Catalysis of organic reactions: 22nd Conference on the catalysis of organic reactions, Richmond, Virginia, 2008 (Boca Raton; London; New York, 2009). - ОГЛАВЛЕНИЕ / CONTENTS
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ОбложкаCatalysis of organic reactions: 22nd Conference on the catalysis of organic reactions, Richmond, Virginia, 2008 / ed. by M.L.Prunier. - Boca Raton; London; New York: CRC Press, 2009. - xxvi, 549 p.: ill. - (Chemical industries; 123). - Ind.: p.537-549. - ISBN 978-1-4200-7076-7
 

Место хранения: 031 | Институт катализа им. Г.К.Борескова CO РАН | Новосибирск

Оглавление / Contents
 
Board of Editors .............................................. xxi
Chronology of Organic Reactions Catalysis Society
Conferences ................................................. xxiii
Preface ....................................................... xxv
1  New Chemistry, Including Pulp Bleaching Processes, of
   the Golden-Aged, Water-Soluble Compound,
   Tris(hydroxymethyl)phosphine ................................. 1
   Brian R. James
   Department of Chemistry, University of British Columbia,
   2036 Main Mall, Vancouver, B.C., Canada, V6T1Z1
2  Design and Serendipity in the Discovery and Development
   of Homogeneous Catalysts for Organic Synthesis .............. 15
   John F. Hartwig
   Department of Chemistry, University of Illinois, 600 South
   Mathews Ave, Urbana, IL 61801
3  Asymmetric Hydrogenation of an Amino Acid Intermediate in
   the Synthesis of Complex Drug Targets: From Kinetic
   Modeling to Process Development ............................. 23
   Daniel S. Hsieh, Dong Lin, Steve S.Y. Wang, Reginald
   O. Cann, Justin B. Sausker and San Kiang
   Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, New Brunswick, NJ 08903
4  Process Intensification. Continuous Two-Phase Catalytic
   Reactions in a Table-Top Centrifugal Contact Separator ...... 39
   Gerard N. Kraai1, Boelo Schuur1, Floris van Zwol1, Robert
   M. Haak2, Adriaan J. Minnaard2, Ben L. Feringa2, Hero
   J. Heeres1 and Johannes G. de Vries2,3
   1Dept. of Chemical Engineering and 
   2Stratingh Institute for Chemistry, University of
   Groningen, Nijenborgh 4, 9747 AG Groningen, the 
   Netherlands 
   3DSM Pharmaceutical Products-Advanced Synthesis,
   Catalysis & Development, P.O. Box 18, 6160 MD, the 
   Netherlands
5  Application of Scavengers for the Removal of Palladium
   in Small Lot Manufacturing .................................. 51
   Alan M. Allgeier, Emilio E. Bunel, Tiffany Correll, Mina
   Dilmeghani, Margaret Faul, Jacqueline Milne, Jerry Murry,
   Joseph F. Payack, Christopher Scardino, Bradley J. Shaw
   and Xiang Wang
   Amgen Inc., 1 Amgen Ctr Dr., Thousand Oaks, CA 91320
6  Large-Scale Synthesis of Thienobenzazepine Derivatives
   Using Two Efficient Metal Catalyzed Processes Telescoped:
   Nitro Reduction and Intramolecular Aminocarbonylation ....... 61
   William G. Holloway1,Kumiko Takeuchi1, Michael L.
