Department of Chemistry
Willamette University
900 State Street
Salem, Oregon 97301
503-370-6013 voice
503-375-5425 fax
Development of chiral organic catalysts derived from 2-amino sugars: simple compounds for tricky tasks.
Ring-closing metathesis reactions of allenes: developing new methods for making synthetically challenging large-ring molecules.
Instrumental methods for environmental analysis. For example, UV-visible spectroscopy for measurement of pH.
Metal ions in the environment, particularly interactions with living organisms and phytoremediation.
Analysis of antioxidants in wine.
Ligand exchange reactions of Ru(II) and Ru(III) anti-cancer drugs using infrared spectroelectrochemistry.
X-ray spectroscopic determination of electron distribution in Ru-Cl bonds in ruthenium-based anti-cancer drugs and their derivatives.
Kinetics of short-lived intermediates generated by laser flash photolysis of metal nitrosyl and carbonyl complexes (in collaboration with Prof. Williamson).
Binding and cleavage studies of metal complexes with tRNA (in collaboration with Prof. Kirk).
The effect of steric, through-bond and through-space chlorine-chlorine interactions on the conformational stability of molecules and stereochemical outcomes of reactions.
The factors that influence the formation, structure and fate of the oxaphosphetane intermediate in the Wittig reaction.
The role of chlorine-substituted dienophiles and dienes on the stereochemistry of the Diels-Alder adduct.
The application of Spartan, a molecular mechanical and quantum chemical calculations program, to the theoretical study of reactions under kinetic and thermodynamic control.
Design and synthesis of novel pharmaceuticals utilizing amino acid-aminoglycoside scaffolds.
Investigation of the binding betewen novel molecules and nucleic acid via fluorescence spectroscopy.
Define essential elements within novel molecules that dictate nucleic acid specificity.
Photochemistry of sunscreens: Do sunscreen components really protect against photo-induced free radical production?
Raman spectroelectrochemical investigations of Ru(II) and Ru(III) anti-cancer compounds, (in collaboration with Professor Holman)