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Hosted by the Dayton Section of the American Chemical Society T h e 4 1 s t C e n t r a l R e g i o n a l M e e t i n g o f t h e A m e r i c a n C h e m i c a l S o c i e t y D a y t o n , O h i o 1 6 1 9 J u n e 2 0 1 0 Chemistry: Chemistry: Chemistry: Reacting to Provide Reacting to Provide Reacting to Provide New Technologies New Technologies New Technologies

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Page 1: AFOSRdaytonacs.org/cermacs2010/program/ACS-CR_all.pdf · 2010-06-11 · Margaret Roach Theresa Huston Steve Trohalaki Ed Badger Future Central Regional ACS Meetings & General Chairs

Hosted by the Dayton Section of the American Chemical Society

The 41st Central Regional Meeting of the American Chemical Society

Dayton, Ohio 16–19 June 2010

Chemistry:Chemistry:Chemistry:Reacting to Provide Reacting to Provide Reacting to Provide New TechnologiesNew TechnologiesNew Technologies

CeRMACS-2010 Sponsors The Central Region and the Dayton Section of the American Chemical Soci-ety owe a debt of thanks to all CeRMACS-2010 sponsors. Without their gen-erosity and gracious support, this meeting would not have been possible.

Wright Materials Research

Air Force Research Laboratory

Dayton Section, Central Region, Cleveland Section.

ACS Division of Chemical Education

ACS Division of Polymer Chemistry

AFOSRAFOSRAFOSRAir Force Office of Scientific Research

SCHB ACS Division of Small Chemical Businesses

BIOL ACS Division of

Biological Chemistry

INOR ACS Division of

Inorganic Chemistry

46551 ACS-CR Cover_mp.indd 1 6/8/2010 11:55:25 AM

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46551 ACS-CR Cover_mp.indd 2 6/8/2010 11:55:25 AM

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Table of Contents

CeRMACS-2010 Organizing Committee ................................................ 1

Central Regional ACS Officers ............................................................. 1

Dayton Section ACS Executive Committee ............................................ 2

Patterson-Crane Award Committees .................................................... 2

Future Central Regional ACS Meetings ................................................. 2

Welcome Letter from the CeRMACS-2010 Organizing Committee ............. 3

Welcome Letter from the Mayor of Dayton ............................................ 4

Dayton Mayor’s Proclamation .............................................................. 5

CeRMACS-2010 Sponsors ................................................................... 6

Special Events .................................................................................. 7

Workshops ....................................................................................... 7

Patterson-Crane Award ...................................................................... 8

Central Regional Awards .................................................................... 9

Exposition ....................................................................................... 10

Literature Tables .............................................................................. 12

Plenary Lectures .............................................................................. 13

Meeting Matrix................................................................................. 16

Technical Program ........................................................................... 19

Author Index ...................................................................................75

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Dayton Convention Center Floor Plan First Floor

Second Floor

Third Floor

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CeRMACS-2010 Organizing Committee

General Chair: Barry Farmer

Program Chairs: James Gord David Johnson Loon-Seng Tan

Treasurer: Larry Drummy

Webmaster: Hilmar Koerner

Printing & Publicity: Steve Trohalaki

Exhibits Chairs: Pamela Lloyd Kristi Singh

Special Events: Wendy Goodson Joy Haley Lisa Denny

Fundraising: Rajiv Berry Peter Mirau

Housing: Todd Yeates

Awards Committee: Suzanne Lunsford Todd Yeates Rachel Jakubiak Aaron Sellinger John Emanuele

Central Regional ACS Officers

Chair: Daniel A. Scherson

Past Chair: James A. Cowan

Chair-Elect: Barry Farmer

Secretary: Roger Parker

Treasurer: Roger Parker

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Dayton Section ACS Executive Committee

Chair: Hilmar Koerner

Past Chair: Todd Yeates

Chair-Elect: Vladimir Benin

Secretary: Jim Carey

Treasurer: Aaron Sellinger

Councilor: Steve Trohalaki

Alt. Councilor: Rachel Jakubiak

Patterson-Crane Award Committees

Dayton Section Columbus Section

Ray Dudek (Chair) Steve Rosenthal (Chair)

Margaret Roach Theresa Huston

Steve Trohalaki Ed Badger

Future Central Regional ACS Meetings & General Chairs

Year Host Section General Chair, Affiliation

2011 Indiana Jeannie R. Phillips, Dow AgroSciences

2012 Detroit Mark Bevenuto, Detroit Mercy, Chemistry Dept.

2013 Midland Philip J. Squattrito, Central Michigan Univ.

2014 Pittsburgh Christina Mastromatteo, PPG Industries Inc.

2019 Midland General Chair to be named

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American Chemical Society Central Region Dayton Section

Welcome to Dayton and to the 2010 Central Regional Meeting of the Ameri-can Chemical Society. We hope you will have a productive and informative meeting. We are excited to have the outstanding plenary speakers, the exceptional invited speakers, the many very timely focused symposia, and that wide array of general papers and posters the Program Chairs have been able to include in the program. Please take the time to visit the booths in the Exposition – the exhibitors offer products that should be of interest to you and they play a key role in the financial health of a regional meeting. In addition to the technical components of the meeting, we also urge you to participate in the other activities we have planned to give you time to socialize, network, and have fun.

Organizing an ACS Regional meeting is a big undertaking, especially for a group of volunteer, amateur organizers. It could not have succeeded with-out the assistance of the ACS Regional Meetings Department, in particular Beverly Johnson, who brought her professional insights to bear when needed, and helped us (and ACS) through the birthing pains of a new ab-stract submission system (PACS) recently adopted by ACS. During the month of May, painful shrieks from unanticipated PACS spasms could be heard in Washington, DC all the way from Dayton.

We gratefully acknowledge the financial support for the meeting from the Air Force Research Laboratory’s Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, and Air Force Office of Scientific Research; UES; Wright Materials Re-search; ACS Immediate Past President, Thomas H. Lane, and the Dow Corning Foundation; Proctor & Gamble; Stipkala, LLC; Spectral Energies; and Delong America, Inc. as well as the support provided for individual symposia. Finally, we greatly appreciate the financial support from many components of the American Chemical Society: the ACS Central Region; the ACS Dayton Section; The ACS Cleveland Section; the ACS Divisions of Polymer Chemistry; Biological Chemistry; Analytical Chemistry; Inorganic Chemistry; Small Chemical Businesses; Chemical Education; and Com-puters in Chemistry.

The CeRAMCS-2010 organizers and the Dayton Section wish you a fruitful and enjoyable meeting.

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Sponsors of Programs, Events, and General Support

Platinum Sponsors - $10,000 or more Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory

Gold Sponsors - $5,000 to $9,999 ACS Immediate Past President, Thomas H. Lane, and the Dow Corning

Foundation Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Air Force Research Laboratory UES, Inc.

Silver Sponsors - $1,000 to $4,999 Wright Materials Research Company Central Region of the ACS Proctor & Gamble Dayton Section of the ACS ACS Division of Computers in Chemistry ACS Division of Inorganic Chemistry ACS Division of Analytical Chemistry ACS Division of Chemical Education Stipkala, LLC Spectral Energies

Bronze - Less than $1,000 ACS Division of Polymer Chemistry ACS Division of Biological Chemistry ACS Division of Small Chemical Businesses Cleveland Section of the ACS Delong America, Inc. American Elements

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Special Events and Workshops Wednesday, 16 June

5:20 PM Theater (312) Central Region, High School Student Chemistry, and Patterson-Crane Awards

5:40 PM Theater (312) Patterson-Crane Award Address: The Fifty Years of Chemoinformatics, by Prof. Peter Willet, Uni-versity of Sheffield, UK

6:10 PM Theater Lobby Welcome Reception (ticket required)

Thursday, 17 June

7:30 AM Governance Breakfast Room 306 (ticket required)

6:00 PM Boonshoft Museum Chemipalooza (ticket required)

Friday, 18 June

7:00 PM Fifth-Third Field Dayton Dragons Baseball (ticket required)

Workshops

Wednesday, 16 June

9:00 AM—Noon Room 307 ACS Career Workshop I

Planning Your Job Search: 8:00 AM – 9:30 AM

Preparing a Resume: 9:30 AM – 11:00 AM

Effective Interviewing: 11:00 AM – noon

1:00—5:00 PM Room 307 ACS Career Workshop II

Personal Resume Review, by appointment at registration desk

Thursday, 17 June

1:00—5:00 PM Room 208 ACS Leadership Workshop: Leading Without Authority

Saturday, 19 June

9 AM—5 PM Rms 307-9 High School Teacher Workshops

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Prof. Peter Willett, University of Sheffield, UK Winner of the 2010 Patterson-Crane Award

Fifty Years of Chemoinformatics Chemoinformatics is the name given to that part of chemistry that relates to the computational processing of chemical information, in particular informa-tion about the 2D and 3D structures of molecules [1]. The term itself only started to be used at the end of the last century, but many of its constituent techniques have been under active development for many years. This talk will provide a brief introduction to the subject for those to whom it is unfamil-iar before giving an historical overview of its development since its genesis in studies of methods for searching databases and predicting biological proper-ties that took place in the late Fifties and early Sixties [2].

The following areas will be mentioned: substructure and similarity searching in files of 2D chemical structures; the representation and searching of chemical reactions and of the ge-neric (or Markush) structures that characterise many chemical patents; applications of artifi-cial intelligence research in chemoinformatics, these including computer-aided synthesis de-sign systems that support a chemist when carrying out a difficult synthesis and computer-aided structure elucidation systems that enable the identification of unknown molecules from spectral information; the automatic identification of pharmacophoric patterns, i.e., the ar-rangement of functionality in 3D space that is responsible for biological activity; the search-ing of such patterns in databases of 3D chemical structures; protein-ligand docking, where one seeks to fit a putative ligand into a protein’s binding site in much the same way as one might try to fit a key into a lock; QSAR methods such as Hansch analysis and Free-Wilson analysis, which correlate biological activity with physicochemical properties and with descrip-tors encoding substituents on rings, and Comparative Molecular Field Analysis (CoMFA), which correlates activity with steric and electrostatic fields in 3D space; and recent work on molecular diversity analysis, in which one seeks to maximise the degree of structural varia-tion in sets of molecules that are being considered for biological testing. Current key areas of research include: the prediction of the ADME and toxicity properties of molecules; and studies of a range of methods for virtual screening, i.e., the ranking of molecules in order of decreasing probability of activity.

1. W.L. Chen (2006). “Chemoinformatics: past, present and future” Journal of Chemical In-formation and Modeling, 46, 2230-2255

2. P. Willett (2008). “From chemical documentation to chemoinformatics: fifty years of chemical information science.” Journal of Information Science, 34, 477-499

The Patterson-Crane Award

The Dayton and Columbus, Ohio Sections of the American Chemical Society sponsor the Patterson-Crane Award for contributions to chemical information. It is international in scope and given in honor of two outstanding members of the Sections - Austin M. Patterson (1876-1956) and E.J. Crane (1889-1966).

The biennial award consists of a $2,000 honorarium and a personalized commendation. The award is funded by a bequest of the Patterson family to the Dayton Section, by the Helen G. Crane Fund of the Columbus Foundation, and by the Patterson-Crane Award Fund of the Columbus Section.

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The ACS Division of Chemical Education Central Region Award

for Excellence in High School Teaching

This year’s winner is Bridgette Sparks from Saline High School, Saline, Michigan.

