Good Vibes for Catalytic Chemistry

A Way to Make Better Catalysts for Meds, Industry and Materials.

Written byUniversity of Utah
| 4 min read
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March 12, 2014 – University of Utah chemists discovered how vibrations in chemical bonds can be used to predict chemical reactions and thus design better catalysts to speed reactions that make medicines, industrial products and new materials.

“The vibrations alone are not adequate, but combined with other classical techniques in physical organic chemistry, we are able to predict how reactions can occur,” says chemistry professor Matt Sigman, senior author of the study in the Thursday, March 13, issue of the journal Nature.

“This should be applicable in a broad range of reactions. It streamlines the process of designing molecules for uses in new drugs, industrial chemicals and new materials.”

Catalysts are chemicals that speed reactions between other chemicals without changing the catalyst itself.

Postdoctoral researcher Anat Milo, the study’s first author, says use of the new method “can assist the design of reactions with fewer byproducts and much less waste, and the reactions would be more efficient. We are able to directly form the product we want.”

She and Sigman conducted the study with Elizabeth Bess, a University of Utah Ph.D. student in chemistry. The research was funded by the National Science Foundation.

Shining Infrared Light on Bond Vibrations

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