Core-stabilized polyion complex micelles entrapping enzymes as bionanoreactor. A. Harada, A. Kawamura, M. Inagaki, K. Kono, M. Jaturanpinyo, X. Yuan, K. Kataoka 8:50 324. Conducting polymer nanowiresbased sensors. J. Wang, Y. Bunimovich, G. Sui, Y. Guo, J. R. Heath, H-R. Tseng 9:05 325. Controlled synthesis of micropattemed single crystals via amorphous-tocrystalline transition induced by polymermodified 3D templates. J. Aizenberg 9:30 326. Structural states of self-assembled lamellar DNA-Membrane templates during artificial biomineralization of CdS nanorods. G. C. Wong 9:55 327. Controlled nanocrystal growth on sequence peptide coated nanotubes to fabricate Au, Ag, and Ge nanowires. G. Muniz, I. A. Banerjee, L. Yu, R. Djalali, H. Matsui 10:10 Intermission. 10:30 328. Self-assembly of peptide nanotubes by charged-termini capped diphenylalanine peptide analogue. E. Gazit, M. Reches 10:55 329. Self-assembling peptide amphiphile nanofiber scaffolds to facilitate islet cell transplantation. J. C. Stendahl, L-J. Wang, M. O. Guler, X. Zhang, X. Chen, D. B. Kaufman, S. I. Stupp 11:10 330. Self-assembly of DNA nanostructures. C. Mao 11:35 331. What is nano to cells and the body? D. E. Discher, P. Dalhaimer 12:00 332. Trace level pathogen identification by antibody nanotube networks. R. I. MacCuspie, I. A. Banerjee, P. Krause, H. Matsui 12:15 333. Assembly of hybrid nanostructures using biological building blocks. J. M. Slocik, M. M. Tomczak, M. O. Stone, R. R. Naik Section Β San Diego Marriott San Diego Β Polymeric Semiconductors for Thin-Film Electronics Characterization of Interfaces and Morphology L. Loo and M. L. Chabinyc, Presiding

10:40 339. Enhanced field-effect mobility of organic thin film transistors by surfacemediated molecular ordering. K. Cho, D. H. Kim, Y. D. Park, Y. Jang, H. Yang, Y. H. Kim, D. G. Moon, S. Park, T. Chang, C. Y. Ryu 11:00 340. Structural correlations of charge transport in regioregular poly(3-hexylthiophene). R. J. Kline, M. D. McGehee, M. F. Toney 11:20 341. Nanostructured polymers in poly­ meric optoelectronic devices. W. T. S. Huck, G. Fichet, G. L. Whiting, H. Snaith, R. H. Friend

Organizers,

8:30 334. Mechanisms of morphology forma­ tion in spin-coated semiconducting polymer blends. S. Y. Heriot, R. A. L. Jones 9:00 335. Correlating structure development to performance enhancement in organic semi­ conductor films. D. M. DeLongchamp, E. K. Lin, S. Sambasivan, D. A. Fischer 9:20 336. Volatile solvent solubility and ther­ mal annealing effects on regio-regular P3HT thin film structure and its correlation with TFT charge mobility. H. Yang, T. J. Shin, Z. Bao, K. Cho, C. Y. Ryu 9:40 337. Dynamic instabilities during forma­ tion of light-emitting polymer thin films. S-C. Luo, V. Craciun, E. P. Douglas 10:00 Intermission. 10:20 338. Combined optical approach to structural determination of semi-conducting polymer thin films. M. Gurau, D. M. DeLongchamp, L. J. Richter

San Diego Marriott Torrey 3 General Papers/New Concepts in Polymeric Materials Structure/Property Relationships R. N. DeMartino,

Organizer

A. K. Nanda and W. W. Lai,

Presiding

8:00 342. Glass transition in peptides. Tem­ perature and pressure effects. G. A. Floudas, P. Papadopoulos, I. Schnell, H. -A.KIok, T. Aliferis, H. latrou, N. Hadjichristidis 8:20 343. Processable PMR-type polyimides: Process-Property relationships, curing kinet­ ics, and thermooxidative stability. M. A. Abdalla, D. R. Dean, S. Campbell 8:40 344. Structure and mechanical properties of new low modulus elastomers. Y. Zhang, L. Okrasa, S. Qin, H-l. Lee, K. Matyjaszewski, T. Pakula 9:00 345. Identification and characterization of a new η-carrier material suitable for elec­ tronics application. W. W. Lai, A. H. Francis, P. G. Rasmussen, A. R. Millward 9:20 346. Photophysical properties of dendronized platinum(ll) acetylides for optical power limiting. R. Vestberg, R. Westlund, M. Carisson, B. Eliasson, E. Glimsdal, J. Ortengren, M. Lindgren, E. Malmstrom 9:40 347. Effect of solid content, degree of neutralization, chain extension, and tem­ perature on the rheological behavior of polyurethane dispersions. S. A. Madbouly, J. U. Otaigbe, A. K. Nanda, D. A. Wicks 10:00 Intermission. 10:30 348. Effect of the degree of ionic con­ tent, neutralization and chain extension on polyurethane dispersions. A. K. Nanda, D. A. Wicks, S. A. Madbouly, J. U. Otaigbe 10:50 349. Fluorescence study of the associa­ tion of a maleated EP copolymer in hydro­ carbon solvents: Effect of solvent toward the ΜΑΗ pendants on an EP-MAH. M. Zhang, J. Duhamel 11:10 350. Atomic force microscopy observa­ tion of crystallization and melting of narrow composition distribution polyethylene/alphaolefin copolymers. F. Mirabella 11:30 351. Tailoring the surface attachment of polydiacetylenes for molecular electronics applications. J. S. S. Jespher Daniel, J. E. Norton, V. Y. Lee, J. E. Frommer, O. Chaudhuri, K. Han, R. D. Miller, J. C. Scott 11:50 352. Computational studies of the inter­ actions between water and glassy polymer network. H. Zhang, J. Mijovic THURSDAY AFTERNOON

San Diego Marriott Manchester 1 Bionanotechnology - The Interface Between Biology and Polymer Science Biological Polymers K. Hamad-Schifferli,

Organizer

R. R. Naik and H. Matsui, Presiding

Organizers,

1:30 353. Effect of fatty acid conjugation on antimicrobial peptide activity. M. V. Tirrell 1:55 354. Interface of biology with polymeric materials science for defense applications. M. O. Stone

PMSE/PROF/SCHB 2:20 355. Nano-to micro-scale structures of polymers that repel and attract proteins. A. Chilkoti 2:45 356. Template-driven enzyme immobiliza­ tion: Development of a rapid and practical process inspired by diatoms. J. C. McAuliffe, W. C. Smith, R. Bond, J. Zimmerman, D. E. Ward, K. Sanford, T. H. Lane 3:10 Intermission. 3:30 357. Synthesis and single molecule studies of titin-mimicking modular polymers. J. Roland, Z. Guan 3:45 358. Biomimetic self-assembly of charged block copolymers and synthetic polypep­ tides. D. J. Pochan, T. J. Deming, K. L. Wooley, J. P. Schneider 4:10 359. Multifunctional artificial proteins for biological and materials applications. R. S. Farmer, Y. Wang, K. L Kiick 4:35 360. Nature's structural block design rules in Bombyx mon silk fibroin protein. C. T. S. Wong Po Foo, E. Bini, D. Knight, D. L. Kaplan

Division of Professional Relations

Section Β San Diego Marriott San Diego Β Toward Noninvasive Delivery and Diagnostics: Proteins, Genes and Cells J. D. DeNuzzio and S. Dinh, Presiding

Section C San Diego Marriott Torrey 3 General Papers/New Concepts in Polymeric Materials

M. Boden,

T. J. Kucera and J. K. Borchardt, Program Chairs

Organizer

Presiding

1:00 369. Conducting polymer nanowi re-based electrochemical transistors of interest for sensor applications. M. M. Alam, J. Wang, H-R. Tseng 1:20 370. Synthesis, characterization, and drug release properties of poly(e-caprolactone-b-isobutylene-b- ε-caprolactone). M. Boden, J. C. Cho, R. Faust, R. Richard, M. Schwarz, S. Ranade, K. Chan 1:40 371. Micropatterned conductive thin films of poly(aniline) from Langmuir-Blodgett technique and admicellar polymerization. M. Marquez, A. D. W. Carswell, B. P. Grady 2:00 372. Real-time and microscopic investiga­ tions of hybrid photopolymerizations using Raman spectroscopy. Y. Cai, J. L. P. Jessop 2:20 373. Synthesis and polymerization of N-alkyl dithieno[3,2-b:2',3'-d]pyrroles. L. De Cremer, W. Vanormelingen, G. Koeckelberghs, A. Persoons, C. Samyn, T. Verbiest 2:40 374. Development of novel family of molecular glasses based on oligosilanes. I. Imae, Y. Kawakami

8:00-10:00 1. Chemistry at the crossroads. M. W. Jordan, Β. Μ. Millar 2. Career staying power: Techniques for longterm success. J. K. Borchardt 3. Tips to reduce your ACS meeting expenses. J. K. Borchardt 4. Nontraditional personalities — nontraditional careers. C. Bailey 5. Getting unstuck: Shifting to a new career. M. J. Brownfield 6. Consulting: An ideal career for (some) tech­ nical professionals. G. E. Dolbear 7. CEPA Task Force on Globalization Issues. J. R. Bingham, H. N. Cheng, M. L. Gorbaty, M. G. Hankins, N. B. Mandava, N. W. Standish, D. Straus, J. F. Tatera, M. L. Wu, J. Kasper-Wolfe

SUNDAY MORNING Academic Hiring - How Do You Get the Job? Cosponsored with Graduate Education Advisory Board, National Organization for the Professional Advancement of Black Chemists and Chemical Engineers, Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science, PRES, CHED, CMA, CPT, SOCED, WCC, and YCC SUNDAY AFTERNOON Chemistry Enterprise 2015: Where in the World Will We Be? The Big Picture Cosponsored with PRES, BMGT, SCHB, and CEPA Closing the Gap for Underrepresented Groups by 2015: Proactive Strategies are the Key! Cosponsored with CWD, WCC, CMA, and PRES

MONDAY AFTERNOON Section A

TUESDAY AFTERNOON San Diego Marriott Columbia 3

Section A Manchester Grand Hyatt Edward D

L. P. Greenblatt and B. J . Streusand, Organizers, Presiding 2:00 Introductory Remarks. 2:05 8. ACS perspective on health care for early retirees. J. Parr 2:35 9. Health care coverage: Vital pillar for retirement security. J. C. Hansen 3:05 Intermission. 3:20 11. Practical considerations leading to a succesful retirement: An employer's per­ spective. J. Doran 3:50 10. Issues of healthcare benefits from a very small business perspective. B. J. Streusand 4:20 12. The government's role in retiree healthcare benefit. B. Dougherty Enterprise 2015: Preparing for Careers in Chemical Technology Cosponsored with TECH, and PRES

Division of Small Chemical Businesses P. J. Bonk, Program Chair

MONDAY AFTERNOON

BUSINESS MEETING: Sun SUNDAY AFTERNOON Chemistry Enterprise 2015: Where in the World Will We Be? The Big Picture Cosponsored with PRES, BMGT, PROF, and CEPA

M O N D A Y EVENING Informatics Challenges for Startups Cosponsored with CINF

Convention Center Sails Pavilion

MONDAY MORNING

Sci-Mix

Section A

J. K. Borchardt,

Organizer

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

Invention to Venture: A Symposium on Entrepreneurship Cosponsored with National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance, BMGT, and CEPA L. A. Casper, P. J . Bonk,

Organizer Presiding

1:00 3. Sales and marketing for early stage companies. J. C. Giordan 2:30 Intermission. 2:45 4. Securing financing for early stage ventures. J. Steig 4:15 Concluding Remarks. Chemistry Enterprise 2015: Where in the World Will We Be? The Big Picture Open Forum: Thesis, Antithesis, and Synthesis Cosponsored with PRES, BMGT, PROF, and CEPA Small Business Opportunities in Green Chemistry (sponsored by Green Chemistry & Engineering Subdivision) Bio-based Cosponsored with IEC, ENVR, and CEI TUESDAY MORNING Section A

SOCIAL EVENT: Social Hour: Tue

Section A

Small Business Opportunities in Green Chemistry (sponsored by Green Chemistry & Engineering Subdivision) Technologies Cosponsored with IEC, ENVR, and CEI

Enterprise 2015: Preparing for Careers in Chemical Technology Cosponsored with TECH, and PRES

Take Two: New Careers for Ph.D. Chemists Cosponsored with YCC, CHAL, SCHB, CEPA, and WCC

Chemistry Enterprise 2015: Where in the World Will We Be? The Big Picture Open Forum: Thesis, Antithesis, and Synthesis Cosponsored with PRES, BMGT, SCHB, and CEPA

Chemistry Enterprise 2015: Where in the World Will We Be? The Big Picture Opportunities and Challenges of Globalization Cosponsored with PRES, BMGT, PROF, and CEPA

Take Two: New Careers for Ph.D. Chemists Cosponsored with YCC, CHAL, PROF, CEPA, and WCC

MONDAY MORNING Chemistry Enterprise 2015: Where in the World Will We Be? The Big Picture Opportunities and Challenges of Globalization Cosponsored with PRES, BMGT, SCHB, and CEPA

8:15 1. Chemical Entrepreneurship: True stories from the trenches. P. J. Bonk 9:45 Intermission. 10:00 2. Opportunity assessment and the value proposition. W. Elliott 11:30 Concluding Remarks.

TUESDAY MORNING

Issues for Retirees: Healthcare Cosponsored with Local Section Activities Committee, and CEPA

Organizers,

1:00 361. Carbohydrate-peptide hybrid copoly­ mers as safe and effective gene delivery vectors. M. Metzke, N. O'Connor, S. Maiti, Z. Guan 1:30 362. Biodegradable cationic polymers as efficient gene delivery carriers. Y. Shen, P. Xu, S. Li, Q. Li, J. Ren, E. V. Kirk, W. J. Murdoch, M. Radosz 2:00 363. Gene delivery system using polysac­ charide schizophyllan and poly(dA) tailed DNA. T. Anada, R. Karinaga, K. Koumoto, M. Mizu, S. Shinkai, K. Sakurai 2:30 364. Multilayered polyelectrolyte films that sustain the release of functional DNA from surfaces. J. Zhang, C. M. Jewell, N. J. Fredin, D. M. Lynn 3:00 Intermission. 3:20 365. New dendritic beta-cyclodextrin/ triazole system for DNA delivery. S. Srinivasachari, T. M. Reineke 3:50 366. Positron annihilation with cancer cells. G. Liu, Y. Li, H. Chen, J. Zhang, J. E. Gadzia, Y. C. Jean 4:20 367. Structural traits of poly(glycoamidoamine)s affect DNA delivery. Y. Liu, T. M. Reineke 4:50 368. Transition metal-catalyzed one-pot synthesis of amphiphilic dendritic molecular nanocarriers. G. Chen, P. Andre, J. M. DeSimone, Z. Guan

R. N. DeMartino,

3:00 Intermission. 3:30 375. High throughput methods to deter­ mine the compatibility of polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxanes (POSS) in polycar­ bonate. C. Wu, D. A. Wicks 3:50 376. Is supercritical C0 2 -polymerized poly(vinylidene fluoride) branched? A rheological view point. L. F. Scanu, J. DeSimone, G. W. Roberts, S. A. Khan 4:10 377. Study of poly(hexafluorobutyl methacrylate-co-acrylates) latex. Y. Chen, Y. Wang Jr., C. Zhang Sr. 4:30 378. Dendron decorated chromophores for optical power limiting applications. R. Vest berg, A. M. Nystrom, M. Carlsson, B. Eliasson, C. Nilsson, A. Eriksson, C. Lopes, M. Lindgren, E. Malmstrom 4:50 379. Poly(ionic liquid)s: Novel materials for C 0 2 absorption. J. Tang, H. Tang, W. Sun, M. Radosz, Y. Shen

San Diego Marriott Columbia 3

San Diego Marriott Columbia 3 True Stories of Small Chemical Businesses P. J. Bonk,

Organizer

8:55 Introductory Remarks. 9:00 5. Focus Synthesis LLC: A new chemical business. E. R. Billyard 9:30 6. Kalexsyn Inc.: A new company from the Pfizer-Pharmacia merger. D. C. Zimmermann 10:00 7. West Coast Analytical Service, Inc.: Twenty years of trace analysis. E. Lindsay 10:30 Intermission. 10:45 8. Seres Laboratories. J. Stearns, M. D. Frishberg 11:15 9. California Pacific Lab, Inc.: EcoFunnels. R. Najafi 11:45 Concluding Remarks. Market Pull versus Technology Push in Industrial Organometallic Chemistry Cosponsored with INOR, and ORGN TUESDAY AFTERNOON Market Pull versus Technology Push in Industrial Organometallic Chemistry Cosponsored with INOR, and ORGN

Invention to Venture: A Symposium on Entrepreneurship Cosponsored with National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance, BMGT, and CEPA L. A. Casper, P. J . Bonk,

Organizer Presiding

8:00 Introductory Remarks/About the NCIIA.

TECH-121

TECHNICAL PROGRAM

•OHM Biotechnology Secretariat J. Fin ley, Secretary General SUNDAY AFTERNOON Section A Convention Center Room 33C Applied Biocatalysis and Biotransformations Cosponsored with BIOT

3:35 15. Comparative functional genomics of the hyperthermophilic bacterium Thermotoga maritime and the archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus. R. M. Kelly, S. B. Conners, K. R. Shockley, M. R. Johnson, C. I. Montera 4:00 16. Genome adaptations for life at high pressure. D. H. Bartlett, G. Valle, B. A. Methe, J. Yates 4:25 17. Structural genomics of a hyperther­ mophilic archaeon. F. E. Jenney Jr., F. L. Poole II, F. J. Sugar, C. Shah, H-S. Lee, T. Li, J. Eneh, S. Bridger, Β. Dillard, R. C. Hopkins, M. W. W. Adams 4:50 Concluding Remarks. TUESDAY MORNING Biogeochemistry at the Limits of Habitability Cosponsored with GEOC

J. S. Dordick,

Organizer TUESDAY AFTERNOON

2:00 Introductory Remarks. 2:05 1. Biomolecular engineering for biocatalyst and bioprocess development. H. Zhao 2:30 2. Biocatalyst discovery, evolution and application. G. DeSantis, K. Wong, B. Farwell, K. A. Kretz, D. Robertson, M. J. Burk, J. Short 2:55 3. Enzymes and their material needs: Overcoming the natural limitations of bioca­ talysis. D. S. Clark 3:20 Intermission. 3:35 4. Nanobiocatalysis. P. Wang 4:00 5. Parallel enzymatic synthesis of nonnatural phenylpropanoids. H. Jiang, J. A. Morgan, H. Chen 4:25 6. High-throughput biocatalysis for new compound discovery. J. S. Dordick 4:50 Concluding Remarks. MONDAY MORNING Section A Convention Center Room 33C Biocatalysis and Biotransformations under Extreme Conditions: Biodiversity Cosponsored with BIOT M. W . W . Adams and R. M. Kelly, Organizers 8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 7. Novel products from microbial diversity and laboratory evolution. E. Mathur 9:00 8. Life in hot acid around pH 0: Lessons from the genome sequence of the extreme thermoacidophile Picrophilus torridus. A. Angelov, O. Fuetterer, H. Liesegang, G. Gottschalk, G. Antranikian, W. Liebl 9:25 9. New extreme thermophiles found in high temperature compost. T. Moriya, K. Hikota, M. Kobayashi, T. Oshima 9:50 Intermission. 10:05 10. Biodiversity of alkalithermophiles. J. Wiegel 10:30 11. Lessons from extreme environments on protein stability: Novel osmolytes from hyperthermophiles. H. Santos 10:55 Concluding Remarks. MONDAY AFTERNOON Section A Convention Center Room33C Biocatalysis and Biotransformations under Extreme Conditions: Genomics and Genetics Cosponsored with BIOT M. W . W . Adams and R. M. Kelly, Organizers 2:00 Introductory Remarks. 2:05 12. Genetic tools for engineering hyper­ thermophiles. H. Atomi, T. Imanaka 2:30 13. Functional genomic analysis of the hyperthermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus. P. Blum, J. Schelert, M. Drozda, Y. Maezato 2:55 14. Integrated genomics approach to unravel a novel metabolic pathway. S. Brouns, J. van der Oost 3:20 Intermission.

122-TECH

Section A Convention Center Room 33C Genomic and Systems Approaches to Metabolic Engineering Cosponsored with BIOT E. T. Papoutsakis and M. J. Betenbaugh, Organizers 2:00 Introductory Remarks. 2:05 18. Genome-scale metabolic engineering of Mannheimia succiniciproducens for enhanced succinic acid production. S. Y. Lee 2:35 19. Exploring the diversity of metabolism. V. Hatzimanikatis, C. Li, J. A. lonita, C. S. Henry, M. Jankowski, L. J. Broadbelt 3:05 20. A genomics approach to metabolic engineering of glycosylation pathways. M. Betenbaugh 3:35 Intermission. 3:50 2 1 . Regulatory network engineering. J. C. Liao 4:20 22. Understanding butanol and butyrate toxicity and tolerance in Clostridia at the genomic scale. Ε. Τ. Papoutsakis, K. Alsaker, J. Borden 4:50 23. New "Dimensions" in genome annota­ tion. B. O. Palsson 5:20 Concluding Remarks. WEDNESDAY MORNING Section A Convention Center Room 33C Evolutionary Approaches to Biocatalysis and Biotransformations Cosponsored with BIOT G. Georgiou,

Organizer

8:00 Introductory Remarks. 8:05 24. Enzyme humanization and the cre­ ation of novel enzymes by combinatorial non-homologous recombination. K. E. Griswold, Y. Kawarasaki, N. Ghoneim, S. J. Benkovic, G. Georgiou 8:30 25. Protein evolution: The theory and the practice. D. S. Tawfik 8:55 26. Protease isolation and evolution in the intracellular environment. P. S. Daugherty 9:20 Intermission. 9:35 27. Engineering cytochrome P450 BM-3 towards methane hydroxylation. P. Meinhold, M. W. Peters, T. Kubo, F. H. Arnold 10:00 28. Second sphere residues biomolecu­ lar recognition and catalysis. B. Field, J. Diaz, S. K. Avrantinis, J. Coroneus, G. A. Weiss 10:25 29. Allsoteric enzymes created by the in vitro recombination of nonhomologous genes. M. Ostermeier 10:50 Concluding Remarks.

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Section A Convention Center Room 33C Biocatalysis and Biotransformations under Extreme Conditions: Enzymes and Proteins Cosponsored with BIOT M. W. W . A d a m s and R. M. Kelly, Organizers 2:00 Introductory Remarks. 2:05 30. Fundamental and biotechnological aspects of cold-adapted enzymes. T. Collins, A. Hoyoux, G. Feller, C. Gerday 2:30 3 1 . Characterization of lipases and esterases from extreme thermophiles, thermoacidophiles and thermoalkaliphiles. G. Antranikian, M. Royter 2:55 32. Molecular design of thermophilic xylose isomerase and alcohol dehydroge­ nase catalysts. C. Vieille, D. Sriprapundh, K. I. Ziegelman-Fjeld, S. H. Eom, J. G. Zeikus 3:20 Intermission. 3:35 33. Evidence for a versatile chaperone and protein degradation functions in hyperthermopilic archaea. F. T. Robb, P. Laksanalamai 4:00 34. A novel archaeal alanine dehydroge­ nase family: Characterization and crystal structure of the enzyme from Archaeoglobus fulgidus. I. Schroeder, H. G. Monbouquette, D. T. Gallagher 4:25 35. Archaeal proteasomes and protein quality control. J. A. Maupin-Furlow, M. A. Gil, P. A. Kirkland, C. J. Reuter, A. J. Wright 4:50 Concluding Remarks.

2:30 43. Genome-based approaches for inves­ tigating and optimizing uranium bioremediation and electricity generation by Geobacter species. M. Coppi, D. R. Lovley 3:00 Intermission. 3:15 44. The BioCyc pathway database collec­ tion and the pathway tools software. P. D. Karp 3:45 45. Metabolomic functional analysis of bacterial genomes. C. J. Unkefer, P. J. Unkefer 4:15 46. Genomically derived reagents. B. Kay, M. D. Scholle, J. Kehoe, U. Kriplani, K. Sishtia, F. Collart 4:45 Concluding Remarks.

H33I9 Catalysis & Surface Science Secretariat V. V. Guliants, Secretary General SUNDAY AFTERNOON George A. Olah Award in Hydrocarbon or Petroleum Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Enrique Iglesia Cosponsored with PETR MONDAY MORNING George A. Olah Award in Hydrocarbon or Petroleum Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Enrique Iglesia Cosponsored with PETR MONDAY AFTERNOON George A. Olah Award in Hydrocarbon or Petroleum Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Enrique Iglesia Cosponsored with PETR

THURSDAY MORNING TUESDAY MORNING Section A Convention Center Room 33C

George A. Olah Award in Hydrocarbon or Petroleum Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Enrique Iglesia Cosponsored with PETR

Environmental Biotransformations in the Genomic Age

TUESDAY AFTERNOON

B. H. Davison and B. Kay,

George A. Olah Award in Hydrocarbon or Petroleum Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Enrique Iglesia Cosponsored with PETR

Organizers

8:55 Introductory Remarks. 9:00 36. Genomics GTL: A look into the trea­ sure trove of environmental microbes. D. G. Thomassen 9:30 37. Access to novel biomolecules through high throughput cultivation. K. Zengler, G. Clark, M. Walcher, G. Woodnut, J. Short, M. Keller 10:00 38. Characterizing the complex metaproteomes of microbial communities. B. Davison, N. VerBerkmoes, G. B. Hurst, A. P. Borole, F. W. Larimer, R. L. Hettich 10:30 Intermission. 10:45 39. Functional anchors to study the soil metagenome. P. D. Schloss, J. Handelsman 11:15 40. Metabolic engineering of Rhizobacteria for simultaneous removal of TCE and cadmium. W. Lee, T. K. Wood, W. Chen THURSDAY AFTERNOON

WEDNESDAY MORNING Catalysis in Fuel Chemistry Hydrogen Production and Storage Cosponsored with FUEL, and PETR E. V. Murphree Award in Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Mark E. Davis Cosponsored with IEC, COLL, and PETR WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Catalysis in Fuel Chemistry Nanostructured Catalytic Materials & Reactivity Cosponsored with FUEL, and PETR E. V. Murphree Award in Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Symposium in Honor of Mark E. Davis Cosponsored with IEC, COLL, and PETR

Section A THURSDAY MORNING Convention Center Room 33C Environmental Biotransformations in the Genomic Age

Catalysis in Fuel Chemistry HDS, FCC, (De)Hydrogenation Cosponsored with FUEL, and PETR THURSDAY AFTERNOON

B. Kay and Β. Η. Davison, Presiding

Organizers,

1:25 Introductory Remarks. 1:30 4 1 . Global and physiological responses to substrate shifts in continuous and controlled batch cultures of Shewanella oneidensis MR-1. J. K. Fredrickson, C. Giometti, E. Kolker, K. Nealson, M. Riley, J. Tiedje, J. Zhou 2:00 42. Post-genomic studies on pigment biosynthesis and carbon utilization in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. W. Vermaas, B. Wang, D. Vavilin, A. van de Meene, R. Roberson

Catalysis in Fuel Chemistry NOx Reduction and Oxidation Chemistry Cosponsored with FUEL, and PETR

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

BTEC/CATUCEPA/CEI/CMA/CPT/COMSCI/SOCED

Committee on Economic and Professional Affairs

Small Business Opportunities in Green Chemistry (sponsored by Green Chemistry & Engineering Subdivision) Bio-based Cosponsored with IEC, ENVR, and SCHB

S. Shah, Program Chair SUNDAY AFTERNOON Chemistry Enterprise 2015: Where in the World Will We Be? The Big Picture Cosponsored with PRES, BMGT, PROF, and SCHB MONDAY MORNING Chemistry Enterprise 2015: Where in the World Will We Be? The Big Picture Opportunities and Challenges of Globalization Cosponsored with PRES, BMGT, PROF, and SCHB Invention to Venture: A Symposium on Entrepreneurship Cosponsored with National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance, SCHB, and BMGT Take Two: New Careers for Ph.D. Chemists Cosponsored with YCC, CHAL, PROF, SCHB, and WCC

Committee on Minority Affairs L. K. Hampton, Program Chair SUNDAY MORNING Academic Hiring - How Do You Get the Job? Cosponsored with Graduate Education Advisory Board, National Organization for the Professional Advancement of Black Chemists and Chemical Engineers, Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science, PRES, CHED, PROF, CPT, SOCED, WCC, and YCC SUNDAY AFTERNOON Closing the Gap for Underrepresented Groups by 2015: Proactive Strategies are the Key! Cosponsored with CWD, WCC, PROF, and PRES

10:10 Intermission. 10:30 4. Stable isotopes in forensic chemistry. J. R. Ehleringer 11:00 5. Advanced instrumental technologies and their impact on homeland security and on forensic science. M. B. Denton 11:30 6. Biothreat agent forensics: Seeking attribution using an adaptive, integrated approach. R. S. Murch MONDAY AFTERNOON

Section A Convention Center Room 25C Finding Criminals with Forensic Chemistry Cosponsored with ANYL, and CHAL

Invention to Venture: A Symposium on Entrepreneurship Cosponsored with National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance, SCHB, and BMGT TUESDAY MORNING Managing Globalization Cosponsored with BMGT TUESDAY AFTERNOON Issues for Retirees: Healthcare Cosponsored with Local Section Activities Committee, and PROF

WmWM: Committee on Professional Training F. F. Crim Jr., Committee Chair

1:30 7. Developments in forensic science education in the U.S. M. Houck 2:00 8. Evolution of forensic DNA typing. B. R. McCord 2:30 9. DNA contributes to solving cold cases . R. Harmon 3:00 Intermission. 3:15 10. The challenges of DNA evidence and the courts. G. Clarke 3:45 11. Forensics and funding: The NSF and NIH. J . Hicks, B. Korte

S. Shah, Program Chair

C. Hollinsed, Program Chair

SOCIAL EVENT: tunchbox Forum: Staffing testies Fac­ ing the Forensic Sciences: Mon B U S I N E S S M E E T I N G : Sat

SUNDAY AFTERNOON Learning Chemistry Through Policy Issues and Civic Engagement Cosponsored with CHED, and ENVR

MONDAY MORNING

Section A

S U N D A Y EVENING

Convention Center Room 25C

Joe Breen Student Poster Session in Green Chemistry (sponsored by Green Chemistry & Engineering Subdivision) Cosponsored with IEC, and CHED

Finding Criminals with Forensic Chemistry Cosponsored with ANYL, and CHAL

MONDAY MORNING Learning Chemistry Through Policy Issues and Civic Engagement Cosponsored with CHED, and ENVR Small Business Opportunities in Green Chemistry (sponsored by Green Chemistry & Engineering Subdivision) Technologies Cosponsored with IEC, ENVR, and SCHB

L. A. Echegoyen a n d J . R. Almirall, Organizers 8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:40 1 . Detection and analysis of ignitable liquids and explosives from scenes of crimes. R. L. Kelly 9:10 2. Forensic utility of the elemental analy­ sis of materials. J. R. Almirall 9:40 3. Advances in the biochemistry of DNA fingerprinting analysis. J. M. Butler

Nanotechnology: Is Little Stuff Such a Big Deal? Cosponsored with CHAS, and ENVR

C. M. Baldwin, Program Chair

The Committee on Meetings & Expositions requests that there be no smoking in meeting rooms or committee meetings.