Bridgette Sparks grew up in San Diego, California, and moved to the Bay Area when she was 17. In 1994, she obtained her B.A. in Biochemistry from Mills College in Oakland, California. Bridgette earned her M.A. in Education from the University of California, Berkley in 1998. Upon graduating, she moved to the Midwest and taught at Cleveland Public schools for two years before moving to Ann Arbor to coach for the Univer-sity of Michigan's rowing team. After two years of coaching she re-turned to teaching; she started at Saline Area Schools in 2001. She currently teaches Honor's Chemistry, General Chemistry, and AP Chemistry as well as serving on the Saline Crew Team's Board as a Recruiting and Alumni Relations Director. Ms. Sparks has acted as a consultant for chemistry-related Science Olympiad Events and the Chemistry Olympiad. During her tenure at Saline Schools she also served on district-wide curriculum teams, acted as a class advisor, started a rowing team, and organized high school student science presentations to elementary school classes.

Bridgette Sparks sees parallels between teaching and coaching: “The experiences in the classroom, coaching on the field, and participating in the education system as a student, have shaped who I am as an educator today. Reflection, goal setting, con-sistent and clear feedback, clear communication, and a firm grasp of content are the essentials of good learning and teaching practice. Helping students determine their learning styles and how to teach themselves to be better learners is the foundation of my teaching philosophy. Goal setting, developing action plans, clear feedback, and communication are the hallmarks of good coaching and good teaching.”

The E. Ann Nalley Regional Award for Volunteer Service to the ACS Steve Trohalaki is the winner of the E. Ann Nalley Central Regional Award for Volunteer Ser-vice to the American Chemical Society. Steve has served the Dayton Section in a variety of roles since 1994, including Councilor, Alternate Councilor, Bulletin Editor, National Chemistry Week Coordinator, and as Chair of numerous committees. Why Steve is so pervasive in the everyday operation of the Dayton Section is no secret. As one former member of the Execu-tive Committee said, “Whatever anyone does, it’s never done to Steve’s satisfaction, and he wields sarcasm like a knife.” A Past Chair added, “Section volunteers have fled like rats on a sinking ship in response to his obnoxious comments.” A former Committee Chair, ventured, “I wouldn’t call him a jerk or anything; he’s a vindictive SOB and he just might find out I said it.” Steve’s jerkitude is surpassed only by his vanity. He wouldn’t even permit the printing of a current photo, choosing instead one from his second postdoc, as if that will somehow alleviate his balding pate and burgeoning girth. Congratulations, Steve. Now, take your award and do us a favor — go home!

Bridgette Sparks with her favorite future chemist.

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ExpositionRoom 103. Wed: noon–5 PM; Thurs: 9 AM–1 PM and 2–5 PM; Friday: 9 AM–noon

Delong America, Inc. Delong America's LVEM5 electron microscope is built on a revolutionary technology platform that al-lows for rapid multi-modal imaging and benchtop convenience. The LVEM5 can image in up to 4 modes (TEM, STEM, SEM, and electron diffraction). It is remarkably easy for anyone to learn and op-erate. Rapid sample exchange significantly increases throughput, making the LVEM5 an effective screening tool to reduce the load on overworked instruments. An added bonus of the LVEM5 is the ability to image soft materials, such as biological samples and polymers, without the use of heavy metal stains. Whether you observe polymers or nanoparticles, cellular complexes or nanoparticles, in-creasing contrast means improving results. Get to see what your samples really look like at the nano scale, easily and quickly, from your benchtop.

MeasureNet Technology MeasureNet brings Laboratory Information Management System (LIMS) functionality to the university teaching laboratory. MeasureNet’s network design provides high-quality data acquisition without the cost and maintenance of bench-cluttering, stand-alone PCs, while enabling live data monitoring and remote storage for collaborative exercises between multiple labs and multiple institutions. Each net-work supports up to 15 work stations for experiments that include temperature, pressure, pH, voltage, and mass measurements. A shared UV-vis spectrometer delivers 1-nm resolution spectroscopy to stu-dent workstations. Additional acquisition tools include a dual-beam colorimeter, ion-selective elec-trodes, and electrochemistry probeware. MeasureNet users can integrate GCs, HPLCs, and calorime-ters for advanced laboratory applications.

Oxford Instruments America, Inc.Oxford Instruments is the world’s leading supplier of analytical instruments for electron microscopy. We offer the widest range of detectors for EDS, WDS and EBSD applications all of which can be seam-lessly integrated. This includes the new range XMax silicon drift detectors which offer the largest area detectors available with no compromise of data quality. Our systems have been designed and built us-ing over 35 years of microanalysis experience together with valuable input from the people who use this equipment for real applications -our customers.

Biolin Scientific Biolin Scientific provides analytical instrumentation for the nanoscale analysis of surfaces, materials and interfaces for research, development, quality control and diagnostics. Within Biolin Scientific are the following brands, applications, technologies and instrumentation. Q-Sense provides analytical in-strumentation based on the patented QCM-D technology for rapid characterization of interfaces and studies of molecular interactions. KSV provides instrumentation for research on nanoscale films and molecular interactions including SPR, LB, ISR and PMI. Nima provides analytical and deposition LB in-struments for the fabrication of monolayers. Attension provides tensiometry instrumentation for meas-uring contact angle and surface tension to support interfacial science and materials development. Far-field provides analytical instrument systems based on its patented technology, Dual Polarization Inter-ferometry (DPI) to detect and monitor molecular changes occurring on a surface. For more informa-tion, please visit www.biolinscientific.com.

Pine Research Instrumentation If you need to introduce your students to modern electroanalytical chemistry in an easy and inexpen-sive way, then Pine’s WaveNow potentiostat and Instructional Three- Electrode Cell are exactly what you need! This potentiostat is a lightweight instrument with a USB interface. The instructional cell contains disposable, screen-printed electrodes. www.pineinst.com/echem .

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Exposition(continued)

Michigan Technological UniversityThe Tech MBA Online, from Michigan Technological University, gives you the same quality education of an on-campus program with the convenience and flexibility of distance learning. Our MBA, which fo-cuses on Innovation and Technology Management, is accredited with AACSB, http://www.mtu.edu/business/administration/dean/accredidation/, which places us in the top 15% of business schools in the world. You can have your MBA in just two short years. Our curriculum in-cludes a nine day residency in India, as part of your global education, as well as two short campus residencies. We also incorporate networking and professional development into this premium package. Our professors teach on campus and online as part of their regular teaching load. Our MBA is ranked 58th worldwide by Beyond Grey Pinstripes, an organization that evaluates how universities are prepar-ing MBA students for social, environmental, and ethical stewardship. Find our more about our program by attending an informational webinar. You can register at http://www.mtu.edu/business/mba-online/webinars.

TCI AmericaTCI is a leading global manufacturer and supplier of specialty chemicals to the pharmaceutical, elec-tronic, cosmetic, chemical, environmental and biotech industries. Drawing on over 80 years of syn-thetic organic chemistry experience, TCI is dedicated to developing new technology that produces rare and novel compounds. Our current catalog lists a comprehensive line of over 21,000 organic and bio-chemical products for use in research and production. Our manufacturing capabilities include multi step synthesis and continuous production from milligram to ton scale for custom and contract research services. Our modern facilities provide cGMP manufacturing with FDA validation. Please visit our web-site, http://www.tciamerica.com, today.

Air Force Research Laboratory, Materials & Manufacturing Directorate The Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, headquartered at Wright-Patterson, with an additional re-search facility at Tyndall AFB, FL, develops materials, processes and advanced manufacturing tech-nologies for aircraft, spacecraft, missiles, rockets and ground-based systems and their structural, elec-tronic and optical components. Their research includes revolutionary nano-scale and biotechnologies, as well as nonstructural materials such as coatings, fluids and greases. Air Force product centers, lo-gistics centers and operating commands rely on the directorate’s expertise in metallic and nonmetallic structural materials, nondestructive inspection, materials used in aerospace propulsion systems, sen-sor materials, laser-hardened materials, systems support and advanced manufacturing methods to solve system, expeditionary deployment, and operational challenges.

Vernier Software & Technology Stop by the Vernier Software & Technology booth to see some of our exciting new products for college chemistry. See our powerful new computer interface, LabQuest Mini. You can also try out our new, improved SpectroVis Plus array diode VIS-NIR spectrophotometer, with its improved resolution, wider range (380-950 nm), and new fluorometry support. You can also collect data on our popular new Vernier Mini GC. The Mini GC is smaller than a shoebox and can use room air as a carrier gas. You can collect, graph, and analyze the data on either a computer or our stand-alone LabQuest lab interface.

JULABO USA, Inc. JULABO has been recognized as a market leader and technological innovator in producing temperature control instruments. JULABO manufactures temperature regulating equipment ranging from -91 to +335°C. Our customers span the pharmaceutical, petroleum, and semi-conductor industries to food preparation, academic laboratories and many others. Over the last 43 years JULABO has continually introduced new technology in their products allowing for higher levels of performance without compli-cated operation. All JULABO products are manufactured under strict quality standards and carry a 2-year warranty. North American customers are supported from JULABO USA facilities in Allentown, PA and Vista, CA. To request additional information call 800-458-5226 or visit www.julabo.com.

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Literature Tables The Department of Chemistry at Illinois State University (www.chem.ilstu.edu) is one of the largest thesis-based terminal M.S. programs in the country, offering cutting-edge research and pre-mier facilities, a strong mentoring environment, and graduate teaching/research assistantships to qualified students.

The graduate program in Molecular Biophysics and Structural Biology (MBSB) at the University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University is an interdisciplinary program at the interfaces of Biology, Chemistry, Physics and other traditional disciplines. Molecular Biophysics aims to unravel and explain biological phenomena and processes in atomic and molecular detail.

Thermo Fisher Scientific, “The World Leader in Science”.David Catalano: 614-563-1666 (cell); [email protected] (e-mail) Customer Service: (866) 984-3766 (866-9-THERMO). Service: (800) 438-4851

With the theme, Cultivating Chemistry at the Crossroads of America, CeRMACS-2011 will be hosted by the Indiana Local Section and take place June 8-10 at the University Place Conference Cen-ter and Hotel, Indianapolis, Indiana. Come celebrate the International Year of Chemistry (IYC) in In-dianapolis! A comprehensive technical program is planned, including Plenary Sessions celebrating the IYC, a poster session, technical and career development workshops, and special events for high school teachers and undergraduate students.

The University of Dayton is a Catholic Marianist university on the south edge of downtown Dayton, Ohio, with a student body of approximately 8,000 undergraduate and 2,000 graduate students. The UD Chemistry Department has 11 faculty and approximately 80 undergraduate majors and 8 M.S. students. The department grants approximately 15 B.S. and B.A. and 4 M.S. degrees per year.

The Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, on the campus of Indiana University Pur-due University, Indianapolis (IUPUI), offers programs culminating in Ph.D. & M.S. graduate de-grees, an American Chemical Society-certified B.S. degree in Chemistry (with both chemistry and bio-chemistry options), pre-professional B.A. degrees, and an A.S. degree. Our goals are to carry out cut-ting edge research and to provide a stimulating and productive environment for the education of fu-ture scientists.

Left Coast Instruments offers a wide range of advanced instrumentation focused in two areas: (i) research microscopy, and (ii) failure analysis. Techniques we offer include: Ultra-Fast Confocal Raman Microscopy; Scanning Acoustic Microscopy (SAM); Photon Emission Microscopy (PEM), 3-D x-ray micro-tomography; real-time x-ray imaging; and a wide range of sample preparation equipment.