   Prunier1 and Antonio Navarro2
   1Lilly Research Laboratories, Lilly Corporate Center,
   Indianapolis, IN 46285 
   2Lilly Research Laboratories, Lilly Technology 
   Center, Indianapolis, IN 46360
7  Manufacture and Application of Asymmetric Hydrogenation
   Catalysts ................................................... 69
   Lee T. Boulton1, Christopher J. Cobley, Ian C. Lennon,
   Graham A. Meek, Paul H. Moran, Céline Praquin2 and James
   A. Ramsden
   Dowpharma, Chirotech Technology Limited, 162 Cambridge
   Science Park, Milton Road, Cambridge, CB4 OGH, United
   Kingdom
   1Chemical Development, GSK Research and Development
   Limited, Medicines Research Centre, Gunnels Wood Road,
   Stevenage, Hertfordshire, SGI 2NY, United Kingdom
   2Pfizer Ltd, IPC 533, Ramsgate Road, Sandwich, Kent,
   CT 13 9NJ, United Kingdom
8  Hydrogenation of Nitro-Substituted Acetophenones ............ 79
   S. David Jackson, Rebecca McEwan and Ron R. Spence
   WestCHEM, Dept. of Chemistry, The University, Glasgow
   G12 8QQ, Scotland, UK
9  Tuning Selectivity through the Support in the
   Hydrogenation of Citral over Copper Catalysts ............... 87
   I.V. Deliy1,1.G. Danilova1, I.L. Simakova1, F. Zaccheria2,
   Nicoletta Ravasio2 and R. Psaro2
   1Boreskov Institute of Catalysis, Pr. Akademika
   Lavrentieva 5, 630090, Novosibirsk, Russia
   2CNR-ISTM and Dip. CIMA, University of Milano, via
   G.Venezian 21, 20133 Milano, Italy
10 Improved Activity of Catalysts for the Production of
   Hydroxylamine ............................................... 93
   Jaime R. Blanton1, Takuma Hara2, Konrad Moebus3 and
   Baoshu Chen3
   1Evonik Degussa Corporation, 5150 Gilbertsville Highway,
   Calvert City, KY 42029
   2Evonik Degussa Japan Co., Ltd., Tsukuba Minami Daiichi
   Kogyo Danchi, 21 Kasuminosato Ami-machi, Inashiki-gun, 
   Ibaraki-ken, Japan 300-0315
   3Evonik Degussa GmBH, Rodenbacher Chaussee 4, Hanau
   (Wolfgang), Germany 63457
11 A "Trans-Effect" in Carbon Double-Bond Hydrogenation ........ 99
   Arran S. Canning, S. David Jackson, Andrew Monaghan, 
   Ron R. Spence and Tristan Wright
   WestCHEM, Dept. of Chemistry, The University, Glasgow Gl
   2 8QQ, Scotland, UK
12 Detailed Kinetic Analysis Reveals the True Reaction
   Path: Catalytic Hydrogenation, Hydrolysis and 
   Isomerization of Lactose ................................... 103
   Tapio Salmi, Jyrki Kuusisto, Johan Wärnå and Jyri-Pekka
   Mikkola
   Åbo Akademi, Process Chemistry Centre, Laboratory of
   Industrial Chemistry, FI-20500 Åbo/Turku, Finland
13 Hydrogenation of α, β,-Unsaturated Aldehydes over Ir
   Catalysts Supported on Monolayers of Ti-Si and Nb-Si ....... 117
   J.J. Martínez1, H. Rojas1, G. Borda1 and P. Reyes2
   1Grupo de Catálisis (GC-UPTC) Universidad Pedagógica у
   Tecnológica de Colombia, Escuela de Química, Facultad de
   Ciencias. Av. Norte - Tunja, Colombia
   2Facultad de Química, Universidad de Concepción, 
   Chile. Concepción,  Casilla 160-C, Concepción, Chile
14 4,6-Diamino Resorcinol by Hydrogenation, a Case Study ...... 127
   Antal Tungier1, Zeno Trocsanyi2 and Laszlo Vida1
   1Budapest University of Technology and Economics,
   Department of Chemical and Environmental Process
   Engineering Budapest, 1111 Hungary, Budafoki ut 81
   2Repét Company, Petfurdo, Hungary 8105
15 Novel Hydrogenolysis Route to Perfluoroalkyl Ethane
   Thiols ..................................................... 135
   Stephen E. Jacobson1, Lloyd Abrams1, Glover Jones1, Lei
   Zhang1 and James F. White2