Space Chemistry: Mars and Beyond C. M. Baldwin,

Organizer

2:00 Introductory Remarks. 2:05 2. Mars chemistry: Water, salts, and the evolution of the Martian surface. D. L. Blaney 2:45 3. Titan and the water-rich worlds. D. J. Stevenson 3:25 Concluding Remarks. MONDAY MORNING

Manchester Grand Hyatt Douglas A Heroes of Chemistry Cosponsored with ACS Industry Member Programs C. M. Baldwin,

Organizer

9:30 Introductory Remarks. 9:35 4. Correcting critical nutritional deficien­ cies in children worldwide. H. Mehansho 10:15 5. Kaletra® (lopinavir/ritonavir), an antiretroviral therapy for HIV-infected individu­ als. H. L. Sham 10:55 6. Mylotarg®, the first drug approved in a new class of therapies called "antibodytargeted chemotherapy". J. Upeslacis 11:35 Concluding Remarks. Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Analytical Chemistry Cosponsored with CHED, and ANYL Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Chemical Education Cosponsored with CHED

OTHER SYMPOSIA OF INTEREST: Chemistry for the Health Sciences GOBS of Fun {see CHED, Wed) tew Directions in Teaching Chemistry {see CHED, Mon)

SOCIAL EVENTS: Committee on Coloration Associates Reception for Urtdergraduate»: Mon Graduate School Recruiting Breakfast: Mon Student Affiiiates Chapter Awards Ceremony: Sun Younger Chemists Committee Recep­ tion: Sun SUNDAY MORNING Academic Hiring - How Do You Get the Job? Cosponsored with Graduate Education Advisory Board, National Organization for the Professional Advancement of Black Chemists and Chemical Engineers, Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science, PRES, CHED, PROF, CMA, CPT, WCC, and YCC

Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Organic Chemistry Cosponsored with CHED, and ORGN Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Physical Chemistry Cosponsored with CHED, and PHYS MONDAY AFTERNOON Section A Manchester Grand Hyatt Douglas A Eminent Scientist Lecture featuring K. C. Nicolaou C. M. Baldwin,

Organizer

4:30 Introductory Remarks. 4:40 7. Chemical synthesis at the limits of molecular complexity and diversity. K. C. Nicolaou 5:25 Concluding Remarks. Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Biological Chemistry Cosponsored with CHED Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Computational Chemistry Cosponsored with CHED

Exploring the Molecular Vision: Multidisciplinary Approaches to Curricular Reform Cosponsored with CHED

Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Environmental Chemistry Cosponsored with CHED, and ENVR

SUNDAY AFTERNOON

Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Inorganic Chemistry Cosponsored with CHED

Section A Manchester Grand Hyatt Douglas A Chemistry Survival Guide Cosponsored with CHED C. M. Baldwin,

MONDAY AFTERNOON Learning Chemistry Through Policy Issues and Civic Engagement Cosponsored with CHED, and ENVR

Society Committee on Education

Communicating Beyond Generational Differences: Boomers, X-ers, end Mil* lennials in the Industrial Workplace (see YCGt Sun)

Committee on Science Committee on Environmental Improvement

Esau

SUNDAY MORNING Academic Hiring - How Do You Get the Job? Cosponsored with Graduate Education Advisory Board, National Organization for the Professional Advancement of Black Chemists and Chemical Engineers, Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science, PRES, CHED, PROF, CMA, SOCED, WCC, and YCC

Manchester Grand Hyatt Douglas A

Section A L. A. Echegoyen and J . R. Almirall, Organizers

MONDAY AFTERNOON Chemistry Enterprise 2015: Where in the World Will We Be? The Big Picture Open Forum: Thesis, Antithesis, and Synthesis Cosponsored with PRES, BMGT, PROF, and SCHB

Section Β

Organizer

Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Polymer Chemistry Cosponsored with CHED M O N D A Y EVENING Sci-Mix: Successful Student Affiliates Chapter Poster Session Cosponsored with CHED

2:00 Introductory Remarks. 2:05 1 . Learning how to learn chemistry. D. M. Bunce 3:25 Concluding Remarks.

TECH-123

TECHNICAL PROGRAM 1

Women Chemists Committee R. D. Libby and C. W. Ribes, Program Chairs SUNDAY MORNING Academic Hiring - How Do You Get the Job? Cosponsored with Graduate Education Advisory Board, National Organization for the Professional Advancement of Black Chemists and Chemical Engineers, Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science, PRES, CHED, PROF, CMA, CPT, SOCED, and YCC

TUESDAY AFTERNOON

MONDAY MORNING

ACS Nobel Laureate Signature Award Symposium: Spectroscopy at the Nanoscale Cosponsored with ANYL

Section A

Starting a Successful Research Program at a Predominantly Undergraduate Institution Cosponsored with Council on Undergraduate Research, and YCC

Section A

S. B. Seymore,

9:00 Introductory Remarks. 9:05 4. Working as a chemist outside the laboratory: Careers in scientific information. C. B. Koch 5. Withdrawn. 9:30 6. Leaving the lab for the law: The transi­ tion to a career in patent law. S. B. Seymore 9:55 Intermission. 10:00 7. A chemist swimming with the sharks (or the fish). D. L. Rieger 10:25 Panel Discussion. 10:55 Concluding Remarks.

Closing the Gap for Underrepresented Groups by 2015: Proactive Strategies are the Key! Cosponsored with CWD, PROF, CMA, and PRES

SOCIAL EVENTS:

C. W. Ribes, Organizer,

BUSINESS MEETING: Sat

Presiding

Reception: Sun

2:00 Panel Discussion.

SUNDAY MORNING

Communicating Beyond Generational Differences: Boomers, X-ers, and Millennials in the Industrial Workplace Cosponsored with Corporation Associates, YCC, BMGT, TECH, and PRES

Academic Hiring - How Do You Get the Job? Cosponsored with Graduate Education Advisory Board, National Organization for the Professional Advancement of Black Chemists and Chemical Engineers, Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science, PRES, CHED, PROF, CMA, CPT, SOCED, and WCC

MONDAY MORNING Chemical Safety Issues for Radiation Work Cosponsored with CHAS, CHED, and NUCL Take Two: New Careers for Ph.D. Chemists Cosponsored with YCC, CHAL, PROF, SCHB, and CEPA The Next Generation of Analytical Chemistry Professionals Cosponsored with ANYL, and YCC MONDAY AFTERNOON Preparing Yourself to be a Faculty Member Cosponsored with YCC, and CHED TUESDAY MORNING ACS Nobel Laureate Signature Award Symposium: Spectroscopy at the Nanoscale Cosponsored with ANYL PROGRESS: Strengthening Our Academic Foundations Cosponsored with CHED, and PRES

SUNDAY AFTERNOON Section A San Diego Marriott Leucadia Communicating Beyond Generational Differences: Boomers, X-ers, and Millennials in the Industrial Workplace Cosponsored with Corporation Associates, BMGT, TECH, WCC, and PRES A. C. Myers, T. Laranang-Mutlu, S. R. Pazicni, and F. Adebi, Organizers 3:00 Introductory Remarks. 3:05 1. Intergenerational communication skills. J. Cufaude 3:25 2. Boomers in the industrial workplace. S. A. Burns 3:45 3. Generation X-er's in the industrial workplace. K. C. Glasgow 4:05 Discussion. 4:35 Concluding Remarks. Careers in Chemical Information Cosponsored with CINF

Photographing of slides and/or taping of talks is prohibited unless permission is obtained from individual presenters.

124-TECH

Take Two: New Careers for Ph.D. Chemists Cosponsored with CHAL, PROF, SCHB, CEPA, and WCC

ACS Nobel Laureate Signature Award Symposium: Spectroscopy at the Nanoscale Cosponsored with ANYL

A. C. Myers and S. B. Seymore, Program Chairs

San Diego Marriott Columbia 2

San Diego Marriott Delmar

WEDNESDAY MORNING

Younger Chemists Committee

SUNDAY AFTERNOON

M. L. Hurrey, R. Willigan, and A. Mahapatro, Organizers

Organizer

9:00 Introductory Remarks. 9:05 14. Writing excellent "industry" research proposals: When to look to the government for funding. R. R. Willigan 9:30 15.1 have to do what? I went into indus­ try so I didn't have to do this! F. Wood-Black 9:55 Intermission. 10:10 16. Scientific grant proposal writing from an entrepreneurial small businessperson's perspective. J. L. Lombardi 10:35 17. Frameworks for market and profit­ ability analysis in industrial business propos­ als. E. M. Yokley, W. C. Hollinsed 11:00 Panel Discussion. 11:25 Concluding Remarks. TUESDAY AFTERNOON Section A San Diego Marriott Delmar

The Next Generation of Analytical Chemistry Professionals Cosponsored with ANYL, and WCC

Starting a Successful Research Program at a Predominantly Undergraduate Institution Cosponsored with Council on Undergraduate Research, and WCC

MONDAY AFTERNOON

T. J . Wenzel and M. D. Schuh,

San Diego Marriott Delmar Preparing Yourself to be a Faculty Member Cosponsored with CHED, and WCC L. F. Lyman and T. B. Higgins, S. R. Pazicni, Organizer,

Organizers

Presiding

1:00 Introductory Remarks. 1:05 8. Teaching-ready from the start: Gradu­ ate degree programs for future and current faculty. C. F. Bauer 1:25 9. Documenting your growth as a teacher. R. Cole 1:45 10. Reflections on future faculty develop­ ment: Then (1980) and now (2005). B. P. Coppola 2:05 Intermission. 2:20 11. Rewards and challenges of teaching at an undergraduate college. J . M. Smist 2:40 12. Teacher, sensei, master: Martial arts and faculty development. C. Middlecamp, P. B. Kelter 3:00 13. Academic searches: The employer's perspective. A. T. Schwartz 3:20 Concluding Remarks. TUESDAY MORNING Section A San Diego Marriott Delmar Industrial Proposal Writing Cosponsored with BMGT, and IEC

Organizers

1:00 Introductory Remarks. 1:05 18. What is undergraduate research and why do research at a predominantly under­ graduate institution? T. J. Wenzel 1:15 19. What types of research should a new faculty member pursue? K. K. Karukstis 1:25 20. Selection of and working with under­ graduates. Κ. Κ. Karukstis 1:35 2 1 . Establishing and enhancing an institu­ tional research environment. J. de Paula 1:50 22. Research across academic depart­ ment boundaries: Professional payoffs and pitfalls. D. W. Husic 2:05 23. Art and necessity of gaining internal support from institutional administrators. M. L. Druelinger 2:20 Panel Discussion. 2:55 Intermission. 3:10 24. Research Corporation programs for undergraduate institutions. S. Ronco 3:25 25. Writing excellent research proposals: The ACS PRF view. R. H. Rich 3:40 26. Writing more competitive grant pro­ posals. T. J. Wenzel 4:05 Panel Discussion. 4:45 Concluding Remarks.

η

EXPOSITION

H ^ ^ ESERVE TIME NOW TO VISIT THE the Exposition. Attendees can utilize free ^^M ACS National Exposition in San Internet access at the Internet Café, cour^ ^ ^ Diego. Learn about scientific and tesy of Chemistry org (behind aisle 100), 1 m industrial trends, discover timely and take advantage of wireless access technologies, and network with compa­ (behind aisle 2200) during regular exponies that serve chemical professionals. sition hours. Exhibitors will showcase services; instruments; books; computer hardware; Prize & Souvenir Booths. Attendees can scientific software; and a wide array of participate in several prize drawings anc chromatographic, lab, and safety equip­ receive a free meeting souvenir at desigment. Technical personnel will be on hand nated booths inside the exhibit hall. to give demonstrations, answer your ques­ tions, and discuss your specific needs and Free Exposition Workshops & Preseninterests. tation Theater Sessions. Exhibiting Located in Halls Β and C in the San companies will host free workshops in priDiego Convention Center, the exposition vate rooms or free theater sessions on the will be open on Monday, March 14,9 AM expo floor on Monday through Wednesto 5 PM; Tuesday March 15,9 AM to 5 PM; day, March 14 to March 16, in San Diego and Wednesday, March 16,9 AM to 1 PM. on topics of interest to the chemical professional. For more information, visit Free Internet & Wireless Access Inside http : //chemistry org/expositions.

Virtual Exposition. Visit the Online Exhibitor Directory at http://chemistry org/expoplanner to obtain a complete listing of exhibitors, learn more about a company's products and services, and prepare a customized floor plan to maximize your exposition visit. Admission Requirements & Expo-Only Registration. Exposition admission is complimentary for all national meeting registrants. A badge is required to enter the exhibit halls. Individuals who want to visit the exhibits without registering for the technical component of the national meeting can obtain an expo-only badge for $35. Students with school identification can obtain an expo-only badge for $10. Registration can be handled online, by mail, or in person in the main registration area of the convention center.

EXPOSITION

EXHIBITORS The following list of exhibitors is the property of the American Chemical Society. Any unauthorized use of this list, or any part therof, either directly or indirectly, is strictly prohibited. Academy Savant, P.O. Box 3670, Fullerton, CA, USA 92834, (714)870-7880, fax: (714)526-7400, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. academysavant.com Save time and effort with these top-quality teaching tools! Interactive e-learning CDs and audiovisual educational programs on Chromatography (7-volume HPLC series plus LC/MS; GC, GC/MS; CE); Spectroscopy (AA, ICP, CE, MS, Spectral Interpretation); Safety (Bio/ Chem hazards, MSDS, Compliance, Environmental, Radiation); Laboratory Techniques (wet chemistry). Academy Savant's software has animations, simulations, hot-words, quizzes, a glossary, notebooks plus word-search, customization, bookmarking, individual student progress-tracking and scorekeeping features. New! "Protein/Peptide Analysis with MS", version 2. 2017 Accelrys, 10188 Telesis Court, Suite 100, San Diego, CA, USA 9 2 1 2 1 , (858)799-5000, fax: 858799-5100, Internet: www.accelrys.com Accelrys is a world leading computational science company, developing and delivering innovative scientific software applications and services that help to accelerate the discovery and development of new pharmaceuticals, chemicals, and materials. Our life science simulation and informatics software spans the entire drug discovery spectrum, from target identification and characterization, through lead identification and optimization, to compound management and pharmaceutical development. Our materials research software supports and integrates a wide range of applications across nanotechnology, catalysis, crystallization, formulation, polymers, and materials characterization. These solutions enhance scientific insight and promote the flow of data, information, and knowledge throughout your discovery and development programs. They support your decision-making process and enable you to make the most intelligent use of your resources. 620,622 Ace Glass, Inc., 1430 N.W. Blvd., Vineland, NJ, USA 08360, (800)223-4524, fax: (800)543-6752, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. aceglass.com ACE will exhibit a new upgraded version of Pilot Plant Reaction Equipment, Photochemical Reaction Apparatus, Prepacked MichelMiller Chromatography colums, reusable or disposable. You can also view Instatherm, the better and safer way to heat oil baths, Hydrogénation Apparatus featuring Ace-Threded Glassware. Also, view the versatility of the original Ace-Thred (internally threaded glassware), on such items as pressure tubes, inlet/out connnections for water jackets, and much more. How about vacuum pumps without oil. We offer Piab and Welch. Also see our Pressure Reaction Equipment as well as our Filter Reactors. 428 ACS Chemical & Engineering News, 1155 16th S t r e e t , N W , W a s h i n g t o n , D C , USA 2 0 0 3 6 , (202)872-4600, fax: (202)872-4615, e-mail:help@ acs.org, Internet: www.cen-online.org Experience the dynamic online world of chemistry with Chemical & Engineering News Online and chemistry.org at Booth 820. Let our C&EN Online team show you how easy it is to keep up-to-date on everything that is making news in the chemical world the people, events and stories that your colleagues are talking about. Take the opportunity to pick up your copy of the latest issue of Chemical & Engineering News. By partnering with chemistry.org, we can also help you access the various ACS Web resources; obtain comprehensive information on all ACS programs, products and services, including education options; manage your membership account information, complete meeting registrations; and learn about other important ACS programs. Don't forget to join us for our daily events and prize drawings! Visit our web sites www.cen-online.org and www. chemistry.org. 820 ACS Education, 1155 16th Street, NW, Washingt o n , DC USA, 20036, (202)872- 4382, fax: (202)833-

2-EXPO

7732, Internet: [email protected] The Education Division of the American Chemical Society has products and programs for kindergarten through professional education. Our booth displays examples of our products and programs for elementary, middle, high school, college, graduate education and continuing science education. Students, teachers, and ACS members can all find information that can help their efforts in increasing science literacy. Our booth is staffed with knowledgeable ACS staff who can answer questions regarding our wide variety of programs and products. 823 ACS Member Insurance, 1155 16th Street, N.W., Washington, DC, USA 20036, 1-800-227-5558, ext 6038, fax: (202) 872-4435, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: h t t p : / / w w w . c h e m i s t r y . o r g Stop by the ACS Member Insurance booth to find out how you can "Be Smart, Be Protected". We'll show you now you can sign up for each of the plans, including the newly introduced 10 & 20-year Group Level Term plans! We'll have plenty of information regarding the ACS non-qualified tax deferred annuity (TDA) and individual retirement accounts (IRA's). There will be special presentations and gifts you won't want to miss! Find out more info about the insurance plans available to you at www.chemistry.org/ insurance. 829 ACS Membership, 1155 16th Street, NW, USA 20036, fax: 202-872- 6337 You'll be able to meet staff, listen to presentations from the ACS Speaker Service and learn about the 2005 National Chemistry Week celebration, "The Joy of Toys". Get information about ACS Chemists Celebrate Earth Day, Chemaqination, Salutes to Excellence, and Chemists in the Library Programs. Available for purchase are items such as t-shirts, beaker mugs, "Mole" dolls, element pins, and the national meeting pin. Purchase items online at chemistry.org/ store. 922 ACS O f f i c e of Legislative and G o v e r n m e n t Affairs, 1155 16th St. NW, Othmer 320, Washingt o n , DC, USA 2 0 0 3 6 , ( 2 0 2 ) 8 7 2 - 4 3 8 6 , e - m a i l : [email protected], Internet: http://www. chemistry.org/government Stop by for your chance at a prize!!! Working with American Chemical Society members, the ACS Office of Legislative and Government Affairs promotes public policy that advances the chemical enterprise and its practitioners. The government affairs booth gives ACS members the opportunity to participate in and learn about ACS Legislative Action Network, Policy Fellowships, and more. Strong member participation ensures that chemists are heard in the development of laws, regulations, and key programs.

ACS Office of National M e e t i n g s , 1155 16th S t r e e t , N.W., W a s h i n g t o n , D C , USA 2 0 0 3 6 , (202)872-6264, fax: (202)872-6128, Internet: http.7/ chemistry.org/meetings ACS National Meetings promote innovative and high-value meetings through the ACS technical programs, events, and services. The Society's technical divisions, secretariats, and committees participate in technical sessions, where papers are presented in oral and poster formats. An exposition of many companies & organizations displays everything from science instruments and books to computer hardware and scientific software. The employment center (NECH) offer members and employers a venue to meet and discuss job opportunities. Also, continuing education is offered through ACS short courses, divisional, exposition, and other workshops, Chemical Abstracts Service seminars and Career Resource Center development programs and workshops.

821 ACS Office of Regional M e e t i n g s , 1155 16th Street, N W , USA 2 0 0 3 6 , (202)872- 4 0 6 7 , fax: (202)776-8299, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.chemistry.org/meetings/regional ACS Regional Meetings bring state-of-the-science programming and networking opportunities to chemists throughout the United States. Close to home, economical, compact (averaging 3 days), and organized by ACS members, they provide a venue for chemists both to present their work and to benefit from that of their colleagues. The Regional Meetings booth has information for attendees and exhibitors on the 6 meetings scheduled for 2005. Come learn more about the exciting opportunities!

ACS Publications, 1155 16th Street NW, L-5029, Washington, DC, USA 20036, (202)872-4600, fax: (202)872-4615, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: http://pubs.acs.org Join the ACS Cycle of Excellence at the ACS Publications Booth 828. Since 1879, the journals of the American Chemical Society have been recognized for unparalleled excellence in the chemical sciences. Such achievement is due to the dedication of the readers, authors, reviewers and editors of ACS journals. New in 2005 is the Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation. Information will be available on the forthcoming journal ACS Chemical Biology. Also featured wJll be the expanding ACS Journal Archives that provides access to more than 3 million pages of original, essential chemistry dating back to the debut of the Journal of the American Chemical Society over 125 years ago. Come see all of our ACS High Quality, High Impact Journals proud to be COUNTER compliant and check the booth schedule for daily special events and presentations. Visit us online at: http://pubs.acs.org. 828 Advanced Asymmetries, Inc., 213 East W h i t e Street, Millstadt, IL, USA 62260, (618)476-3920, fax: (618)476-7408, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.advancedasymmetrics.com Advanced Asymmetries manufactures, distributes, imports, and sources chiral compounds in any quantity. We provide support for all aspects of chiral chemical research. 240 Advanced Chemistry Development, 90 Adelaide St. West, Suite 600, Toronto, O N , C A N A D A M5H 3V9, (416) 368-3435, fax: (416) 368-5596, e-mail: i n f o @ a c d l a b s . c o m , Internet: w w w . a c d l a b s . c o m Advanced Chemistry Development, Inc. (ACD/ Labs), the inventor ofChemAnalyticsTM, is a chemistry software company offering solutions that integrate chemical structures with analytical chemistry information. ACD/Labs provides chemical research scientists worldwide with innovative software packages for spectroscopic validation of structures, elucidation of unknown substances, chromatographic separation, medicinal chemistry, preformulation, systematic nomenclature generation, and chemical patenting and publication. 1906 Agela Technologies, See Bonna Technologies. Agilent Technologies, 2850 Centerville Rd, W i l m i n g t o n , DE, US 19808, 800 227 9 7 7 0 , e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. agilent.com/chem Agilent is a leading provider of analytical instrument systems for life sciences, pharmaceutical, environmental and chemical industries, worldwide. The company offers a range of instruments, including LC-MS, HPLC, Bioanalyzer, Microarray solutions, ICP-MS, GC, and GC-MS systems, as well as services needed for success in acquiring and interpreting genetic and chemical information - from sample handling, to analysis to data management and reporting. Agilent is committed to providing superior standards-based technology, designed for maximum productivity, cost effectiveness and ease in complying with regulatory requirements. 835 AirClean Systems, 3248 Lake W o o d a r d Drive, Raleigh, N C , USA 2 7 6 0 4 , (919)255-3220, fax: (919)255-6120, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.aircleansystems.com Ductless fume hood technology since 1992. Manufacturer of polypropylene ductless fume hoods, powderweighing enclosures, and laminar flow workstation. AirClean Systems offers the widest range of application capability due to filter capacity, innovative safety features, and construction material. Application-specific products for your needs, shipped fullyassembled and manufactured in the USA. 2202 Akzo Nobel/EKA Chemicals, 7 Livingstone Ave., Dobbs Ferry, NY, USA 10522, (914)674-5019, fax: (914)693-3654, Kromasil® is a silica-based HPLC Packing for analytical up to process-scale application. Kromasil® is available in bulk and slurrypacked 4.6mm to 4 columns with analytical performance. Kromasil® has superior mechanical and chemical stability, together with high available surface area. Kromasil® 100 is available as silica, C4, C8, C18 and NH2; Kromasil® 60 is available as silica and CN; Kromasil® 300 is available as silica, C4, C8 and C18. Kromasil® Chiral phases, covalently bonded to 100 silica are also available. 1635 Aldrich/Sigma-Aldrich, 3050 Spruce Street, St. L o u i s , M O , USA 6 3 1 0 3 , ( 8 0 0 ) 3 2 5 - 3 0 1 0 , f a x :

(800)325-5052, Internet: sigma-aldrich.com Aldrich/Sigma-Aldrich provides over 85,000 chemicals and 15,000 laboratory equipment items, including materials for your organic chemistry, materials science and drug discovery research and development. Learn about our heterocyclic building blocks for organic and medicinal chemists, custom blended solvents in our unique VerSA-FlowTM delivery system, and pick up new literature on scavenger resins, Suzuki coupling and nanotechnology. Try our improved substructure search tool and browse 1 million pages of technical information at sigma-aldrich.com. 1110,1112,1114 Alfa Aesar-A Johnson Matthey Co., 26 Parkridge Road, Ward Hill, MA, USA 01835, (978)521-6300, fax: (978)521-6350, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.alfa.com Alfa Aesar, a Johnson Matthey Company, is a leading international manufacturer and supplier of research chemicals, metals and materials. With over 22,000 products, Alfa Aesar is the single source for customers' chemical and material needs, from research sizes to semi-bulk and bulk quantities. Our catalog carries organic compounds, high purity inorganics, pure metals, alloys, elements, precious metal compounds and catalysts, rare earths, AA/ICP standards and more. Virtually all products are in stock for immediate shipment.

1819,1821 Alltech Associates, Inc., 2051 W a u k e g a n Rd, D e e r f i e l d , IL, USA 6 0 0 1 5 , (800)458-3769, fax: (847)948-1078, e-mail:alltechemail.com, Internet: alltechweb.com Alltech Associates, Inc is a leading manufacturer and supplier of chromatography products, including the most extensive line of HPLC and GC columns available from a single source and a complete line of supplies and instrumentation for GC, HPLC, IC, TLC, Sample Handling and Filtration. Alltech has also developed and introduced instrumentation for chromatography that delivers improved performance and costsaving advantages to the analytical chemist. 2 1 0 8 A m e r i c a n Institute of Physics, 2 H u n t i n g t o n Q u a d r a n g l e , Suite #1 N 0 1 , Melville, NY, USA 11747, (516)576-2485, fax: (516)576-2374, Internet: www.aip.org Subscribe to Scitation Alertsweekly e-mails containing the title of virtually every article published in a choice of 100 physics subdisciplines. Purchase an AIP Article rack and enjoy prices as low as $2.50 per article. Now access the complete online archive of AIP journals back to Volume 1, Issue 1. Geochemical Transactions, an innovative online journal from the ACS Division of Physical Chemistry is now published by AIP. Ask us about consortia licensing and the tremendous savings available with AIP combination packages.

1208 American Laboratory (Intl Sci Com), 30 Controls Dr., Shelton, CT, USA 06484, (203)926-9300, fax: (203)447-3432, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: [email protected] American Laboratory/St. Andrews Marketing Associates 30 Controls Drive Shelton, CT 06484 / Tel: 203-926-9300 Fax: 203-926-9310 Our publications are edited for North American chemists and life scientists for the application of instrumentation to analytical chemistry, bio-analysis and applied spectroscopy. Editorial includes application notes, technical articles, and information on current laboratory instrumentation. Home Page http://www.iscpubs.com St. Andrews conducts research which serves an international group of clients who are seeking reliable marketing intelligence to help them make critical sales and marketing decisions. Home Page http:// www.standrewsmarketingassociates.com 735 American Peptide Company, Inc., 777 East Evelyn Ave., Sunnyvale, CA, USA 94086, (408)733-7604, fax: (408)733-7603, e-mail:Sales@americanpeptide. com, Internet: www.americanpeptide.com American Peptide Company, Inc. (APC) offers comprehensive sélectives of pre-manufactured catalog peptides in convenient aliquots, a spectrum of custom synthesis services from array screens to mg and kg of research-grade peptides, and full scale cGMP manufacturing of pharmaceutical-grade peptides. APC is dedicated to delivering high quality peptides to pharmaceutical and biotech companies. 1135 AmeriChem, 118 LaPorte Street, Suite A, Arcadia, CA, USA 91006, (626)294- 2920, fax: (626)2942 9 1 1 , Internet: www.americhem.com 219

American Scientific Glassblowers Society, Pacific Northwest Section, PO Box 1589, Cedar Ridge, CA, USA 95924, (530) 273-6176 x17, fax: (530) 4771068, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.asgs-glass.org The American Scientific Glassblowers Society is a national organization composed of glassblowers, manufacturers, distributors and suppliers servicing the glassworking industry. The Pacific Northwest Section of the ASGS provides various forums to educate and promote its members. Members specialize in scientific glassblowing for such markets as glass apparatus, quartz products, industrial lighting, medical apparatus, uv lamp manufacturing, and specialized glass fabrication. The ASGS-PNW section has members in all western states with its heaviest concentration in California. 2103 A m g e n , O n e A m g e n Center Dr., Thousand Oaks, CA, USA 9 1 3 2 0 , (805)447-1000, fax: (805)4471985, Internet: w w w . a m q e n . c o m Amgen is the world's largest biotechnology company. Our mission is to serve patients. For nearly 25 years, the company has used scientific discovery and innovation to dramatically improve people's lives. Visit us at: www.amgen.com. As an EEO/AA employer M/F/D/V, Amgen values and encourages diversity in the workplace. 431 Analogix, Inc., 171 Industrial Dr., Burlington, W l , USA 53105, (262)767-9111, fax: (262)767-1879, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. ana-logix.com Since 1998, Analogix has provided researchers with flash chromatography solutions designed to save time and maximize results. Our lab, pilot and production scale products include consumables, systems, and accessories compatible with Analogix and competitive products. In addition, we provide innovative HPLC and hard-to-find fine chemical solutions to scientists through our close partnership with Interchim of France. Analogix & Interchim are committed to providing scientists with innovative purification, chromatography and fine chemical solutions. 1336,1338 Analytical Sales and Services Inc., 230 West Parkway, Unit O n e , Pompton Plains, N J , USA 07444, (973)616-0700, fax: (976)616-0133, e-mail:info@ analytical-sales.com, Internet: www.analyticalsales.com Introducing ASPIRE Flash Chromatography columns, manifolds, and accessories. Also introducing COOL SLEEVE, a compact single LC column heater and cooler. New LC column introductions include Echelon for highly polar compounds. New Sprite high speed direct connect columns for LC-MS. 1211 AnalytiCon Discovery, Hermannswerder Haus 17, Potsdam, 14473, Germany, (49)331-2300-300, fax: (49)331-2300-333, Internet: www.ac-discovery.com AnalytiCon Discovery offers a complete Natural Product (NP) drug discovery solution, ranging from biomaterial acquisition andfermentation to medicinal and computational chemistry, delivering NPlibraries with fully structure elucidated compounds. AnalytiCon's expertise in High Throughput Structure Elucidation of NPs—50 times faster than any other team in the world—forms the basis of the company's success. AnalytiCon's programs and collections of pure NPs (MEGAbolite(RJ) as well as of semisynthetic NP-analogues (NatDiverse(TM)) enable HT- screening of NPs. 1235 Anasazi Instruments, 4101 Cashard Ave., Suite 103, Indianapolis, I N , USA 46203, (317)783-4126, fax: (317)783-7083, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.aiinmr.com Anasazi Instruments manufactures 60 and 90MHz FT-NMR instruments. The Eft-60 and EFT-90 are permanent magnet FT-NMR spectrometers for one and two dimensional spectra of a wide range of nuclei including 1H, 13(2, 19F, 31Ρ and more. The PC based EFT is a simple to use instrument with an excellent warranty and customer support. Users of EM360 and EM390 CW-NMR instrument can upgrade existing spectrometers to FT capability witn features such as autoshimming, digital filtering, direct digital synthesis. 419 AnaSpec, Inc., 2149 O T o o l e Ave., San Jose, CA, USA 9 5 1 3 1 , (408)452-5055, fax: (408)452-5059, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. anaspec.com AnaSpec, Inc. is a leading manufac­ turer of amino acid building blocks, syntnesis resins and reagents for combinatorial chemistry. AnaSpec's catalog products include a comprehen­

sive line (3,500) of amino acids (Fmoc- & Bocprotected, natural and unnatural), as well as numer­ ous resins and reagents for solid phase peptide synthesis and organic synthesis. AnaSpec also has an extensive line of catalog peptides, antibodies, and fluorescent reagents; and provides custom ser­ vices in peptide synthesis, antibody production, and assay development. 1627 Anton Paar, 10215 Timber Ridge Dr., Ashland, VA, USA 23005, (804)550-1051, fax: (804)550-1057, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: h t t p : / / w w w . a n t o n - p a a r . c o m What's new in rheology? Everything! Come see our latest series of rheometers, the MCR 301 and 501. The new MCR series offers many unique features only available from Anton Paar, including ToolMaster to automatically configure the instrument, TruGap, the only technol­ ogy that actually measures and controls the gap, RheoPlus Softwware, and our exclusive EC drive for continous, drift-free performance. Come visit our booth and discover the difference that years of innovation can make! 1928 Apple Computer, Inc., One Infinite Loop, Cuper­ tino, CA, USA 95014, (408)996-1010, fax: (408)^960275, Internet: www.apple.com 1636 Argonaut Technologies, 220 Saginaw Drive, Red­ w o o d City, CA, USA 94063, (650)716-1600, fax: (650) 716-1601, Internet: www.argotech.com Argo­ naut Technologies is a leading provider of sample preparation products, polymer-supported reagents, flash chromatography columns and instrumenta­ tion and systems for chemical process develop­ ment. Products for drug discovery include FlashMaster flash chromatography systems, ISOLUTE SPE sorbents available in 96-well plates and col­ umns, and other tools and accessories for com­ pound purification. Our Advantage Series of chemical development instrumentation integrates synthesis with data collection and analysis and pro­ vides process chemists with a suite of instruments for developing efficient, reliable and scalable chemical processes. 1820,1822 Astatech Inc., 1 Deer Park Drive, Suite C, M o n ­ mouth Junction, NJ, USA 08852, (732)355-1000, fax: (732)355-1122, e-mail:[email protected], Inter­ net: www.astath.com AstaTech, Inc. is a global chemical/pharmaceutical technology company that specializes in custom drug discovery research, pro­ cess research & development, custom synthesis and biotechnology services. We feature over 2,000 advanced research intermediates including, but not limited to, chiral compounds, unnatural amino acids, heterocyclic products, indole derivatives and high purity natural products on a gram to multikilogram scale. Our current catalog can be down­ loaded from our website at www.astath.com and can also be sent my mail or email upon request.