Members of the ACS Division of Chemical Education come from the entire educational spectrum (pre-secondary, secondary, two- and four-year colleges, universities, research institutions), and in-clude those from industry who are concerned about the education and professional training of future chemists and other molecular scientists. DivCHED provides a common ground for teachers and stu-dents of chemistry to examine chemical education in its broadest sense through its committee and governance structure, website, Newsletter, programs at national and regional ACS meetings, the ACS Exams Institute, the Biennial Conference on Chemical Education (BCCE), and the premier journal in its field, the Journal of Chemical Education.

CambridgeSoft is a leading provider of software and services for discovery, analysis and collabora-tion to life sciences and chemical industries, academia and government. Products include Cloud, Enter-prise, Workgroup and Desktop versions of Chem & Bio Office, including Chem & Bio Draw and E-Notebook, providing knowledge management, chemical and biological informatics, and scientific data-base solutions.

The Dayton International Peace Museum is a place where Daytonians and people across the Mi-ami Valley can find the arsenal of peace. Though many peace centers, institutes, and similar organiza-tions exist around world, Dayton’s burgeoning peace community can contribute exponentially to the worldwide peace-building movement. The Museum is not meant to compete with or supercede other groups and organizations. Its success will be based on how it encourages, supports, and supplements the already diverse and unwieldy spirit of peace that is underrated and unheard by many in our com-munity

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Plenary Lectures Presented in the Theater (3rd Floor) at 8 AM and 1 PM

The Changing Landscape of Human Performance - the Impact of Nanosciences and Bio-chemistry (Wednesday AM)

Dr. Morley O. Stone is Chief Scientist, 711th Human Performance Wing, Air Force Research Laboratory. Prior to this assignment, Dr. Stone was appointed Senior Scientist (ST), Molecular Sys-tems Biotechnology, Human Effectiveness Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL/RH) and Chair, Bio-X Strategic Technology Thrust (STT) for AFRL. Prior to this assignment, Morley was Chief, Hardened Materials Branch, Materials and Manufacturing Directorate (AFRL/RX). From 2003-2006, he was detailed as a Program Manager with the Defense Sciences Office of the Defense Advanced Re-search Projects Agency (DARPA/DSO). His Ph.D. in biochemistry is from Carnegie Mellon University and he worked in the biotechnology/materials science area for 17 years before entering the human performance area 3 years ago. In 2005, he was elected Fellow of AFRL and received Carnegie Mellon’s Alumni Merit Award. In 2006, he was awarded the OSD medal for Exceptional Civilian Service and 2007 elected Fellow of the International Society of Optical Engineering (SPIE).

Drug Discovery: Ingenuity or Serendipity? (Wednesday PM)

Professor Richard B. Silverman received his B.S. degree in chemistry from The Pennsylvania State University in 1968 and his Ph.D. degree in organic chemistry from Harvard University in 1974 (with time off for a two-year military obligation from 1969-1971). After two years as a NIH postdoc-toral fellow in the laboratory of the late Professor Robert Abeles in the Graduate Department of Bio-chemistry at Brandeis University, he joined the chemistry faculty at Northwestern University. In 1986 he became Professor of Chemistry and Professor of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, and Cell Biology. In 1996 he was named the Arthur Andersen Professor of Chemistry for a period of two years, in 2001 he became the Charles Deering McCormick Professor of Teaching Excellence for three years, and since 2004 he has been the John Evans Professor of Chemistry.

Awards include DuPont Young Faculty Fellow in 1976, Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow in 1981-1985, NIH Research Career Development Award 1982-1987, Fellow of the American Institute of Chemists in 1985, Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1990, Arthur C. Cope Senior Scholar Award of the American Chemical Society in 2003, Alumni Fellow Award from Pennsylvania State University in 2008, Medicinal Chemistry Hall of Fame of the American Chemical Society in 2009, and the Perkin Medal in 2009. He is the recipient of several teaching awards, includ-ing the E. LeRoy Hall Award for Teaching Excellence and the Excellence in Chemistry Education Award from the Northwestern University Chapter of Alpha Chi Sigma Chemistry Fraternity in 1999, the Northwestern University Alumni Teaching Award in 2000, and the Charles Deering McCormick Chair in Teaching Excellence in 2001.

Professor Silverman is the inventor of LyricaTM (pregabalin), marketed worldwide by Pfizer for refractory epilepsy, neuropathic pain, fibromyalgia, and (in Europe) for generalized anxiety disorder. He has published over 250 research articles, holds 41 domestic and foreign patents, and has written four books.

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Plenary Lectures (continued)

Nanotechnology and Energy (Thursday AM)

Dr. Wade Adams is the Director of the Richard E. Smalley Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology at Rice University. The Smalley Institute is devoted to the development of new innova-tions on the nanometer scale by coordinating and supporting nanoscience and nanoengineering re-search of over 150 faculty members. Some current thrusts include research in conventional and re-newable energy, carbon nanotubes, nanoporous membranes, molecular electronics and computing, and diagnostic and therapeutic medical applications of buckyballs and nanoshells. The Smalley Insti-tute is part of a major initiative at Rice to expand research activities in nano, bio, info and energy and environmental science and engineering.

Dr. Adams retired from the US Air Force senior executive ranks in January 2002, as the Chief Scientist of the Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Ohio. Dr. Adams was educated at the U.S. Air Force Academy, Van-derbilt University, and the University of Massachusetts.

For the past 40 years Dr. Adams has conducted research in polymer physics, concentrating on structure-property relations in high-performance organic materials. He is internationally known for his research in high-performance rigid-rod polymer fibers, X-ray scattering studies of fibers and liquid crystalline films, polymer dispersed liquid crystals, and theoretical studies of ultimate polymer proper-ties. He has written more than 200 publications on these topics, including several review articles and two edited books, has four patents (one licensed), and has given over 700 technical presentations. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and the Air Force Research Laboratory. Dr. Adams also retired from the Air Force Reserve in the rank of Colonel in 1998.

Innovative Technology Needs to Meet Air Force Operation Energy Requirements (Thurs. PM)

Mr. William (Bill) Harrison serves as the Technical Advisor for Fuels and Energy for the Pro-pulsion Directorate of the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson AFB Ohio and as the Act-ing Chief Scientist, Air Force Energy Policy, in the Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Energy, Environment, Safety and Occupational Health. He is an Air Force Research Labora-tory Fellow responsible for developing plans, strategy and technical recommendations related to fuels and energy programs for the Air Force in support of the Air Force Energy Strategy’s three pillars: to increase supply, reduce demand and change the culture. He chairs and/or serves on several inter-agency, DoD level, government/commercial and academic working groups related to alternative en-ergy, the environment, and propulsion.

Prior to his job as Technical Advisor, he served as Chief, Fuels Branch, Turbine Engine Division, Propulsion Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson, AFB Ohio for thirteen years, where he directed all the technical, financial, and administrative aspects of research and development of aerospace fuels for all Air Force airbreathing propulsion systems (turbine, ramjet, scramjet)and hy-drocarbon fueled rockets. He led basic research, exploratory development, and advanced develop-ment programs at the National Aerospace Fuels Research Complex (NAFRC) to develop advanced high heat sink fuels, improved low temperature fuels, reduced pollutant emissions fuels as well as related technologies including applications of bio technology, nano technology, development of advanced fuel diagnostic equipment, computational chemistry tools, advanced fuel system visualization, modeling and simulation techniques.

Page 19: AFOSRdaytonacs.org/cermacs2010/program/ACS-CR_all.pdf · 2010-06-11 · Margaret Roach Theresa Huston Steve Trohalaki Ed Badger Future Central Regional ACS Meetings & General Chairs

15

Plenary Lectures (continued)

Climate Change and Atmospheric Chemistry in the Arctic (Friday AM)

Prof. Paul Shepson was born and raised in Elmira, N.Y., a child of the Finger Lakes. He ob-tained a B.S. in Chemistry from State University of New York College at Cortland, and a Ph.D. in ana-lytical/atmospheric chemistry from Penn State. He worked for Mobil Oil Corp. (Paulsboro refinery) in 1982, before moving to a research position in the Atmospheric Sciences Research Laboratory at the U.S. EPA in Research Triangle Park, N.C., from 1983-1987. From 1987 – 1994 he was a Professor in the Chemistry Department at York University in Toronto, where he was also Director of the York Cen-tre for Atmospheric Chemistry, where he still holds an adjunct appointment. He has been a member of the Faculty at Purdue University since 1994, where he holds a split appointment between the De-partments of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, and Chemistry. He is currently Head of the Depart-ment of Chemistry, and was the founding Director of the Purdue Climate Change Research Center (PCCRC). Professor Shepson’s research group is interested in numerous problems in the field of at-mospheric chemistry, and analytical chemistry applied to atmospheric measurement problems. His group focuses on issues related to exchange of gases between the surface and the atmosphere in two very different environments – the Arctic, and mid-latitude forests. His research approaches involve building unusual platforms from which to study the atmosphere, including tethered balloons, and his groups aircraft, the Airborne Laboratory for Atmospheric Research. He is an avid pilot with instru-ment, commercial, and multi-engine ratings. Professor Shepson is keenly interested in understanding and communicating about the impacts of anthropogenic activities on the composition of the atmos-phere, and how that relates to climate change and ecological impacts. He has ~140 publications on various issues related to atmospheric and analytical chemistry.

Page 20: AFOSRdaytonacs.org/cermacs2010/program/ACS-CR_all.pdf · 2010-06-11 · Margaret Roach Theresa Huston Steve Trohalaki Ed Badger Future Central Regional ACS Meetings & General Chairs

16

Wed

nesday

Dayton Co

nven

tion

 Cen

ter;  3rd Floor 

2nd Floo

r1st floor

Start T

ime

8:00

 AM

Plen

ary Lecture I:  

8:50

 AM

Thea

ter (Rm 312

)

8:50

 ‐ 9:00

 AM

Brea

k       

(10 min)

9:00

 AM

10:20 ‐ 1

0:40

 AM

Brea

k       

(20 min)

10:40 AM

12:00 PM

Lunch       

(60 min)

1:00

 PM

Plen

ary Lecture II

Thea

ter (Rm31

2)

1:50

 ‐ 2:00

 PM

Brea

k       

(10 min)

2:00

 PM

3:20

 ‐ 3:50

 PM

Brea

k       

(30 min)

3:50

 PM

5:10

 PM

5:20

 PM

10:00 PM

Compu

tation

al 

Materials Scien

ce I: 

Theo

ry, M

odeling & 

Simulations

3 Ta

lks

4 Ta

lks

16‐Jun

‐10

Individu

al 

resume review

 by

 app

t4 Ta

lks

2 Ta

lks

Physical I

4 Ta

lks

Organ

ic I

4 Ta

lks

ACS

 Caree

r Worksho

p I

Physical II

4 Ta

lks

Organ

ic II

3 Ta

lks

ACS

 Caree

r Worksho

p II

4 Ta

lks

Room

Dayton Co

nven

tiona

l Cen

ter Closes

Awards Presentation  & Crane

‐Patterson

 Award Sp

eech  

Welcome reception: im

med

iately after Awards Cerem

ony  

  Th

eater (Rm 312

), reception ou

tside of th

eater. 

3 Ta

lks

Expo

sition

12:00 PM

 ‐ 5:00

 PM

 4 Ta

lks 

3 Ta

lks

Molecular & 

Nan

oscale 

Metam

aterials

3 Ta

lks

Compu

tation

al 

Materials Scien

ce II: 

Biom

olecular 

Simulations

3 Ta

lks

 Biom

aterials &   

BioN

anotechn

olog

y  

4 Ta

lks 

Nan

omaterials II 

 4 Ta

lks 

End of Techn

ical Program

 (5:10 PM

)

302

303

304 M

orley Ston

e, "Th

e chan

ging

 land

scap

e of hum

an perform

ance ‐ the im

pact of n

anoscien

ces an

d bioche

mistry"

202

203

307

308

310

309

103                       

Poster Session

 I        

70 Posters

Room

 103

2PM ‐ 4:30

 PM

(defen

d du

ring

 PM 

brea

k)

311

Richard Silverman

, "Drug Discove

ry: Ing

enuity or Se

rend

ipity?"