   1DuPont Company, Wilmington, DE 19880, Contribution #8847
   2Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland,
   WA 99352
16 New Insight into the Electrocatalytic Hydrogenation of
   Model Unsaturated Organic Compounds ........................ 149
   Jean Lessard1, Maja Obradović2 and Gregory Jerkiewicz2
   1Laboratoire de chimie et électrochimie organiques,
   Département de chimie, Université de Sherbrooke, 
   Sherbrooke, QC, Canada J1K 2R1
   2Department of Chemistry, Queen's University, Kingston,
   ON, Canada K7L 3N6
17 Catalytic Reductive Alkylation of Aromatic and Alkyl
   Amines and Diamines over Sulfided and Unsulfided Platinum
   Group Metals ............................................... 159
   Venu Amnaiatesan1, Jaime L. Morrow1 and Baoshu Chen2
   1Evonik Degussa Corporation, 5150 Gilbertsville Hwy,
   Calvert City, KY 42029
   2Evonik Degussa GmbH, Rodenbacher Chaussee 4, 63457
   Hanau-Wolfgang, Germany
18 Catalytic Synthesis of N,N-Dialkylglucamines ............... 167
   I.K. Meier, Mike E. Ford and R.J. Goddard
   Air Products and Chemicals, Inc., 7201 Hamilton Boulevard,
   Allentown, PA 18195
19 Simple Catalytic Synthesis of N,N'-Dialkyl-N,N'-di
   (l-deoxyglucityl) ethylenediamines, Sugar-Based Gemini
   Surfactants ................................................ 171
   Mike E. Ford, C.P. Kretz, К.R. Lassila, R.P. Underwood
   and I.K. Meier
   Air Products and Chemicals, Inc., 7201 Hamilton Boulevard,
   Allentown, PA 18195
20 Anchored Wilkinson's Catalyst: Comparison with the
   Homogeneous Catalyst and Supported Rhodium with Respect
   to Reaction Selectivity .................................... 175
   Setrak K. Tanielyan, Robert L. Augustine. Norman Marin
   and Gabriela Alvez
   Center for Applied Catalysis, Department of Chemistry and
   Biochemistry, Seton Hall University, South Orange,
   NJ 07079
21 Synthesis of New Ligands for the Preparation of Combined
   Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Catalysts .................... 185
   Catherine Pinel, Sébastien Noël, Ke Pan, Ciahong Luo and
   Laurent Djakovitch
   IRCELYON, Institut de recherches sur la catalyse et 
   l'environnement de Lyon, UMR 5256 - CNRS - Université de
   Lyon Bioresources upgrading and green chemistry,
   2 avenue Albert Einstein 69626 Villeurbanne Cedex, 
   France
22 Assessing Catalyst Homogeneity/Heterogeneity via
   Application of Insoluble Metal Scavengers: Application to
   Heck and Suzuki Reactions .................................. 193
   Christopher W. Jones and John M. Richardson
   School of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, Georgia
   Institute of Technology, 311 Ferst Dr., Atlanta, GA 30332
23 Unusual Isolated Pre-Catalyst Systems Using TaniaPhos/
   MandyPhos Ligands .......................................... 203
   Oliver Briel2, Angelino Doppiu1, Ralf Karch1, Christophe
   Le Ret2, Roland Winde1 and Andreas Rivas Nass1
   1Umicore AG & Co. KG, Strategic Research & Development,
   Rodenbacher Chaussee 4, D-63403 Hanau, Germany
   2Umicore AG & Co. KG, Precious Metals Chemistry,
   Rodenbacher Chaussee 4, D-63403 Hanau, Germany
24 New Developments in the Synthesis and Application of
   Chiral Phospholane Ligands ................................. 211
   Renat Kadvrov1 and John Tarabocchia2
   1EvonikDegussa GmbH, Rodenbacher Chaussee 4, 63457Hanau-
   Wolfgang, Germany
   2Evonik Degussa Corp., 379 Interpace Parkway,
   Parsippany, NJ 07054
25 New Concepts in Designing Ruthenium-Based Second
   Generation Olefin Metathesis Catalysts and Their