1926 Asylum Research, 6310 Hollister Ave., Santa Bar­ bara, CA, USA 93117, 805-696-6466, fax: 805-6966444, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.AsylumResearch.com Featured is the MFP-3D Scanning Probe/Atomic Force Microscope with power and flexibility in one complete system. Sensored-closed loop operation in all three axes assures low noise and precise measurements. Top and bottom optical access allow simultaneous AFM and advanced optical capabilities such as phase contrast and, epifluorescence. The MicroAngelo feature allows powerful nanolithography and manipulation experiments without additional hard­ ware. New software enhancements allow advanced 3D rendering capabilities including real-time 3D rendering. 336 Atomate Corporation, 711 Bond Avenue, Santa Barbara, CA, USA 9 3 1 0 3 , (805)963-1779, fax: (805)435-1951, e-mail: [email protected], Inter­ n e t : w w w . a t o m a t e . c o m Atomate Corporation develops robust systems, components, and mate­ rials optimized for the synthesis of nanowires and nanotubes using the chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method. Atomate has a solution for researchers who desire enhancements to existing systems and for those who want to build or buy a new system. Atomate's mission is to develop prod­ ucts that enable the customer to focus their efforts on the science, not on engineering of equipment. 205

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EXPOSITION Atomistix A / S , c/o Niels Bohr Institute, Juliane Maries Vej 30, Copenhagen, DENMARK 2100, +45 35 32 06 3 0 , fax: + 4 5 35 32 06 3 5 , e - m a i l : [email protected], Internet: atomistix.com Our product, Virtual NanoLab is reqarded by nanotechnologists the world over as the leading software for modeling electronic structure and transport across molecular junctions in architecture with components that resemble experimental tools for: Sample preparation Visualizing the atomic structure and electronic resonances Analyzing electronic spectra Measuring l-V characteristics Application areas for Virtual NanoLab: Rectification and switching in molecular electronic devices Resistance and capacitance of metal-nanotube contacts Electromigration in atomic wires Leakage currents in MOS structures Spin dependent transport across interfaces Charge transfer in biological systems Electron field emission from carbon nanotuoes 238 Aureus Pharma, 174, quai de Jemmapes, Paris, FRANCE 75010, (33) 1 40 18 57 57, fax: (53) 1 40 18 57 58, Internet: www.aureus-pharma.com Aureus Pharma designs, develops and markets a novel solution combining a computerized knowledge management system with data mined from the scientific literature to accelerate new drug discovery. Aureus Pharma offers researchers involved in pharmaceutical research structured AurSCOPE databases containing biological and chemical information related to pharmaceutical^ important themes. Currently databases offered include GPCR, Ion Channel, hERG Channel and ADME/ Drug-Drug Interactions. These databases can be accessed by AurQUEST a web based user interface. 110 BACHEM, 3132 Kashiwa Street, Torrance, CA, USA 90505, (310) 539-4171, fax: (310) 530-1571, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.bachem.com Bachem is an independent, technology-based company specializing in the production of peptides, innovative biochemical and pharmaceutical compounds. With headquarters in Bubendorf, Switzerland, and subsidiaries in both Europe and the US, Bachem works on a global scale and holds a leading position in its field. With multiple cGMP compliant facilities, Bachem is an ideal partner for large and small scale API manufacturing. Bachem also offers opportunities to innovative technology partners for collaborations on future active substances. 1416 Barnstead International, 2555 Kerper Boulevard, D u b u a u e , IA, USA 5 2 0 0 1 , ( 5 6 3 ) 5 5 6 - 2 2 4 1 , fax: (563)589-0516, Intermet: www.barnstead.com. 537 Benjamin/Cummings-Pearson Education, Benjamin Cummings, 1301 Sansome Street, San Francisco, CA, USA 9 4 1 1 1 , (415)402-2396, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.aw-bc.com Benjamin Cummings is a leading college science publisher of textbooks and multimedia products. Our goal is to partner with instructors, authors, and students to create content and tools that take the educational experience forward. We are committed to publishing the best collection of print and electronic content designed to help teachers teach and students learn. 720,722 Bentham Science Publishers Ltd., Bentham Science Publishers Ltd., P. O. Box 640310, San Franc i s c o , C A , USA 9 4 1 6 4 , ( 6 0 9 ) 9 1 5 - 4 4 7 3 , f a x : (415)775-4503, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.bentham.org Bentham Science Publishers, a major STM journal publisher of 61 journal titles in 2005 and 5 book series, answers the information needs of the pharmaceutical, bio-medical and medical research community. With 4 journals ranked in the top 30 list of pharmacology and pharmacy, leading journals include Current Pharmaceutical Design (Impact Factor 5.55) and Current Medicinal Chemistry. FREE online journal sample copies and information: www.bentham.orq Subscribe, discounted multi-site licenses and FREE online trials: [email protected] 635 Berghof/America, 3773 NW 126th Avenue, Building 1, Coral Springs, FL, USA 33065, (800)5445 0 0 4 , fax: ( 9 5 4 ) 3 4 4 - 2 0 0 8 , e - m a i l : b e r g h o f @ berghofusa.com, Internet: www.berghofusa.com Acid Purification/Distillacid Apparatus with all exposed parts to the medium of fluoropolymers. MwS-2 Microwave Digestion Systems with pressure controlled venting, for small sample prep in acid resistant, non-contaminating vessel. World's only high pressure reaction vessels with complete fluoropolymer lining (cap and vessel). Fluoropoly-

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mer labware, bottles, storage containers, cap liners, fittings, self adhesive bench protectors, stirrers, sleeves, adapters, filters, heaters, tubing, film, sheet, rod. tedlar and FEP gas sampling bags. Fluoropolymer custom machining, fabrication and coating. 1509

Internet: w w w . b o d m a n . c o m Bodman Industries can provide products for all your chromatographic needs. We offer products for HPLC, GC, TLC and Flash Chromatography. We will be highlighting Bulk Silica Gel, TLC plates and prepacked Flash Cartridges for automated Synthesis. 2031,2033

Biacore, Inc., 200 Centennial Avenue, Suite 100, Piscataway, NJ, USA 08854, (800)242-2599, fax: (732)885-5669, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.biacore.com Biacore supplies analytical systems that improve productivity of research and development in the life science and pharmaceutical markets. Unique data on protein interactions give insights into protein functionality, the role of proteins in normal and diseased states, and the influence of potential drug candidates. The company also provides ready-to-use solutions to determine food quality and safety. For more information visit www.biacore.com. 2207

Bonna Technologies, c/o Agela Technologies, O n e Innovation Way, Newark, DE, USA 1 9 7 1 1 , (302)235-1833 1730

Bioanalytical Systems, Inc., 2701 Kent Avenue, West Lafayette, IN, USA 47906, (800)845-4246, fax: (765)497-1102, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.bioanalytical.com BASi will display its line of electrochemical instruments and accessories, including the Epsilon potentiostat/ galvanostat, Rotating Disk Electroae and DigiSim Cyclic Voltammetry simulation software. 1504 Biopro International, 265 Conklin St., PO Box156, Farmingdale, NY, USA 11735, (516)249-0099, fax: (516)249-0494, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.biopro.com Professional staff with 30+ years of experience in the pharmaceutical and biotech industry sells and services state-of-the-art processing equipment and instruments from leading manufacturers in europe: Bioengineering fermenters/bioreactors; Kuehner stackable and incubation shakers; Christ freeze dryers and vacuum concentrators; Aquasant cell density meters and level probes; Fedegari laboratory autoclaves; Prior continuous chromatography; Graber vibromixers; Bioxplore multiple screening fermenters; Riebesam glassware washing machines; Duetz cryo replicators; DrM sterile liquid filters and Dairei ultra-low temperature freezers. 2206 Bio-Rad, Informatics Division, 3316 Spring Garden Street, Philadelphia, PA, USA 19104, +1 (888) 5 - B I O - R A D , fax: (215) 6 6 2 - 0 5 8 5 , e - m a i l : [email protected], Internet: www. knowitall.com Specializes in state-of-the-art sonware and database solutions for the pharmaceutical, biotech, and chemical industries. Bio-Rad is the leading publisher of fully verified spectral databases, cheminformatics, spectroscopy software, and decision support systems for drug discovery. The company's award-winning KnowltAII Informatics System offers a fully integrated environment with flexible, expandable software and database solutions for spectroscopy (MS, NMR, IR, Raman, spectral data management), cheminformatics, and ADME/Tox evaluation. 1826 Biotage, 1725 Discovey Dr., Charlottesville, VA, USA 2 2 9 1 1 , (434)979-2319, fax: (434)979-4743, Internet: www.biotage.com Biotage is a global supplier of high quality microwave synthesis and flash chromatography tools that help synthetic organic chemists achieve their research and discovery goals. Our systems and consumables are designed to reduce cycle-times and improve success rates through automation, speed and efficiency, with a clear and direct scale-up path, from research and discovery through cGMP production. 510 BioTools, Inc., 950 North Rand Road, Suite 123, W a u c o n d a , IL, USA 60084, (847)487-5500, fax: (847)487-5544, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.btools.com Showcasing unique instrumentation for analysis of chiral organics and biomolecules: the only dedicated spectrometer for measurements of Vibrational Circular Dichroism (VCD), the ChirallR. VCD provides unambiguous determination of absolute configuration and can be used to monitor asymmetric synthesis. BioIR for analysis of proteins, sugars, nucleotides, and viruses. Also exhibiting extremely fast Raman spectrometer, BioRAMAN; and the first commercial Raman Optical Activity (ROA) spectrometer, the ChiralRAMAN, ideal for characterization of all types of biomolecules and chiral molecules. 940 Bodman Industries, 13 Mount Pleasant Road, P.O. Box 2 4 2 1 , Aston, PA, USA 19014, (610)459-5600, fax: (610)459-8036, e-mail:[email protected],

BrandTech Scientific, 11 Bokum Road, Essex, CT, USA 06426-1506, (860)767-2562, fax: (860)7672563, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. brandtech.com BrandTech Scientific supplies liquid handling devices, corrosion-resistant oil-free vacuum pumps, and stainless steel support jacks and frames. Products include the Dispensette(R) dispensers; Transferpette(R) pipettes; and VACUUBRAND(R) self-adjusting vacuum systems that require no preprogramming. New products include electronic pipettes; PFA labware for trace analysis; Class A plastic labware, and plastic disposable UV-transparent solvent-resistant cuvettes.

1815 Brinkmann Instruments, Inc., One Cantiague Rd., Westbury, NY, USA 11590-0207, (800)645-3050, fax: (516)334-7506, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.brinkmann.com Brinkmann in partnership with its world renowned manufacturers presents its latest products. Come see the newest Titrando titrator from Metrohm. We offer a comprehensive line of potentiometric and Karl Fischer titrators, from basic dedicated units to fully automated, computerized systems. Automate even low-level Karl Fischer moisture samples. We also offer phi/ion meters, colorimeters, electrodes, voltammetric analyzers, rancimats and much more. Our dedication to quality products, service and customer satisfaction set us apart. Further featured products are Buchi SafetyVap Rotary Evaporators, Sepacore Flash Chromatography Systems, Syncore Parallel Evaporators, Lauda Automatic Viscosity Measurement Systems, Heating and cooling circulators, Chillers, Kinematica Polytron Homogenizers, Overhead Stirrers, Radleys Discovery Technologies Carousel Reaction Stations, Radleys Lara Controlled Laboratory Reactor. 9 0 8 , 9 1 0 , 9 1 2 , 9 1 4 , 9 1 6 Brookhaven Instruments, 750 Blue Point Road, Holtsville, NY, USA 11742-1832, (631)758-3200, fax: (631)758-3255, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.bic.com Brookhaven Instruments manufactures quality instrumentation for colloid & polymer characterization, quality control & research applications. Particle size measurements are obtained utilizing static and dynamic light scattering or disc centrifuqation. Instruments determining zeta potential by particle electrophoresis, phase analysis & streaming potential are also available. The BI-MwA Molecular Weight analyzer is a versatile light scattering instrument for measurements of absolute molecular weight of polymers & proteins.

Brooks/Cole Thomson Learning, 10 Davis Drive, B e l m o n t , CA, USA 9 4 0 0 2 , (650)413-8825, fax: (650)595-0260, Internet: h t t p : / / w w w . b r o o k s c o l e . com/chemistry Brooks/Cole, an imprint of Thomson Learning, is your premier Chemistry publisherproviding materials for every way you teach and every way students learn. Our complete list of products reflect our commitment to providing the best and most innovative resources for students and instructors. To see for yourself and experience some of our cutting-edge products such as the suite of ScienceNow products, OWL, Classroom Response Technology, new CER labs, our renowned Chemistry textbooks and more, stop by our booth and visit our website at: http://www. brookscole.com/chemistry 1408,1410,1412 Bruker AXS, 5465 E. Cheryl Pkwy., Madison, W l , USA 53711, (608) 276-3000, fax: (608) 276-3006, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.brukeraxs.com Bruker Nonius provides Advanced X-ray Solutions in chemistry, life sciences, and materials science. The Chemical Crystallography APEX II CCD features the newest 4K chip, with lower noise, faster readout and highest sensitivity for microcrystals or weak diffractors, plus twins, strong absorbers, charge density, modulated structures and diffuse scattering. Biological Crystallography systems feature the new, highest sensitivity Platinum 135 4K' CCD and MICROSTAR high brilliance generator for high-resolution data and high throughput screen-

ing. Nanotechnology research systems include a range of powder diffraction and single crystal solu­ tions. 1601,1603 Bruker Daltonics Inc., 40 Manning Road, Billerica, MA, USA 0 1 8 2 1 , (978)663-3660x1149 1602 Bruker Optics Inc., 19 Fortune Drive, Manning Park, Billerica, MA, USA 01821 1604 Buchi Analytical, 19 Lukens Drive, Suite 400, New C a s t l e , DE, USA 1 9 7 2 0 , ( 3 0 2 ) 6 5 2 - 3 0 0 0 , fax: (302)652-8777, Internet: www.buchi-analytical.com Buchi Analytical, Inc. - Worldwide manufacturer and supplier of innovative quality control and research instruments. Products and services include, NIRSolutions, which is a comprehensive service package consisting of laboratory, at-line or on-line Near Infrared-Spectrometer hardware and software for pharmaceutical and food QC. Sepacore is a revolutionary new line of Flash- and Pre­ parative Chromatography for high performance compound purification from mg up to 100g. Other products include Kjeldahl, automated extraction and fat extraction systems. 102 Buck Scientific, 58 Fort Point Street, East Norwalk, CT, USA 06855, (203)853-9444, fax: (203)853-0569, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.bucksci. com Buck Scientific offers a wide variety of new analytical instruments and supplies. We have grown into a multinational corporation with dis­ tributors in over 40 countries. We have established a reputation for affordable products with excellent analytical capabilities. Buck Scientific, Inc. has more than 10,000 satisfied instrument users in over 40 countries. We support a wide variety of customers in the industrial, environmental, quality control, mining, plating, and educational markets. Our engineers and chemists are continuously develop­ ing new applications to serve particular needs. 727 C / D / N Isotopes, 88 Leacock Street, Pointe Claire, Quebec, PQ, C A N A D A H9R 1 H 1 , (800)565-4696, fax: (514)697-6148, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.cdnisotopes.com C/D/N Isotopes has developed an extensive listing of deuterated compounds. We continue to develop methods of preparation which allows us to offer an expanding range of high quality products. This permits us to put forth a vast variety of products at very competi­ tive prices. Due to our extensive custom synthesis experience, we can meet the particular require­ ments of your research. Visit our booth No. 427 and pick up a catalog. ^27 CAChe Software, See Fujitsu A m e r i c a / C A C h e Software. California Pacific Laboratory, 37 Commercial Bou­ l e v a r d , Suite 1 0 0 , N o v a t o , C A , USA 9 4 9 4 9 , (415)883-2600, fax: (415)532-1662, e-mail:info@ calpaclab.com, Internet: www.ecofunnels.com Does your open waste contanier make you fume? ECO Funnel solves the "open waste container problem". The patented design screws tightly on top of a typical waste bottle or carboy (4 L-55 Gal.) and prevents 99.9% emission of solvents into the laboratory environment. Its easy open and close lid makes pouring waste solvents convenient, practical and complies with EPA, FDA & Fire Marshall, rules and regulations providing a safer, healthier and more productive work environment. 220 Cambridge Crystallographic Data Ctr, 12 Union Road, Cambridge, UNITED K I N G D O M CB2 1EZ, +44 1223 336408, fax: +44 1223 336033, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. ccdc.cam.ac.uk The Cambridge Structural Data­ base (CSD) is a world repository of validated crystal structure data for small organic and metal-organic compounds. The CSD System comprises the data­ base itself and comprehensive tools to search, visualise and analyse: molecular dimensions, con­ formational preferences, pharmacophore patterns and intermolecular interactions. The CCDC also develop a range of applications software - GOLD (protein-ligand docking), SILVER (analysis of dock­ ing solutions) Relibase+ (search and analysis of pro­ tein-ligand complexes), SuperStar (protein-ligand interactions) and DASH (crystal structure solution from powder diffraction data). 326,328 CambridqeSoft Corporation, 100 Cambridge Park Dr., Cambridge, MA, USA 02140, (617) 588 9100, fax: (617) 588 9190, e-mail:info@cambridgesoft.

c o m , I n t e r n e t : w w w . c a m b r i d g e s o f t . c o m CambridgeSoft develops, markets and services life sci­ ence enterprise solutions for pharmaceutical, biotechnology, chemical companies and academic research organizations. These solutions integrate across research, discovery, development and manufacturing functions. Software products include desktop, workgroup and enterprise ver­ sions of Chem & Bio Office, (ChemDraw, StructName, ChemNMR, ChemDraw/Excel, Chem3D, ChemFinder, BioAssay, BioViz, BioDraw, Inventory & Ε-Notebook) with knowledge manage­ ment (E-Noterbook, CombiChem, 21CFR11, E-Signatures & DocManager), chemical and biological informatics (Inventory, Validation, BioAssay, BioSAR & Registration), and scientific database (The Merck Index, ChemACX) solutions. Websites include ChemFinder.Com, and ChemBioNews. Com for indexed database content and news and SciStore.Com for e-commerce. 1402 Carbolite Inc., P.O. Box 7, 110 South 2nd St., W a t e r t o w n , W l , USA 53094, (920)262-0240, fax: (920)262-0255 316 CB R e s e a r c h a n d D e v e l o p m e n t I n c . , 27 McCullough Drive, New Castle, DE, USA 19720, (302)323-6318, fax: (302)323-4879, Internet: www. cbrd.net 2037 CEM Corporation, P.O. Box 200, Matthews, NC, USA 28106, (800)726-3331, fax: (704)821-5185, e - m a i l : i n f o @ c e m . c o m , Internet: w w w . c e m . c o m CEM is a world leading provider of microwave chemistry solutions for life sciences and analytical laboratories. We offer the most complete line of modular microwave synthesis systems for discov­ ery, lead optimization, scale up, low-temperature synthesis, high-throughput and peptide synthesis with a variety of accessories and options to fit your needs. Perform atmospheric and pressurized reac­ tions on all systems. Also, see the MARS Xpress™ System for high-throughput microwave digestion.

www.chemat.com Chemat Technology Inc. is the fastest growing manufacturer of quality lab equip­ ment, such as rotary evaporators, ultrasonic cleaner, spin coater, dip coater, lens coater, web coater and fiber drawing machine. Chemat also designs and manufactures chemical precursors for thin film in research and bulk quantities: include: high purity of metal alkoxides, dialkylamides, organo-polymers, nano powders and high surface area powders, colloidal solutions and functional solutions for the sol-gel, nona technology, thin film and CVD processes. 2001 ChemBridge Corporation, 16981 Via Tazon Drive, Suite G, San D i e g o , CA, USA 92127, (858)4517 4 0 0 x 1 4 6 , fax: ( 8 5 8 ) 4 5 1 - 7 4 0 1 , e - m a i l : sales® chembridqe.com, Internet: www.chembridge.com ChemBridge Corporation - a leading global discov­ ery chemistry research company with over 400 employees. ChemBridge is engaged, jointly with its affiliated company, ChemBridge Research Labora­ tories (CRL), in exclusive discovery chemistry col­ laborative services. ChemBridge offers an expan­ sive array of over 500,000 non-exclusive, diverse small molecule compounds, including a premium quality, 400K screening collection, and 2 parallel synthesized libraries: NOVACorenew for 2004 (24Kcmps) & PHARMACophore (WOKcmps). 2007 ChemDiv, Inc., 11558 Sorrento Valley Road, Suite 5, San Diego, CA, USA 9 2 1 2 1 , (858)794-4860, fax: (858)794-4931, e-mail:[email protected], Inter­ net: www.chemdiv.com ChemDiv, Inc. (Chemical Diversity) is a leading provider of discovery ser­ vices. Being one of the largest commercial sources of discovery chemistry, ChemDiv offers global comprehensive solutions including medicinal chemistry, in vitro and in vivo biology, as well as repository and logistics support. Chemical Diversity employs over 400 scientists and support staff, operating out of its San Diego, CA and European research facilities. For additional information, please visit http://www.chemdiv.com 429

1832 Center For Photochemical Sciences, Bowling Green State University, 132 Overman Hall, Bowling G r e e n , O H , USA 4 3 4 0 3 , ( 4 1 9 ) 3 7 2 - 6 0 0 8 , fax: (419)372-0366, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: h t t p : / / w w w . b g s u . e d u / d e p a r t m e n t s / photochem The Center for Photochemical Sciences is dedicated solely to the study of the interaction of light with matter. Research focuses on molecular change resulting from the initial absorption of light to the final reaction product. Emphasis is on prac­ tical applications of this knowledge. Photoscientists make the hardware for the communications revo­ lution and a Ph.D. is offered that provides training in this new area of research. Graduates find con­ tinuing opportunities in Fortune 500 companies as well as new businesses. 1729 Cerep, Inc., 15318 NE 95th St., Redmond, W A , USA 98052, (425)895-8666, fax: (425)785-3736, e - m a i l : c u s t o m e r _ s u p p o r t @ c e r e p . c o m , Internet: www.cerep.com Cerep combines novel modeling and library design techniques with highly effective screening and profiling technologies to assist phar­ maceutical companies in their search for innova­ tive, effective, safe drug candidates. Cerep is known worldwide for pharmacoinformatics, library design & synthesis, lead optimization, and its pio­ neering technologies in compound profiling and HTS, in vitro ADME and in vitro and in vivo phar­ macology. Visit us to find out why Cerep scientists have been awarded over 50 patents in the past five years. 1833 Chemapps, 5820 Miramar Rd, Suite 2 0 7 , San D i e g o , CA, USA 9 2 1 2 1 , (858)453- 9 5 0 9 , fax: (858)453-9510, e-mail: [email protected], Inter­ net: w w w . c h e m a p p s . c o m A new generation of chemical information tools that allow the user flex­ ibility and ease of use. SARvision is a powerful desktop application for medicinal chemistry SAR analysis, K-table generation, and data-reporting. BioLib, is a suite of methods and applications for developing informatics solutions. BioLib-SDK is a C + + based library that can be used as a starting point for implementing your own C + + code for life sciences informatics. SHOW is a computer gener­ ated graphic guidance for manual samplehandling. 2107 Chemat Technology, 9036 W i n n e t k a A v e n u e , Northridge, CA, USA 91324, (818)727-9786, fax: (818)727-9477, e-mail:[email protected], Internet:

Chemglass, Inc., 3861 N. Mill Road, Vineland, NJ, USA 08360, (800)843-1794, fax: (800)922-4361, Internet: www.chemqlass.com Exhibiting our com­ plete line of specialty glassware and equipment. Featured products include our process reactors from 10 to 100 Liters, benchtop reactor systems from 250mL to 4 liters and our Optichem® line of sample handling solutions for combinatorial chem­ istry. Other products in the display include our hot­ plate stirrers, all Teflon diaphragm pumps, Corning Reusable Glassware, Julabo's Presto circulators, Heidolph rotary evaporators, pressure vessels, NMR tubes, Schlenk glassware & manifolds, flasks, bump traps, & fritted ware. 802,804,806,808 Chemical Abstracts Service, 2540 Olentangy River Road, P. O. Box 3012, Columbus, O H , USA 43210, (614) 447-3600, fax: (614) 447-3600, e-mail:help@ cas.org, Internet: www.cas.org CAS delivers the most complete and effective digital information environment for scientific research. CAS provides pathways to published research in the journal and patent literature plus a wealth of information in the life sciences and a wide range of other scientific disciplines back to the beginning of the 20th cen­ tury. CAS provides a range of information products to meet your needs. These include SciFinder®, SciFinder Scholar®, STN Internationalism) and Sci­ ence IP(sm), the CAS search service. 1028 Chemical Computing Group, 1010 Sherbrooke St. West, Suite 910, Montreal, PQ, C A N A D A H3A 2R7, (514) 393-1055, fax: (514) 874-9538, e-mail:info@ c h e m c o m p . c o m , Internet: w w w . c h e m c o m p . c o m Chemical Computing Group, Inc. (CCG) is a devel­ oper and worldwide supplier of scientific software for Life Sciences. CCG's flagship software platform, MOE (Molecular Operating Environment), com­ bines visualization, simulation and methodology development into a single integrated package. MOE's collection of built-in applications, which include tools for protein modeling, molecular mod­ eling, structure-based drug design, high through­ put discovery, cheminformatics and bioinformatics, appeal to a wide audience of users ranging from computational experts to occasional users. MOE applications are built on the Scientific Vector Lan­ guage (SVL), a high-level programming system designed specifically for life science application development, which allows users to customize MOE applications and to develop their own novel tools. Users are free to run MOE on a variety of hardware platforms and operating systems, includ-

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CHEMJOBS ARE.EL R

LENTER

B r o u g h t t o y o u by C&EN Chemjobs and t h e D e p a r t m e n t o f Career Services

ACS 229th National Meeting · San Diego Convention Center · San Diego, CA Sunday, March 13 -Wednesday, March 16, 2005 This comprehensive career resource center will provide a broad array of career services, including online job searches, onsite job interviews, career workshops and one-on-one résumé reviews and career assistance.

Employment Services The Chemjobs Career Center at the San Diego National Meeting, will offer employment services in Hall A of the San Diego Convention Center, Sunday, March 13 through Wednesday, March 16, from 8 AM t o 5:30 PM. Job seekers and employers will be provided a venue to meet and discuss job opportunities. The Chemjobs Career Center is open to ACS members and national and student affiliates. All job seekers and employers must sign up online at http://cen-chemjobs.org/careercenter to participate. JOB SEEKER SIGN-UP. The Chemjobs Career Center database allows job seekers t o sign up and manage their account, keep track of changes to their schedule, and communicate w i t h employers, completely online. Using the database, job seekers can: Maintain a personal calendar. Search job postings by field of specialization, work function, education level, or employer.