Biom

aterials &     

BioN

anotechn

olog

y  

3 Ta

lks 

Molecular & 

Nan

oscale 

Metam

aterials

3 Ta

lks

Nan

omaterials I 

 

3 Ta

lks 

3 Ta

lks

3 Ta

lks

4 Ta

lks

3 Ta

lks

Lunch

Page 21: AFOSRdaytonacs.org/cermacs2010/program/ACS-CR_all.pdf · 2010-06-11 · Margaret Roach Theresa Huston Steve Trohalaki Ed Badger Future Central Regional ACS Meetings & General Chairs

17

Thursday

Dayton Co

nven

tion

 Cen

ter;  3rd Floor 

2nd Floo

r1st floor

Start T

ime

8:00

 AM

Plen

ary Lecture III

Thea

ter (Rm31

2)

8:50

 ‐ 9:00

 AM

Brea

k       

(10 min)

9:00

 AM

10:20 ‐ 1

0:40

 AM

Brea

k       

(20 min)

10:40 AM

12:00 PM

Lunch       

(60 min)

1:00

 PM

Plen

ary Lecture IV

Thea

ter (Rm31

2)

1:50

 ‐ 2:00

 PM

Brea

k       

(10 min)

2:00

 PM

3:20

 ‐ 3:50

 PM

Brea

k       

(30 min)

3:50

 PM

5:10

 PM

6:00

 PM

10:00 PM

Room

Ana

lytical I 

3Talks

Inorganic I    

4 Ta

lks

4 Ta

lks

Poster Session

 II       

76 Posters

Room

 103

2 PM

 ‐ 4:30

 PM

(defen

d du

ring

 PM 

brea

k)                  

Chem

 Ed Sympo

sium

 I  

3 Ta

lks 

Compu

tation

al 

Materials Scien

ce IV

:  En

ergy App

lications

3 Ta

lks

Small C

hem 

Busine

ss Sym

p. 

 Alterna

tive

Energy II: P

V & 

Fuel Cells          

3 Ta

lks 

Nan

omaterial IV     

3 Ta

lks 

Ana

lytical II

4 Ta

lks

2 Ta

lks

3 Ta

lks

3 Ta

lks

Inorganic II

4 Ta

lks

Polymer

4 Ta

lks

308

309

    4 Ta

lks 

17‐Jun

‐10

Compu

tation

al 

Materials Scien

ce III: 

Nan

oscale 

Simulations

4 Ta

lks

  Exp

osition

9 AM ‐ 1:00

 PM

 Small C

hem 

Busine

ss Sym

p. 

2 Ta

lks

Alterna

tive

Energy I: PV, Fue

l Ce

lls 

3 Ta

lks 

204

208

Nan

omaterial III 

3 Ta

lks 

Organ

ic III

3 Ta

lks

307

203

303

304

302

End of Techn

ical Program

 (5:10 PM

)

Chem

ipaloo

zaVen

ue: B

oonsha

ft M

useu

m of D

iscove

ry 

3 Ta

lks

2 Ta

lks

3 Ta

lks

 1 Talk + PN

C3 Ta

lks

3 Ta

lks

Bio‐Nan

o Co

mbina

torial 

Characterization

     

  3 Talks

4 Ta

lks

3 Ta

lks

Expo

sition

2:00

 PM ‐5

:00 PM

 

103

Lunch

310

311

202

ACS

 Worksho

p, 

"Lea

ding

 witho

ut 

Autho

rity"    

1‐5 PM

William Harrison, "Inno

vative Techn

olog

y Nee

ds to Mee

t Air Force Ope

ration

 Ene

rgy Re

quirem

ents" 

Wad

e Ada

ms, "Nan

otechn

olog

y & Ene

rgy"

2 Ta

lks

Pane

l Discussion

3 Ta

lks

4 Ta

lks

Page 22: AFOSRdaytonacs.org/cermacs2010/program/ACS-CR_all.pdf · 2010-06-11 · Margaret Roach Theresa Huston Steve Trohalaki Ed Badger Future Central Regional ACS Meetings & General Chairs

18

Friday

Dayton Co

nven

tion

 Cen

ter;  3rd Floor 

2nd Floo

r1st floor

Start T

ime

8:00

 AM

Plen

ary Lecture V

8:50

 AM

Thea

ter (Rm31

2)

8:50

 ‐ 9:00

 AM

Brea

k       

(10 min)

9:00

 AM

10:20 ‐ 1

0:50

 AM

Brea

k       

(30 min)

10:50 AM

12:10 PM

Lunch      

(60 min)

1:10

 PM

3:10

 ‐ 3:30

 PM

Brea

k       

(20 min)

End

5:10

:00 PM

7:00

 PM

Materials fo

r Sp

ace & 

Aerospa

ce App

l. I       

3 Ta

lks                 

310

311

205

206

103

202

203

204

307

308

309

Paul She

pson

, "Clim

ate Ch

ange

 and

 Atm

osph

eric Che

mistry in the

 Arctic"

  3 Talks 

3 Ta

lks

3 Ta

lks

2 Ta

lks

Chem

 Ed Sympo

sium

 II   

 2 Ta

lks 

Laser‐ba

sed 

Techno

logies fo

r Ch

emical 

Mea

suremen

ts2  Talks          

Poster Session

 III       

62 Posters

Room

 103

 9 AM ‐ 11

:30 AM

(defen

d du

ring

 AM 

brea

k)       

Alterna

tive 

Energy III: 

Fuels 

4 Ta

lks 

Chem

istry for 

Peace

2 Ta

lks

4 Ta

lks

 4  Talks 

Lunch

 Ch

em Ed Sympo

sium

 III 

  3 Talks 

  Laser‐based

 Te

chno

logies fo

r Ch

emical 

Mea

suremen

ts3 Ta

lks   

Minority 

Lead

ers in 

Nan

omaterials 

Research Sym

p

3 Ta

lks

Alterna

tive 

Energy IV

: Dielectric Po

lymers 

for Ca

pacitors 

  4 Ta

lks 

SMP & Smart 

Compo

sites   

   4 Ta

lks 

Room

18‐Jun

‐10

Dayton Drago

ns Baseb

all at F

ifth‐Th

ird Field

3 Ta

lks

4 Ta

lks

Ana

lytical III

3 Ta

lks 

Bioche

4 Ta

lks

End of Techn

ical Program

 (5:10 PM

)

4 Ta

lks

2 Ta

lks

Expo

sition

9:00

 AM ‐1

2:00

PM 

3 Ta

lks

Page 23: AFOSRdaytonacs.org/cermacs2010/program/ACS-CR_all.pdf · 2010-06-11 · Margaret Roach Theresa Huston Steve Trohalaki Ed Badger Future Central Regional ACS Meetings & General Chairs

19

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 8:00 AM – 4:00 PMACS Career Workshop307, Dayton Convention CenterCareer Workshops and Individual Résumé Reviews will be offered that will give members a unique insight into the job market. The workshops are designed to help chemical professionals and students at all levels under-stand the current workplace

8:00 AM Planning Your Job Search9:30 AM Preparing a Resume11:00 AM Effective Interviewing1:00 PM Personal Resume Review

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 8:00 AM – 9:00 AMPlenary Lecture I312 Theatre, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Barry Farmer, James Gord, David Johnson, Hilmar Koerner, Loon-Seng Tan, Steven Trohalaki

8:00 AM 1. The Changing Landscape of Human Performance – The Impact of Nanosciences and BiochemistryMorley O. Stone.711th Human Performance Wing, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patter-son AFB, OH, United States.

8:50 AM. Break

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:00 PMComputational Materials Science: Theory, Modeling, & Simulation I304, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Kelly Anderson, Soumya Patnaik

9:00 AM 2. Computational Research for Aerospace Materials DevelopmentBarry L. Farmer.Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States.

9:40 AM 3. Hydrogen Sorption in a Slit-Pore Model of Silicon NanosheetsRachel S. Aga,1 Kristy Wickman,1 Amir A. Farajian,2 Lok C. Lew Yan Voon.3

1Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States; 2Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States; 3Department of Physics, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States.

10:00 AM 4. Interfacial Friction and Sliding in Amorphous Carbon/Nanotube NanocompositesZhenhai Xia, Jianbing Niu.Department of Mechanical Engineering, The University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break

Page 24: AFOSRdaytonacs.org/cermacs2010/program/ACS-CR_all.pdf · 2010-06-11 · Margaret Roach Theresa Huston Steve Trohalaki Ed Badger Future Central Regional ACS Meetings & General Chairs

20

10:40 AM 5. Aspects of Multi-Scale Modeling: Calculations of Optical Properties at the Nano-ScalePaul N. Day, Kiet A. Nguyen, Jinsong Duan, Ruth Pachter.Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, United States.

11:10 AM 6. The Role of Simulation and Informatics in the Electronic Laboratory EnvironmentMichael J. Doyle, George Fitzgerald.Accelrys Inc., San Diego, CA, United States.

11:40 AM 7. Probing the Conformational Transition Mechanism of ClpY by Using Molecular Dynamics SimulationsHuan Wang, Manori Jayasinghe, George Stan.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Oh, United States.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:00 PMMolecular & Nanoscale Metamaterials: Novel Design Concepts in Materials Chemistry I303, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Katie Thorp, Augustine UrbasPresider: Katie Thorp

9:00 AM 8. Applied MetamaterialsAugustine M. Urbas, Katie Thorp.Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Resaerch Lab, Dayton, OH, United States.

9:20 AM 9. Synthesis and Photoinduced Pharacteristics of Emerald Green Fullerene and C60-(Antenna) Nanostructures as Molecular Basis of MetamaterialsLong Chiang,1 Arthur Epstein,2 Loon-Seng Tan,3 Augustine Urbas.3

1Department of Chemistry, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Lowell, MA, Unit-ed States; 2Department of Physics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States; 3AFRL/RX, Air Force Research Laboratory, Dayton, OH, United States.

9:50 AM 10. Tuning Permittivity and Permeability Responses by Using Radical Pairs towards Development of Molecular MetaMaterialsBin Hu.Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:40 AM 11. Production of High Aspect Ratio Magnetic Oxide Nanoparticles Via Novel Syn-

thetic TechniquesMatthew J. O’Malley,1 Thomas F. Ekiert,1 Kelsey Miles,2 Angela Griner,2 Cory Flynn,2 Brandon Yocum,2 Kevin Davis,2 Max Alexander.3

1Universal Technology Corporation (UTC), United States; 2Southwestern Council for Higher Education (SOCHE), United States; 3Wright Patterson Air Force Base (WPAFB), United States.