   Application ................................................ 217
   Renat Kadvrov1, Anna Rosiak1, John Tarabocchia2, Anna
   Szadkowska3, Michał Bieniek3 and Karol Grela3
   1EvonikDegussa GmbH, Rodenbacher Chaussee 4, 63457Hanau-
   Wolfgang, Germany
   2Evonik Degussa Corp., 379 Interpace Parkway, Parsippany,
   NJ 07054
   3Institute of Organic Chemistry, Polish Academy of
   Sciences, Kasprzaka 44/52, 01-224 Warsaw, Poland
26 Kinetic Implications Derived from Competitive Reactions:
   Buchwald-Hartwig Amination ................................. 223
   Antonio C. Ferretti1, Jinu S. Mathew2, Colin Brennan3 and
   Donna G. Blackmond11,2
   1Department of Chemical Engineering and
   2Department of Chemistry, Imperial College London
   SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom,
   3Process Studies Group, Syngenta, Huddersfield HD2
   IFF, United Kingdom
27 A Highly Active and Reusable Catalyst for Suzuki
   Couplings: BaCe1-xPdxO3-x (0 < x ≤ 0.1) .................... 233
   Xiaoying Ouyang1, Jun Li2,3, Ram Seshadri1,2,3 and
   Susannah L. Scott1,4
   1Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry,
   2Materials Department,
   3Materials Research Laboratory, and
   4Department of Chemical Engineering University of 
   California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106
28 Biphasic Hydroformylation of Higher Olefins ................ 243
   Steven D. Pietz, Claire M. Ohman, Trudy A. Scholten,
   Steven Gebhard and Girish Srinivas
   TDA Research, Inc., 12345 W. 52nd Ave., Wheat Ridge, CO
   80033
29 Hydroformylation of 1-Butene on Rh Catalyst ................ 253
   Andreas Bernas1, Johan Ahlkvist1, Johan Wärnå1, Päivi
   Mäki-Arvela1, Juha Lehtonen2, Tapio Salmi1 and Dmitry Yu
   Murzin1
   1Åbo Akademi, Process Chemistry Centre, Laboratory of
   Industrial Chemistry, FI-20500 Åbo/Turku, Finland
   2Perstorp Oy, Technology Centre, P.O. Box 350, Fl-0610
   1 Borgå/Porvoo, Finland
30 Innovative One-Pot Oxidation Method for the Synthesis
   of Bioproducts from Renewables ............................. 263
   Pierre Gallezot and Alexander B. Sorokin
   Institut de recherches sur la catalyse et l'environnement
   de Lyon 2, avenue Albert Einstein, 69626 Villeurbanne,
   France
31 A Process for the Production of Biodiesel from Non-
   Conventional Sources ....................................... 271
   Paolo Bondioli1, Laura Delia Bella1, Nicoletta Ravasio2
   and Federica Zaccheria2
   1Stazione Sperimentale OH e Grassi, via G. Colombo79,
   20133 Milano, Italy
   2CNR-ISTM and Dip. CIMA, University of Milano, via G.
   Venezian 21, 20133 Milano, Italy
32 Heterogeneous Catalyst and Process for the Production of
   Biodiesel from High Free-Fatty Acid-Containing
   Feedstocks ................................................. 279
   Rajiv Banavali1, Robert T. Hanlon1, Karel Jerabek2 and
   Alfred K. Schultz11 
   1Rohm and Haas Company, LLC, Spring House, PA 19477
   2Institute of Chemical Process
   Fundamentals, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic,
   Rozvojova 135, 165 02, Prague 6, Czech Republic
33 Sustainable Biodiesel Production by Catalytic Reactive
   Distillation ............................................... 291
   Anton A. Kiss and Gadi Rothenberg
   van't Hoff Institute for Molecular Sciences, University
   of Amsterdam, Nieuwe Achtergracht 166, 1018 WV Amsterdam,
   the Netherlands
34 New Catalysts for the Hydrogenolysis of Glycerol and
   Sugar Alcohols ............................................. 303
   Johnathan E. Holladav1, James F. White1, Thomas H.