Request interviews. View interviews scheduled by employers. Have notices sent to a personal email account. Get information about jobs and employers before the meeting. Please note: Job seekers must sign up for the Chemjobs Career Center by March 14 to participate. Those who sign up before by February 25 will receive a confirmation packet containing their yellow Chemjobs Career Center ID card prior to the national meeting. Those who sign up after February 25 must pick up their ID card at the Chemjobs Career Center Information Booth in Hall A of the San Diego Convention Center. All job seekers must register for the national meeting. Waivers for national meeting registration fees are granted to members who have received a 2005 dues waiver; check the appropriate box on the meeting registration form. A national meeting registration badge must be visible to enter Hall A. EMPLOYER SIGN-UP. The Chemjobs Career Center database allows employers to sign up and manage their accounts, schedule interviews, and keep track of schedule changes completely online. Using the database, employers can:

Maintain a personal calendar. Search résumés across a number of criteria. Set up interviews. Send/receive email. Have notices sent to their private email account. Track interview activity. Collect statistics on postings and interviews. Please note: Employers must sign up for the Chemjobs Career Center by March 16 t o participate. Those who sign up by February 25 will receive a confirmation packet containing their blue Chemjobs Career Center ID card prior to the national meeting. Those who sign up after after February 25 must pick up their ID card at the Chemjobs Career Center Information Booth in Hall A of the San Diego Convention Center. For additional information, please visit http://cen-chemjobs.org/careercenter.

Other Career Resources The Chemjobs Career Center also provides one-on-one career assistance and a variety of professional and career development workshops to enhance your career potential. 0ne~0n~Une Career Assistance. Individual half-hour appointments w i t h a career consultant are available for the purpose of reviewing your résumé or CV, conducting practice interviews, and discussing your career options. Please bring a copy of your résumé or CV for all appointments. All sessions w i t h career consultants will be held in Hall A of the San Diego Convention Center. To sign up for an appointment for Sunday, March 13, please email [email protected] or you may call Karen Dyson at 1-800-227-5558, ext. 4432. Appointments for Monday, March 14 - Wednesday, March 16 will be assigned onsite.

Professional Development Workshop Schedule All workshops will be held at the San Diego Convention Center in workshop rooms 5-A and 5-B. IMPORTANT: Workshop times are subject to change. Please consult the web version of the workshop schedule at http://chemistry.org/careers/workshops.htmlfor the final workshop times. SUNDAY, MARCH 13 9 to 10 AM. Interviewing 101: Basic Skills. 9 to 10:30 AM. Mock Interview Demonstration. 10:30 to 11:30 AM. Targeting the Job Market. 11 AM to 12 PM. Foreign National Scientists: Obtaining a Job in the U.S. 1 to 2 PM. Tough Interview Questions. I to 3 PM. Career Strategies: Critical Steps for Success. 2:30 to 5 PM. Writing Excellent Research Proposals. 3:30 to 5 PM. Mock Interview Demonstration. MONDAY, MARCH 14 9 to 10:30 AM. Mock Interview Demonstration. 9 to 11 AM. Overcoming Barriers: Current Issues Facing Foreign-Born Chemical Professionals. I I AM to 12 PM. Interviewing 102: Behavior-Based Questions.

TUESDAY, MARCH 15 9 AM to 12 Noon. Academic Jobs: A PhD is Only the Beginning. 9 to 10:30 AM. So You Want to Be a Consultant? 10:30 AM to 12:00 Noon. Navigating the Federal Employment Process. 1 to 2 PM. Interviewing 101: Basic Skills. 1 to 3 PM. Interviewing 103: CommunicationTechniques. 2:30 to 4 PM. Mock Interview Demonstration. 3:30 to 4:30 PM. Résumé/CV Preparation.

Mock Interviews provide individual half-hour appointments t o conduct a practice interview and receive immediate feedback from a career consultant. Please come dressed for an interview and bring a copy of your résumé or CV. Résumé/CV Reviews offer individualized career assistance. This program provides individual half-hour appointments w i t h a career consultant for the purpose of reviewing your résumé or CV and discussing your career options. Bring a copy of your résumé or CV.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1 6 9 to 10 AM. Interviewing 101: Basic Skills. 9 to 10 AM. Effective Networking. 10:30 to 11:30 AM. Targeting the Job Market. 10:30 to 11:30 AM. Résumé/CV Preparation. 1 to 2 PM. Career Transitions. 1 to 4 PM. Negotiating Techniques. 2:30 to 3:30 PM. Starting a Chemical Consulting Business.

1 to 2 PM. Finding Chemical Jobs in Small Business.

4 to 5 PM. Résumé/CV Preparation.

1 to 2 PM. Résumé/CV Preparation.

4 to 5 PM. Interviewing 101: Basic Skills.

2:30 to 3:30 PM. Interviewing 101: Basic Skills. 2:30 to 4 PM. Mock Interview Demonstration. 4 to 5 PM. Targeting the Job Market.

Photos © San Diego Convention and Visitors Bureau

Other Programs of Interest Many ACS Committees and Divisions sponsor programs related to career development. Please consult the web version (http://chemistry.org/careers/workshops.html) for final schedule and locations. SUNDAY, MARCH 13 8:00 to 11:00 ΑΛΛ. "Academic Hiring: How Do You Get the Job?" Presidential Event. Workshop. Organized by the Department of Career Services and the Office of Graduate Education, LOCATION: San Diego Marriott, Ballroom Β 3:30 to 5:00 PM. "Pursuing Chemistry in a Volatile Job Market. Symposium. LOCATION.· Manchester Grand Hyatt, Cunningham Room 1:15 to 4:45 PM. "Chemistry Enterprise 2015: Where in the World Will We Be?" Presidential Event. Symposium. Organized by CEPA, and co-sponsored by SChB, PROF, BMGT, and CEPA. LOCATION: San Diego Marriott, Ballroom Β

MONDAY, MARCH 1 4 8:30 AM to 4:15 PM. Chemistry Enterprise 2015: Where in the World Will We Be? Presidential Event. Symposium. See Sunday, 1:15 to 4:45 PM, for details. LOCATION: San Diego Marriott, Ballroom C 3:15 PM to 4:15 PM. CEPA Open Forum (Part of Presidential Event: Chemistry Enterprise 2015: Where in the World Will We Be?) LOCATION: San Diego Marriott, Ballroom C TUESDAY, MARCH 15 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM. "Working in Nanotechnology: What Does it Take?" LOCATION: Presentation Theater inside ACS National Exposition, San Diego Convention Center, Halls B&C.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM. "Working in Biotechnology/Biopharmaceuticals: Promise, Problems, and Potential." LOCATION: Presentation Theater inside ACS National Exposition, San Diego Convention Center, Halls B&C.

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DEPARTMENT OF CAREER SERVICES American Chemical Society 1155 Sixteenth Street, NW Washington, DC 20036 (800) 227-5558 http://chemistry.org/careers

EXPOSITON ing Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, IBM AIX, HP-UX, Sun Solaris, and Silicon Graphics Irix. 710 Chemical Sources International, Inc., P.O. Box 1824, Clemson, SC, USA, 29633, (864)646-7840, fax: (864)646-9938, e-mail: i n f o r m a t i o n ® c h e m s o u r c e s . c o m , Internet: www.chemsources. com Chem Sources . . . a comprehensive directory of chemical reference & source information. This chemical database lists 300,000 commercial compounds and 15,000 trade names distributed by some 8000 chemical companies. Search chemicals by CAS registry number, formula or name. The Chem Sources database is an excellent multifunctional reference tool for labs, research libraries and college science departments. Available Online, CDROM or in printed editions. Online network discounts for academia. 837 ChemiK Co., Ltd., 2225, 55 Yunshi Street, N i n g b o , 315010, CHINA, 86 574 8729 8855, fax: 86 574 8729 7 4 6 1 , e-mail: c a i @ c h e m i k . c o m , Internet: www.chemik.com ChemiK is a custom synthesis company in China, providing custom synthesis from lab, kilo, pilot to commercial scale (gram-kilo10Okq-multitons) in small molecule compounds. Lab: building blocks special reagents; Kilo: novel compounds reagents; Pilot & Commençai: Intermediates in benzene substitution and heterocyclics. ChemiK provide you an integral solution to source chemicals in China, from R&D, Custom Synthesis, to Commercial sourcing. 838 Chemlnnovation Software, 7966 Arjons Drive, Suite A, San D i e g o , CA, USA 92126, (858)7800 3 7 1 , fax: (858)780-0372, e-mail:info@ cheminnovation.com, Internet: www. c h e m i n n o v a t i o n . c o m Break-through CBIS framework enables customers to quicldy deploy customized and integrated Web applications: Compounds, Reactions, Inventory, E-Notebooks, HTS, Documents, Experimental Data Files, Reports, Cell Lines, Plâsmids, Enzymes, in-vivo and in-vitro Assays and more. Ultra-fast searching engine supports structures embedded in Word documents and text in other file formats. New version of Chem 4-D provides improved tools for structure drawing and IUPAC nomenclature. Sequence 4-D provides easy-to-use tools for plasmid drawing and DNA/ protein sequence analysis. 1831 ChemNavigator, Inc., 6126 Nancy Ridge Drive, Suite 117, San Diego, CA, USA 9 2 1 2 1 , (858)4509740x1225, fax: (858)625-2377, Internet: w w w . chemnavigator.com 117 ChemPacific Corporation, 6200 Freeport Centre, Baltimore, M D , USA 21224, (410)633-5771, fax: (410)633-5808, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.chempacific.com Chempacific Corporation provides Contract Research, Custom Synthesis, API and cGMP manufacturing services for Fortune 500 pharmaceutical, agricultural, and chemical companies worldwide. ChemPacific specializes in Chiral Synthesis; Unnatural amino acid; Indoles, Indolines and Indazoles; Heterocyclic Synthesis; Nucleosides and Nucleotides; ana carbohydrate chemistry. ChemPacific is positioned to serve clients with a state-of-the-art R&D facility in Baltimore, Maryland that handles projects up to Kg scale. Chempacific also performs chemical manufacturing at its 100%-owned facility, Hangzhou ChemPacific, in China. 630 C h e m s p e e d T e c h n o l o g i e s , Rheinstrasse 3 2 , Augst, SWITZERLAND CH-4302, +41 61 816 95 00, fax: + 4 1 61 8 1 6 95 0 9 , e - m a i l : c h e m s p e e d @ chemspeed.com, Internet: www.chemspeed.com Chemspeed Technologies, headquartered in Augst (Basel), Switzerland, is a global leader in the development of innovative instruments and consumables for scientists working in research and development laboratories including a line of fully automated parallel synthesizers, instruments for high throughput solid dispensing and liquid handling, and workstations for process research and development. Chemspeed is a premier provider of products and services, that reduce time-to-market schedules, increase productivity, and lower costs in research and development. 729,731 CiVentiChem LLC, PO Box 12041, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA 27709, (919)642-0100, fax: (919)642-0103, e-maiI:[email protected], Internet: www.cvchem.com CiVentiChem is a fully integrated company with the main focus in providing research services to pharmaceutical, biotechnology

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and other life science companies. We excel in providing quality services in the areas of medicinal chemistry, lead optimization, contract R&D, custom synthesis of pharmaceutical intermediates, NMEs, reference standard, metabolites and focussed libraries. We provide chemists on FTE basis in a cost effective manner at our labs in RTP, NC and in Hyderabad, India. If you need any of these services, please contact us. 1204 Combi-Blocks, 7949 Silverton Avenue, Suite 915, San Diego, CA, USA 92126, (858)635-8950, fax: (858)635-8991, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.combi-blocks.com COMBI-BLOCKS is a major manufacturer and a worldwide supplier of a series of chemical compounds called combinatorial building blocks. Our major products include various kinds of boronic acids, imidazoles, indoles and oxindoles, anilines, nitrobenzenes, tetrahydropyrans, thiazoles, pyrroles, pyridines, carboxylic acids, aldehydes, bromides, fluoro compounds, and other combinatorial building blocks.

CombiPhos Catalysts, Inc., P.O. Box 220, Princet o n , N J , USA 0 8 5 4 2 - 0 2 2 0 , (800)659-9793, fax: (908)281-79698, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.combiphos.com CombiPhos Catalysts, Inc. is a combinatorial technology-based application company which manufactures, markets a wide variety of highly active and air-stable crosscoupling catalysts, which are made with technology licensed from the DuPont Company. CombiPhos Catalysts, Inc. is the sole provider of highly active, air- and moisture-stable cross-coupling catalysts (POPd, POPdl, POPd2, PXPd, and PXPd2) for the pharmaceutical, biopharmaceutical and specialty chemical industries. 1725 CONFLEX Corporation, 12526 High Bluff Dr., Ste. 300, San Diego, CA, USA 92130, (800) 294-0054, fax: (509)692-4541, e-mail:[email protected], Intern e t : w w w . c o n f l e x . u s Conflex Corporation announces the release of CONFLEX5, the latest version of the CONFLEX software products. CONFLEX5, now bundled with the BARISTA visualization and analysis platform, performs fast, exhaustive conformation searching and analysis critical to drug discovery and chemical engineering. Determine conformations of large molecules with Parallel CONFLEX. Available only from Conflex Corporation are the latest, advanced versions of CONFLEX and Parallel CONFLEX. CONFLEX5 software, based on the conformational searching algorithms developed by Dr. H. Goto, operates on Windows, Mac Ob X, and Linux. 1613 Crystal Maker Software Limited, Begbroke Science Park, Bldg 5, Sandy Lane, Yarnton, O x f o r d shire, UNITED K I N G D O M OX5 1PF, + 4 4 18653 0 9 6 4 3 , fax: + 4 4 1 8 6 5 - 3 0 9 6 4 4 , e-mail:info@ crystalmaker.com, Internet: http://www. c r y s t a l m a k e r . c o m CrystalMaker Software Ltd develops innovative computer software for visualizing crystal and molecular structures on personal computers. Our award-winning CrystalMaker program provides spectacular, real-time visualization of structures with direct interaction and measurement tools - in an elegant, easy-to-use interface. CrystalMaker integrates with our diffraction packages - SingleCrystal and CrystalDiffract - to provide a complete crystallographic solution, with simulation and analysis of x-ray and neutron powder diffraction, electron diffraction, reciprocal lattice sections and stereographic projections. 1938 Cuadra Associates, Inc., 11835 West O l y m p i c Boulevard, Suite 855, Los Angeles, CA USA, 90064, (800)366-1360, fax: (310)477-1078, e-mail: sales® c u a d r a . c o m , Internet: w w w . c u a d r a . c o m Cuadra STAR is customizable knowledge management software for applications where fast, precise, browser-based retrieval is essential. It includes built-in capabilities for capturing and retrieving electronic information, and orner capabilities designed to help you manage technical and business information efficiently. There are ready-to-run STAR solutions for describing research materials, laboratory notebooks, competitive intelligence information, records management materials, or archival, library, museum, and photographic collections. You can manage your system yourselves, or use our hosted (ASP) solution. 1038 d e C O D E chemistry, 2501 Davey Road, W o o d r i d g e , IL USA, 6 0 5 1 7 , ( 6 3 0 ) 7 8 3 - 4 8 5 8 , fax: (630)783-4909, Internet: www.decode.com 540

Delta N u , 813 Second St, Laramie, WY, USA 82070, (307)745-9148, fax: (307)745-9152, e-mail: i n f o @ d e l t a n u . c o m , Internet: w w w . d e l t a n u . c o m DeltaNu supplies academia and industry with lowcost Raman spectroscopic products. These range from benchtop systems for teaching and research to portable hand-held systems for field or forensic work. Our system operating wavelengths range from 532 nm to 785 nm and spectral ranges from 200 wavenumbers to 3400 wavenumbers. We offer teaching material and newsletters to address educational needs and applications. This year come by and see our new Inspector Raman battery operated field spectrometer. 1237 Desert Analytics, 245 S. Plumer Avenue, Suite #24, T u c s o n , A Z , USA 8 5 7 1 9 , ( 5 2 0 ) 6 2 3 - 3 3 8 1 , fax: (520)623-9218, e-mail:thelab@desertanalytics. c o m , Internet: desertanalytics.com Desert Analytics, 245 S. Plumer Ave. #24, Tucson, AZ 85719, (520) 623-3381, fax: (520) 623-9218 Web site: desertanalytics.com, e-mail: thelab@ desertanalytics.com Celebrating 25 YEARS of service. Providing high quality microanalytical service to customers worldwide. Specializing in the analysis for the chemical elements: CHNOSP, halogens & metals, AA, ICP, ion chromatography. Analysis for academia, industry (pharmaceutical, plastics/ polymers, coal/petroleum/ ultimate/proximate, electronic/ tin/ solder plate) and government. Trace analysis, TOC. Custom analysis. We welcome your inquiries. 1305 Dialog, 11000 Regency Parkway, Suite 10, Cary, N C , USA 2 7 5 1 1 , (919)462-8600, fax: (919)4689890, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.dialog.com Dialog is a leading worldwide provider of online information services to biomedicine, pharmaceuticals, research and development, engineering, and intellectual property organizations. Experienced searchers will appreciate Dialog's professional search tool, DialogLink, available for demonstration in the Dialog booth. DialogLink combines speed and precision to offer cuttingedge XML technology for professional report creation and robust linking capabilities, as well as an option for chemical structure searching. To learn more, visit www.dialog.com/acs or visit us at booth #1106. 1106 Dionex Corp., 1228 Titan Way, PO Box 3603, Sunnyvale, CA, USA 94088-3603, (408)737-0700, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. dionex.com New state-of-the-art Reagent-Free IC (RFIC) system for superior isocratic and gradient performance. New nano and capillary LC system for critical protein analysis applications with powerful technologic advancements. New columns and high-performance consumables for IC and LC. High-productivity IC and dual-gradient HPLC systems. Chromeleon chromatography software for broad instrument control, data management, and more. Autopurification series for high-throughput sample purification. IC/MS and LC/MS systems. Accelerated Solvent Extraction (ASE) instruments featuring single sample and fully automated models. 1113,1115 Division of Business D e v e l o p m e n t and M a n a g e m e n t , C/o PCI, 4231 South Fremont A v e n u e , Tuscon, AZ, USA 8 5 7 1 4 , e-mail:lnfo@ chemicalenterprise.org, Internet: www. chemicalenterprise.com The ACS Division of Business Development and Management is an organization comprised of professionals who share a common interest in creating, growing and managing chemical businesses. Specifically, the Division is focused on fostering growth in the chemical industry by providing resources to chemical professionals, sharing of knowledge and creating a voice for individuals involved in the development and expansion of the chemical enterprise. 1532 Division of Small Chemical Business, 1117 Mineral S p r i n g s R o a d , C h a r l o t t e , N C , USA 2 8 2 6 2 , (704)598-4819, fax: (704)598-4819, e-mail:scooke@ sprynet.com, Technical writing, consulting, life sciences, D N A sequencing. Molecular Experts LLC, [email protected] 617-290-89/5. Chemical C o n s u l t a n t s N e t w o r k , http://www. chemconsultants.org 610-664-0528. Certification, training, seminars, translations. V-Labs, carbohydrates and polysaccharides. Research, development, and analytical services. Medical applications, consultations, packaging, http://www.v-labs.com, [email protected], 985-893-0533. Process Systems Consulting, 704-598-4819. ISO-9000, Process

Safety Management, Environmental Process Engineering, Green Chemistry. Companies of Members of the Division - space available at each National Meeting. Contact [email protected], 704-5984819 to reserve your space. 1530 Eastern Analytical Symposium, P.O. Box 633, Montchanin, DE, USA 19710-0633, (610)485-4633, fax: (610)485-9467, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.eas.org Join us at the 44th EAS, November 14-17, 2005, in Somerset, New Jersey. The annual symposium & exposition on analytical chemistry and the allied sciences facilitates the exchange of technical information and showcases scientific instrumentation and services. The technical program features more than 600 papers presented by industrial, governmental, and academic scientists, while the EAS Workshops and Short Courses provide practical information on analytical methodologies and equipment. An exposition of 220 Companies in 300 booths provides a state-ofthe-art update in modern laboratory equipment.

1615 Eberbach Corp., PO Box 1024, 505 S. Maple St., Ann Arbor, M l , USA 48106, (734)665-8877, fax: (7 3 4 ) 6 6 5 - 9 0 9 9 , e - m a i l : r a l p h b o e h n k e ® eberbachlabtools.com, Internet: www. e b e r b a c h l a b t o o l s . c o m Eberbach Corporation manufactures laboratory instruments and apparatus. Exhibiting the Eberbachlabtools; shakers and mixers ( reciprocating and orbital ) , blenders and homogenizers and the speciatly Waring blennder containers and accessories in sizes from 3ml to 4 liter. See the new small shakers, vortexers and rokers. 1507 e D A Q , 2205 Executive Circle, Colorado Springs, C O , USA 80906, (719)576-7000, fax: (719)5763 9 7 1 , e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. edaq.com eDAQ manufactures high performance data recording hardware and software for research and teaching use in the physical sciences: General purpose data recording—using e-corder® (Chart and Scope software) Chromatography—using PowerChrom®280 system. Electroanalytical voltammetry—using EChem™ software. eDAQ software-controlled amplifiers including: pH, conductivity, temperature and bridge amplifiers, and potentiostats, are used in conjunction with e-corder systems. eDAQ data recording systems are Windows and Macintosh compatible, utililizing USB interface. No Cards, just plug and play. 1631 Eksigent Technology, 2021 Las Positas Court, Suite 1 6 1 , Livermore, CA, USA 9 4 5 5 1 , (925)9608 8 6 9 x 3 2 5 , fax: (925)443-4392, Internet: w w w . eksigent.com 2132 Elsevier, 360 Park Avenue South, New York, NY, USA 10010-5107, (888)4ES-INFO, fax: (212)6333680, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. elsevier.com Explore the world of Chemistry at Elsevier's booth #402, where important new books, top-level journals, and the best online products will be showcased. Many Elsevier book titles, including those of Academic Press and the Tetrahdron Organic Chemistry Series, will be offered at discounts up to 20%. Browse through our new titles including Vol. IV of the Encyclopedia of Mass Spectrometry; research our new multi-volume works: Comprehensive Organic Functional Group Transformations II & the Encyclopedia of Analytical Sciences II. Collect free sample copies of our journals including the Tetrahdron Letters journal. In addition to electronic journal content, our online database ScienceDirect now offers Elsevier Reference Works and Serials. Receive an electronic demo of the Encyclopedia of Separation Science or browse through historical articles in the Journal of Solid State Chemistry or other titles recently added to our backfiles. Discover ChemVillage - a new solution for chemistry researchers or wander across to the aisle to our MDL booth where you can learn more about MDL's Discovery Gate. 402,502 E M D Biosciences, Inc., 10394 Pacific Center C t , San Diego, CA, USA 92121, (800)854-3417, fax: (858)453 -3552, e-maihcustomer.service® emdbiosciences.com, Internet: www. e m d b i o s c i e n c e s . c o m EMD Biosciences, Inc is engaged in the development, production, marketing, sales and distribution of a oroad array of products used worldwide in disease-related life sciences research in pharmaceuticals, biotechnology and academic research settings. EMD Biosciences, Inc. offers products through its Calbiochem,

Novabiochem, Novagen and Clinalfa brands. We proudly present here our Novabiochem brand, a leading provider of state-of-the-art innovative building blocks, resins, and solid supported reagents for peptide, protein and high-throughput chemical synthesis. 1o20 E M D Chemicals Inc., 480 South Democrat Road, Gibbstown, NJ, USA 08027, (800)222-0342, fax: 856-423-6313, EMD Chemicals is a leading manufacturer of high-purity chemicals, reagents and specialty products for chromatography, molecular biology & microbiology in the industrial and académie. We also provide high purity chemicals for R&D, scale-up and production applications in the pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical industries. 1622 E n a m i n e , 23 A l e x a n d r a M a t r o s o v a St., Kyiv, UKRAINE 01103, +380 675-0705 66, fax: +380 44 537 32 53, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.enamine.net Enamine provides a full spectrum of products and services to support drug discovery industry. More than 350,000 on-shelf compounds and 10,000 proprietary building blocks form a unique collection. The innovative technology enables the in-house production of 12,000 handcrafted compounds per month. Our customers are welcome to use our facilities to synthesize in a short time any selections from an original collection (REAL Database) of 7,000,000 off-shelf compounds. Enamine also provides excellent outsourcing solutions in custom synthesis and discovery chemistry. 1035 Entech Instruments, 2207 Agate Court, Simi Valley, CA, USA 93065, (805)527- 5939, fax: (805)5277913, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.entechinst.com Entech is a leading manufacturer of GC inlet systems for gas phase chemical analysis, including concentrators for polar, nonpolar, volatile and semi- volatile compounds. Large volume robotic autosampler technology provides the highest sensitivity GCMS inlet available for headspace analysis of liquids and solids. Entech's proprietory Silonite coating renders stainless steel tubing, fittings and injection liners completely inert for GC applications. Turn-key solutions are available for Environmental, Food and Beverage, Forensic, Homeland Security, Industrial Hygiene and Indoor Air Quality applications. 1639 Fisher Scientific, 2000 Park Lane, Pittsburgh, PA, USA 15275, 4 1 2 - 4 9 0 - 8 3 0 0 , fax: 4 1 2 - 4 9 0 - 8 6 3 0 , Internet: www.fishersci.com Fisher Scientific, a manufacturer and distributor, brings our customers the world's largest selections of chemicals developed and produced specifically for use in laboratories. We offer liquids, drys, organics, inorganics, multi-compendial products, solvents, acids, standards, buffers, diagnostics, dyes, stains, bioreagents, and enzymes for a wide variety of applications including but not limited to: Biotechnology, Environmental Testing, Chromatography, Manufacturing Processes, Clinical Analysis, Research & Development and Quality Control. To order in the United States including Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico, Call: (800)766-7000 or Fax: (800)926-1166 2102 FIZ CHEMIE BERLIN, Franklinstrasse 1 1 , Berlin, GERMANY D-10587, +49 30 39977 0, fax: +49 30 39977 134, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.chemistry.de FIZ CHEMIE BERLIN is a major scientific information and documentation center for chemistry. Its main activities include the preparation of databases, software packages, books, and printed information services covering synthetic organic chemistry, thermophysical properties, chemical engineering, pharmaceuticals and polymers. In addition, FIZ CHEMIE maintains specialized Internet search engines for chemistry, medicine, pharmacoloqy and scientific publications. H 730,732 FMC Lithium, Seven LakePointe Plaza, 2801 Yorkmont Road, Suite 300, Charlotte, NC, USA 28208, (704)868-5446, fax: (704)868-5312, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: f m c l i t h i u m . c o m Organolithiums, organomagnesiums, n-, sec-, and tert-butyllithium, LDA, lithium hexamethyldisilazide, lithium t-butoxide, lithium alkoxides, silane protecting groups, tert-butyldimethylsilyl chloride, tert-butyldiphenylsilyl chloride, di-tert-butylsilane, di-tert-butylsilyl ditriflate, di-tert-butylsilyldichloride, tri-tert-butylphosphine, di-tert-butylphosphine, trimethylphosphine, other specialty phosphine catalyst ligands, substituted pyridine deriva-

tives, custom boronic acids, custom intermediates from ortho metallation, protected functional synthons, anionic polymerization initiators, lithium aluminum hydride solutions, lithium borohydride in THF 1202 Frontier Scientific, P.O. Box 3 1 , Logan, UT, USA 84323, (435)753-1901, fax: (435)753-6731, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.frontiersci.com Frontier Scientific is a major producer of advanced molecular building blocks for drug discovery and materials science. Frontier Scientific's range of products include boronic acids, organohalides, catalysts, and multi-functional druglike building blocks. These unique materials act as extremly versatile and powerful starting materials for organic synthesis. Frontier Scientific also preforms custom organic synthesis and contract research. Please visit us at www.frontiersci.com or at our booth #1705 for more information. 1705 Fujitsu A m e r i c a / C A C h e S o f t w a r e , 200 Lower Brook Drive, Suite 2100, W e s t w o o d , MA, USA 02090, (781)326-7175, fax: (781)326-7179, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.fujitsu. com/us The BioSciences Group of Fujitsu America, Inc., capitalizes on Fujitsu Limited's over 20 years of leadership in creating innovative and reliable solutions for helping experimental scientists overcome the challenges in their laboratory workflow. BioSciences Group solutions provide a framework for researchers to make in silico predictions about leads, targets, and interactions, and to validate these hypotheses experimentally. BioSciences Group offerings include the CAChe® suite of life sciences predictive modeling tools, the ActiveSite™ module for drug discovery leadgeneration, and the BioServer™ massively parallel simulation server for genomics-based drug design. For more information, please see: http://www. fai.fujitsu.com/. 2030 Gelest Inc., 11 East Steel Road, Morrisville, PA, USA 19067, (215)547-1015, fax: (215)547-2484, Internet: www.gelest.com 643 Georg Thieme Verlag Thieme Publisher, Ruedigerstr14, Stuttgart, GERMANY 70469, +49 711 8 9 3 1 7 7 2 , f a x : + 4 9 711 8 9 3 1 7 7 7 , e - m a i l : [email protected], Internet: www. thieme-chemistry.com Since 1909 Thieme has published evaluated information about synthetic, and general, chemistry for professional chemists and advanced students. Thieme Chemistry's portfolio of products includes the well known journals SYNThlESIS and SYNLETT, Protecting Groups, Spectroscopic Methods in Organic Chemistry, Pharmaceutical Substances, Houben-Weyl, and Science of Synthesis. Most of these resources are also available online and have been completely revamped this May. To find out more about these and other products please visit www.thieme-chemistry.com

418,420 GFS Chemicals, PO Box 245, Powell, O H , USA 43065-0245, (740)881-5501, fax: (740)881-5989, Internet: www.gfschemicals.com GFS Chemicals has been a manufacturer of specialty and analytical chemcials for over 76 years. Our core technologies are centered on liquid ammonia and acetylene chemistries (the Farchan Line), including ofefinic and silyl intermediates, Grignard reactions and reagents; plus dyes, stains, phenanthroline and bipyridine heteroaromatics. Our catalog includes over 4000 products most frequently used in research, development, material characterization and analysis. 1209 Glas-Col, 711 Hulman Street, P.O. Box 2128, Terre H a u t e , I N , USA 4 7 8 0 2 , ( 8 1 2 ) 2 3 5 - 6 1 6 7 , f a x : (812)234-6975, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.glascol.com Labnetix software gives you the flexibility to monitor and control a variety of our mixing products. Our Combinatorial/Biotech products include heating/cooling vortexers, ovens, rotators for microplates, reaction block holders and concentrator/evaporators from 8 to 384 wells. We offer standard and custom heating mantles and temperature controls for precise regulation. 2024,2026 H.S. Martin, Inc., P.O. Box 6 6 1 , 1149 S. E. Blvd, V i n e l a n d , N J , USA 0 8 3 6 2 , (856)692-8700, fax: (856)692-3805, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.hsmartin.com H.S Martin offers a complete line of process and laboratory equipment including the rollowing: Reactors: Cylindrical Glass