11:00 AM 12. Organo-Soluble Functionalized Gold Nanorods: Opportunity and ChallengeQuan Li,1 Yannian Li,1 Dingshan Yu,2 Liming Dai,2 Augustine Urbas.3

1Liquid Crystal Institute, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio, United States; 2De-partment of Chemical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States; 3Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Re-search Laboratory, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

Page 25: AFOSRdaytonacs.org/cermacs2010/program/ACS-CR_all.pdf · 2010-06-11 · Margaret Roach Theresa Huston Steve Trohalaki Ed Badger Future Central Regional ACS Meetings & General Chairs

21

11:30 AM 13. Bottom-Up Approach towards Optical Metamaterials: Proto-Assembly of Gold Nanorods for Tunable Plasmon CouplingDhriti Nepal, Kyoungweon Park, Christopher Tabor, Jinsong Duan, Ruth Pachter, Michael Durstock, Richard A. Vaia.Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:00 PMNanomaterials: Synthesis, Structures, Functionalization and Applications I310/311, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Liming Dai, Lawrence Drummy, Benji MaruyamaPresider: Liming Dai

9:00 AM 14. Doping Carbon Nanotube Using Spark Plasma SinteringKeqin Yang, Jian He, H. Dale, Pooja Puneet, Z. Su, Malcolm J. Skove, Terry M. Tritt, Apparao M. Rao.Department of Physics and Astronomy, Clemson University, Clemson, SC, United States.

9:30 AM 15. Modeling and Simulations of Carbon Nanotubes, Graphene and Their Nanopap-ers for Technological ApplicationAlper Buldum.Department of Physics, Department of Chemistry, The University of Akron, Ak-ron, OH, United States.

10:00 AM 16. Toward Understanding Structural and Optical Properties of Nanoscale Zinc and Cadmium Chalcogenide Magic-Size Quantum Dots: Insight from Computational PredictionKiet A. Nguyen,1,2 Paul N. Day,3 Ruth Pachter.1

1Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States; 2UES, Inc., Dayton, OH, United States; 3General Dynamics Information Technology, Dayton, OH, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:40 AM 17. Nano Scale Physical Property Measurement of Carbon Fibers and Polymers with

Electron Emission Loss Spectroscopy (EELS)Sabyasachi Ganguli,1,2 Ajit K. Roy,2 Robert Wheeler.3

1UDRI, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH, United States; 2AFRL/RXBT, Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Dayton, OH, United States; 3MCF, UES, Dayton, OH, United States.

11:00 AM 18. Development of a Metal Decorated Carbon Nanotubes-Supported Catalyst for a Microchannel Methanation ReactorChung-Hsuan Huang,1 Jane H. Fujiyama-Novak,1 Susana Carranza,2 Randy L. Vander Wal.1

1Energy and Mineral Engineering & EMS Energy Institute, PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY, University Park, PENNSYLVANIA, United States; 2Makel Engineer-ing, Inc., Chico, California, United States.

11:20 AM 19. Catalytic Activity of Ultrathin Pt Film Coated on an Aligned CNT SubstrateXin Su, Ji Wu, Bruce J. Hinds.Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, University of Kentucky, Lex-ington, Kentucky, United States.

Page 26: AFOSRdaytonacs.org/cermacs2010/program/ACS-CR_all.pdf · 2010-06-11 · Margaret Roach Theresa Huston Steve Trohalaki Ed Badger Future Central Regional ACS Meetings & General Chairs

22

11:40 AM 20. Ferric Iron Nanoparticle Formation Mediated by Negatively Charged PolypeptidesVamsi Krishna Aluru, Robin S. Farmer.Department of chemical Engineering, West Virginia University, Morgantown, west virginia, United States.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:00 PMNew Vistas in Biotechnology: Chemistry, Materials and Applications I308/309, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Alamgir Karim, Rajesh Naik

9:00 AM 21. Controlling the Formation of Bacterial Films on Engineered Structured SurfacesJoanna Aizenberg,1,2 Allon Hochbaum,1,2 Benjamin Hatton,1,2 Alexander Epstein.1,2

1School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, United States; 2Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering, Harvard University, United States.

9:30 AM 22. Innovative, Inexpensive Surfaces To Investigate the Effect of Nanotopography on CellsKunal S. Parikh,1 Shreyas Rao,1 L. Burr Zimmerman,1 Haris Ansari,2 L. J. Lee,1 Sheikh A. Akbar,2 Jessica O. Winter.1,3

1William G. Lowrie Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States; 2Department of Materi-als Science and Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States; 3Department of Biomedical Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.

9:50 AM 23. Exploring Bio-Inspired Strategies for the Production of Nobel Metal NanocatalystsMarc R. Knecht,1 Ryan Coppage,1 Dennis B. Pacardo,1 Joseph M. Slocik,2 Rajesh R. Naik.2

1Department of Chemistry, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, United States; 2Nanostructured and Biological Materials Branch, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:40 AM 24. Peptide Based Molecular Recognition Elements for Binding 2,4,6-Trinitrotoluene

Avram W. Siegel, Robin S. Farmer.Department of Chemical Engineering, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV, United States.

11:00 AM 25. DNA Aptamer Functionalized Zinc Oxide Field Effect Transistors for Liquid State Selective Sensing of Small MoleculesJoshua A. Hagen,1,2 Sang Nyon-Kim,2 Nancy Kelley-Loughnane,1 Rajesh R. Naik,2 Morley O. Stone.1

1711th Human Performance Wing RHCB, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States; 2Materials and Manufacturing Di-rectorate RXBN, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States.

Page 27: AFOSRdaytonacs.org/cermacs2010/program/ACS-CR_all.pdf · 2010-06-11 · Margaret Roach Theresa Huston Steve Trohalaki Ed Badger Future Central Regional ACS Meetings & General Chairs

23

11:20 AM 26. Design of Cell-Based Sensors by Employing a Synthetic RiboswitchSvetlana V. Harbaugh, Molly E. Davidson, Jorge L. Chavez, Latha Narayanan, Nancy Kelley-Loughnane, Morley O. Stone.711th Human Performance Wing, Human Effectiveness Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

11:40 AM 27. Surface Interactions between Biomolecules and Au NanoparticlesManish Sethi, Marc R. Knecht.Chemistry, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, United States.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 9:00 AM – 11:40 AMOrganic Chemistry I203, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: David Johnson

9:00 AM 28. Making Dialkyl Carbonates under High Speed Ball Milling ConditionsDaniel C. Waddell, Ashley Bunger, James Mack.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

9:20 AM 29. Computational Modeling of Rhodium-Based Catalytic DendrimersDaniel A. Turner, Christopher M. Hadad.Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, United States.

9:40 AM 30. Restricted Rotation in Ortho-Fluorine Substituted TerephthalatesJeffrey D. Fogle, William A. Feld.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

10:00 AM 31. Palladium-Catalyzed Borostannylative Cyclization of 1,n-Diynes. Synthesis and Properties of Atropisomeric 1,3-DienesAmanda M. Kutney, T. V. RajanBabu.Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:40 AM 32. Investigating the Ullman Reaction under Solvent-Free High spped Ball Millng

Teresa L. Cook, James Mack.Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

11:00 AM 33. Microwave Synthesis of 1,4-Disubstituted 1,2,3-Triazoles from Organic AzidesPeter Norris.Chemistry, Youngstown State University, Youngstown, OH, United States.

11:20 AM 34. Microwave-Assisted Michael Additions of N-(arylsulfonyl)pyrroles and -IndolesKelsey C. Miles, Benjamin K. Southerland, Daniel M. Ketcha.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States.

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Wednesday, June 16, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:00 PMPhysical Chemistry I202, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: James GordPresider: Mark Masthay

9:00 AM 35. Insights into the Molecular Mechanism of Conformational Transition between Functional States of Archaeal Chaperonin Thermosome by Using Normal Mode Analysis and Elastic Network ModelManori I. Jayasinghe,1 Pooja Shrestha,1 George Stan,1 X. Wu.2

1Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cinciinati, Ohio, United States; 2NHLBI, National Institutes of Health, Laboratory of Biophysical Chemis-try, Bethesda, MD, United States.

9:20 AM 36. Substrate Protein Unfolding and Translocation by the p97 NanomachineSam Tonddast-Navaei, Manori Jayasinghe, George Stan.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

9:40 AM 37. Structural and Bioinformatic Analyses of the Substrate Binding Mechanism of Archaeal and Eukaryotic ChaperoninsPooja Shrestha,2 Manori Jayasinghe,1 Xiongwu Wu,3 George Stan.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 2Department of Physics, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 3National Institutes of Health (NIH), United States.

10:00 AM 38. Negative and Infinite Microcanonical, “Continuous” Canonical, and “Discrete” Canonical Temperature States in Two-Level Magnetic Spin LatticesMark B. Masthay,1 Ross E. Jones,2 Robert N. Karingithi,2 Philip A. Miller,2 Ra-makanth Ananthoji,2 Harry B. Fannin.2

1Department of Chemistry, University of Dayton, Dayton, Ohio, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, Murray State University, Murray, KY, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:40 AM 39. Toxicity of Platinum Group Metals in Chick Embryo Tibiotarsi

Jennifer Monahan,1 Jessica Dagher,1 Tai Lam,1 Marjorie Markopoulos,1 Allie Meyerhoefer,1 Kent Weaver,1 Britney NeJame,2 Jacob Cowley,2 Robert Slaughter,3 Larry Burggraf,3 Zofia Gagnon,2 Ioana Pavel.1

1Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States; 2Department of Environmental Science and Policy, Marist College, Poughkeep-sie, NY, United States; 3Department of Engineering Physics, Air Force Institute of Technology, Wright Patterson, OH, United States.

11:00 AM 40. Interfacial Structure of Bilayer Compensation Films Prepared by Sequential So-lution ProcessWumin Yu, Mark D. Foster.Department of Polymer Science, The University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

11:20 AM 41. High-Level Quantum Mechanical Studies of BromocarbenesJean M. Standard, Rebecca J. Steidl, Matthew C. Beecher, Robert W. Quandt.Department of Chemistry, Illinois State University, Normal, IL, United States.

11:40 AM 42. Nonextensive Entropies and Non-Boltzmann (Tsallis) Thermostatistics in Two-Level Magnetic Spin Lattices in the Absence of Long-Range InteractionsMark B. Masthay,1 Ross E. Jones,2 Robert N. Karingithi,2 Philip A. Miller,2 Ra-makanth Ananthoji,2 Harry B. Fannin.2

1Department of Chemistry, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, Murray State University, Murray, KY, United States.

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Wednesday, June 16, 2010 1:00 PM – 2:00 PMPlenary Lecture II312 Theatre, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Barry Farmer, James Gord, David Johnson, Hilmar Koerner, Loon-Seng Tan, Steven Trohalaki

1:00 PM 43. Drug Discovery: Ingenuity or Serendipity?Richard B. Silverman.Department of Chemistry, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, United States.

1:50 PM. Break

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 2:00 PM – 5:10 PMComputational Materials Science: Theory, Modeling, & Simulation II304, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Kelly Anderson, Soumya Patnaik

2:00 PM 44. Interactions of Peptides and Ionic Liquids with Silica SurfacesR. J. Berry,1 L. B. Hill,1 Y. H. Ngo,1 Vikas Varshney,1 M. L. Jespersen,1 P. A. Mi-rau,1 Hendrik Heinz,2 F. S. Emami.2

1RXB, Air Force Research Laboratory, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2Department of Polymer Engineering, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

2:30 PM 45. Molecular Dynamics Study of Entropic Force in Resilin-Like PeptidesRoman Petrenko,1 Matthew B. Dickerson,3,4 Rajesh R. Naik,4 Soumya S. Pat-naik,4,5 Thomas L. Beck,1 Jaroslaw Meller.2

1Department of Physics, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 2Department of Environmental Health, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 3Research Associateship Program, National Research Council, Washington, DC, United States; 4Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Lab, WPAFB, Dayton, OH, United States; 5Modeling Solutions, Inc, West Chester, OH, United States.

3:00 PM 46. Molecular Simulations of Actin FlexibilityJiyoung Lee, Ruxandra Dima.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

3:20 PM Coffee Break3:50 PM 47. Interaction of Protein Building Blocks and Surfactants with Shaped Surfaces of

Au, Pd, and Silica in Aqueous SolutionHendrik Heinz.Department of Polymer Engineering, University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States.

