Speaker: Professor Tianning DIAO

Institution: Associate Professor, Department of Chemistry, New York University, USA

Hosted By: Professor Yong HUANG

Zoom Link: https://hkust.zoom.us/j/99500106408?pwd=ODdOREh5ZGgzbVlqL2xQUTRGQ0VJdz09 

 

Abstract of the talk

Reactions involving organic radical intermediates have been traditionally regarded as overly reactive and unselective. Nickel complexes can reversibly coordinate to radicals, and thus modulate the reactivity and control the selectivity of reactions involving radical intermediates. Our research answers fundamental questions, such as "how do nickel complexes initiate radical formation from various precursors", "how do radicals interact with nickel complexes", and "How do ligands serve to stabilize open-shell intermediates and facilitate catalytic reactions?" Mechanistic insight has informed us in the development of a new glycosyl radical precursor for the syntheses of C-glycosides, including nucleoside analogues crucial for drug discovery and chemical biology studies.

 

Short Biography

Prof. Tianning Diao is an Associate Professor of Chemistry. She received her Ph.D. in Chemistry from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 2012 and conducted postdoctoral research at Princeton University from 2012 to 2014. Since joining the faculty of NYU in 2014, she has focused on understanding the mechanism of nickel-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions and developing new methods to address challenges in organic synthesis of sustainable energy conversion. Diao is a recipient of the NSF-CAREER award (2016), Sloan Research Fellowship (2018) Chinese-American Chemistry Professors Association Distinguished Junior Faculty Award (2018), Organometallics Distinguished Author Award (2018), Camille-Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award (2019), and Thieme Chemistry Journal Award (2019).

15 Dec 2021
9:00am - 11:00am
Where
Online
Speakers/Performers
Organizer(S)
Department of Chemistry
Contact/Enquiries
chivy@ust.hk
Payment Details
Audience
PG students, Faculty and staff
Language(s)
English
Other Events
24 Mar 2025
Seminar, Lecture, Talk
IAS / School of Science Joint Lecture - Pushing the Limit of Nonlinear Vibrational Spectroscopy for Molecular Surfaces/Interfaces Studies
Abstract Surfaces and interfaces are ubiquitous in Nature. Sum-frequency generation vibrational spectroscopy (SFG-VS) is a powerful surface/interface selective and sub-monolayer sensitive spect...
22 Nov 2024
Seminar, Lecture, Talk
IAS / School of Science Joint Lecture - Leveraging Protein Dynamics Memory with Machine Learning to Advance Drug Design: From Antibiotics to Targeted Protein Degradation
Abstract Protein dynamics are fundamental to protein function and encode complex biomolecular mechanisms. Although Markov state models have made it possible to capture long-timescale protein co...