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EXPOSITION to 100 Liters; Spherical Glass to 200 Liters; Distilla­ tion Systems: Glass and Stainless Steel to 100 Gal­ lon; ASTM Systems: D2892, D5236, D1160 and others; Custom Glassware Engineering; Full line of Dewars; Heat Exchanges and Condensers in both Glass and Stainless Steel; Process Glassware Repair Services, Solvent Recovery Stills; Fabrication of both Quartz and Pyrex; Pilot Plant/Kilo Lab compo­ nents to Turn Key Systems. 1307 Hayden McNeil Publishing, 14903 Pilot Drive, Ply­ m o u t h , M l , USA 4 8 1 7 0 , ( 7 3 4 ) 4 5 5 - 7 9 0 0 , fax: (731)455-3901, e-mail:mckenna@hmpublishing. c o m , Internet: w w w . h m p u b l i s h i n g . c o m HaydenMcNeil is the premiere publisher for customized chemistry laboratory manuals and carbonless labo­ ratory notebooks. We set the standard by provid­ ing the highest quality of production and service. Please stop by our booths 1712 and 1714 to learn more about how we can improve your materials for you and your students. 1001,1003 Hebei N e w Chaoyang Chemical Stock Co., LTD., Chaoyang Chemicals, Inc., 20501 Katy Freeway, Suite 140, Katy, TX, USA 77450, (713) 884-0540, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: w w w . c h a o y a n g - c h e m . c o m Hebei New Chaoyang Chemical Stock Co., LTD., based in Hebei Province China, is a leading manufacture of fine chemicals in China. Our products include dimethyl carbonate (DMC), propylene carbonate (PC), ethylene carbon­ ate (EC), diethyl carbonate (DEC), diphenyl carbon­ ate (DPC), methanol, ethylene glycol, etc. Our products have been exported to Japan, India, America and Europe. To serve our North American customers, recently we opened a new office in Houston area - Chaoyang Chemicals Inc. 1037 Heidolph Instruments, 2615 River Road, Unit 4, Cinnaminson, NJ, USA 08077, (856)829-6160, fax: (856)829-7369, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.heidolph.com Heidolph Instruments is a lead­ ing manufacturer of laboratory equipment includ­ ing; rotary evaporators, liquid and solid parallel synthesis, magnetic stirrers, overhead stirrers, shak­ ers and mixers, peristaltic pumps and homogeniz­ es. Heidolph products are designed and manufac­ tured to deliver the highest quality available and come with a 3-year warranty. Our New Jersey facil­ ity maintains stock on standard line items as well as spare parts for customer support. High quality products supported with excellent customer ser­ vice and technical support. 629,631 HEL, Inc., Princess Road Office Park, 4 Princess Road, Suite 205, Lawrenceville, NJ, USA 08648, (609 )912-1551, fax: (609)912-1552, e-mail:rlee@ HEL-INC.COM, Internet: www.hel-inc.com HEL is a multinational company engaged in the develop­ ment, production, sales and service of automated reactor and calorimeter systems for chemical and pharmaceutical companies. All of our systems cen­ ter on our proprietary hardware and software sys­ tems to operate the units. Our products focus on 3 main application areas of chemistry: process screening, process optimization & development and process development/scaleup. Additionally, we make systems for thermal hazard testing and screening. 1104 Hellma Cells, Inc., 80 Skyline Drive, Plainview, NY, USA 11803, (516)935-0007, fax: (516)939-0555, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. hellmausa.com Manufacturer of Hellma Photom­ eter Cells and accessories including Fiber Optic Immersion Probes, Liquid and Glass Photometric Calibration Standards, Quartz microplates. Expanded line of process probes good to 35 bar, 300C. Unmatched selection of stock and custom cells. Supplier of Cathodeon and Heraeus Light sources including Deuterium, Hollow Cathode, Photoionization, Spectral Line; Zeiss MMS and MCS Miniature Spectrometer modules covering 190-2200nm in combination; Tec5 Interface elec­ tronics for display/readout of PDAs and CCDs. New: Fiber Optic Tray cell for 4-5ul volume. 1922 Heraeus Metal Processing, Inc., 13429 Alondra Boulevard, Santa Fe Springs, CA, USA 90670, (562)483-1845, fax: (562)623-3071, Internet: www. wc-heraeus.com For over 150 years, Heraeus has been a world leader in precious metals technolo­ gies, currently has over 9000 employees with over Euro 7 billion in annual sales. Heraeus Metal Pro­ cessing, Inc. (HMP) is part of the Heraeus global production network throughout North America, Europe, Asia and Africa. At HMP, we offer a wide

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variety of precious metals compounds for both homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis appli­ cations, and offer full precious metals recycling ser­ vices. 1238 Hiden Analytical Inc., 9033 General Dr., Plymouth, Ml, USA 48170, (734)455-8503, fax: (734)455-8658, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. HidenAnalytical.com Hiden Analytical manufacture precision quadrupole mass spectrometers for gas analysis, surface science, catalysis studies and plasma characterization. Showcased will be Hiden's latest laboratory grade integrated Microreactor and Mass Spectrometer system for catalyst charac­ terization and evaluation - the CATLAB. Designed specifically for catalysis screening, characterization, kinetic and thermodynamic measurements, the CATLAB incorporates a fast response, low thermal mass furnace with rapid changeover catalyst car­ tridge system, hot-zone interface and QIC-20 pre­ cision gas analysis system. /28

both Quartz and Pyrex; Pilot Plant/Kilo nents to Turn Key Systems.

Lab

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Huber-USA, 271 Main Street, Northport, NY, USA 11768, (631)912-0800, fax: (631)912-0899, Internet: www.huber-usa.com 2114 Huber/Caron, P.O. Box 715, Marietta, O H , USA 45750, (800)648-3042, fax: (740)374-3760, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. caronproducts.com CARON will be exhibiting high power circulators with operating temperatures ranging from -120 to +400 C. Manufactured by Huber, the Unistats provide cooling capacities from 700 W to 130 kW & heating from 1.5 kW to 80kW. These low-volume, hydraulically-sealed circulators provide effective and efficient temperature control, the high cooling-power density and low fluid volume provides fast heating/cooling rates using less power and thermal fluid making them the system of choice for kilo labs, process research, miniplants, and production. 424

Hirschmann, Inc., Hirschmann, Inc., 2700 Holloway R d . , S u i t e 1 0 3 , L o u i s v i l l e , KY, USA 4 0 2 9 9 , 5022400287, fax: 5022400394, e-mail:michael@ hirschmann-inc.com, Internet: www.hirschmanninc.com Hirschmann, Inc. offers unique, techno­ logically advanced and competitively priced instruments like e.g. ceramus—a bottle top dis­ penser with extremely durable ceramic plunger and easy and reliable volume setting, pipetus—the only rechargeable pipette filler with LLD, inductive charging stand and a design that really deserves the attribute economically, solarus—the first solarpowered manual titrator independent from con­ ventional power sources. Hirschmann, Inc. also sells HPLL columns, micro capillaries and chemi­ cally inert micro plates with glass inserts. 330

Hypercube Inc., 1115 N W 4th Street, Gainesville, FL, USA 32601, (352)371-7744, fax: (352)371-3662, Internet: www.hyper.com HyperChem Release 7.5 Windows 95/98/2000, Windows NT, ME, XP. HyperChem Release 7.5 is the newest member of the HyperChem family. Computational methods include molecular mechanics, molecular dynamics, and semi-empirical and ab-initio molecular orbital methods. HyperChem Data and HyperNMR have been migrated into HyperChem Release 7, and new features have been added. The new features include DFT, TNDO, Charmm Protein Simulations, Molecules in Magnetic Fields, and much more (Student Edition also available) 1213

Hitachi High Technologies, 3100 N. First St., San Jose, CA, USA 95134, (408)432-0520x7044, fax: (408)432-8258, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: w w w . h i t a c h i - h t a . c o m / L S h o m e Hitachi High Technologies America, Inc. (ΗΤΑ) is commit­ ted to providing the highest-quality scientific instruments to the North American market. We support thousands of satisfied customers with a wide range of reliability-proven analytical instru­ mentation, including high performance liquid chro­ matography (HPLC), Amino Acid Analyzers, and UV-Visible/NIR and Fluorescence Spectroscopy. 2025

Image Metrology A / S , Diplomvej 373, Lyngby, DK-2800, DENMARK, 45 4525 5854, fax: 45 4593 4732, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. imagemet.com Image Metrology is a world wide leading supplier of image processing software for "nano-microscopy". Our main product is the Scanning Probe Image Processor, SPIP. SPIP offers an unmatched set of features for image calibration, correction and analysis including automatic particle and roughness analysis, 3D visualization and batch processing. SPIP supports a wide variety of microscope types and their file formats including Scanning Probe Microscopes (SPM), interference microscopes, Scanning Électron Microscopes (SEM), confocal microscopes and profilers. 217

Horiba Jobin Yvon, 3880 Park Ave., Edison, NJ, USA 08820, (732)494-8660, fax: (732)549-5157, e-maiI:[email protected], Internet: http://www.jobinyvon.com/ The world's most sen­ sitive Spectrofluorometers and the world's leading Raman instruments are displayed. The LabRAM series of Raman Microscopes excel at all applica­ tions, from R&D to routine analysis, while the xgt edxrf Microscopes deliver high-resolution elelmental imaging. The most complete solutions for fluo­ rescence dynamics come from the ultimate sensi­ tivity fo tcspc and the convenience of phase modulation, whether micro or macro, uv to ir, flashlamp to UV diode or xenon excitation, com­ plete systems or components to build your own. 302,304 Hotpack, See SP Industries. Houghton Mifflin Company, 222 Berkeley St., Boston, MA, USA 02116, (800)733-1717, ext. 4010, fax: (800)733-1810, Internet: chemistry.college. hmco.com/instructors The Houghton Mifflin Col­ lege Division is committed to creating the highest quality course materials available. From textbooks to technology products, we use traditional and innovative media to deliver meaningful content and provide educational tools such as online tutor­ ing, instructor resources, and distance learning environments. 421 H.S. Martin, Inc., P.O. Box 6 6 1 , 1149 S. E. Blvd, V i n e l a n d , N J , USA 0 8 3 6 2 , (856)692-8700, fax: (856)692-3805, e-mail: [email protected], Inter­ net: www.hsmartin.com H.S Martin offers a com­ plete line of process and laboratory equipment including the following: Reactors: Cylindrical Glass to 100 Liters; Spherical Glass to 200 Liters; Distilla­ tion Systems: ôlass and Stainless Steel to 100 Gallon; ASTM Systems: D2892, D5236, D1160 and others; Custom Glassware Engineering; Full line of Dewars; Heat Exchanges and Condensers in both Glass and Stainless Steel; Process Glassware Repair Services, Solvent Recovery Stills; Fabrication of

Indofine Chemical Co., 121 Stryker Lane, Hillsboro u g h , N J , USA 0 8 8 4 4 , ( 9 0 8 ) 3 5 9 - 6 7 7 8 , f a x : (908)359-1179, e-mail:chemical@indofinechemical. com, Internet: www.indofinechemical.com INDOFINE, established in 1981, is committed to providing high quality rare organic molecules, biochemicals and natural products for the advancement of science. We provide custom synthesis, contract research and process development and toll manufacturing in the areas of Flavonoids, coumarins, acetophenones, benzophenones, chromones, fluoroorganics, heterocyclics and natural products for the pharmaceutical, agricultural and life science industries. Please visit our new websites: tollmanufacturing.com, contractresearch. com, flavorsand fragrances.com, rareorganics.com, benzophenones.com, acetophenones.com and coumarins.com for more information. 1707 Inel, P.O. Box 147, Stratham, N H , USA 03885, (603)778-9161, fax: (603)778-9171, e-mail:inelinc@ aol.com, Internet: www.inel.fr Inel specializes in manufacturing unique x-ray diffractometers with advanced detection and sample positioning capabilities. We are a world leading supplier of curved position sensitive detectors (PSD s) which collect entire diffraction patterns in real time with excellent resolution. Applications include in-situ variable temperature studies, polymorph identification and Rietveld analysis. Samples can be bulk powders, capillaries, thin films, etc. In addition to new diffractometer systems, we also upgrade older instrumentation offering a new x-ray generator, tube, goniometer, or detector. 1734 InforSense, 48 Princes Gardens, London, UNITED K I N G D O M SW7 2PE, + 44 (0) 207 5946 710, fax: + 44(0) 207 5 9 4 6 8 3 6 , e - m a i l : m a r k e t i n g @ i n f o r s e n s e . c o m , Internet: w w w . i n f o r s e n s e . c o m InforSense develops and markets next-generation discovery informatics platforms for individual researchers, cross-function teams and discovery enterprises based on its unique Open Discovery

Workflow™ technology. With InforSense™ 1.9, you can access and integrate all your data and software applications; mine, analyze and visualize your diverse information; automatically interpret your results; and manage and reuse your discovery process knowledge. A single informatics environment enables you to create, manage, integrate and deliver your intellectual property, throughout the discovery life cycle thus increasing research productivity. 1607,1609 Innovative Directions, 2284 San Pablo Ave., Suite 100, Pinole, CA, USA 94564, 510-799-6105, fax: 510-799-9681, e-mail:tombruggman@dianovainc. c o m , Internet: w w w . d i a n o v a i n c . c o m Innovative Directions is a manufacturers representative group that supplies products and services to the Biotechnology and Pharmaceutical industries. Our product line features a variety of bio-processing equipment such as bioreactors/fermenters, cell counters, cell disruptors and chromotography/purification skids. Our products include the ŒDEX from innovatis AG and the fedbatch-pro and cellferm-pro from Dasgip AG. 1630 Innovative Technology, 2 New Pasture Road, Newburyport, MA, USA 01950, (978)462-4415, fax: (978)462-3338, e-maiI:[email protected], Internet: www.solventpurification.com - www. gloveboxes.com Innovative Technology is a leader in the design of Solvent Purification Systems and Controlled Atmosphere Glove Boxes. The Pure Solv 400 solvent purifier is the safe alternative to thermal distillation and provides anhydrous grade solvents on tap safely.The System One glove box provides the reliability you would expect from a company with over 20 years experience in gas purification technology. 1918,1920 Instec, Inc., 5589 Arapahoe A v e n u e , Ste. 208, Boulder, C O , USA 8 0 3 0 3 , (303)444-4608, fax: (303)444-4607, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.instec.com Instec designs, manufactures, and sells polarizing optical microscopes (POM) with long working distance polarizing condenser and long working distance objectives, programmable precision temperature controllers, hot and cold stages (from -i90C to 700C), C-mount microscope digital cameras with sample temperature overlay. Applications: Thermal microscopy, FTIR, Freezing and drying, X-Ray, and AFM. 836 Instruments For Research & Industry, 108 Franklin Avenue, Cheltenham, PA, USA 19012, e-mail:info@ i-2-r.com, Internet: www.i-2-r.com Instruments for Research and Industry is one of the most experienced providers of lab devices and Tools For Scientists including: GLOVE BAG, the LEAD DONUT, LEAD CUFF, LEAD BRICK, PVC coated lead sheets, HANDI-LEAD, Temperature Controllers, Temperature Monitors, THERM-O-WATCH, TEMP-O-TROL, Thermocouples, Over Temperature Protection, Vacuum Controllers, ΜΑΝΟ-WATCH, GLOW-BOX, WATER-FLOW MONITOR, SPILL ALARM and CUT­ OFF, RESERVIOR MONITOR, Safety Shields, LABGUARD, SPLASH -GARD, and Polarimeter. 626,628 Intelliqensys, Belasis Business Centre, Billingham, United Kingdom TS23 4EA, 44 1642 343411, fax: 44 1642 714305, e-mail:postmaster@intelligensys. co.uk, Internet: www.intelligensys.co.uk Intelligen­ sys produces software to help you find break­ throughs to your formulation problems that are hard to obtain by traditional means. Our software systems INForm and FormRules use cutting-edge machine learning technologies to convert your data into models and rules, helping you optimize your formulated products rapidly. Our complemen­ tary simulation software accelerates 'what if inves­ tigations, to speed your research. We also offer a full range of training and support. 1437 Invitrogen Corporation, 1600 Faraday Avenue, Carlsbad, CA, USA 92008, (760)476-6635, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. invitrogen.com Invitrogen provides products and services that support academic and government research institutions and pharmaceutical and biotech companies worldwide in their efforts to improve the human condition. Our life science technologies improve and accelerate all areas of research, drug discovery, and commercial biopro­ duction. 739 IQ Scientific Instruments, 2075-E Corte del Nogal, Carlsbad, CA, U.S.A. 92009, (760)930-6501, fax:

(760)930-0615, IQ Scientific Instruments develops, manufactures and markets highly-advanced silicon chip sensors for medical, laboratory and industrial phi applications. The company holds a command­ ing lead in silicon chip sensor technology and has established business relationships with the world's top scientific instrumentation and marketing com­ panies. Current products range from the miniLab pocket-sized meter, to handheld and bench-top meters, to the IQ500 processLab in-line process controller/analyzer. We also have a new line of handheld, waterproof, multi-parameters meters including pH and conductivity. 204 J-KEM Scientific, 6970 Olive Blvd., St. Louis, M O , USA 63130, (800) 827-4849, fax: 314-863-5536, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: h t t p : / / w w w . jkem.com New Personal Reaction Station has every feature needed for solution phase parallel synthe­ sis. Six glass reactors, built-in magnetic stirring, heating & cooling (-78 to 130 C), inert atmosphere with septum caps. Optional concentrator evapo­ rates solvent inside the reaction tube. Digital tem­ perature controllers regulate any volume (0.1ml to 100L) or piece of equipment to 0.1 degree C with ramping and data logging. Digital vacuum regula­ tor controls vacuum pressures and eliminates mer­ cury. Custom Reaction Controllers automate the addition of reagents as a function of time, tempera­ ture, pH or other reaction parameters. NEW Eclipse Robotic Workstations make lab automation afford­ able. From $13,000 the Eclipse automates dissolu­ tion, synthesis, reformatting, weighing, any labora­ tory task. Weighting workstation with 0.1 mg balance is $19,400 complete! User programmable. Robotic shaker homes on command. New catalog.

401,403,405 J-Star Research, 3001 Hadley Rd., Suite 1-3, South Plainfield, N J , USA 07080, (252)923-0085, fax: (252)923-1085, e-mail:dminor@drugdiscoveryalliances. c o m , Internet: www.jstar-research.com J-STAR Research is in the business of providing world class chemistry support to discovery and development groups in the pharmaceutical industry. Some examples of the core competencies of J-STAR include: process research, route scouting, synthe­ ses of novel compounds, metabolites, impurities, and reference standards. J-STAR Research is head­ quartered in South Plainfield, ΝJ whereby all of the chemistry is conducted at this location. Staffed by predominately a Ph.D. staff and has a state of the art analytical laboratory, www.jstar-research.com 2004 JASCO, 8649 Commerce Drive, Easton, M D , USA 2 1 6 0 1 , (410)822-1220, fax: (410)822-7526, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: w w w . jascoinc.com Jasco specializes in analytical instru­ mentation in the areas of spectroscopy and chromatography. With 45 years of experience in the academic, pharmaceutical, biotechnology and industrial markets worldwide, Jasco is an excellent choice for your laboratory needs. We offer a full line of instrumentation: UV/VIS/NIR, FT-IR 4000 & 6000 Series, Fluorescence, Circular Dichroism, Raman, FT-Raman, SFC, HPLC and Polarimeters. And new for 2005: Our latest innovation in Chromatography-our X-LC (Extreme Pressure Liquid Chromatography) and X-SFC (Extreme SuperCritical Fluid (Chromatography) to exemplify speed, accuracy, and green technology. 1101,1103 JEOL USA, Inc., 11 Dearborn Road, Peabody, MA, USA 01960, (978)535-5900, fax: (978)536-2205, e-mail:[email protected] or [email protected], Internet: www.jeol.com JEOL is a global leader of NMR, mass spec, and electron optical instrumentation used for high-end scientific research and industrial applications. JEOL provides innovative technolo­ gies and products (such as our new AccuTOFDART mass spectrometer which allows analysis at atmospheric pressure and ground potential with no solvent or sample preparation required). We will have information on our line of MS and NMR prod­ ucts as well as our SEM, TEM, and AFM instrumen­ tation. 724,726 John Wiley 8c Sons,lnc, 111 River St, Hoboken, Ν J, USA 07030, (201)748-6000, fax: (201) 7486088, Internet: www.wiley.com John Wiley & Sons, Inc., provides state-of-the art chemical information to students, educators, researchers and scientists worldwide. World-class journals such as Angewandte Chemie, Journal of Polymer Science, and Chemistry & Biodiversity and superior texts and references such as Organic Chemistry: An

Intermediate Text, 2nd Edition; Main Group Metals in Organic Synthesis; and the fifth edition of the Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology are just some of the products that comprise Wiley's comprehensive chemistry library. Through Wiley InterScience (http://www.interscience.wiley.com/) we deliver electronic access to hundreds of jour­ nals, major reference works, online books, backfile collections, and chemical databases including the forthcoming Materials Science and Chemistry Backfile Collections and the Organic Syntheses and Organic Reactions databases. Through our partner­ ships with 14 European societies and other inter­ national chemistry partners, Wiley is able to offer authoritative content from the most respected authors in the field. Wiley is dedicated to serving the chemistry community through the ongoing development of innovative services such as spectroscopyNOW.com and separationsNOW. com. 702 Jones & Bartlett Publishers, 40 Tall Pine Dr., Sud­ b u r y , M A , USA 0 1 7 7 6 , ( 9 7 8 ) 5 1 9 - 8 1 2 8 , f a x : (978)443-8000, Internet: www.jbpub.com 736 Journal of Chemical Education, Department of Chemistry, 1101 University Ave., Madison, W l , USA 53706, (608)262-5153, fax: (608)265-8094, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.jce.divched.org The Journal of Chemical Education has brought readers the best of the world of chemical education since its founding in 1924 by Neil Gordon. Meet the JCE staff and get acquainted with CHED, the award-winning division that publishes JCE, creates and distributes ACS Standardized Exams, and pro­ vides a network of support for chemistry teachers at all levels through meetings, programming, commit­ tees, workshops, and outreach. Outreach materials and assistance available. Subscriber Services: PO Bx 1267, Bellmawr, NJ 08099-1267; phone 856/ 931 -5825/ fax 856/931-4115. 902,904 Jubilant Biosys Ltd., 55 Devasandra 80 Feet Road, RMV Extension 11 Stage, Bangalore, India 560 094, 91 80-2351 8634, fax: 91 80-2351-8633, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: h t t p : / / w w w . jubilantbiosys.com 106 Julabo USA, Inc., 754 Roble Road, Suite 180, A l l e n t o w n , PA, USA 18109, (800)458-5226, fax: (610)231-0260, e-mail:[email protected], Inter­ net: w w w . j u l a b o . c o m JULABO is a worldwide manufacturer of temperature control equipment : Refrigerated and Heating Circulators from -95C to +200C; Presto's and HT's Highly Dynamic Tem­ perature Control Systems from -85C to +400C; Water Baths from +20C to +99.9C; Recirculating Coolers from -25C to +150C. JULABO features fast cool-down times, small footprint, digital and ana­ log interfaces, external temperature control and a 2 year warranty. Online-catalog www.julabo.com 1407,1409 Kalexsyn, Inc., 4717 Campus Drive, Kalamazoo, Ml, USA 49008, (269)372-8705, fax: (269)585-5953, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.kalexsyn. com Kalexsyn partners with scientific customers engaged in the drug discovery processproviding medicinal chemistry services to . We are experts in all aspects of medicinal chemistry, including organic synthesis, physical property modification, analog strategies, and diversification of compound collections. Our services can accelerate your drug discovery program at all stages including early SAR studies of screening hits, optimization of leads, and synthesis of intermediates and building blocks. We have access to a consulting staff of unparalleled drug discovery experience and medicinal chemistry expertise. 438 Kd Scientific, 84 October Hill Road, Hollison, M A USA, 01746, (508)893-3122, fax: (508)429-2784, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. kdscientific.com Kd Scientific syringe pumps are an economical solution to delivering precise and smooth flow in research, pilot plants and produc­ tion applications. They are recognized worldwide for quality, accuracy and reliability. A broad line of syringe pumps are offered; from a simple onesyringe infuse only, to a programmable multisyringe infuse/withdrawal pump. New products featured are a nano syringe pump and high pres­ sure pump. Kd Scientific is committed to the high­ est level of customer satisfaction and technical sup­ port for all their products. 2020

EXPO-9

EXPOSITION Kett, PMB 504, 17853 Santiago Blvd., Suite 107, Villa Park, CA, USA 92861, (800)438-5388 or 714579-1716, fax: (714)579-7611, e-mail:support@ kett.com, Internet: www.kett.com Improve profitability and productivity by updating your moisture and composition measurement technology200 instruments including the new, innovative KJT270F fiber-optic composition analyzer for use in laboratory and process applications. Also displayed is the new FD120 Advanced Moisture Balance at 1/3-1/4 the price of comparable instruments, the FD720 offers seven drying modes, .01% resolution, GLP/ GMP compliance. Anyone can get lab quality results in minutes using the FD720. Kett instruments provide quick, easy, accurate measurements with practical features you want and need. 331 Key Organics Ltd., Highfield Industrial Estate, C a m e l f o r d , C o r n w a l l , UNITED K I N G D O M PL32 9QZ, +44 (0)1840 212137, fax: +44(0)1840 213712, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. keyorganics.ltd.uk Key Organics: Developers and suppliers of the unique and diverse BIONET Intermediates and Screening Libraries are now offering KEY FOCUSED LIBRARIES with a dedicated team developing novel compound libraries on an exclusive and non-exclusive basis. Key Organics is also one of the UKs leading providers of Custom and Contract Chemistry Services to the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and agricultural chemistry sectors worldwide on both Fee for Service or Full Time Equivalent schemes. To find out more, visit Booth 1837 1837 Kforce Scientific Staffing, 4510 Executive Drive, S u i t e 3 2 5 , San D i e g o , C A , U S A 9 2 1 2 1 , 8 5 8 . 5 5 0 . 1 6 0 0 , fax: 8 5 8 . 5 5 2 . 0 3 9 7 , e-mail: [email protected], Internet: w w w . k f o r c e . com At Kforce, we have the right formula for your success. In your world of science, the one factor you don't want to experiment with is your staff. Kforce Scientific has your solution. We provide a full range of scientific professionals from scientists and microbiologists to research associates and technicians. Whether you need project or direct hire professionals, we have the tools and experience to provide the highest caliber candidates with the specific technical aptitude you require. 228 Kimble/Kontes, 1022 Spruce Street, PO Box 1502, V i n e l a n d , N J , USA 0 8 3 6 0 , ( 8 8 8 ) 5 4 6 - 2 5 3 1 , fax: (856)692-3242, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.kimble-kontes.com Kimble/Kontes is an ISO 9001:2000 manufacturer of both standard laboratory and custom glassware. Standard products include reusable and disposable glass and plastic products, sample vials, and a full line of Kimble KIMAX® borosilicate tubing and rod drawn in our own facility. Specialty products include micro scale, airless and vacuum apparatus, distillation systems and apparatus, chromatography columns and HPLC accessories, TLC supplies, environmental glassware, filtration glassware, NMR tubes and accessories, precision tissue grinders and cell culture glassware. Custom items and repairs are handled in our Custom Glass Shop. Our Engineered Glass Division provides components for OEM. 301,303,305 KINTECH Ltd., 1 Kurchatov Square, M o s c o w , 123182, RUSSIA, 7 095 196 7362, fax: 7 095 196 9 9 9 2 , e-mail: i n f o @ k i n t e c h . r u , I n t e r n e t : w w w . kinetech.ru, Kinetic Technologies (KINTECH) Ltd. is developing software tools "Chemical Workbench" and "Khimera". Products are designed for chemical mechanisms development, kinetic simulation, and conceptual process design. To develop and study chemical mechanisms set of reactor models, built-in Substances and Reactions databases and functions to calculate thermodynamic, kinetic, and transport properties are available. Software can be used in field of Hydrogen Energy, Environment Protection, Industrial Safety, Nanotechnologies and Material Science and Education. 332 KNAUER-ASI G m b H , Hegauer W e g 38, Berlin, D-14163, GERMANY, 49 30 809727 2 1 , fax: 49 30 801501 0, Internet: www.knauer.net 2029 KNF Neuberger, 2 Black Forest Rd., Trenton, NJ, USA 08691-1810, (609) 890-8600, fax: (609) 8908323, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: http://www. knflab.com LABOPORT® dry vacuum pumps offer quiet, clean, stable vacuum to 1.5 Torr tor your rotovap, vacuum oven, concentrator and tasks such as degassing and filtration WITHOUT messy pump oil or aspirator water hassles. Teflon® and Kalrez®

10-EXPO

materials resist aggressive vapors for longest-life. Patented valves take the punishment from condensate droplets without performance loss or damage.