4:30 PM 48. Computational Modeling of Protein Unfolding and Translocation by the ClpY Bio-logical NanomachineAndrea N. Kravats, Manori Jayasinghe, George Stan.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

4:50 PM 49. Assessment of Varied Gridcenter Searching Algorithm in Ligand-Protein DockingZhifeng Kuang, Rajesh R. Naik, Barry L. Farmer.Materials and Manufactoring Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratories, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States.

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Wednesday, June 16, 2010 2:00 PM – 4:10 PMMolecular & Nanoscale Metamaterials: Novel Design Concepts in Materials Chemistry II303, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Katie Thorp, Augustine UrbasPresider: Augustine Urbas

2:00 PM 50. Layered Metamaterials for Optical FilteringRachel Jakubiak.Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, AFRL, WPAFB, OH, United States.

2:30 PM 51. Loss-Free and Active Optical Negative-Index MetamaterialsShumin Xiao, Vladimir P. Drachev, Alexander V. Kildishev, Xingjie Ni, Uday K. Chettiar, Hsiao-Kuan Yuan, Vladimir M. Shalaev.School of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Birck Nanotechnology Cen-ter, Purdue University, west lafayette, IN, United States.

3:00 PM 52. Structural Changes in Plasma Polymerized Films Derived from Titanium (IV) IsoproxideLirong Sun,1,2 Hao Jiang,1,2 John T. Grant,1,3 Timothy J. Bunning,1 Rachel Jakubiak.1

1Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, AFRL, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2Gen-eral Dynamics Information Technology, Dayton, OH, United States; 3University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, OH, United States.

3:20 PM Coffee Break3:50 PM 53. Fabrication of a 2-D Square Hole Array by Attenuated Holographic-Lithography

for PlasmonicsMichael J. Birnkrant,1 Lalgudi V. Natarajan,1,2 Vincent P. Tondiglia,1,2 Richard L. Sutherland,1,2 Augustine M. Urbas,1 Timothy J. Bunning.1

1Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, United States; 2Science Applications Interna-tional Corporation, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 2:00 PM – 4:50 PMNanomaterials: Synthesis, Structures, Functionalization and Applications II310/311, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Liming Dai, Lawrence Drummy, Benji MaruyamaPresider: Lawrence Drummy

2:00 PM 54. Stability Limited Growth Mechanism of Peptide-Mediated Au Nanoparticle Syn-thesis Using Molecular Dynamics SimulationsJing Yu, Matthew L. Becker, Gustavo A. Carri.Department of Polymer Science, University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States.

2:20 PM 55. Wiring Gold Monolayer Protected ClustersBrian N. Turner, David E. Cliffel.Department of Chemistry, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United States.

2:40 PM 56. Effective Material for Reproducible SERS “Blinking”Andrey V. Malkovskiy, Alexei P. Sokolov, Mark D. Foster.Department of Polymer Science, The University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States.

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3:00 PM 57. Super Robust Gold Nanoparticles Stabilized by Trithiols for Sensing of Volatile Organic CompoundsNiti Garg,1 Ashok Mohanty,2 Rongchao Jin.1

1Chemistry, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, United States; 2c, Na-tional Metallurgical Laboratory, Jamshedpur, Jharkhand, India.

3:20 PM Coffee Break3:50 PM 58. Active Targeting PDT Drug Delivery through Gold Nanoparticle for Brain Cancers

Yu Cheng,1 Joseph D. Meyers,2 Ann-Marie Broome,2 Richard Agnes,2 Malcolm E. Kenney,1 James P. Basilion,2 Clemens Burda.1

1Department of Chemistry, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States; 2Departments of Biomedical Engineering and Radiology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States.

4:10 PM 59. Size Selection and Concentration of Silver Nanoparticles by Tangential Flow Fil-tration for SERS-Based BiosensorsJohn C. Trefry,2 Jennifer L. Monahan,1 Kent M. Weaver,1 Allie J. Meyerhoefer,1 Marjorie M. Markopoulos,1 Zachary S. Arnold,1 Dawn P. Wooley,2 Ioana E. Pavel.1

1Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States; 2Department of Neuroscience, Cell Biology and Physiology, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

4:30 PM 60. Kinetics of Transport, Dispersion and Deposition of Engineered Nanoparticles in Porous MediaZhen Li,1 E. Sahle-Demessie,2 Ashraf A. Hassan,1 George A. Sorial.1

1Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 2Office of Research and Development, 2U.S. En-vironmental Protection Agency, cincinnati, OH, United States.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 2:00 PM – 5:20 PMNew Vistas in Biotechnology: Chemistry, Materials and Applications II308/309, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Alamgir Karim, Rajesh Naik

2:00 PM 61. Versatility of Droplet-Interface-Bilayer (DIB) Lipid MembranesSrikoundinya Punnamaraju, Andrew J. Steckl.Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OHIO, United States.

2:20 PM 62. Detection of a Common Ion Effect by Artificial Stomach/Duodenum (ASD) ModelChristopher S. Polster, David C. Sperry.Analytical Chemistry, Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis, IN, United States.

2:40 PM 63. Vesicle Encapsulated Hemoglobin Dispersions as Potential Oxygen CarriersShahid Rameez, Andre F. Palmer.Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.

3:00 PM 64. Hemoglobin Regulates the Metabolic, Synthetic, Detoxification and Biotransfor-mation Functions of Hepatoma Cells Cultured in a Hollow Fiber BioreactorGuo Chen, Andre F. Palmer.Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, The Ohio State Univer-sity, Columbus, OH, United States.

3:20 PM Coffee Break

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3:50 PM 65. Integrating Biological Self-Assembly with Synthetic ChemistryYunnan Fang,1 Jonathan P. Vernon,1 Samuel Shian,1 John D. Berrigan,1 Ye Cai,1 Nicole Poulsen,2 Matthew B. Dickerson,3 Seth R. Marder,2 Rajesh R. Naik,3 Nils Kroger,2 Kenneth H. Sandhage.1

1School of Materials Science and Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, United States; 2School of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Georgia In-stitute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, United States; 3Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Dayton, OH, United States.

4:20 PM 66. Electrospun and Natural Fibers Containing Biologically Active Components as Antibacterial MaterialsMatthew B. Dickerson,1,2 Heather R. Luckarift,3,4 Maneesh K. Gupta,1 Law-rence F. Drummy,1,5 Glenn R. Johnson,3 Rajesh R. Naik.1

1Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States; 2Research Associateship Program, National Research Council, Washington, D.C., United States; 3Materials & Manu-facturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Tyndall AFB, FL, United States; 4Universal Technology Corporation, Dayton, OH, United States; 5UES, Inc., Dayton, OH, United States.

4:40 PM 67. Analytic Sensing: A Comparison of Riboswitches and Bio-Functionalized NanoparticlesNancy Kelley-Loughnane, Svetlana V. Harbaugh, Molly Davidson, Jorge L. Chavez, Morley O. Stone.711 Human Performance Wing , Human Effectiveness Directorate, Air Force Re-search Laboratory, Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, United States.

5:00 PM 68. Enzyme Activity of Horseradish Peroxidase Encapsulated by Self-Assembled Peptide NanotubesByung-Wook Park, Dong-Shik Kim.Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 2:00 PM – 5:00 PMPhysical Chemistry II202, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: James GordPresider: Mark Masthay

2:00 PM 69. Z-E Photoisomerization of Aryl-Phosphaalkenes: Phosphorus Really Is a Carbon CopyJohn L. Payton,1 John D. Protasiewicz,1 M. Cather Simpson.2

1Department of Chemistry, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States; 2Chemistry and Physics Departments and The Photon Factory, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.

2:20 PM 70. 4-Thiothymidine: A Nucleoside Analogue of Thymidine Showing Sub-Picosecond Intersystem CrossingChristian Reichardt, Carlos E. Crespo-Hernández.Department of Chemistry,Center for Chemical Dynamics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States.

2:40 PM 71. Computational Study of Photochemical Properties of Substituted NaphthalimidesShubham Vyas,1 Ksenija D. Glusac,2 Christopher M. Hadad.1

1Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH, United States.

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3:00 PM 72. Probing Single-Electron Self-Exchange across a Molecule-Metal InterfaceYuanmin Wang, Papatya Ceylan Sevinc, Yufan He, H. Peter Lu.Department of Chemistry, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH, United States.

3:20 PM Coffee Break3:40 PM 73. Shooting and Swimming Azobenzene Single Crystals in Triacrylate Solution

Thomas M. Sutter,1 Namil Kim,1 Dmitry Golovaty,2 Thein Kyu.1

1Department of Polymer Engineering, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States; 2Department of Theoretical and Applied Mathematics, University of Ak-ron, United States.

4:00 PM 74. Synthesis and Characterization of Novel Platinum Acetylide OligomersThomas M. Cooper, Douglas M. Krein, Aaron R. Burke, Daniel G. McLean, Joy E. Haley, Jonathan M. Slagle, Jennifer Monahan.Air Force Research Laboratory, United States.

4:20 PM 75. Ultrafast Single-Triplet Population Dynamics in Nitro-Aromatic CompoundsR. Aaron Vogt, Christian Reichardt, Carlos Crespo-Hernandez.Department of Chemistry, Case Western Reserve University, United States.

4:40 PM 76. Solvent Effects on Emission Spectra of Carminic Acid and Determination of Its Ground and Excited State Dipole MomentsSarika Jaggannagari Brahmananda, Patty K.-L. Fu.Department of Chemistry, Governors State University, University Park, IL, United States.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 2:00 PM – 4:30 PMPoster Session I103, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Barry Farmer, James Gord, David Johnson, Hilmar Koerner, Loon-Seng Tan, Steven Trohalaki

77. Ortho-Metallated Acetophenone Imine Derivatives as Ligands for Group I, II, XI and XII MetalsJohn F. Beck, Joseph A. R. Schmidt.Department of Chemistry, The University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States.

78. Reactions of Methylmercuric Compounds with Aqueous Hexacyanoferrate(II) IonJohn S. Thayer.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

79. Wilson Coefficients from the Excess Gibbs Free Energy and the Activity Coefficients for One Component of Binary SolutionsStanley A. Studniarz.Chemisty, Penn State University, Sharon, PA, United States.

80. Bio-Inspired Synthesis, Characterization, and Catalytic Application of Pd Nanoparticle NetworksRohit Bhandari, Anshuman Jakhmola, Marc R. Knecht.Department of Chemistry, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, United States.

81. Conformational Analysis of Four Polyphenolic Inhibitors of PAI-1Christopher Fairchild, Patrick Spoutz, Maria C. Milletti.Department of Chemistry, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI, United States.

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82. Exploring the Effects of Reaction Conditions on the Activity of Biomimetic Pd Nanoparticle CatalystsDennis B. Pacardo,1 Rajesh R. Naik,2 Marc R. Knecht.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, United States; 2Nanostruc-tured and Biological Materials Branch, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, United States.

83. Validation of an HPLC-MS/MS Test Method To Quantify S-Benzylmercapturic Acid and S-Phen-ylmercapturic Acid in Human UrineClayton Bhymer.BHAB, NIOSH, Cincinnait, Ohio, United States.

84. Synthesis of Branched Gold NanoparticlesNancy Ortiz, Sara E. Skrabalak.Department of Chemistry, Indiana University- Bloomington, Bloomington, IN, United States.

85. Unconventional Precursors with Ultrasonic Spray Pyrolysis: Synthesis of Shape-Controlled Bi2WO6 ParticlesAmanda K. Peterson, Sara E. Skrabalak.Department of Chemistry, Indiana University-Bloomington, Bloomington, IN, United States.