   Peterson1,2, John G. Frye1, Aaron A. Oberg1, Lars
   Peerboom3, Dennis J. Miller3 and Alan H. Zacher1
   1Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, P.O. Box 999,
   Richland, WA 99352
   2The Dow Chemical Company, Midland, MI 48674
   3Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials
   Science, Michigan State University, East Lansing,
   MI 48824
35 Catalytic Hydrogenolysis of Glycerol ....................... 313
   Michèle Besson, Laurent Djakovitch, Pierre Gallezot,
   Catherine Pinel, Alain Salameh and Matevz Vospernik
   Institut de recherches sur la catalyse et
   l'environnement de Lyon, UMR 5256 - CNRS - Université de
   Lyon, 2 avenue Albert Einstein, 69626 Villeurbanne
   Cedex, France
36 Development of Commercially Viable Thermomorphic
   Catalysts for Controlled Free Radical Polymerization ....... 319
   Christina M. Older1. Soley Kristjansdottir1, Joachim
   C. Ritter1, Wilson Tam1 and Michael C. Grady2
   1DuPont Central Research & Development, Experimental
   Station, Wilmington, DE 19880
   1DuPont Performance Coatings, Marshall Laboratories,
   Philadelphia, PA 19146
37 Rhodium Catalyzed Carbonylation of Ethylene and Methanol
   in the Absence of Alkyl Halides Using Ionic Liquids ........ 329
   Joseph R. Zoeller, Mary K. Moore, Andrew J. Vetter,
   Ashley Quillen and Theresa Barnette
   Eastman Chemical Company, Research Laboratories, P.O.
   Box 1972, Kingsport, TN 37660
38 Preparation and Characterization of Supported Amine
   Catalysts .................................................. 339
   Brittni A. Scruggs1, Suzanna L. Kilgore1, Sarah L.
   Hruby2, Brent H. Shanks2 and Bert D. Chandler1
   1Department of Chemistry, Trinity University, San
   Antonio, TX 78212
   2Department of Chemical Engineering, Iowa State
   University, Ames, IA 50011
39 One-Pot Gas Phase Synthesis of 1,2-
   Methylenedioxybenzene ...................................... 345
   Dario F. Impalà1, Oreste Piccolo2 and Angelo Vaccari1
   1Dip. di Chimica Industriale e dei Materiali, ALMA MATER
   STUDIORUM-Università di Bologna, Viale Risorgimento 4,
   40136 BOLOGNA BO, Italy
   2Studio di consulenza scientifica (www.scsop.it) Via
   Bornò 5, 23896 SIRTORILC, Italy
40 The Gas-Phase Ammoxidation of n-Нехапе to Unsaturated
   C6 Dinitriles, Intermediates for Hexamethylenediamine
   Synthesis .................................................. 357
   Nicola Ballarini1, Andrea Battisti1, Alessandro
   Castelli1, Fabrizio Cavani1, Carlo Lucarelli1, Philippe
   Marion2, Paolo Righi3 and Cristian Spadoni1
   1Dipartimento di Chimica Industriale e dei Materiali,
   Università di Bologna, Viale Risorgimento 4, 40136
   Bologna, Italy. INSTM, Research Unit of Bologna:
   a Partner of NoE Idecat, FP6 of the EU
   2Rhodia Operations, Centre de Recherches et Technologies,
   85, Rue des Frères Perret 69190 Saint Fons, France:
   a Partner of NoE Idecat, FP6 of the EU 
   3Dipartimento di Chimica Organica A. Mangini, Università
   di Bologna, Viale Risorgimento 4, 40136 Bologna, Italy
41 TUD-1: A Generalized Mesoporous Catalyst Family for
   Industrial Applications .................................... 367
   Philip J. Angevine1, Anne M. Gaffney1, Zhiping Shan2,
   Jan H. Koegler1 and Chuen Y. Yeh1
   1Lummus Technology, 1515 Broad Street, Bloomfield, NJ
   07003
   2Huntsman Chemical, 8600 Gosling Road, The Woodlands,
   Houston, TX 77381
42 Bifunctional Catalysis of Alkene Isomerization and Its
