All tracks begin with intensive summer course work in the area of study. To complete the master's degree, students in this track will also need to complete 30 internship credits and an additional 12 credits of course work. An overview of credits and requirements can be found on the Overview page of this website.

Summer Course Outline

The University of Oregon Summer Organic Synthesis & Organometallics Program is an intensive course of study designed to introduce students to advanced concepts, reactions, and techniques in contemporary organic chemistry. Students will study important organic reactions, in formal coursework and by performing representative examples of them in the laboratory. As part of their training, students will learn essential concepts and skills to be fully effective in the organic laboratory.

The summer Organic Synthesis & Organometallics program contains three intensive courses (12 credits) starting in late June and finishing in early September.

Organometallics in Organic Synthesis

The course begins with an historical perspective and moves quickly into the heart of organometallics in organic synthesis. The fundamentals of organotransition metal chemistry are elucidated before moving into the elementary organometallic reactions. Simple catalytic cycles are then introduced and discussed in depth. Finally, all this is brought together in applications to organic synthesis.

Synthetically Important Organic Reactions

Each day will start off with a lecture describing important aspects of the reaction of the day. Usually there will be several different methods to accomplish each type of reaction. The different methods will be compared in lecture. In the lab that follows the lecture, students will break up into small teams. Each team will run one or more reactions, with different teams running different reactions. Subsequently, the results of the different teams and the different reactions will be presented, discussed and compared.

Advanced Organic Synthesis

Focus is on multi-step synthesis of diverse target molecules. Projects are driven by the needs of our industrial partners and may include synthesis of the following types of molecules:

  • chiral ligands for use in asymmetric catalysis
  • dendrimers
  • liquid crystals
  • fluorescent molecules
  • molecular switches
  • natural products
  • molecules with nonlinear optical properties
  • pharmaceuticals
  • new specialized ligands for improved cross coupling reactions
  • molecules that can be used to make sensors
  • molecules that self-assemble to form supramolecular structures

The courses and labs have been designed to not only teach the fundamentals, but also to introduce and instill soft skills such as teamwork, problem solving and communicating (orally and in writing) that are so critical to succeed in any industrial environment.


Faculty

Michael M. Haley, UO Department of Chemistry: B.A., Rice University, 1987. Ph.D., Rice University, 1991 (W. Edward Billups). Postdoctoral: University of California, Berkeley, 1991-93 (K. Peter C. Vollhardt). At Oregon since 1993.

Shih-Yuan Liu, UO Department of Chemistry: 1st Diploma, Vienna University of Technology, 1997. Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2003 (Gregory C. Fu). Postdoctoral: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2003-06 (Daniel G. Nocera). At Oregon since 2006.

 

 

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