86. Developments in the Syntheses of a Series of Podand Ligands Utilizing Diethylenetriamine, Triethylenetetraamine, or SpermineCandice N. M. N. Kashat, Lance A. Gschwender, Wei Pang, Mark A. Benvenuto.Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, University of Detroit Mercy, Detroit, MI, United States.

87. Synthesis and Characterization of Silver Nanoparticles for SERS-Based BiosensingAllie Meyerhoefer, Kent Weaver, Zachary Arnold, Jennifer Monahan, Marjorie Markopoulos, Ioana Pavel.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States.

88. Elucidation of Peptide Effects That Control the Activity of NanoparticlesRyan H. Coppage,1 Joseph M. Slocik,2 Rajesh R. Naik,2 Marc R. Knecht.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, United States; 2Nanostruc-tured and Biological Materials Branch, Airforce Research Institution, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States.

89. Chemistry Merit Badge – 1911-2010Wendell L. Dilling.Department of Chemistry, Central Michigan University, Mt. Pleasant, Michigan, United States.

90. First Example of Triphenylene-Fused PorphyrinLin Jiang, Hong Wang.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, United States.

91. Structural Elucidation of Atmospheric Water-Soluble Organic Nitrogen Compounds with Ultra-High Resolution Mass SpectrometryJeffrey P. LeClair, Lynn R. Mazzoleni.Department of Chemistry, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI, United States.

92. Measurement of the Deformation of Silicon Substrates Coated with a Plasma-Polymerized Ac-rylonitrile FilmDavid Sisler,1 Jesse Enlow,1,2 Vincent P. Tondiglia,1,4 Hao Jiang,1,3 Rachel Jakubiak.1

1Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, AFRL, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2UES, Inc., Dayton, OH, United States; 3General Dynamics Information Technology, Dayton, OH, United States; 4SAIC, Dayton, OH, United States.

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93. Densification of Plasma Polymerized TiOxCyNz Films with Air ExposureLirong Sun,1,2 Hao Jiang,1,2 John T. Grant,1,3 Timothy J. Bunning,1 Rachel Jakubiak.1

1Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, AFRL, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2General Dynamics Information Technology, Dayton, OH, United States; 3University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, OH, United States.

94. Plasma Polymerization for Bio-Assisted Fabrication of NanostructuresRachel Jakubiak,1 Kyle D. Anderson,2 Joseph M. Slocik,1,3 Michael E. McConney,1,2 Jesse O. Enlow,1,3 Timothy J. Bunning,1 Rajesh R. Naik,1 Vladimir V. Tsukruk.2

1Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, AFRL, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2School of Materials Science and Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, United States; 3UES, Inc., Dayton, OH, United States.

95. Nano-Particles Influence on the Partition of Polyaromatic Hydrocabons in Aquatic SystemsQiuming Amy Zhao.Department of Sustainable Technology Division, US EPA, 26 W. Martin Luther King Drive, OH, United States.

96. Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition for Fabrication of Biologically Sensitive FilmsJesse Enlow,1,3 Hao Jiang,1,2 Daniel Gallagher,1 Lawrence Brott,1 Rachel Jakubiak,1 Rajesh Naik,1 Timothy J. Bunning.1

1Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, AFRL, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2General Dynamics Information Technology, Dayton, OH, United States; 3UES, Inc., Dayton, OH, United States.

97. Structural Motifs in Carbon Cages and Clusters: Insights from C24Roderick M. Macrae, Davin Rose.School of Mathematics and Sciences, Marian University, Indianapolis, IN, United States.

98. Q(n) Species Distribution in K2O·2SiO2 Glass by 29Si Magic Angle Flipping NMRKevin J. Sanders,1 Michael C. Davis,1 Derrick C. Kaseman,1 Sahar M. Parvani,1 Philip J. Gran-dinetti,1 Dominique Massiot,2 Pierre Florian.2

1Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, United States; 2CNRS and Universite d Orleans, Orleans Cedex 2, France.

99. Synthesis of Polymer-Layered Silicate Nanocomposites Using One-Step Prepared OrganoclaysThomas Morgan, Isabelle Lagadic.Chemistry, Northern Kentucky University, Highland Heights, KY, United States.

100. Investigating Mesoporous Organosilicates as Carriers for Controlled Delivery of the Anticancer Agent DoxorubicinEmilee Knue, Adam McCallum, Isabelle Lagadic.Chemistry, Northern Kentucky University, Highland Heights, KY, United States.

101. Synthesis and Reactivity of Nickel PCP-Pincer Thiolate ComplexesJie Zhang, Jeanette A. Krause, Hairong Guan.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

102. Gold Nanorods and Nanoprisms: Synthesis, Characterization, and Self-AssemblyKristina L. Tran,1 Kirpal Bisht,2 Vinay K. Gupta.1

1Department of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, United States.

103. Reactions between Pd(phpy)tacn+ and Chemical OxidantsAllison M. Muldoon, William Connick, Sayandev Chatterjee.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

104. Using a Flow-Through Reactor (FTR) To Investigate near Equilibrium Dissolution Kinetics of Calcite and Effects of Sample HistoryMichael Mante, Steven R. Higgins, Kevin G. Knauss.Chemistry, Wrighty State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

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105. Quartz Crystal Microbalance with Dissipation Monitoring (QCM-D) To Analyze Nanoparticle Self-Assembly and Surface InteractionsStephen Hussey.Biolin Scientific Inc., Linthicum Heights, MD, United States.

106. Metal-Filled Alkoxy and Organosilicon NanopolymersPlousia E. Vassilaras, Malcolm E. Kenney.Department of Chemistry, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

107. Carbazole Donor and Carbazole or Bithiophene-Bridged Sensitizers for Dye-Sensitized Solar CellsKrishna Panthi, Anthony C. Onicha, Felix N. Castellano, Thomas H. Kinstle.Center for Photochemical Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio, United States.

108. Development of Chitin and Chitosan-Based Materials as Hemostatic DressingJirapun Paraboon,1 Daniel Smith,1 Mark Van Dyke.2

1Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States; 2The Wake For-est Institute for Regenerative Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston Salem, NC, United States.

109. A Modified Microscale Method To Determine Coefficients of Thermal Expansion for Two-Photon Dye SolutionsDaniel A. Lyons,1,2 Matthew J. Dalton,1,3 Ramamurthi Kannan,1,4 Christopher A. Bailey,1,5 Mi-chael F. Durstock,1 Byron P. Edmonds,1 Loon-Seng Tan.1

1Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2Southwestern Ohio Council for Higher Education, Dayton, OH, United States; 3Gen-eral Dynamics Information Technology, Dayton, OH, United States; 4SynCon, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 5National Research Council Fellowship, United States.

110. Selectivity of Hydroxyl Radical Addition to Aromatic HydrocarbonsStephen B. Benzinger, James S. Poole.Department of Chemistry, Ball State University, Muncie, IN, United States.

111. Understanding the Fundamentals of Nanoparticle Self-Assembly: An Experimental and Simula-tion StudyChakra Prasad Joshi,1 Yevgen Kryukov,2 Jacques G. Amar,2 Terry P. Bigioni.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States; 2Department of Physics and Astronomy,the Wright Center for Photovoltaics Innovation and Commercialization, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States.

112. Synthesis and Characterization of Silver Nanoclusters Protected by GlutathioneSantosh Kumar, Terry P. Bigioni.Department of Chemistry, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States.

113. Synthesis and Characterization New Influenza A M2 Ion Channel BlockersTracy Olin, Jacob J. Weingart, Jun J. Hu.Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

114. Hybrid Photovoltaic Materials: Characterization of Polymer-Nanoparticle CompositesBimala Lama, Matthew P. Espe.chemistry, University of akron, akron, Ohio, United States.

115. Aluminosilicate Aerogels: Synthesis and CharacterizationAnna M. Pischera,1 Tracy C. Olin,2 Marlyssa Ittes,2 Deng-Yuan Liou,2 Frances Hurwitz,2 Mat-thew P. Espe.1

1Department of Chemistry, The University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States; 2NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, Ohio, United States.

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116. Investigation of Self Assembled Naphthalene Diimides Using Picosecond Time Correlated Single Photon CountingNatalie C. Romano,1 Hui Shao,2 Tuan Nguyen,1 Jon R. Parquette,2 David A. Modarelli.1

1Department of Chemistry and The Center for Laser and Optical Spectroscopy, The University of Akron, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, United States.

117. Computational Investigations of Hydrogen Interaction in Carbon NanoporesJared M. Duncan, Rachel S. Aga.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

118. Enhancement of Electrochemical Capacitor Performance of Graphene by Nitrogen DopingDingshan Yu, Liming Dai.Department of Chemical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

119. Aligned Electrospun Fibers by Air-BlowingFeng Du,1,2 Liming Dai.2

1Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH, United States; 2Department of Chemical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

120. Binding of Ethene to Single Walled Carbon NanotubesDaniel B. Lawson.Natural Sciences, University of Michigan-Dearborn, Dearborn, MI, United States.

121. Experimental Probing of Photonic Density of States in Hyperbolic MetamaterialM. A. Noginov,2 H. Li,2 D. Dryden,3 G. Nataraj,3 Yu A. Barnakov,2 M. Mayy,2 Z. Jacob,1 E. E. Narimanov.1

1Birck Nanotechnology Center, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, United States; 2Center for Materials Research, Norfolk State University, Norfolk, VA, United States; 3Summer Re-search Program, Center for Materials Research, Norfolk State University, Norfolk, VA, United States.

122. Examination of the Boron Oxygen Bond and the Platinum Sulphur Bond in Oxoboryl Thiophe-nyl Complex by Comparison of the Gooch Structure to the Standard Model Lewis StructureTodd W. Gooch.Department of Physical Geometry, Gravitational Unit Theory Unified Field Theory, Hebron, Kentucky, United States.

123. Prediction of the LSER s Coefficient of Phosphorus and Sulfur-Containing Gas Chromatograph-ic Stationary Phases Using Quantitative Structure-Solubility RelationshipsMichael S. Arnold, David S. Ballantine.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, United States.

124. DFT-Calculated Polarizabilities and Dipole Moments for Development of Molecular Descriptors for QSSR/LSER StudiesDaniel J. Renfus, Brendan C. Dutmer, Thomas M. Gilbert, David S. Ballantine.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, United States.

125. Prediction of the H-bond Acceptor Coefficient a1 in LSER Applications Using QSSRAndrew Prochaska, David S. Ballantine.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, United States.

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126. Heat Induced Structural Rearrangement and Crystallite Formation in Thin Films of Room Tem-perature Plasma-Polymerized Titanium (IV) IsopropoxideHao Jiang,1,2 Lirong Sun,1,2 John T. Grant,1,3 Kurt Eyink,1 Timothy J. Bunning,1 Rachel Jaku-biak.1

1Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, AFRL, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2General Dynamics Information Technology, Dayton, OH, United States; 3University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, OH, United States.

127. Computational Analysis of Surface Carbon Energetics as a Function of Carbon Nanotube Size and GeometryAndrew J. Rusnak, Ronald C. Brown.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Mercyhurst College, Erie, PA, United States.

128. Photochemical Studies of Corannulene Derivatives; an Approach towards Designing PhotoswitchesR. A. A. U. Ranaweera,1 Chester Williamson,2 Qian Li,1 Derek Jones,1 James Mack,1 Anna D. Gudmundsdottir.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 2Depart-ment of Chemistry, Central State University, Wilberforce, OH, United States.