1015 Knovel Corporation, 30 Main Street, Suite 402, Danbury, CT, USA 06810, 203-748-6066, fax: 203748-4854, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.knovel.com Knovel Corporation (www.knovel. com) delivers accurate and complete answers to engineering and scientific questions fast. Subscription access via the Web to 600+ books and databases—full text and searchable—from trusted sources like McGraw-Hill and Wiley. Search an entire library of engineering/scientific information in seconds. Less time searching, more time problem-solving. 202 Kruss USA, 1020 Crews Road, Suite K, Matthews, N C , USA 28105, (704)847-8933, fax: (704)8479416, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: w w w . krussusa.com Kruss is a manufacturer of surface science equipment for research, development, educational, and quality control labs. We provide instrumentation for the measurement of contact angle, surface tension, interfacial tension, surface energy and many other surface properties. Kruss supports a full line of surface Tensiometers and Contact Angle Meters and provide you with expert guidance through your surface related questions to meet any surface science need that you might have. 1414 KSV Instruments, P.O. Box 192, Monroe, CT, USA, (203)268-1745, fax: (203)459-0437, e-mail: info@ ksvinc.com, Internet: www.ksvltd.com KSV Instruments manufactures instruments for research and analysis of Contact Angle and Surface Tension as well as Langmuir Blodgett Instruments, a Quartz Crystal Microbalance, and a Brewster Angle Microscope. Surface Science and Nanotechnology applications can benefit from KSV's extensive application experience and innovative instruments. 319 LABCONCO, 8811 Prospect Avenue, Kansas City, M O , USA 64132, (816) 823-0376, fax: (816) 3630130, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.labconco.com 1726,1728 Leadscope, 1393 Dublin Road, Columbus, O H , USA 43212, (614)675-3696, fax: (614)675-3732 321 LHASA Limited, University of Leeds, School of Chemistry, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom, 44 113 343 4450, fax: 44 113 343 6535, Internet: www. Ihasalimited.org 2019 Life Chemicals, 2477 G l e n w o o d School Drive, Suite 203, Burlington, O N , L7R 3R9, C A N A D A , (905) 6 3 4 - 5 2 1 2 , fax: (905) 6 3 4 - 4 7 1 9 , e - m a i l : [email protected], Internet: www. Iifechemicals.com Life Chemicals Inc is Canadianbased corporation, supplier of small molecules for Life Science Industries worldwide with offices in Canada and Germany. We offer following highquality products and services: COLLECTION OF HTS COMPOUNDS—over 290,000 selected druglike and lead-like compounds, synthesised inhouse and available in any format, including targeted libraries BUILDING BLOCKS—a source of more than 4,000 original intermediates CUSTOM SYNTHESIS—synthesis of analogues and custom libraries. 1137 M. BRAUN, Inc., 14 Marin Way, Stratham, N H , USA 03885, (603)773-9333 x, 269, fax: (603)773-0008, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. mbraunusa.com M.Braun offers a full line of standard and custom glove box systems including vacuum ovens, analyzers, freezers, mini's, Siemens graphical touch panel display, and our NEW Automatic Solvent Purification System. With over 30 years of experience in the design and manufacturing of these products, M.Braun supplies its customers with complete turnkey solutions for all their controlled environment needs. Please stop by and see the new Auto SPS in booths 526, 528. 526,528 Mallinckrodt Baker, Inc., 222 Red School Lane, Phillipsburg, NJ, USA 08865, (908)859-9333, fax: (908)859-9381, Mallinckrodt Baker, Inc is a leading supplier of laboratory chemicals and related p r o d ucts designed t o provide o p t i m u m performance on today's instrumentation. Featuring new products for LC/MS and flash chromatography as well as a

new line of Karl Fischer reagents. Learn about our o t h e r p r o d u c t lines and p a c k a g i n g which are designed and tested for use on your instruments. Sign up t o receive your copy of our J.T.Baker catal o g . J.T.Baker® is a trademark of Mallinckrodt Baker, Inc. 230,232 Materia, Inc., 60 N. San Gabriel Blvd., Pasadena, CA, USA 91107, (626)584-8400x233, fax: (626)5841984, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. materia-inc.com Materia provides catalyst technologies that enable, enhance and streamline the discovery, development, and manufacture of new pharmaceuticals, chemicals, and polymeric materials. Our core technology is based on a suite of proprietary ruthenium catalysts invented by Dr. Robert Grubbs at Caltech. This technology enables the formation and manipulation of carbon-carbon bonds within highly functionalized precursors to generate new chemical entities by an exceptionally scalable and portable processes. For more information, logon to www.materia-inc.com. 1002,1004 Materials Research Society, 506 Keystone Dr., Warrendale, PA, USA 15086, 724-779-3003, fax: 724-779-8313, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. mrs.org An interdisciplinary scientific society, the Materials Research Society (MRS) publishes periodicals (MRS Bulletin), journals (Journal of Materials Research), proceedings volumes (over 850 to date) and monographs covering a wide range of topics in materials science. Among them: polymers and orqanic materials; biomedical and biological materials; nanoscience and nanotechnology; electronic materials; and materials characterization. New for 2005 ... all current MRS members now enjoy free print and electronic subscriptions to MRS Bulletin, as well as free access to over 12,500 (and growing) proceedings papers online. 2022 Matrix Scientific, P.O. Box 25067, Columbia, SC, USA 29223, (803)788-9494, fax: (803)788-9419, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. matrixscientific.com NEW research chemical intermediates and building blocks printed catalog available, containing over 15,000 items, including many novel and new materials. CD catalog also available with SD file. Featured are boronic acids, fluorine compounds, sulfonyl chlorides, pyrimidines, indoles, (trifluoromethyl)pyridines etc. Products find application in pharmaceutical, agrochemical, polymer, coatings and academic research. Principals have over 39 years of experience in the manufacture and supply of quality products for research and development. 1502 McCarthy Scientific Co., PO Box 2635, Fallbrook, CA, USA 92088-2635, 760-731-6570, e-mail:info@ mccarthyscientific.com, Internet: mccarthyscientific.com Accessories for IR/UV/VIS spectrophotometers. The X-cell line of IR cells, crystals, sample holders and miscellaneaous accessories will be on display. Also include will be quartz and glass cuvettes for UV/VIS instruments. 206 McGraw-Hill Higher Education, Two Penn Plaza, New York, NY, USA 10121-2298, (212)904-2892, fax: (212)04-2280, Internet: www.mcgraw-hill.com McGraw-Hill Higher Education offers a variety of solutions in both textbook and electronic formats. We offer textbooks in the following Chemistry courses: Liberal Arts Chemistry, Prep Chemistry, General Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Biochemistry and Advanced Chemistry. We also offer a broad spectrum of Digital Solutions and Electronic Homework products to accompany our textbooks. To get the most from your text, technology and course, stop by our booths #1408 and #1410. 1 0 1 4 , 1 0 1 6 Measurenet Technology, 4242 Airport Road, Cinc i n n a t i , O H , USA 4 5 2 2 6 , ( 8 6 6 ) ^ 9 6 - 6 7 6 5 , fax: (866)209-8111, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.measurenet-tech.com MeasureNet's patented network design gives academic laboratories high-quality data collection without the cost and maintenance of bench-cluttering stand-alone PCs. One MeasureNet Network supports up to 24 students for experiments that include temperature, pressure, pH, and mass measurement while a shared visiole or UV-vis spectrometer delivers highprecision spectroscopy to all workstations.

1411,1413 Metaphorics, LLC, 441 Greg Ave., Sania Fe, N M , USA 8 7 5 0 1 , (505)954-3281, fax: (505)989-1200, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. metaphorics.com Metaphorics' goal is to develop

tools to integrate biological and chemical information. We have recently released CABINET (Chemical And Biological Informatics NETwork) which is a collection of servers with diverse data models. They provide easy browser navigation through chemical and biological information sources and the ability to explore the relationships between them. Our current version includes databases ranging from metabolic pathways and protein-ligand interactions to databases of marketed drugs and QSAR relationships as well as tools for integration of inhouse data. 1608 Microlab, Inc., P.O. Box 7358, Bozeman, MT, USA 59771, (406)586-3274, fax: (406)586-3582, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: microlabinfo.com MicroLab's innovative computer-based acquisition tools, software and curricula engage students in scientific inquiry and enhance college and university laboratory education and research. MicroLab's unique ten-wavelength scanning colorimeter, integrated environmental sensors, and high resolution measurements encourage creativity in instructional labs. MicroLab's faculty workshop program, with workshops conducted throughout the year, build skill in integrating computer technology and research strategies into lab instruction. 1308 Micromeritics Instrument Corp., 1 Micromeritics Dr., Norcross, GA, USA 30093-1877, (770)6623633, fax: (770)662-3696, e-mail:ussales@ micromeritics.com, Internet: www.micromeritics. com Micromeritics is a leading supplier of particle characterization analytical laboratory instruments for R&D, QA/QC, production, and process control applications. Characteristics determined include: particle size, surface area, pore volume, pore size, material density, catalytic activity, and active surface area. In addition, Micromeritics Analytical Services provides sample analyses on a contract basis.

317 MicroPatent, 250 Dodge Avenue, East Haven, CT, USA 06512-3358, (203)466-5055, fax: (203)4665054, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. micropat.com MicroPatent, a Thomson business, is a leading provider of intellectual property information and related services, produces the world's largest commercial collection of searchable fulltext patent information, and has industry-leading analytic, collaboration, and IP-management offerings. Stop by our booth (#306) to learn about: searchable .pdf patent documents, our improved file history service with inventory lookup, the Aureka 9.2 enhanced analytic platform, and MicroPatent's Patent Index database (MPI) with full functionality. 306 Microtrac Inc., 12501-A 62nd Street, North Largo, FL, USA 33773, (727)507-9770x13, fax: (727)5079774, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. microtrac.com Complete line of particle size instrumentation. Including our Nanotrac 150 & 250 Particle Analyzer using dynamic light scatter for high concentration nanometer sizing from .00086.5 microns. Also showing our S3500 laser diffraction based analyzers utilizing 3 solid state lasers for easy, accurate particle analysis. Also showing the new Turbotrac Dry Dispersing Feeder. 1337 Miele, 9 Independence Way, Princeton, NJ, USA 08540, (800)991-9380, fax: (609)419-4241, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. Iabwashers.com Miele is a leading manufacturer of laboratory glassware washing systems. Miele large glassware washers are ideally suited for central washing areas, offering high throughput and advanced drying features, eliminating the need for a separate and costly drying oven. Miele labwashers produce less noise and heat emissions than other manufacturers, while also providing lower energy, water, and detergent consumption. Miele offers a full line of detergents, baskets and inserts, technical expertise and fully trained sales and service nationwide. 1838 Mikromasch, 7086 Southwest Beveland, Portland, OR, USA 97223, (503)598-9828, fax: (503)5989721, Internet: www.mikromasch.com 1206 Milestone, Inc., 25 Controls Dr., Shelton, CT, USA 06484, 203-925-4240, fax: 203-925-4241, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. milestonesci.com Milestone will be showcasing their entire line of advanced labstations for microwave accelerated organic synthesis for both industrial and educational applications. Accessories for

combinatorial chemistry, parallel synthesis, photochemistry, batch reactions, protein hydrolysis, medicinal chemistry, scale-up, and more wi II be presented. Information will also be available on microwave assisted digestion, extraction, and ashing, as well as direct mercury analysis and clean chemistry accessories. 201 Miner 3D, Hurbanova 36, Hlohovec, SK-92001, Slovakia, European Union, (421)337-331101, fax: (421)337-331102, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.miner3D.com Miner3D provides advanced data visualization, sonification and speech technologies for interactive data analysis, real-time data mining and for visual navigation through complex information systems. Miner3D Enterprise and Miner3D Professional editions are used at several world-class pharmaceutical companies as well as by many smaller biotech teams. At ACS Spring Exhibition at San Diego, Miner3D will make public its newest software Release 5 that brings many new features and improvements. 213 Minitab Inc., Quality Plaza, 1829 Pine Hill Road, State College, PA, USA 16801, (814)238-3280, fax: (814)238-1702, Internet: www.minitab.com Minitab is the leading provider of quality improvement software. Our flagship product - MINITAB Statistical Software - has been used to implement virtually every major Six Sigma initiative around the world. MINITAB is also the leading statistical software used in education. More than 4,000 colleges, universities, and high schools worldwide choose MINITAB. Minitab also offers Minitab Quality Companion for process management, as well as world class training and software customization. Visit www.minitab.com 1535 Molecular Imaging, 4666 S. Ash Avenue, Tempe, AZ, USA 85282, (480)753-4311, fax: (480)753-4312, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.molec.com PicoView software, a new, fast and user friendly generation of SPM software will be shown as well as the widest range of closed loop scanners and scan control software in the industry. The PicoPlus series of products offer a modular design for maximum flexibility in your research goals with minimum capital. Molecular Imaging offers a comprehensive array of on-site training, web based teaching and diagnostics, as well as factory based training and workshops. 2018 Molecular Networks Gmbh, Computerchemie, Naegelsbachstr. 25, Erlangen, GERMANY 91052, +49 9131 815670, fax: +49 9131 815669, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.mol-net.com Molecular Networks is a chemoinformatics company that provides tools, consulting and development and services to chemical, pharmaceutical, and biotech companies. The company's product portfolio includes more than 20 applications used by more than 100 companies worldwide. Currently, the company is leveraging its know-how and proprietary technology to expand its business activities in the areas of synthesis driven combinatorial library design, prediction of chemical reactivity and synthetic accessibility of compounds. New products covering these areas will oe available in 2005.

1738 MP Biomedicals, Fine Chemicals, 15 Morgan, Irvine, CA, USA 92618, (949)833-2500, fax: (949)8595010, e-mail: www.mpfinechemicals.com, Internet: www.mpbio.com 2027

probe microscope products for research and education. The easy-to-use and affordable Nanosurf easyScan AFM and STM systems will be featured in our booth. Stop by to see the easyScan's ease-ofuse, attractive design, and capabilities. Our wide range of AFM products include the nanoAnalytics Q-control, high quality Nanosensors and Budgetsensors AFM probes, SPM post-processing software, and a variety of accessories. 1435 NanoWorld AG, Rue Jaquet-Droz 1, Neuchatel, 2007, Switzerland, 41 32 720 5325, fax: 41 32 720 5775, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. nanoworld.com NanoWorld AG is a leading manufacturer of high quality tips for Scanning Probe Microscopy (SPM) and Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM). NanoWorld™ offers four product lines, the Pointprobe series comprises AFM tips with various coatings and shapes for a wide range of applications. The Arrow™ series allows easy positioning of the tip on the area of interest. Tipless cantilevers and arrays based on the Arrow series and the Hybrid-Nitride series were recently introduced.

215 NIH Office of Intramural Training and Education, 2 Center Drive MSC 0240, Building 2, Room 2W11A, Bethesda, MD, USA 20892, (301)5940581, fax: (301)402-0483 The National Institutes of Health Office of Intramural Training and Education administers training opportunities in the approximately 1250 NIH intramural laboratories, which focus on biomedical research. Positions are available for basic science and clinical postdoctoral fellows, graduate students, and recent recipients of the Bb degree. The NIH has a major interest in bringing the expertise of chemists, physicists, engineers, and computational/information scientists to bear on the key health problems of our society.

104 National Research Council/NAS, 500 5th St., NW, GR 322A, Washington, DC, USA 20001, (202)3342760, fax: (202)334-2759, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.national-academies.org/rap The National Research Council (NRC) of the National Academies offers 350 awards annually for research to be conducted in residence at participating US government laboratories. Applicants design research projects to be compatible with the interests of the sponsoring laboratory. Awards include a competitive stipend, relocation, professional travel, and health insurance. Annual application deadlines are February 1, May 1, August 1, and November 1. Further program information, including instructions on how to apply, can be found at www. nationalacademies.org/rap. 638 Nature Publishing Group, 345 Park Avenue S., New York, NY, USA 10010, (212)-726-9200, Internet: www.nature.com NPG publishes quality research and review material; timely news; and essential career and recruitment information in science and clinical medicine. The NPG portfolio combines the excellence of Nature, its associated primary research journals, the new Nature Clinical Practice series, Nature Methods, and over 30 leading international scientific journals. Visit the booth to pick up submission details for Nature Chemical Biology, plus your sample copy of Nature, Nature Methods, Nature Materials and other journals. 107 NCRR Projects—NBCR, RBVI, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA, USA 92093-0505, (858)822-0974, fax: (858)822-0861 112

Nanolnk, Inc., 1335 West Randolph St., Chicago, IL, USA 60607, (312)525- 2900, fax: (312)525-2972, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. nanoink.net Nanolnk's mission is to become the world leader in nanometer-scale manufacturing and applications development. Because of its unmatched flexibility, high resolution, accuracy, and scalability, Nanolnk's DPN™ nanoiabdication technology allows the development of new or improved products that would have been impossible or cost- prohibitive to create. DPN applications include nanoscale brand protection for pharmaceutical products, nanoscale additive repair, and nanoscale rapid prototyping. Nanolnk continues to build its intellectual property by filing over 100 patent applications worldwide. 743

New Era Enterprises, P.O. Box 747, Vineland, NJ, USA 08362-0747, (800)821-4667, fax: (856)6978727, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.newera-spectro.com Infrared opticswindows,lenses,ATR elements and optical coatings; Liquid, solid, gas transmission accessories; Internal, specular and diffuse reflectance accessories; HATR crystal plate mount and lictuid transmission cell reconditioning.-NMR sample tubes(complete range); Specialty NMR tubes including screwcap, tip-off,hazardous and micro tube systems and polymeric sample tubes; Gel tubes and presses for protein studies; Capillary tubes with holders for metabolic profiling stucfies. UV-Vis sample cells.

Nanoscience Instruments, 9831 S. 51 Street, Suite C110=9, Phoenix, AZ, USA 85044, (480)940-3940, fax: (480)940-3941, e-mail:mflowers@nanoscience. com, Internet: www.nanoscience.com Nanoscience Instruments provides a wide range of scanning

Nippon Fusso USA, Inc., 3305 Depot Road, Hayward, CA, USA 94545, (510)259- 0108, fax: (510)259-0109, e-mail: yamamoto@nipponfusso. com, Internet: www.nipponfusso.com Custom TEFLON Coating Company in Hayward, California. EXPO-11

EXPOSITON Specialized "Anti-Electrostatic TEFLON Coating" that dissipate static on the surface of coating. Over 100 type of high quality PTFE, PFA, FEP, ETFE, ECTFE coatings are available for Anti-Corrosion, Non-Stick, Anti-Chemical and Anti-Ion Contamination. 2117 NIST, 100 Bureau Drive, Stop 2310, Gaithersburg, M D , USA 2 0 8 9 9 - 2 3 1 0 , ( 3 0 1 ) 9 7 5 - 3 7 7 4 , f a x : (301)926-0416, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.nist.gov/srm NIST Standard Reference Materials supports accurate and compatible measurements by certifying and providing over 1300 Standard Reference Materials with wellcharacterized composition or properties, or both. Used to perform instrument calibrations as part of overall quality assurance programs, to verify the accuracy of specific measurements and to support the development of new measurement methods. The Standard Reference Data Group has provided well-documented numeric data to scientists and engineers for use in technical problem-solving, research, and development. 625,627 nPoint, 1617 Sherman Avenue, Madison, Wl USA, 53704, (608)204-8756, fax: (608)310-8774, Internet: www.npoint.com 744 NRC Research Press, 1200 Montreal Road, Bldg. M-55, Rm.243-C, Ottawa, O N , C A N A D A K1A 0R6, (613)993-0156, fax: (613)952-7656, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: h t t p : / / pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca Stop by for manuscript and subscription information on the Canadian Journal of Chemistry (CJC) and the Journal of Environmental Engineering and Science. International in scope and readership, these are just two of 15 peerreviewed scholarly journals published in print and online by Canada's foremost scientific publisher— NRC NRC Research Press. Inquire about our monographs, conference proceedings and publishing services. Enter our draw for your chance to win a one-year, personal electronic subscription to CJC. 322 Oakwood Products Inc., 1741 O l d Dunbar Road, West Columbia, SC, USA 29172, (803)739-8800, fax: (803)739-6957, e-mail:sales@oakwoodchemical. c o m , Internet: www.oakwoodchemical.com Oakwood Products, Inc., a manufacturer and distributor of research organics, has been supplying research chemicals to the pharmaceutical, agrochemical and materials research communities for over 12 years. Oakwood's new listing contains over 13000 items, including many unique building blocks and reactive intermediates. Organofluorine, organosulfur and heterocyclic compounds are featured. Oakwood provides custom synthesis services from kilo-lab through pilot plant scale. Oakwood is the US distributor Tor ASV Innovative Chemie, ChemCollect, Chess, Daikin Chemicals Sales, Priaton and Tetramer Technologies 1301 Ocean Optics, Inc., 830 Douglas Avenue, Duned i n , FL, USA 3 4 6 9 8 , ( 7 2 7 ) 7 3 3 . 2 4 4 7 , f a x : (727)733.3962, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: O c e a n O p t i c s . c o m Ocean Optics is a diversified electro-optics technology firm and a global leader in optical sensing technologies including fluorescence and absorbance spectroscopy. We enable a wide range of markets, including biochem engineering, R&D, environmental monitoring and medical diagnostics. Our newest innovations include: The Curie—fully integrated lab spectrofluorometer measures fluorophores in solutions from 200-850 nm. The Maxwell—spectrophotometer provides spectral analysis from 200-1100 nm at 0.7 nm (FWHM) resolution. DH-2000-BAL— powerful deuterium tungsten-halogen source with balanced output across 210-1700 nm range.

1312,1314 Ohaus Corp., 19A Chapin Road, Pinebrook, NJ, USA 07058-, (973)944-7026, fax: (888)288-5667, e-mai I : d e b b i e . f o r e m a n @ o h a u s . c o m , Internet: www.ohaus.com Ohaus Corporation is a leading manufacturer of scales and balances for the laboratory, education, industrial and specialty markets worldwide. With over 90 years of experience in the design, development and marketing of balances for a wide variety of applications, Ohaus has earned its reputation as a trusted supplier of precise, reliable and affordable products tnat meet virtually any weighing need. 1303 Ol Analytical, 151 Graham Road, P.O. Box 9010, College Station, TX, USA 77842-9010, (800)653-

12-EXPO

1711, fax: (979)690-0440, [email protected], Internet: www.oico.com Ol Analytical, with headquarters in College Station, TX, is engaged in developing scientific products used in sample preparation, detection, analysis, measurement and monitoring applications in environmental, food and beverage, pharmaceutical, semiconductor, power generation, chemical, petrochemical, HVAC industries and Homeland Security Industries. Ol Analytical products are used for research and development, quality control, analytical services and process monitoring. O.I. Corporation stock is traded on NASDAQ, the largest U.S. electronic stock market, where many technology stocks are traded. 2105

O x f o r d Diffraction Ltd., 130 A Baker A v e n u e Extension, C o n c o r d , MA, USA 01742, (978)3715506, fax: (978)369-8287, Winner of the 2004 R&D100 Award for technical excellence, the Xcalibur single crystal X-ray diffractometers are available for both small molecule x-ray crystallography and protein/macromolecular studies. We manufacture our own high intensity X-ray sources, high sensitivity CCD cameras, Kappa 4-circle goniometers, nitrogen and helium cryogenic attachments, and software. Stop by our booth for a free applications CD-ROM. Or call us toll free at 866-371-5506. 122

OLIS, Inc., 130 Conway Drive, Suites A & B, Bogart, G A , USA 3 0 6 2 2 - 1 7 2 4 , ( 8 0 0 ) 8 5 2 - 3 5 0 4 , f a x : (706)353-1972, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.olisweb.com Move to the modern with Olis, Inc! (1) Research spectrophotometers for dual beam absorbance, fluorescence, and circular dichroism for best data during steady-state and kinetic studies. (2) Accessories for temperature ramping, titration, stopped-flow, andphotolysis. (3) Modernizations of Cary 14, SLM 8000, Aminco DW-2 and other gold-standard optical spectrophotometers. (4) Windows compatible data analysis and global fitting interface for the classic HP 8452 diode array. All Olis hardware compatible with Olis Windows 2000/XP/NT compatible software. 434,436

517,519,521

On Assignment Lab Support, 26651 West Agoura Rd., Caiabasas, CA, USA 91302, (818)871-3330, fax: (818)878-7945 320 On Site Nitrogen Generators, 3069 Colley Lane, Escondido, CA, USA, 92025, (619)297-4621, fax: (619)297-2609 1436 Onyx Scientific, Unit 97/98, Sunderland Enterprise Park East, S u n d e r l a n d , U N I T E D K I N G D O M SR52TQ, 4 4 1 9 1 5 1 6 6 6 1 6 , fax: 4 4 1 9 1 5 1 6 6 5 2 6 , e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.onyx-scientific.com Onyx Scientific provides a wide range of chemical services to the life sciences industry. We specialise in medicinal chemistry, pre-clinical development and GMP scale-up, in addition to offering a comprehensive range of analytical services. 335 O p e n E y e Scientific S o f t w a r e , 3 6 0 0 Cerrillos Road, Suite 1107, Santa Fe, N M , USA 87507, (505)473-7385, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.eyesopen.com OpenEye develops software for virtual screening and structure-based drug design. While the 'space' of medicinal chemistry is vast, we believe it can be computationally well-characterized and navigated by treating 3D as a primary molecular variable. We have the most complete chemical informatics, OEChem, and software for structure generation, docking, shape comparison, pka and tautomer prediction, electrostatics comparison, forcefield refinement, visualization and IUPAC naming. We license site-wide (Mac, Linux, Windows, most Unix) and freely to academics. 111,113 Opotek, 2233 Faraday Avenue, Suite E, Carlsbad, CA, USA 9 2 0 0 8 , (760)929-0770, fax: (760)9198782, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. o p o t e k . c o m Manufacturer of tunable solid-state laser systems operating in the ultra-violet, visible & near-infrared spectral regions, based on patented optical parametric oscillator technology. These systems are compact, easy to use, & have computercontrol & fiber delivery options. Products are used in the areas of photochemistry, trace analysis, mass-spectroscopy, photobiology & medical diagnostics. 1538 OriginLab Corporation, One Roundhouse Plaza, N o r t h a m p t o n , MA, USA 01060, (800)-969-7720, fax: (413)586-0176, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.originlab.com Origin 7.5 is a software application that combines point-and-click interfaces for scientific graphing and analysis with a powerful programming environment. Over 60 built-in plot types allow you to quickly create 2D, 3D, contour, and image graphs. Advanced data analysis tools include statistics, signal processing, curve fitting and peak analysis. The C programming capability combined with the numerical computation and graphing power make Origin a robust platform for routine data processing, analysis, and algorithm development. 1825

Oxford University Press, 198 Madison Avenue, New York, NY, USA 10016, (212)726-6079, fax: (212)726-6446, Internet: www.oup.com

PAC/Antek Instruments, Inc., 300 Bammel Westf i e l d R o a d , H o u s t o n , TX, USA 7 7 0 9 0 , (800)444.TEST, e-mail:[email protected] / Internet: www.paclp.com The full integration of Antek and PAC (formerly Petroleum Analyzer Company), combines the strength of a leading international supplier of laboratory and process/on-line instrumentation for sulfur, nitrogen, and fluoride measurement in liquid, gas, and solid samples with a diverse specialization of petroleum analysis equipment manufacturers for petrochemical and oil and gas markets, into one dynamic, manufacturing, and service organization. 1012 PANalytical, 12 Michigan Drive, Natick, MA, USA 01760, 508-647-1100, fax: 508-647-1115, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. panalytical.com The leading supplier of instrumentation and software for X-ray diffraction and X-ray fluorescence spectrometry. Offering a wide range of proven diffraction products for speed and resolution, X'Pert Pro MPD with X'Celerator; Alphal the highest resolution laboratory system; CubixFast for XRD process control; and SAXSess Small Angle X-ray Scattering System. X-ray fluorescence products (WXRF and EDXRF) include the MiniPal benchtop system, the industry leading Axios WDXF and our new ultra-trace element analyzer, the Epsilon5.

1510 Parallel Quantum Solutions, 2013 Green Acres Rd., Suite A, Fayettvile, AR, USA 72703, (479)5215118, fax: (479)521-5167, e-mail:sales@pqs-chem. com, Internet: http://www.pqs-chem.com Parallel Quantum Solutions manufactures parallel computers with integrated software for high-performance computational chemistry. Our offerings have an exceptional price/performance ratio and are fully configured for parallel computations straight out of the box. Our current product, the QuantumCube, is aimed primarily at ab initio modelling, but also includes semiempirical, molecular mechanics and dynamics methods. In addition to our own software, we can preinstall third-party packages including ADF, Gaussian03, Q-Chem, MolPro, Jaguar, Spartan and PCModel. 1908 Parr Instrument Co., 211 53rd Street, Moline, IL, USA 61265, (309)762-7716, fax: (309)762-9453, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. parrinst.com Laboratory reactors and pressure vessels, stirred and unstirred, used at elevated temperatures and pressures in the catalytic hydrogénation, organic synthesis and the polymerization processes. Oxygen combustion bomb calorimeters and accessories for the determination of the heat of combustion in solid, liquid and refuse derived fuels. Sample preparation equipment used in the acid digestion process in either microwave or convection ovens for trace metal analysis. 1201,1203,1205 Particle Sizing Systems, 8203 Kristel Circle, Port Richey, FL, USA 3 4 6 6 8 , ( 7 2 7 ) 8 4 6 - 0 8 6 6 , fax: (727)846-0865, e - m a i l : d o n n a @ p s s n i c o m p . c o m , Internet: www.pssnicomp.com PbS produces a full line of particle size analyzers covering a range of 0.003-5000 microns for wet and dry applications including the Nicomp DLS Submicron Sizer and the AccuSizer Single Particle Optical Sizer (SPOS). Unprecedented resolution, accuracy and sensitivity with modular accessories including Online sampling, Batch autosampling, Zeta potential, Syringe sampling and Pressurized Liquid Samplers. The new AccuSizer FX (Pat) is a single particle sizing technology that requires little or no dilution on most types of materials. 2003

Pearson Custom Publishing, Pearson Custom Pub­ lishing, 75 Arlington Street, Suite 300, Boston, MA, USA 02116, 617-848-6392, fax: 617-848-6366, e-mail:[email protected], Inter­ net: www.pearsoncustom.com Pearson Custom Publishing (PCP) is a division of Pearson Education, one of the world's leading textbook publishers including Prentice Hall and Addison Wesley/ Benjamin Cumminqs. PCP is a leading provider of custom-published laboratory manuals for chemis­ try. Using our Catalyst online BookBuild system, instructors can select the lab content that meets their needs exactly, or they can publish their own original labs. Visit our booth to see our new cus­ tomizable Pearson Custom Laboratory Notebooks for chemistry! 725 Pharmaceutical Discovery, 485 Route 1 South, Building F, 1st Floor, Iselin, Ν J, USA 08830, (732)346-3081, fax: (732)596-0003 1827 Photon Technology International,Inc., 1009 Lenox Dr., Suite 104, Lawrenceville, NJ, USA 08648, (609)896-0310, fax: (609)869-0365, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.pti-nj.com Photon Technology International, Inc. manufactures a com­ plete line of fluorescence instrumentation. Our fully integrated steady-state, time-resolved, imaging and ratiometric systems are complete, powerful turn-key solutions. Our signature "open architec­ ture" design ensures the accommodation of a vari­ ety of experiments, from protein melting/folding/ unfolding using our temperature regulated cuvette system to fluorescence microscopy of many bio­ logically relevant species, such as Ca2+ and pH. Additionally, our Optical Buidinq Blocks (TM) are components that can be used alone or connected to form powerful, versatile spectroscopic systems.