   Applications ............................................... 379
   Douglas B. Grotiahn, Casey Larsen, Gulin Erdogan, Jeffery
   Gustafson, Abhinandini Sharma and Reji Nair
   Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, San Diego State
   University, 5500 Campanile Drive, San Diego, CA 
   92182-1030
43 Investigation of Deactivation of Co-Salen Catalysts in
   the Hydrolytic Kinetic Resolution of Epichlorohydrin ....... 389
   Surbhi Jain1, Xiaolai Zheng2, Krishnan Venkatasubbaiah3,
   Christopher W. Jones3, Marcus Week4 and Robert J. Davis1
   1Chemical Engineering Department, University of Virginia,
   Charlottesville, VA 22904
   2School of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Georgia Institute
   of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332
   3School of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, Georgia
   Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332
   4Molecular Design Institute and Department of Chemistry,
   New York University, New York, NY 10003
44 A Comparison of the Reaction Mechanism for the Gas-Phase
   Methylation of Phenol with Methanol Catalyzed by Acid and
   by Basic Catalysts ......................................... 399
   Nicola Ballarini, Fabrizio Cavani, Stefania Guidetti,
   Luca Maselli, Ambra Montaletti, Sauro Passeri and Sara
   Rovinetti
   Dipartimento di Chimica Industriale e dei Materiali,
   Università di Bologna, Viale Risorgimento 4, 40136
   Bologna, Italy. INSTM, Research Unit of Bologna
45 In Situ ATR Study of Photocatalytic Dehydrogenation of
   Alcohols on Au and Pd Catalysts ............................ 405
   Duane D. Miller and Steven S.C. Chuang
   Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, The University of
   Akron, Akron, OH 44325-3906
46 Novel Hydride Transfer Catalysis for Carbohydrate
   Conversions ................................................ 411
   Johnathan E. Holladay, Heather M. Brown, Aaron M. Appel
   and Z. Conrad Zhang
   Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Institute for 
   Interfacial Catalysis, P.O. Box 999, Richland, WA 99352
47 A Reasonable Parallel Screening System for Catalytic
   Multiphase Processes ....................................... 419
   T. Salmi, D. Murzin, Kari Eränen, P. Mäki-Arvela,
   J. Wärnå, N. Kumar, J. Villegas and K. Arve
   Åbo Akademi, Process Chemistry Centre, Laboratory of
   Industrial Chemistry, FI-20500 Åbo/Тurku, Finland
48 "Green" Acylation of Aromatic Sulfonamides in
   Heterogeneous Catalysis .................................... 425
   Simona M. Coman1, Cristina Stere1, Jamal El Haskouri2,
   Danie1 Beitrán2, Pedro Amorós2 and Vasile I. Parvulescu1
   1University of Bucharest, Faculty of Chemistry,
   Department of Chemical Technology and Catalysis, Bdul
   Regina Elisabeta 4-12, 030016 Bucharest, Romania
   2Institut de Ciencia dels Material, Universitàt de
   Valencia, Valencia E46071, Spain
49 Synthesis of α, β-Unsaturated Ketones ...................... 435
   Lina M. Gonzalez1, Aida L. Villa2, Consuelo Montes de
   С.1 and Alexander B. Sorokin1
   1Environmental Catalysis Research Group, Universidad de
   Antioquia-CENIVAM, AA 1226, Colombia
   2IRCELYON-CNRS, 69626 Villeurbanne-Cedex, France
50 Reaction Progress Kinetic Analysis: A Powerful
   Methodology for Streamlining Mechanistic Analysis of
   Complex Organic Reactions .................................. 445
   Natalia Zotova2, Fernando Valera2 and Donna G.
