Litcius/Paper detail

Digitizing Chemical Synthesis in 3D Printed Reactionware

Andrius Bubliauskas, Daniel J. Blair, Henry powell-Davies, Philip J. Kitson, Martin D. Burke, Leroy Cronin

2022Angewandte Chemie International Edition33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chemistry digitization requires an unambiguous link between experiments and the code used to generate the experimental conditions and outcomes, yet this process is not standardized, limiting the portability of any chemical code. What is needed is a universal approach to aid this process using a well-defined standard that is composed of syntheses that are employed in modular hardware. Herein we present a new approach to the digitization of organic synthesis that combines process chemistry principles with 3D printed reactionware. This approach outlines the process for transforming unit operations into digitized hardware and well-defined instructions that ensure effective synthesis. To demonstrate this, we outline the process for digitizing 3 MIDA boronate building blocks, an ester hydrolysis, a Wittig olefination, a Suzuki-Miyaura coupling reaction, and synthesis of the drug sulfanilamide.

Topics & Concepts

Software portabilityDigitizationComputer scienceProcess (computing)LimitingModular designCombinatorial chemistryCode (set theory)Chemical synthesisChemistryProgramming languageSet (abstract data type)EngineeringTelecommunicationsMechanical engineeringIn vitroBiochemistryInnovative Microfluidic and Catalytic Techniques InnovationChemical Synthesis and AnalysisMachine Learning in Materials Science