2101 PIKE Technologies, 2901 Commerce Park Drive, Madison, Wl, USA 53719, (608)274-2721, fax: (608)274-0103, Internet: www.piketech.com 1843 Polylnsight, LLC, 526 South Main Street, Suite 414, Akron, OH, USA 44311, (330) 777-0025, fax: (330) 777-0025, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.polyinsight.com Polylnsight is a contract ana­ lytical testing laboratory providing scanninq-probe and atomic-force microscopy techniques (SPM or AFM) for characterizing both the surface and inter­ nal nanostructure of a wide variety of materials. Polylnsight specializes in R&D projects concerned with the morphology and texture of polymer blends, dispersion of nano-fillers (e.g. nanoclays, carbon nanotubes, and nanoscale oxides) in poly­ mers and composites, surface films and functional coatings, fiber-reinforced composites, and multilayered materials. 1438 Polymer Laboratories Inc., Amherst Fields Research Park, 160 Old Farm Road, Amherst, MA, USA 01002, (413)253-9554, fax: (413)253-2476, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. polymerlabs.com PL shows its PL-GPC 50 interated GPC chromatography system for ambient to 0°C; Cirrus GPC/SEC data acquisition and analysis software with multi-detection (LALS, Viscometry) capabilities; PL-ELS 2100 evaporative light scatter­ ing detector for analytical, microbore and prepara­ tive HPLC, GPC, SFC and HTS; PL-PSDA particle distribution analyser; new PlusPore range of organic/aqueous GPC/SEC columns and highly characterized polymer calibrants; polymeric HPLC columns, preparative/process purification media; and StratoSpneres resins for medicinal and combi­ natorial chemistry/peptide synthesis/SPE. 221

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Polymer Source Inc., 124 Avro Street, Dorval, Quebec, CANADA H9P 2X8, (514) 421-5517, fax: (514) 421-5518, e-mail:contact@polymersource. com, Internet: www.polymersource.com Offering a wide range of research grade, structurally welldefined polymers, which include protonated or deuterated nomopolymers and block copolymers, as well as random copolymers; functionalizated polymers; star-like polymers; ionomers; and macromonomers with narrow molecular weight distri­ bution. Besides, thousands other products are listed in our catalog. We provide the specific poly­ mers on the custom synthesis according to the cus­ tomer needs. We also offer analytical services of polymer materials for molecular weight and its dis­ tribution and for chemical structure. 318 Polymer Standards Service-USA Inc., 43 Jefferson Blvd., Suite 3, Warwick, Rl, USA 02888, (401)780-

8884, fax: (401)780-8824, e-mail:pssusa@ polymer.de, Internet: www.polymer.de PSS offers comprehensive solutions for Gel Permeation Chro­ matography: WinGPC Unity software for all GPC/ SEC applications: 2-d chromatography, copolymer analysis, GPC-Viscometry, GPC-Light Scattering; Complete GPC systems, viscometers, SLD 7000 Light Scattering Detector, Refractive Index; Sample testing services; Custom synthesis of special poly­ mers or copolymers; Manufactures of molecular weight standards soluble in aqueous and organic solvents: sold individually or as Kits,DIN certified and MALDI; Gels and columns for GPC: analytical, preparative, Highspeed; Porocheck Software Chromatographic Porosimetry 1719,1721 Precision Detectors, Inc., 34 Williams Way, Bellinqham, MA, USA 02019, (508)966-3847, fax: (508)966-3758, e-mail: info@precisiondetectors. com, Internet: www.precisiondetectors.com Stateof-the-art laser, viscometry and refractive index detectors for the characterization of proteins, poly­ mers, macromolecules and nanoparticles in solu­ tion. Key information is provided for molecular weight and size (1- 1000nm radius). The product line includes flow-cell detectors (for HPLC, FPLC, FFF, and High Temp GPC) and manual/automated batch systems. 639 Prentice Hall, C/o Pearson Education, One Lake Street, Upper Saddle River, NJ, USA 07458, (800)526-0485, fax: (201)236-7098, Internet: www. prenhall.com Prentice Hall is a leading chemistry publisher featuring cutting-edge media products to complement our text materials. Come see our full line of print resources, ranging from freshman to qraduate-level texts, and multimedia products such as online homework systems, classroom per­ formance systems, CD-ROMs, and websites. Whether you want the most basic media support or consider yourself an advanced user, we nave a solution built just for you. We look forward to see­ ing you at our booth. 719,721 Proceedings-Natl Academy of Sciences, 500 5th St., N.W., NAS 340, Washington, DC, USA 20001, (202)334-1333, fax: (202)334-1346, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.pnas.org The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, U.S.A. (PNAS), the most prestigious multidisciplinary scientific journal, appears in print weekly and online daily. Featured are high impact research reprints, commentaries, and colloquium articles, and inaugural year articles from new Academy members. Free issues, cover reprints, and give­ aways will be available. 1829 Q-Sense, Inc., 1200 Quail Street, Suite 250, New­ port Beach, CA, USA 92660, (949)250-0273, fax: (949)250-0273, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.q-sense.com Q-Sense offers a new sensor technology; Ouartz Crystal Microbalance with Dissipation monitoring (QCM-D), an in situ, real time technology for the study of mass and viscoelastic changes at the liquid/solid interface or in thin films. Processes that have been published include DNA hybridization, several aspects of protein/lipid/cell/bacterial adsorption/adhesion, pro­ tein-protein interactions, cross-linking, and phage display. Water content information, substrate flex­ ibility and conformational information are major advantages with the QCM-D technology. For more information please visit www.q-sense.com. 632 Qorpak, Corporate One West, 1195 Washington Pike, Bridqeville, PA, USA 15017, (800)922-7558, fax: (412)257-3001, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.qorpak.com Qorpak is now your essential resource for laboratory supplies as well as a full line of laboratory containers. Choose from a full line of glass, plastic, and metal containers, clo­ sures, UN rated shippers, and specialized cleaning services. New product lines include laboratory chemicals, centrifuge and microcentrifuge tubes, weigh boats, plastic vials, fluid resistant antimircobial lab coats, and mixers and shakers. Visit us at booth #1536 or on-line at www.qorpak.com or reach us at 1-800-922-7558. 1536 Quadrants Scientific, Inc., 10840 Thornmint Road, Suite 110, San Diego, CA, USA 92127, (858)6184708, Internet: www.quadscience.com 538 Quantachrome Corp., 1900 Corporate Dr, Boynton Beach, FL, USA 33426, (561)731-4999, fax: (561)732-9888, e-mail:qc.sales@quantachrome. com, Internet: www.quantachrome.com QUAN­

TACHROME INSTRUMENTS is a leading manufac­ turer of state-of-the-art instruments for the characterization of porous materials and powders. Quantachrome's extensive product range covers the determination of surface area, pore size, pore volume, density (tapped and skeletal), water sorp­ tion behavior and catalyst characteristics. Quantachrome's products are backed by a commitment to customer satisfaction, ISO 9001 certification, and teams of experienced and dedicated service engineers & scientists. 1930 Quark Glass, P.O. Box 2396, Vineland, NJ, USA 08362-2396, (800)955-0376, fax: (856)455-3373, Internet: www.quarkglass.com Quark is a manufac­ turer of discounted scientific glassware. Quark will be exhibiting apparatus used in various bench-top applications such as: custom manifold lines, filtra­ tion apparatus and heavy-walled flasks. New this year are filtration funnels with permanent markings that will never wash or wear off. For scale-up opera­ tions, Quark offers up to 72 liter flasks, 50L jacketed reactor systems, and large-scale filtration funnels. Stop by to view our reactors as well as many other new products. Please sign-up for our new 2005 catalog! 1701 Quesant Instrument Corporation, 29397 Agoura Road, Suite 104, Agoura Hills, CA, USA 91301, (818)597-0311, fax: (818)991-5490, e-mail:gsales@ quesant.com, Internet: www.quesant.com Quesant manufactures AFMs and SlMs and is a price/ performance leader in the industry since 1992. Our QScopes are large sample capable AFMs with vari­ ous degrees of sample handling automation. The Universal SPM is a small sample, atomic level AFM and STM scanner with a starting price of $63,000. Options include closed loop scanners on both sytems, nanolithography, MFM, EFM, SCM, scan­ ning in liauids, sample heater, nanoindenting inter­ face, and much more. 1722 Questel Orbit, Inc., 7925 Jones Branch Drive, McLean, VA, USA 22102, (703)873-4700, fax: (703)873-4701, e-mail:[email protected], com, Internet: www.questel.orbit.com For over 30 years, Questel.Orbit (www.questel.orbit.com) has been helping manage the world's most important IP portfolios. Known for our patent information col­ lection, we also provide a wide array of tools for Internet and Web-based searching; reading, ana­ lyzing, visualizing and communicating search results; ordering and distributing patent copies; evaluating individual patents and entire portfolios. Best of all, our products work the way expert and novice patent users do. 315 Rainin Instrument, LLC, Rainin Rd, Box 4026, Woburn, MA, USA 01888, (800)828-2788, fax: (781)938-8157, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.rainin.com Rainin Instrument, LLC. Pipettes: Includes new ergonomie single and multi-channel manual and electronic pipettes featuring LTS™ Lite Touch™ Tip Ejection System, as well as Pipetman®, Microman®, and Distriman®. Tips: Featuring SpaceSaver environmental tip-rack refills and aero­ sol resistant tips for traditional and LTS Pipettes. Pipette Service: Includes Calibration PM, OnSite Service with Preventive Maintenance, and Express Repair. 520,522 Rapp Polymère GmbH, Ernst Simon Strasse 9, Tuebingen, GERMANY D-72072, 49 7071763157, fax: 497071763158, Since over one decade, Rapp Polymère is the leading company and first address for polymer supports. Rapp Polymère offers a broad range of novel resins for solid phase and liquid phase chemistry (combinatorial chemistry, polymer supported reagents, library generation, peptide and oligonucleotide synthesis), as well as for diagnostic applications and PEGylation. Our products and services are: TentaGel, HypoGel, Polystyrene resins, PEG deriavtives, custom synthesis, peptide synthesis, functionalized polymers, chemistry development, synthesizing modules, miniaturization, HrLC columns 1731 Regis Technologies, Inc., 8310 Austin Avenue, Morton Grove, IL, USA 60053, (847)583-7646, fax: (847)967-1214, Internet: www.registech.com 644 Richman Chemical Inc., 768 N. Bethlehem Pike, Lower Gwynedd, PA, USA 19002, (215)628-2946, fax: (215)628-4262, e-mail:clk@richmanchemical. com, Internet: www.RichmanChemical.com Richman Chemical Inc. provides expert project management for all chemical and pharmaceutical EXPO-13

EXPOSITION outsourcing requirements, focusing on valueadded custom synthesis and processing solutions. Additionally, our knowledgeable chemical sourcing staff can locate and provide difficult-to-find chemi­ cal compounds (any scale). Please speak with us or visit our website to learn how we can help you meet your custom manufacturing and product sourcing needs. 1136 Rigaku, 9009 New Trails Dr., The Woodlands, TX, USA 77381, (281)363-1033, fax: (281)364-3628, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. RigakuMSC.com Rigaku provides the world's most complete line of x-ray diffraction, x-ray fluores­ cence and single-crystal X-ray diffraction hardware and software instruments. In addition, complete contract services are offered for x-ray analysis. Instrumentation includes: CCD detectors, tabletop XRD and WDXRF systems, theta-theta XRD, XRDDSC, WDXRF spectrometer with mapping capabili­ ties and a liquid nitrogen generator. 415,417 Royal Society Of Chemistry, Thomas Graham House, Cambridge Science Park, Milton Rd„ Cam­ bridge, UNITED KINGDOM CB4 OWF, +44 1223 432360, fax: +44 1223 426017, e-mail:sales@rsc. org, Internet: www.rsc.org The Royal Society of Chemistry is the largest organisation in Europe for advancing the chemical sciences. Supported by a network of 45,000 members worldwide and and internationally acclaimed publishing business. Visit our booth for the latest developments in our jour­ nals collection including the RbC Journals Archive, and for special discounts on our books. 936,938 RTS Life Sciences, Northbank Industrial Park, Irlam, Manchester, M44 5AY, United Kingdom, 44 161 7 7 7 2 0 0 0 , fax: 44 161 7 7 7 2 0 0 3 , e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.rtsgroup.com RTS is a leading technology integration company. Providing automation solutions to resolve drug discovery bottlenecks, RTS has been supplying the life science sector with advanced, industrial reliability robotic solutions for over a decade. Specialising in automated storage and retrieval, HTS, uHTb, ADMET, automated liquid handling and cell culture automation for both phar­ maceutical and biotechnology companies, RTS' proprietary products include, SmaRTStore™, Com­ pact-Store™, Assay Platform™, acCellerator™ and SPRINT™—all available and supported throughout Europe and the US. 1138 Rudolph Research Analytical, 354 Route 206, Flanders, Ν J, USA 07836, (973)584-1558, fax: (973)584-5440, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.rudolphresearch.com Automatic Polarimeters—8 different models featuring 21 CFR Part 11 compliance, electronic heating and cooling, an optional auto sampler, and multiple wave­ lengths. Automatic Refractometers—6 different models featuring 21 CFR Part 11 compliance, extended range electronic heating and cooling, a wide refractive index range of 1.3-1.7 Rl. We have instruments designed to meet the needs of many applications within the beverage, chemical, educa­ tion, flavor, food, fragrance, petrochemical, phar­ maceutical, research, and sugar industries. 1937 S.I. Photonics, Inc., 1870W. Prince Road, Suite 38, Tucson, AZ, USA 85705, (520)293-6911, fax: (520)293-7012 2006 SAGE Publications, 2455 Teller Road, Thousand Oaks, CA, USA 91320, (800) 818-7243, fax: (805)499-7881, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.sagepub.com SAGE Publicationspublisher of Journal of Biomolecular Screening, is an independent international publisher in the social sciences, technology and medicine-provides jour­ nals, books, and electronic media of the highest caliber. Researchers, students, and professionals have relied on our innovative resources for over 35 years. Please stop by our booth or visit us at www. sagepub.com. 937 Schrodinger, Inc., 1500 SW First Avenue, Suite 1180, Portland, OR, USA 97201, (503)299-1150, fax: (503)299-4532, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.schrodinger.com Schrodinger will debut two new software products: Phase, a ligandbased drug design program for pharmacophore perception, QSAR model development, and 3D database screening; and Strike, a chemically-aware statistical package for complex data analysis and QSAR. Scnrodinqer's other drug design software includes Prime, for protein structure prediction and 14-EXPO

modeling of liqand-induced receptor flexibility; Glide, for fast flexible docking of ligand libraries in virtual screening; Liaison, for computing accurate binding free energies in lead optimization; QSite, for detailed understanding of ligand-receptor inter­ actions and reaction mechanisms in protein active sites; QikProp, for extremely fast AuME property predictions, and LigPrep, for preparing entire data­ bases of liqands, including accurate 2D to 3D con­ version. Also available are the latest releases of Jaguar and MacroModel, both featuring significant new features and enhancements. 1302 SCI-Tec, Inc., 6660 North High St., Suite 2A, Worthington, OH, USA 43085, (614)888-0023, fax: (614)888-0285, e-mail:[email protected], Inter­ net: www.sci-tec-inc.com Provider of laboratory and process analyzers for powders, dispersions and emulsions. ShearScan, a powder flowability ana­ lyzer, complete with linear, rotational and wall friction cells. TurbiscanLab analyzes the stability of concentrated emulsions and dispersions. TurbiscanMA measures stability reserve of heavy fuel oils. AGS is an automated and thermoregulated Aging Station. PartAn employs video imaging to measure particle size and shape. Particle Explorer uses image analysis and Raman Spectros­ copy to analyze size, shape and exact chemical composition. 1703 Science/AAAS, 1200 New York Avenue, Washing­ ton, DC, USA 20005, (202)326-6417, fax: (202)8987825, Internet: www.scienceonline.org Founded in 1880 by Thomas Edison and published by the AAAS, SCIENCE ranks a world leading scientific journal. Each week, SCIENCE provides over 136,000 global subscribers with peer-reviewed original research, scientific research articles, reports, science and research news as well as policy forums and perspectives on current topics. Scien­ tists can also access the journal online at www. scienceonline.org. The site includes a comprehen­ sive recruitment site, www.sciencecareers.org, offering job listings, career advice and a resume/cv database. 1626 Scientific Computing & Modelling NV, TC/FEW, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1083, Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 1081 HV, 31204447626, fax: 31204447629, e-mail:info@scm. com, Internet: www.scm.com The Amsterdam Den­ sity Functional (ADF) program is a leading Density Functional Theory (DFT) software package used in commercial and academic research. ADF excels at transition metal and heavy element compounds. It is a fast, robust, and user-friendly code with unequalled functionality. A wide variety of molecu­ lar properties and chemical environments can be handled. Meet us at the booth for a demonstration of the improved Graphical User Interface modules and to hear about the latest improvements1. 2008 SciGene, 530 Mercury Dr., Sunnyvale, CA, USA 94085, (408)733-7337, fax: (408)733-7336, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: http://www.scigene. com SciGene is a new company formed upon the acquisition of the FlexChem Synthesis Systems and other product lines from Robbins Scientific. At the ACS spring meeting, SciGene will have the full line of FlexChem synthesis reactor blocks and process­ ing equipment on display for performing parallel solution and solid phase chemistries. 2110 SciTegic, 9665 Chesapeake Dr., Suite 401, San Diego, CA, USA 92123, (858)279-8800, fax: (858)279-8804, e-mail:[email protected], Inter­ net: www.scitegic.com SciTegic, Inc. a wholly owned subsidiary of Accelrys, Inc.(NASDAQ: ACCL), develops and markets informatics software to the pharmaceutical and biotechnology indus­ tries. The company is pioneering a new technology approach called "Data Pipelining" to process drug discovery data with unprecedented flexibility. This new methodology is fast establishing its utility by accelerating informatics research for hundreds of users at dozens of customer sites worldwide. Fur­ ther information about SciTegic is available at: www.scitegic.com. 619,621 Seika Corporation of America, 701 W. Broad St., Suite 204, Bethlehem, PA, USA 18018, 610-9545760, fax: 610-954-5311, e-mail:infoseika@aol. com, Seika Corporation of America distributes solutions for preparative HPLC including dynamic axial compression(DAC)systems, preparative chromatographs, and YMC brand preparative HPLC packings. DAC systems are easy to use, affordable

and come sizes from 5 to 80 cm id. Preparative chromatographs feature gradient based pumping systems with automatic sample injection, UV detec­ tion and fraction collection. YMC brand preparative packings are known worldwide for their selectivity, high loadability, reproducibility, and durability. Visit us in Booth 1632. 1632 Selerity Technologies, 2484 West Custer Road, Salt Lake City, UT, USA 84104, (801)978-2295, fax: (801)978-2298, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.selerity.com Selerity Technologies, Inc. is the leader in the high temperature HPLC and SFC mar­ kets. For the HPLC market, we produce the Polaratherm Total Temperature Controller, a tempera­ ture programmable HPLC column oven capable of operation from zero to 200°C, and the Aquachrom high temperature HPLC with FID. In the consum­ able market, we offer Blaze silica HPLC columns for use at temperatures up to 200°C with extended pH capability and SFC columns for the petroleum industry. 1732 Semichem, P.O. Box 1649, Shawnee Mission, KS, USA 66222, (913)268-3271, fax: (913)268-3445, Internet: www.semichem.com Semichem and Gaussian will show the 3.0 version of their jointly developed interface GaussView. Semichem will also exhibit the 8.0 version of its rapid and robust industry-leading semiempirical program AMPAC with new graphics and computational capabilities. CODESSA, a QSAR/QSPR program that exploits the information available from AMPAC and Gaussian03, will also be available for examination. Gaus­ sian will demonstrate the Gaussian03, a complete solution which focuses on the use of ab initio elec­ tronic structure methods to model molecular struc­ tures and properties of gas and condensed phase systems. 601,603,605 SensoPath Technologies, Inc., 2100 Fairway Dr., Bozeman, MT, USA 59715, (406)585-8192, fax: (406)585-8390, e-mail:brenda.spangler@ sensopath.com, Internet: www.sensopath.com Sensorath Technologies supplies high-affinity teth­ ers for fabrication of self-assembled monolayers on gold, silicon nitride or glass biosensor surfaces. Monothiol tethers, unique dithiol, dihydroxy and trichlorosylyl tethers, all with very low non-specific binding characteristics and sporting functional roup termini for coupling to proteins, peptides, >NA and carbohydrates are in-stock or custom designed and synthesized for specific applications. And now introducing the first in a family of excep­ tionally light-stable, completely water-soluble fluorophores functionalized for coupling to biomolecules. 737

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Serena Software, Box 3076, Bloomington, IN, USA 47402-3076, (812)333-0823, fax: (812)332-0877, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. serenasoft.com Showing the latest releases of Pcmodel9, Gaussian, Orbdraw and Vibrate. Pcmodel is a molecular editor and builder, with molecular mechanics (MMX, MM3, MMFF94, Amber and Oplsaa) and a complete interface to Gaussian, Gamess, PQS, ADF and other QM pro­ grams. Now including support for OpenGL graph­ ics, Smiles strings, SDF, PDB,ADF and PQS. A new version of Orbdraw includes property maps and output to PovRay. All programs available for Win­ dows, Macintosh and Linux. 1902,1904 Seres Laboratories, Inc., 3331-B Industrial Dr., Santa Rosa, CA, USA 95403, 707-526-4526, fax: 707-523-4707, e-mail:[email protected], Inter­ net: www.sereslabs.com Since 1977, Seres has been a custom organic synthesis provider to phar­ maceutical, biotech, diagnostics, semiconductor, and other customers requiring confidentiality and high quality R&D and small lot commercial manu­ facturing. R&D capabilities include novel process identification, scale-up, and optimization. Regis­ tered with the FDA and the State of California as a drug manufacturing establishment since 1979. Capacity up to 700-7/ter scale in multiple, isolated R&D and cGMP production suites. 1611 Setaram, 130 Gaither Drive, Suite 116, Mt. Laurel, NJ, USA 08054, (856)778-7377, fax: (856)778-7377, Internet: www.setaram.com 1335 SGE, Incorporated, 2007 Kramer Lane, Austin, TX, USA 78758, (800)945-6154, fax: (512)836-9159, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.sge.com Chro­ matography Consumables- ProteCol capillary HPLC columns, micro volume syringes, capillary

GC columns, injectors, ferrules, fittings (including SilTite ferrules for GC use), septa, micro valves, fil­ ters, inlet liners, tubing, HPLC columns, GC/MS supplies - ETP electron multipliers, jet separators, column change system; Instruments - pyrolyzer, multidimensional system. Retrofit Equipment - GC backflush, ms open split interface, olfactory detec­ tor outlet II. 636 Shimadzu Scientific Instruments, Inc., 7102 Riverwood Drive, Columbia, MD, USA 21046, (800)4771227, fax: (410)381-1222, e-mail:webmaster@ shimadzu.com, Internet: www.ssi.shimadzu.com Shimadzu offers a full line of analytical instrumen­ tation, including UV Visible and Fluorescence Spec­ trophotometers; FTIR Spectrometers; Automated FTIR Microscope; HPLC systems and components; LC/MS; Gas Chromatography; GC/MS; Data Sta­ tions for Spectroscopy and Chromatography; Ther­ mal Analyzers, TOC, Atomic Absorption spectrom­ eters, Particle Size Analyzers, Balances, Arc-Spark Optical Emission Spectrometers, Capillary Rheometers, Mooney Viscometers, Universal Testing Equipment and more. 901,903,905,907 SiliCycle, Inc., 1200 St. Jean-Baptiste Ave., Suite 114, Quebec City, PQ, CANADA G2E 5E8, (418)874-0054, fax: (418)874-0355, e-mail:info@ silicycle.com, Internet: www.silicycle.com S/7/Cyc/e Inc. is a purification solution provider. We will be exhibiting UltraPure Adsorbents, TIC Plates, SPE Cartridges, Flash Cartridges compatible with ISCO, Jones/IST, Biotage Instruments, HPLC Columns, IMPAQ and more than 80 Functionalized Silica Gels. Our novel silica immobilized scavengers and reagents are powerful tools for organic synthesis and chromatography. We specialized in silicasupported scavengers including metals scavengers and reagents, all available in pre packed formats (SPE, Flash or HPLC). We are happy to undertake custom projects and welcome the challenge! 1036 Silk Scientific, Inc., P. O. Box 533, Orem, UT, USA 84059, (801)377-6978, fax: (801)422-0153, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www. silkscientific.com The UN-SCAN-IT software con­ verts scanned graphs to (x,y) data at Full Scanner Resolution, and can automatically digitize strip charts, instrumental output, published graphs, old graphs, etc. The UN-SCAN-IT gel software turns your scanner into a high speed densitometer and allows you to automatically analyze electrophoresis gel images at full scanner resolution. Windows and Macintosh versions under $400. 2002 Simulations Plus, Inc., 1220 West Avenue J, Lan­ caster, CA, USA 93534, (661)723-7723, fax: (661 )723-5524, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.simulations-plus.com Simulations Plus offers "gold standard software for ADMET property prediction and model-building. Our Gastrorlus™ absorption simulation is worldrenown. ADMET Predictor™ generates approxi­ mately 50 property predictions, including pKa's, human Peft, loqP, logD, aqueous solubility (native and user-specified pH), Vd, plasma protein bind­ ing, BBB penetration, and Fa by simulation at mul­ tiple dose levels. ADMET Modeler™ lets you rap­ idly build high quality artificial neural network ensemble models from your own data—no experi­ ence required! 226 Smiths Detection, 14 Commerce Dr., Danbury, CT, USA 06810, (203)207-9700, fax: (203)207-0586, Internet: www.smithsdetection.com 209,211 Sorbent Technologies, 2377 John Glenn Drive, Suite 106, Atlanta, GA, USA 30341, (770)936-0323, fax: (770)936-0326, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.sorbtech.com Sorbent Technologies specializes in premium products and services for all phases of chromatography and separation science for laboratory, pilot, and production. Sorbents: silica qel, bonded phases, alumina, polymer resins, florisil, polyamide, and custom. TLC Plates: silica, alumina, bonded phases on glass, alumina, and plastic backings. Flash Systems: 12/40, 75, 150, SimpliFlash, Automated Intelliflash 280. Flash Car­ tridges for Analogix, Biotage, Isco, and Jones Sys­ tems. HPLC: Columns and packings. Analytical & Semi-Prep, & Prep. GC columns: capillary, glass & metal. SrE cartridges. Plastic labware. We are your separation solution source! 2036 SP Industries, PO Box 688,1002 Harding Highway, Buena, NJ, USA 08310, (856)697-3000, fax: (856)697-0536, e-mail:[email protected],

Internet: www.wilmad-labglass.com vyilmadLabGlass is a leading manufacturer of specialty sci­ entific glassware, including NMR & EPK tubes and accessories, round bottom flasks, condensers, pilot plant systems, distillation equipment, filtration glassware, cell/tissue culture glassware, peptide synthesis vessels, tissue grinders, volumetric pipettes and flasks, and microchemistry glassware. We also custom manufacture glassware and offer glassware repair services. 210 SPECS, 139 Buena Vista Ave., Corte Madera, CA, USA 94925, (415)924-0555, fax: (415)924-0184, Internet: www.specs.net Specs is based in Delft, The Netherlands, with branch offices in the US and around the world. We provide chemistry services for drug discovery. Primary services include provid­ ing high quality, diverse screening compounds with well over 300,000 currently in stock. Other key offerings include a fully functional research labora­ tory for lead optimization and custom synthesis,and compound reformatiing/replating services. 325 Spectrum Chemicals & Lab. Products, 14422 South San Pedro Street, Gardena, CA, USA 90248, (800)772-8786, fax: (800)525-2299, e-mail:sales@ s p e c t r u m c h e m i c a l . c o m , I n t e r n e t : www. spectrumchemical.com We are a customer-focused manufacturer and global distributor of over 12,000 fine chemicals and 120,000 laboratory supplies and equipment. Our new 2004/05 Chemicals & Labo­ ratory Products catalog, at over 2000 pages, includes chemicals such as organic and inorganic chemicals and reagents, solutions, high purity sol­ vents, microbiological media, biochemicals, and more. Our laboratory products include: balances, glassware, plasticware, gloves, and other general laboratory supplies. Our facilities are ISO 9001 cer­ tified, FDA registered, and operate under cGMP.