   Blackmond1,2
   1Department of Chemistry
   2Department of Chemical Engineering and Chemical
   Technology Imperial College, London SW7 2AZ United 
   Kingdom
51 Dinuclear Copper(II) Complexes for Regioselective
   Glycoside Oxidation ........................................ 455
   Susanne Striegler
   Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Auburn
   University, 179 Chemistry Building, Auburn, AL 36849
52 Photocatalytic Oxidation of Alcohols on Pt/TiO2 and
   Nafion-Coated ТiO2 ......................................... 463
   Felipe Guzman, Zhiqiang Yu and Steven S.C. Chuang
   Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering,
   The University of Akron, 200 E Buchtel Commons, Akron,
   OH 44325
53 Enhanced Catalytic Oxidation Activity of a Dinuclear
   Catalyst Using Water as a Co-Solvent ....................... 473
   Moses G. Gichinga and Susanne Striegler
   Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Auburn
   University, 179 Chemistry Building, Auburn, AL 36849
54 Effect of the Oxidizing Agent and Catalyst Chirality on
   the Diastereoselective Epoxidation of R-(+)-Limonene ....... 479
   Jairo A. Cubillos, Juliana Reyes, Aída L. Villa and
   Consuelo Montes de С Environmental Catalysis Research
   Group, Universidad de Antioquia-CENIVAM, AA 1226,
   Medellin, Colombia
55 The Dynamic Nature of Vanadyl Pyrophosphate, Catalyst for
   the Selective Oxidation of n-Butane to Maleic Anhydride .... 485
   Nicola Ballarini1, Fabrizio Cavani1, Elisa Degli
   Esposti1, Davide De Santi1, Silvia Luciani1, Ferruccio
   Trifirò1, Carlotta Cortelli2, Roberto Leanza2, Gianluca
   Mazzoni2, Angelika Brückner3 and Elisabeth Bordes-
   Richard4
   1Dipartimento di Chimica Industriale e dei Materiali,
   Università di Bologna, Viale Risorgimento 4, 40136
   Bologna, Italy. INSTM, Research Unit of Bologna: 
   a Partner of NoE Idecat, FP6 of the EU
   2Polynt SpA, Via E. Fermi 51, 24020 Scanzorosciate (BG),
   Italy
   3Leibniz-lnstitut für Katalyse an der Universität
   Rostock е. V, Branch Berlin, P.O. Box 96 11 56,
   D-12474 Berlin, Germany: a Partner of NoE Idecat, FP6
   of EU
   4Unité de Catalyse et de Chimie du Solide, UMR CNRS
   8181, Université des Sciences et Technologies de Lille,
   59655 Villeneuve d'Ascq Cedex, France: a Partner of NoE
   Idecat, FP6 of the EU
56 A Five-Week Teaching Laboratory at Wabash College
   Introduces Students to Independent, Original Research in
   the Field of Asymmetric Organocatalysis .................... 491
   Paul R. LePlae, Andrew C. Oehler and Colin M. Ridenour
   Department of Chemistry, Wabash College, 301 W. Wabash
   Avenue, Crawfordsville, IN 47933
57 2008 Murray Raney Award Lecture: The Scientific Design
   of Activated Nickel Catalysts for the Chemical Industry .... 497
   Daniel J. Ostgard
   Evonik Industries GmbH, Rodenbacher Chaussee 4, 63457
   Hanau, Germany

Author Index .................................................. 537
Keyword Index ................................................. 543
Note: The underlined authors signify those who were
presenters at the conference.


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