1010 Springer, 233 Spring St., New York, NY, USA 10013, (212) 460-1500, fax: (201) 348-4505, Inter­ net: springeronline.com Welcome to the new Springerl In 2004 Kluwer Academic Publishers and Sprinqer-Verlag merged under the new Springer brand becoming the ambitious global player in the world of scientific, technical and medical publish­ ing. Our product range includes some 1,250 jour­ nals and 3,500 new book titles each year making us the world's second-largest supplier of scientific lit­ erature. Enjoy 20% off a range of books published by Springer and RSC (Royal Society of Chemistry)from acclaimed review series to heavyweight refer­ ences. Sample renowned journals, like "Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry" and the "Journal of Applied Electrochemistry and sign up for free Springer Alerts. 1007,1009,1011 StellarNet Inc., 14390 Carlson Circle, Tampa, FL, USA 33626, (813)855-8687, fax: (813)855-2279, Internet: www.stellarnet.com 338 Strem Chemicals, 7 Mulliken Way, Dexter Indus­ trial Park, Newburyport, MA, USA 01950-4098, (978)462-3191, fax: (978)465-3104, e-mail:info@ strem.com, Internet: http://www.strem.com Metals, inorganics, organometallics for research. Metal catalysts for organic synthesis, chiral ligands, organophosphines, metallocenes, metal carbonyls & derivatives, precious metals and rare earths, ionic liquids, metal catalysts and ligand kits. Nanomaterials -metal nanoclusters, metal nanocolloids, metal nanoparticles, metal nanopowders, magnetic flu­ ids. Volatile precursors for MOCVD. High pressure reactions. Pharmaceutical intermediates under vali­ dated cGMP facilities. Bulk manufacturing. Custom synthesis. 1008 Supercritical Fluid Technologies, 1 Innovation Way, Suite 304, Newark, DE, USA 19711, (302) 738-3420, fax: (302) 738-4320, e-mail:sales@ s u p e r c r i t i c a l f l u i d s . c o m , I n t e r n e t : www. supercriticalfluids.com Introducing: A new, low cost SrE. A full line of instrumentation for supercritical fluid extraction, reaction, and high-pressure fluid applications. Complete systems for SFE and SFR; 50 ml to multi-liter capacity; automation and data handling options meet a range of needs and bud­ gets. Bench top and rack mounted system. Cus­ tomized systems for special, non-standard applica­ tions, including SCWO. Phase Monitor H is ideal for visual solubility determinations of liquids and solids in supercritical C02. Consultation services, con­ tract research, parts and service. 2005

SynChem, Inc., 1700 South Mount Prospect Road, Des Plaines, IL, USA 60018, (847)298-2436 χ 209, fax: (847)298-2439, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.synchem.com SynChem, Inc. is a contract research organization specializing in cus­ tom synthesis and contract research with its headquater in Chicago USA, and subsidiary in Shanghai, China. SynChem synthesizes novel as well as pre­ viously reported organic compounds and provides expertise in organic and medicinal chemistry to pharmaceutical, drug discovery and biotechnology companies. SynChem also offers a low cost Fit business model in Shanghai, China and can provide over 300 catalog products as unique combinatorial chemistry building blocks. 935 SynPep, 6905 Sierra Court, Dublin, CA, USA 94568, (925)803-9250, fax: (925)803-0786, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.synpep.com SynPep Corporation is a peptide-based company providing custom and catalog peptides in both mg and kilogram quantities. Other products and ser­ vices include custom polyclonal antibody pro­ grams, mass spectroscopy, HPLC, AAA, LC-MS, MAPS systems, amino acids and resins. With over 10 years of experience and producing in excess of 15,000 HPLC purified peptides per year, we have the experience to meet all of your peptide require­ ments on a timely basis and at extremely competi­ tive prices. 1526 Synthematix, Inc., 4815 Emperor Blvd., Suite 214, Durham, NC, USA 27703, (919)474-0762, fax: (919)474-0762, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.synthematix.com Synthematix pro­ vides innovative workflow solutions to researchintensive organizations with an focus on chemistry solutions. Synthematix solutions have been profit­ ably adopted by over 1,000 researchers in a variety of organizations. Arthur Suite, Synthematixs flag­ ship product, provides chemists across an enter­ prise with unparalleled tools for researching, plan­ ning and recording their work. It facilitates building and mining of reaction and procedure databases containing both internal and external data. For chemists involved in parallel chemistry, Synthe­ matix offers Library Builder, the most intuitive tool of its kind. 435,437 Synthonix, 3222 Wellington Court, Suite N, Raleigh, NC, USA 27615, (919) 875- 9277, fax: (919) 875-9601, Internet: www.synthonix.com, Synthonix is your newest partner in drug discovery. We offer a focused range of small molecules with diverse substitution patterns and a high degree of func­ tionality. Our molecules are specifically engineered to provide rapid access to drug candidates through known and reliable chemistry. We offer a number of powerfully functionalized small molecules spe­ cifically tailored to enable you in your quest for active leads. 2118 TA Instruments, 109 Lukens Drive, New Castle, DE, USA 19720, (302)427-4000, fax: (302)4274001, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.tainstruments.com TA Instruments is a lead­ ing supplier of thermal analysis and rheology instrumentation. TA Instruments' is committed to providing the highest level of innovation, technol­ ogy and customer support. The new Q Series™ thermal analysis products and Rheometrics Series rheometers are industry standards. Experience A Higher Level of technology and performance with TA Instruments. Visit TA at booth 1508. 1508 Taylor & Francis/CRC Press LLC, 2000 Corporate Blvd. NW, Boca Raton, FL, USA 33431, (561)9982507, fax: (561)997-7249, Internet: www.crcpress. com The Taylor & Francis Group, represented by its journal and books division and its newly acquired businesses CRC Press and Marcel Dekker is a pre­ mier publisher of scientific and technical books, journals and electronic databases. We publish a number of titles in chemistry including CRC's flag­ ship title: The Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. Please visit our booth to browse our latest titles in this area. 1511,1513,1515 TCI America, 9211 N. Harborgate Street, Portland, OR, USA 97203, (800)423-8616, fax: (888)5201075, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. tciamerica.com TCI America provides custom syn­ thesis and contract research services for the pharmaceutical, cosmetic, electronic, hi-tech and biotechnology researcher. Most recent catalog lists more than Î8,000 high purity special organic chemicals in packaging convenient for lab reagent EXPO-15

EXPOSITON usage. Manufacturing facilities offer kilo to ton lot production utilizing many reaction capabilities. Modern facilities can provide cGMP manufacturing and are registered with the FDA. Visit our Web site and on-line catalog to source, place an order for chemicals or just browse. 523 Technology Exchange Corp., 104 Anawan St., 2nd Floor East, Fall River, MA, USA 02721, (508)6754977, fax: (508)675-3272 1310 Teledyne Isco, Inc., 4700 Superior St., Lincoln, NE, USA 68504, (402)464-0231, fax: (402)465-3064, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.isco.com CombiFlash™ separation systems provide rapid purification of orqanic compounds. The Companion ™ 4x personal purification system offers benchtop automation with Palm™ powered controls. OptiX 10 separates ten samples in parallel with online UV detection and customizable gradients. Sq16x sequentially purifies up to 16 samples with computer-controlled automation, variable UV-vis detection, and peak-based fraction collection. Disposable RediSep™ columns offer fast, reproducible separations for sample loads from 20mg to over 100 grams. Booth #1625 features high-flow precision syringe pumps that deliver accurate flows of virtually any fluid. They are ideal for; bench-scale R&D, batch or pilot processing, liquefied gases or supercritical fluids, or for specialized analytical techniques such as LC-MS or HPLC with electrochemical detection. Ask about our UL-approved pumps for Class 1, Div. 2 locations. 1520,1625 Thar Technologies, 100 Beta Drive, Pittsburgh, PA, USA 15238, (412)967 -5665, fax: (412) 967-9446, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.thartech. com Known as a leader in supercritical fluids, Thar offers complete solutions in chromatography (SFC), extraction, cleaning, reactions and particle design to the pharmaceutical, chemical, defense and food industries. From concept to commercialization, Thar's laboratory and pilot scale instrumentation is specifically designed and fabricated at Thar for use in SCF applications. 119,121 Thermo Electron Corporation, 81 Wyman St., Waltham, MA, USA 02454, (888)Thermo-U, fax: (781)768-6621, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.thermo.com A world leader in hightech instruments, Thermo Electron Corporation helps life science, laboratory, and industrial customers advance scientific knowledge, enable drug discovery, improve manufacturing processes, and protect people and the environment with instruments, scientific equipment and integrated software solutions. Products include sample preparation equipment, liquid handling and automation systems and analytical instruments for chromatography, mass spectrometry, molecular and elemental spectroscopy and microanalysis. These are integrated with informatics solutions and supported by professional and financial services. 1702 Tianyi Fine Chemicals, Yaowan Road #1, Jingzhou, Hubei, 434001, CHINA, 86- 716-8350455, fax: 86-716-8352402, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.tianyifinechem.com Tianyi Fine Chemicals is a private-owned, chemistry based company. The company is mainly enqaged in research, development, production and distribution of pharmaceutical intermediates, contract research and manufacturing. 740

com Headquartered in Princeton, NJ, Tyger Scientific Inc. has been committed to offer specialty chemicals for more than 2000 pharmaceutical, biotech and chemical companies since 1992. We focus on confidential custom synthesis tailored to customers' specifications from R&D through pilot plant production. We also provide large-scale contract manufacturing in Changchun, China subject to riqorous quality control. Customers' satisfaction are always guaranteed. We carry more than 3000 compounds for building blocks and scaffolds that provide you the best solution for chemical outsourcing. 738

com, Internet: www.vac-atm.com Vacuum Atmo­ spheres will exhibit the OMNI-LAB glove box and gas purification system, designed for quality and performance at an economical price. The system maintains less than 1 ppm of oxygen and moisture in an inert atmosphere. The OMNI utilizes a PLC with touch screen display/controls. Gas analyzers, feedthrus and a wide range of accessories are avail­ able. VAC also specializes in engineering and design of custom systems. This includes glovebox integrated thermal vapor deposition systems, spin coater systems, and characterization systems for OLED/PLED R&D. 1107,1109,1111

U.S. DOE Genomics: GTL Program, 1060 Commerce Park, Oak Ridge, TN, USA 37830, (865)5766669, fax: (865)574-9888, e-mail:mansfieldbk@ ornl.gov, Internet: DOEGenomesToLife.org Learn about the Department of Energy's new Genomics: GTL program, sponsoring systems environmental microbiology research. Armed with next generation biology facilities that will serve as engines for discovery of new solutions to energy and environmental challenges, Genomics:GTL will help provide the impetus for dramatic growth in industrial and environmental biotechnology. DOEGenomesToLife. org 1512,1514

Varian, Inc., 2700 Mitchell Drive, Walnut Creek, CA, USA 94598, (800)926-3000, fax: (925)9452206, e-mail:[email protected], Inter­ net: www.varianinc.com Varian, Inc. is a world leader in scientific instruments and a major supplier of analytical solutions and nuclear magnetic reso­ nance (NMR). Products include GC, GC/MS, Micro GC, HPLC, LC/MS, Prep Chromatography, Data Handlinq, UV-Vis-NIR, Fluorescence, ICP, ICP-MS, AA, and Dissolution systems, as well as laboratory consumable products and Vacuum pumps, leak detectors, and components. 1919,1921

United Chemical Technologies, 2731 Β art ram Road, Bristol, PA, USA 19007, (215)781-9255, fax: (215)785-1226, Internet: www.unitedchem.com United Chemical Technologies is a manufacturer of silanes, silicones and platinum catalysts, as well as over 40 functionalized silica gels and polymeric beads. The bonded phases can be packed into standard solid phase extraction columns, car­ tridges, 48/96 well plates and flash chromatogra­ phy columns. UCT prides itself on providing excel­ lent technical support for all products. Come visit our booth to see our new disposable 48 well plate manifold system. 536 United Soybean Board, 2715 Ashman Street, Mid­ land, Ml, USA 48640, (989)631-3377, fax: (989)6310812, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.unitedsoybean.org The United Soybean Board (USB) is a farmer-funded organization work­ ing with industry, academia and government to commercialize innovative soy-based products and technologies. In the industrial area, USB funding focuses on plastics, lubricants, coatings, adhesives and specialty chemicals. The United Soybean Board represents over 600,000 U.S. soybean farm­ ers. 2021 University Science Books, 55 D Gate Five Road, Sausalito, CA, USA 94965, (415)332-5390, fax: (415)332-5393, e-mail:[email protected], Inter­ net: www.uscibooks.com University Science Books publishes fine text and reference books in all areas of chemistry and the physical sciences. New titles include Physical Chemistry for the Biosciences, the new one-semester p. chem. text by Raymond Chang; Informational Biopolymers of Genes and Gene Expression by R.D. Blake, and Mathematical Methods for Scientists and Engineers by Donald McQuarrie. Soon forthcoming is Modern Physical Organic Chemistry by Eric Anslyn and Dennis Dougherty, and Quantum Mechanics: A TimeDependent Perspective by David Tannor. 422 US EPA-NRMRL, c/o SAIC, 11251 Roger Bacon Drive, Reston, VA, USA 20190, (703)318-4260, fax: (703)318-4755 2125

Tripos, Inc., 1699 S. Hanley, Suite 303, St. Louis, MO, USA 63144, (314) 647-1099, fax: (314) 6479241, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www. tripos.com Tripos' solutions enable scientists to make knowledge-driven research decisions that avoid costly synthesis and testing of chemical compounds unlikely to be effective. Tripos Discovery Informatics technologies are used by scientists at major research facilities around the world to manage, analyze, and share biological and chemical information. These technologies include SYBYL(R): Expert Molecular Modeling Environment; UTHIUM(R): Desktop Chemical Collaboration, 3D Visualization, and Decision Support; and SARNavigatorÇTM): Desktop HTS Data Analysis. Tripos Discovery Research offerings include compound collection enhancement, lead design and optimization services, hiqh-throughput medicinal chemistry, and complete drug discovery outsourcing. 310

V&P Scientific, Inc., 9823 Pacific Heights Blvd., Suite T, San Diego, CA, USA 92121, (858)4550643, fax: (858)455-0703 1932,1934

Tyger Scientific Inc., 324 Stokes Ave., Ewing, NJ, USA 08638, (609)434-0144, fax: (609)434-0143, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: www.tygersci.

Vacuum Atmospheres Co., 4652 W Rosecrans Avenue, Hawthorne, CA, USA 90250, (310)6440255, fax: (310)970-0980, e-mail:info@vac-atm.

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US EPA/Green Chemistry Program, 4800 Mont­ gomery Lane, Suite 600, Bethesda, MD, USA 20814, (301)347-5197, e-mail:emily_connor@ abtassoc.com, EPA's Green Chemistry Program fosters research, development, and implementa­ tion of innovative chemical technologies that reduce or eliminate the use or generation of haz­ ardous substances during the desiqn, manufacture, and use of chemical products and processes. The program's four major projects include the Presiden­ tial Green Chemistry Challenge, Green Chemistry Research, Green Chemistry Education activities, and Scientific Outreach. 222

Variomag USA, PO Box 214769, Daytona Beach, FL, USA 32121-4769, (386)761-6422, fax: (386)7600960, Internet: www.VARIOMAG.com Electronic magnetic stirrers with 1 to 60 stirring points to stir in vessels from 0,1 ml to 600 litres. Submersible maqnetic stirrers, cuvette stirrers. Cell stirrers for cell suspensions and tissue cultures. Industrial stir­ rers for high volumes up to 600 litres. Shakers for microtiter plates, stirring block thermotates, and reaction blocks. 2216 VEECO Instruments Inc., 112 Robin Hill Road, Santa Barbara, CA, USA 93117, (805)9671400x2312, fax: (805)967-7717, e-mail:info@veeco. com, Internet: www.veeco.com/AFM Veeco will present the Digital Instruments EnviroScope Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) System for elec­ trochemistry studies. EnviroScope combines a her­ metically sealed sample chamber with modular environmental controls to provide AFM scanning under non-ambient temperature, vacuum, gas, and liquid environments. Also shown is the world's highest resolution AFM, the Digital Instruments MultiMode, with accessories that enhance its capa­ bilities for electrical characterization, force mea­ surements, and mapping electrochemical potential distribution (SECPM). 216,218 Vernier Software & Technology, 13979 SW Millikan Way, Beaverton, OR, USA 97005, (503)2772299, fax: (503)277-2440, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.vernier.com Stop by the Vernier Software & Technology booth to learn how to use our exciting LabPro interface with a Macintosh or Windows computer, a Tl graphing calculator, or a Palm OS handheld. We will be demonstrating our complete line of auto-ID sensors for chemistry. See our Advanced Chemistry with Vernier lab book, our support for Ohaus balances, and our new Stir Sta­ tion magnetic stirrer. 533 Virtis, See SP Industries. W.H. Freeman & Company, C/o Bedford, Free­ man & Worth, 33 Irving Place, New York, NY, USA 10003, (212)576-9460, e-mail:msantee@ whfreeman.com, Internet: www.whfreeman.com/ chemistry W.H. Freeman is a leading publisher in college textbooks for every chemistry course. Visit our booth to see the long-anticipated new general chemistry text, Chemistry, by the ACS. Also see the new editions of Atkins/Jones' Chemical Principles; Harris' Exploring Chemical Analysis; Baird/Cann's Environmental Chemistry; Postma, et al's Chemis­ try in the Laboratory and Wink, et al's Working with Chemistry. 1102 W.W. Norton, 500 5th Avenue, New York, NY, USA 10110, (212)790-4376, fax: (212)869-0856, Internet: www.wwnorton.com 425 Wako Chemicals USA, Inc., 1600 Bellwood Road, Richmond, VA, USA 23237, (804)714-1923, fax: (804)271-7791, Internet: www.wakousa.com 2227 Waters Corporation, 34 Maple St., Milford, MA, USA 01757, (800) 252-4752, e-mail:info@waters. com, Internet: www.waters.com From chemistry and chromatography to laboratory informatics, mass spectrometry and support services, Waters

Corporation has systems and solutions that are right for you. We're a partner who'll work with you to understand your needs, providing you with complete confidence in your work. For more information, please visit www.waters.com. 1912 Wavefunction, Inc., 18401 Von Karman Ave., Suite 370, Irvine, CA, USA 92612, (949)955-2120, fax: (949)955-2118, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.wavefun.com Wavefunction offers chemistry at your fingertips. Spartan software delivers a full range of molecular mechanics and quantum chemical methods to chemistry research and education. Spartan elucidates a host of molecular properties supporting target identification and validation, lead selection, and process optimization. Odyssey combines molecular simulation technology with ready-to-use chemistry content. Full system control of hundreds of molecular samples provide discovery-based learning tools for the introductory chemistry curriculum. Product categories: organic chemistry, software-molecular, technical publications 1811,1813

Western Analytical Products, P.O. Box 579, Murrieta, CA, USA 92564, (800)541-8421, fax: (800)542-8421, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: www.WestemAnalytical.com Products for Solvent Containment and Toxic Vapor Control. High Pressure Capillary Column Packer. Mixed Mode HPLC Columns tor immobilized ION PAIR and MS detection. 637 Whatman, Inc., 200 Park Avenue, Suite 210, Florham Park, NJ, USA 07932, (973)245 8300, fax: (973)245 8329, e-mail:www.whatman.com, Internet: [email protected] Whatman manufactures a complete range of high quality filtration products for sample preparation, including filter papers, glass microfibers, thimbles, membrane filters, syringe and syringeless filters, capsule and vent filters,centrifuge filters, chromatography and blotting papers, HPLC columns, TIC plates and solid phase extraction. 1516 Wilmad LabGlass, See SP Industries.

WebAssign, 940 Main Campus Drive, Suite 210, Raleigh, NC, USA 27606, (800)955-8275, fax: (919)829-1516, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: http://webassign.net WebAssign is a sophisticated online homework management system for chemistry, designed by teachers for teachers. Create assignments easily using randomized questions from leading intro, gênerai organic, and analytical chemistry textbooks or write your own questions. Questions are in a variety of formats: numerical, image map, essay, symbolic, file upload, etc. WehAssiqn supports significant figures. For organic chemistry questions, students can draw complex organic molecules. Sign up for a faculty account and begin using it immediately. 1013

Wilmington PharmaTech, One Innovation Way, Suite 302, Newark, DE, USA 19711, (302)737-9916, e-mail :[email protected], Internet: [email protected] Wilmington PharmaTech is a full service company specializing in chemical process research and development for the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries. We are currently developing practical, economical, and environmental friendly processes (green) for the synthesis of today's medicine. We are also providing FTE contract research, customer synthesis, bulk drug intermediates, crystalline salt screening, polymorph screening, and API's for pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies. 1628

Welch Rietschle Thomas, 7301 N. Central Avenue, P.O. Box 183, Skokie, IL, USA 60077, (847)6768804, fax: (847)677-8606 244

Wyatt Technology Corp., 6300 Hollister Avenue, Santa Barbara, CA, USA 93117, (805)681-9009, fax:

(805)681-0123, e-mail:[email protected], Internet: http://www.wyatt.com DAWN and miniDAWN multi-angle light scattering (MALS) instruments for determining absolute molar masses and sizes of polymers and biopolymers. These detectors interface with GPC/SEC/FFF/HPLC for characterizing molecular weights and sub-micrometer particle sizes without column calibration or reference standards. DynaPro line (Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS)) will also be shown for analysis of protein solutions. Optilab rEX, Rl detector with Extended range capabilities and no gain settings, will be on display as will the ViscoStar differential viscometer. 530,532 YSI, Inc., 1725 Brannum La., Yellow Springs, OH, USA 45387, Experience the power of our Biosensor Platform, the YSI 7100 MBS, and our optically based in situ dissolved Carbon Dioxide Probe, the YSI 8500 Monitor. Our YSI 7100 adds intelligence to the accuracy and precision of our proven YSI 2700 technology in a true multiparameter platform. Measurement capabilities include: glucose, lactate, glutamine, glutamate, ammonium, potassium, sucrose, methanol and ethanol. The benchtop analyzer is packed with productivity features and a touch screen graphical interface. 1629 Zannan Pharma, 4299 Jindu Road, Building #3, 3rd Floor, Shanghi, P.R., CHINA 201108, 86-21-54426233, fax: 86-21-5442-6233, e-mail:business@ zannanpharma.com, Internet: www.zannanpharma. com Zannan Pharma is a contract synthesis and process development company based in Shanghai, China. We supply high-quality building blocks, Ru catalysts for RCM, and custom synthesis from labscale to pilot at a very competitive price. As a reliable outsourcing contractor, Zannan has state-ofthe-art facilities and experienced chemists to work on different projects. 1716

EXPO-17

EXPOSITION EXPOSITION WORKSHOPS Attend these intensive workshops, spon­ sored by exhibiting companies at no cost to you, on Monday to Wednesday at the San Diego Convention Center. Seats are lim­ ited, and attendance is by registration only To view updated workshops and to reg­ ister before March 4, visit http://chem istry.org/expositions. After March 4, you will need to wait until Monday, March 14, to visit the sponsoring company at its booth inside the exposition. They will advise you whether there is room in your chosen work­ shop. Booth numbers are indicated after each exhibitor listing. MONDAY, MARCH U Teaching Chemistry with Molecular Mod­ eling. Sponsor: Wavefunction Inc., Booths 1811,1813. Instructors:Jurgen Schnitker and Sean Ohlinger. Noon to 2:30 PM. Room 11B. Attend this hands-on workshop to use molecular modeling to teach your students to interact with matter and molecules through 3-D visualization. Add a new dimension to lectures, demonstrations, and assignments in general chemistry and introductory organic and physical chemistry, includinggas laws, chemical reactivity bond polarity and basic thermodynamics. Learn about our new Odyssey software that allows realistic simulation ofmolecular motion and our Spartan software, an industry leader in molecular modeling.

tern for manipulating molecules and other nanostructures, enabling in situ modifica­ tion and measurement ofyour sample. The scanner is especially suited for most SPM applications. The Dimension Hybrid's com­ bination of an orthogonal, high-frequency response piezo design with the lowest noise Ζ position sensor available enables both high-resolution imaging and point-andshoot molecular pulling. The scanner is compatible with Veeco's Dimension 3100, aflexible,user-friendly SPM platform, and with the BioScope, for simultaneous SPM and high-quality optical microscopy TUESDAY, MARCH 15 Teaching Chemistry with Molecular Mod­ eling. Sponsor: Wavefunction Inc., Booths 1811,1813. Instructors:Jurgen Schnitker and Sean Ohlinger. 8:30 to 11AM. Room 11B. See Monday Advances in Two-Dimensional Liquid Chromatography. Sponsor: Polymer Stan­ dards Service USAInc, Booths 1719,1721. Instructor: M. Nazeemjahed. 8:30 to 11AM. Room 13. Gel permeation chromatogra­ phy analysis of polymers is governed by hydrodynamic volume, not molar mass. Copolymers, polymer blends, and complex polymer formulations need other liquid chromatographic techniques to also accom­ plish separation by chemical composition. A 2-D chromatography system using W i n G P C Unity Software acquires and processes samples automatically in two dimensions (HPLC combined with GPC). Molar mass and composition information for each component is achieved in one run.

Structure-Aided Drug Design & HighThroughput Lead Optimization. Sponsor: Fujitsu America/CAChe Software, Booth 2030. Instructor: Ian Welsford. Noon to 2:30 PM. Room 12. Experience the newest ver­ Cutting-Edge Technologies To Acceler­ sion of BioMedCAChe, a desktop software ate Computational Chemistry Using tool for drug discovery workflows. Topics Apple's Mac OS X. Sponsor: Apple Com­ covered will include analyzing proteins, puter Inc., Booth 1636. Instructors: Eliza­ modeling active sites, designing ligands, beth Kerr and Matt Maclnnis. 9 to 11AM. pharmacophore modeling, screening lead Room 12. Get hands-on experience with compound scaffolds, optimizing lead com­ powerful computational chemistry soft­ ware andXgrid, a powerful new distributed pounds, novel quantum methods for cal­ computing feature in Mac OS X vl0.4 Tiger. culating binding energies and electronic You'll work through demos and tutorials properties ofwhole proteins, high-through­ using provided laptop computers. We'll put docking, quantitative structure-activ­ assemble our systems into a grid, deploy ity relationships, and fast screening meth­ jobs onto our grid, and experiment with ods for predicting properties (water new computational chemistry software solubility H I A, rule of five, carcinogenic­ now available for Mac OS X. Apple will be ity, and antibacterial activity). joined by staff from the developers of these NanoMan II AFM with Hybrid XYZ Scan­ key computational chemistry applications. ner. Sponsor: Veeco Instruments, Booths 216, 218. Instructor: TBA. Noon to 2:30 Chromatography for Environmental, PM. Room 13. The NanoMan II atomic Chemical/Petrochemical, Semiconduc­ force microscope with the new Dimension tor, and Life Sciences Applications. Spon­ Hybrid XYZ scanner is the preeminent syssor: Dionex Corp., Booths 1113,1115. Instruc­ 18-EXPO

tor: Angie Jinks. Noon to 2:30 PM. Room 12. Ion Chromatography. Featuring new reagent-free ion chromatographic system for superior isocratic and gradient performance. Determinations in complex matrices will be presented. Breakthroughs in high-capac­ ity ion-exchange columns and detector design, and techniques for matrix elimina­ tion will be discussed. High-Performance Liquid Chromatography. Focusing on the Summit x2 Dual-Gradient HPLC system, methods and examples of high sample throughput using the dual-column tandem mode with off-line column regeneration will be presented. The Summit x2's on-line sam­ ple preparation allows analyte enrichment or matrix elimination with efficient trap columns and prevents sample loss during transfer. Capillary & Nano Liquid Chro­ matography. Learn about the UltiMate Plus Nano and Capillary LC system and appli­ cations in the areas ofproteomics, genomics, bioanalysis/pharmacokinetics, and drug dis­ covery Unique features include 2-D capil­ lary LC, monolithic nanocolumns for rapid protein separations, and LC-MALDI MS. Utilizing DialogLink 5 for Chemical Infor­ mation & Chemical Structure Searching. Sponsor: Dialog, Booth 1106. Instructor: Robert T. Stewart. Noon to 2:30 P M . Room 13. Meet Dialog's newest profes­ sional information search tool, DialogLink 5, which facilitates chemical information searching and chemical structure search­ ing. Learn to search via chemical structures in several Dialog databases and to build sophisticated reports. ΎΟΜ can use several chemical drawing packages, including ISIS/Draw and ChemDraw Absolute Macromolecular Characteriza­ tion. Sponsor: Wyatt Technology Corp., Booths 530, 532. Instructor: Philip ^ a t t . Noon to 2:30 PM. Room 11B. The goal of this intensive workshop is to provide you with a strong understanding of why mea­ surements made with multiangle light-scat­ tering detectors are absolute and not rela­ tive. Explore how MALS detectors can be connected to any separation technology to determine the absolute molar masses and sizes ofpolymers and biopolymers without column calibration or reference standards. Developing & Optimizing Reactions Using Microwave Synthesis. Sponsor: Biotage, Booth 510. Instructor: Farah Mavandadi. 3:30 to 6 PM. Room 11B. Precise control of reaction conditions encourages medici­ nal chemists to adopt microwave synthesis as a standard tool in organic chemistry lab­ oratories. Review the basic theory and con-

cepts ofmicrowave synthesis and expand on recent advances. Learn techniques and applications forperforming reactions with reproducibility, safety, and reliability in mind. Postdoctoral & Senior Research Associateship Awards. Sponsor: National Research Council of the National Academies, Booth 638. Instructor: Ray Gamble. 3:30 to 6 PM. Room 12. The National Research Council offers 350 awards annually for research to be conducted in residence at participating U.S. government labs. Applicants design projects to be compatible with the interests of the sponsoring lab. Awards include a competitive stipend, relocation, professional travel, and health insurance. Annual application deadlines are Feb. 1, May 1, Aug. 1, and Nov 1. Program information is at http://wwwnationalacademies.org/rap. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16 Advanced SPM for Nanotechnology & Nanobiotechnology. Sponsor: Molecular Imaging, Booth 2018. Instructor: Shijie Wu. Noon to 2:30 PM. Room 11B. Scanning probe microscopy provides the perfect tool for nanostructuring and nanomanipulation. Components can be analyzed and engineered to nanodevices. Learn how to apply PicoSPM system in nanostructuring (both mechanical and electric lithography) and nanomanipulation (pushing and aligning of nanoparticles and nanowires). The study of electronic properties of single-molecule wires and conductive properties ofthin films with current sensing techniques will be covered. PicoTREC allows researchers to distinguish between species that are and are not engaged in molecular binding events. EXPOSITION THEATER PRESENTATIONS Continue your technical learning inside the exposition. Attend a 45-minute, free educational session hosted by an exhibiting company inside our new PresentationTheater on the exposition floor. Seating will be available on a first-come, first-served basis. To view updated Presentation Theater sessions, visit http://chemistryorg/expositions. MONDAY, MARCH U Why Mac for Science? Sponsor: Apple Computer Inc., Booth 1636. Speaker: Elizabeth Kerr. 1:15 to 2 PM. With an industrial-strength, UNIX-based operating system, the power and precision of 64-bit computing and seamless integration of hardware and software, the Mac has never been better for science. Kerr will discuss

ADVANCE REGISTRATION/EXPOSITION WORKSHOPS San Diego March U-16 Title and session of workshop(s) desired

Name

E-mail

Address _ Telephone

Fax

Advance registration will be passed along to sponsoring companies and will ensure a space in the workshop(s) of your choice. Return the form to ACS Expositions, 1155—16th St., N.W., Washington, DC 20036; fax (202) 872-4410; or e-mail: [email protected]. Registrations can be submitted online at http://www.chemistry.org/expositions. Deadline for advance registration is March 4.

how Apple technology is enabling and advancing scientific computing, including an overview ofMac OS Xvl0.4 Tiger. Inks fourth major release, Mac OS X provides productivity, performance, and usability Kerr will also present customer case studies as examples of how Apple supports research in diverse scientific disciplines. Concept of Focused Diversity & Its Application to Discovery of Dual AT1/ETA Antagonists. Sponsor: ChemDiv Inc., Booth 429. Speaker: Ate* Kiselyov 2:15 to 3 PM. ChemDiv has assembled a set ofbiased compound libraries designed to jump-start medicinal chemistry effort around specific targets or pathways. Learn about our success in utilizing several of these targeted selections: kinase-, GPCR-, recognition motif-, rule of three, and pathway-biased (Hh/Wnt) sets in identifying potent ETAand ATI hits.

success in nanotech. They will also discuss how a strong grounding in chemistry can be key to a successful scientific career. Enabling Collaborative Science for Chemists & Spectroscopists. Sponsor: Advanced Chemistry Development Inc., Booth 1906. Speaker: AntonyWilliams. 1:15 to 2 PM. Our vendor-neutral spectroscopy software combines all techniques in one interface (pK, logD, and solubility prediction); helps synthetic and medicinal chemists; and serves as a tool for teaching synthetic, analytical, and physical chemistry Why Mac for Science? Sponsor: Apple Computer Inc., Booth 1636. Speaker: Elizabeth Kerr. 2:15 to 3 PM. See Monday Quartz Crystal Microbalance: Applications & Methods. Sponsor: KSV Instruments, Booth 319. Speaker: Tapani Viitala. 3:15 to 4 PM. Learn the latest applications and methods of quartz crystal microbalance. Topics include general theory and Q C M history Understand where Q C M can be applied and what information can be attained with this method.

New Microwave Synthesis Tools for Drug Discovery & Scale-up. Sponsor: Biotage, Booth 510. Speakers: Mike Lally and Farah Mavandadi. 3:15 to 4 PM. Biotage will introduce microwave synthesis systems for drug discovery and scale-up. Find out about application data demonstrating a dramatic WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16 reduction in reaction times, increased yields, and direct scale-up. Learn how the Working in Biotechnology & Biopharmalab- and process-scale microwave syntheceuticals: Promise, Problems & Potential. sizers can accelerate drug development. Sponsor: U.S. National Committee of IUPAC TUESDAY, MARCH 15 and ACS Division ofProfessional Relations. Organized by ACS Career Services. SpeakWorking in Nanotechnology: What Does ers: John C. Amedio Jr., Sundeep Dugar, It Take? Sponsor: U.S. National Committee MaryMacDonald, andAmyTapper. 10 AM of IUPAC and ACS Division of Professional to noon. New technologies and changes in Relations. Organized by ACS Career Serhow and where chemistry is practiced have vices. Speakers: Roger Cubicciotti, Harris A. led to the entry of chemistry into the bioreGoldberg, Charles Hotz, and Michael lated fields. Four distinguished professionJaffe. 10 AM to noon. Nanotech is grabbing als will examine characteristics of chemists headlines, government funding, investment who work in biotech and pharma research dollars, and job seekers. Four distinguished and comment on current and future employscientists will discuss the skills and knowlment trends in the biotech and pharma areas edge that may not come with a traditional in terms of new discovery, basic research, scientific education yet are predictors of and business opportunities. EXPO-19

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