129. Synthesis and Characterization of Pyrene-Containing Compounds for the Non-Covalent Func-tionalization of Carbon NanotubesJohn K. Riley,1,2 David H. Wang,1,3 Loon-Seng Tan.1

1Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Nanostructured & Biological Materials Branch (AFRL/RXBN), Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, United States; 2Student Research Program, Southwestern Ohio Council for Higher Education, Dayton, Ohio, United States; 3Multiscale Composites and Polymers Division, University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

130. Study of Adsorption of Metal Cations into Carbon Multi-Wall NanotubesShirley Rosenzweig,1 George A. Sorial,1 E. Sahle-Demessie.2

1Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 2Office of Research and Development, NRMRL, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

131. Surface-Functionalized Antimicrobial Peptides for Antifouling CoatingsCaitlin L. Knight,1,2 David N. Garcia,3 Matthew B. Dickerson,1,4 Wendy J. Goodson.1

1Nanostructured and Biological Materials Branch, Materials and Manufacturing Directorate Air Force Research Lab, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States; 2Biological and Nanoscale Tech-nologies and Materials Division, UES, Inc., Dayton, OH, United States; 3United States Air Force Academy, USAFA, CO, United States; 4Research Associateship Program, National Research Council, Washington, DC, United States.

132. Design and Characterization of Ru-Terpyridine Complex Functionalized Perylene Bisimide for Photo-Electrochemical DevicesTawfik A. Khattab,1 Mark D. Soucek.2

1Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States; 2Departments of Chemistry and Polymer Engineering, University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States.

133. Bulk Heterojunction Photovoltaic Cells: The Effect of Interlayer Morphology on Device PerformanceEric S. Harper.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH, United States; 2RXBN, Air Force Research Laboratories, Wright Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States.

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134. Fiber-Based Bulk-Heterojunction Solar Sells Using Coaxial ElectrospinningNicholas M. Bedford,1 Matthew B. Dickerson,2 Kristi Singh,2 Lawrence F. Drummy,2 Michael F. Durstock,2 Rajesh R. Naik,2 Andrew J. Steckl.1

1Nanoelectronics Laboratory, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 2Materi-als and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States.

135. Electrochemical Oxidation of 5-Ethyl-4a-Hydroxy-3-Methyl-4a, 5-Dihydrolumiflavin (Pseudo-base Et-FlOH )Vincent A. Sichula, Ying Hu, Ekaterina V. Mirzakulova, Ksenija D. Glusac.Chemistry and Photochemistry, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio, United States.

136. Computational Studies with Iridium PCP Pincer Comlpexes for Hydrogen ReleaseOmar Bibi, Jeff Seyler.Chemistry, University of Southern Indiana, Evansville, Indiana, United States.

137. Fiber-Based Fluorescence Spectroscopy with a Variable Bandpass Filter for Use in an Under-graduate Physical Chemistry LaboratoryKatherine Macri, David Styers-Barnett.Department of Chemistry, University of Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN, United States.

138. H2 Reactivity of Pd Nanoparticles Coated with Mixed Monolayers of Alkyl Thiols and Alkyl Amines for Sensing and Catalysis ApplicationsMonica Moreno, Francis P. Zamborini.Department of Chemistry, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, United States.

139. Observation of FRET between Fluorescently Labelled Silica ParticlesMouhamad Khalil.DON, IPCMS institut de physique et chimie des matériaux de Strasbourg, Strasbourg, Alsace, France.

140. Computational Investigations of the Interactions between Phosphate Esters and Metal CarbidesJ. Eric Hils, David W. Johnson, Vladimir Benin.Depatment of Chemistry, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH, United States.

141. Thermodynamic Parameters of Exchange in Solution of Adducts Formed from [PCl2N]3 and Group 13 Lewis AcidsZin-Min Tun, Matthew J. Panzner, Doug A. Medvetz, Brian D. Wright, Linlin Li, Deepa Savant, Peter L. Rinaldi, Wiley J. Youngs, Claire A. Tessier.Department of Chemistry, The University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

142. Role of Ca2+ Ions on Acid-Induced Conformational Changes in Horseradish PeroxidaseDaniela M. Vasquez,2 Scott M. Tremain.1

1Department of Chemical Sciences, Raymond Walters College, University of Cincinnati, Cincin-nati, OH, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, Eastern Illinois University, Charleston, IL, United States.

143. Temperature and pH Responsive Polyethyleneimine Systems as Potential Nonviral Gene VectorsS. Chad Skidmore, Eric Fossum.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

144. Surface Initiated Polymerization in the Presence of Cholesteric Liquid CrystalsJennifer Hurtubise, Michael E. McConney, Timothy J. White, Vince P. Tondiglia, Lalgudi V. Natarajan, Timothy J. Bunning.Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, WPAFB, OH, United States.

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145. Investigation of Recombination Mechanisms in Ultrathin Film Iron Oxide PhotoelectrodesKelley M. Hutchins, Benjamin M. Klahr, Thomas W. Hamann.Department of Chemistry, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, United States.

146. e-Volving Student Learning in Chemistry Using TechnologyLarry Kolopajlo.Chemistry Department, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI, United States.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 2:20 PM – 4:30 PMOrganic Chemistry II203, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: David Johnson

2:20 PM 147. Laser Flash Photolysis Study of Different Substituted PhosphorylazidesHoi Ling Luk, Sivaramakrishnan Muthukrishnan, Matthew S. Platz, Christopher M. Hadad.Department of Chemistry, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.

2:40 PM 148. Design and Synthesis of Corannulene-Based Organic Light EmittersDerek Jones, James Mack.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Crestview Hills, KY, United States.

3:00 PM 149. Synthesis and Photophysical Properties of Meso Substituted N-Confused PorphyrinsRajendra Acharya, David A. Modarelli.Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

3:20 PM Coffee Break3:50 PM 150. Synthesis and Photophysical Properties of Peripheral Modification of N-Confused

Tetraphenylporphyrins Dimer and TrimerRashid Altamimi, David A. Modarelli.Department of Chemistry, The University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States.

4:10 PM 151. Synthesis and Photophysical Properties of Corannulene Based Organic MaterialsPraveen Bachawala, James Mack.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Thursday, June 17, 2010 8:00 AM – 9:00 AMPlenary Lecture III312 Theatre, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Barry Farmer, James Gord, David Johnson, Hilmar Koerner, Loon-Seng Tan, Steven Trohalaki

8:00 AM 152. Nanotechnology & EnergyWade Adams.Richard E. Smalley Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology, Rice Univer-sity, Houston, TX, United States.

8:50 AM. Break

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Thursday, June 17, 2010 9:00 AM – 11:50 AMChemistry and Materials for Alternative Energy I308/309, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Benjamin Leever, Steven Zabarnick, Lei Zhu

9:00 AM 153. Interfaces of Semiconducting Polymers in Transistors and Solar CellsMichael Chabinyc, Justin Cochran, Neil Treat, Craig Hawker.Materials Department, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, United States.

9:30 AM 154. Strateges for the Development of Highly Efficienct Oragnic Solar Cell MaterialsYue Wu, Jianhui Hou.Solarmer Energy Inc, El Monte, CA, United States.

10:00 AM 155. Polymer:Polymer Organic Photovoltaics Using Polyfluorene Based Electron AcceptorsChristopher A. Bailey,1 Barney E. Taylor,2 Jianguo Mei,3 John R. Reynolds,3 John J. Henderson,1 Benjamin J. Leever,1 Michael F. Durstock.1

1RXBN, Air Force Research Lab, Dayton, OH, United States; 2Universal Technol-ogy Corporation, Dayton, OH, United States; 3Department of Chemistry, Univer-sity of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:40 AM 156. Directed Morphology of Molecular Device Components and Student-Amenable

Frameworks for Understanding Bulk Heterojunction PhotovoltaicsBrian D. Pate.Department of Physics & Department of Chemistry, Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant, MI, United States.

11:10 AM 157. Photoinduced Electron Transfer Studies in Porphyrin-Fullerene Dyads-TetradsJojo Joseph,1 Tuan Nguyen,1 Chien-Lung Wang,2 Stephen Z. D. Cheng,2 David A. Modarelli.1

1Department of Chemistry, The University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States; 2Department of Polymer Science, The University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States.

11:30 AM 158. Impedance Analysis and Modeling of P3HT:PCBM Organic Photovoltaic DevicesBenjamin Leever,1,2 Michael Durstock,1 Tobin Marks,2 Mark Hersam.2

1Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States; 2Department of Materials Science, North-western University, Evanston, IL, United States.

Thursday, June 17, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:00 PMComputational Materials Science: Theory, Modeling, & Simulation III304, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Kelly Anderson, Soumya Patnaik

9:00 AM 159. Structure of Irreversibly Adsorbed Polymers by Off-Lattice Monte Carlo Simula-tion: Molecular Weight EffectsVikram K. Kuppa.University of Cincinnati, United States.

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9:35 AM 160. Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Metal Ion Complexation with Aqueous CarboxylatesEugeniya Iskrenova-Tchoukova,1 Andrey G. Kalinichev,1,2 R. J. Kirkpatrick.3

1Department of Chemistry, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, United States; 2Department of Geological Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, United States; 3College of Natural Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, United States.

9:50 AM 161. Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Stability as a Function of Size and Geometry: A Computational Analysis of Surface Carbon EnergeticsRonald C. Brown.Chemistry & Biochemistry, Mercyhurst College, Erie, PA, United States.

10:05 AM 162. Methanation on Fe Surface: First-Principles and Microkinetic ModellingDominic Alfonso, Dan Sorescu.Chemistry and Surface Science, National Energy Technology Laboratory, Pitts-burgh, PA, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:40 AM 163. Molecular Dynamics Simulation of Thermoset Fracture and Its Integration with

Micromechanics AnalysesJames C. Moller,1,2,3 Logan Ward,4 Vernon Bechel,1 Rajiv Berry,1 Timothy Bre-itzman,1 Endel Iarve,1,5 David Mollenhauer,1 Marilyn Unroe.1

1AFRL/RXBC, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States; 2Department of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, Miami Uni-versity, Oxford, OH, United States; 3Universal Technology Corporation, Dayton, OH, United States; 4The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States; 5University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, OH, United States.

11:10 AM 164. Computational Chemistry and Molecular Simulation of Phosphoric Acid-Doped Polybenzimidazoles: Preliminary Studies of Phosphorous AcidShuo Li,1 Joel R. Fried,1 Douglas S. Dudis.2

1Department of Chemical & Materials Engineering, University of Cincinnati, Cin-cinnati, OH, United States; 2Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright Patterson AFB, OH, United States.

11:40 AM 165. Is the (n+1) Electron Pairs Rule Applicable to Alanes? A DFT Structural Study of AlnHn+2 (n=4, 5,…8)Mohamed Maatallah,1 Driss Cherqaoui,1 Joel F. Liebman,2 Abdellah Jarid.1

1Chemistry, Cadi Ayyad University, Faculty of Sciences Semlalia, Marrakech, Morocco; 2Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland, United States.

Thursday, June 17, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:00 PMInorganic Chemistry I204, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: David Johnson

9:00 AM 166. Nickel Hydride Complexes Supported by PCP Pincer Ligands: Efficient Catalysts for Aldehyde and CO2 ReductionSumit Chakraborty, Jeanette A. Krause, Hairong Guan.Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

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9:20 AM 167. Ruthenium Complexes [Ru(bpy)2(DMSO)Cl]PF6 and [Ru(tpa)(DMSO)Cl](ClO4) as Potential Photodynamic Therapeutic AgentsSrikanth R. Banda,1 Jeff Rack,2 Patty K.-L. Fu.1

1Department of Chemistry, Governors State University, University Park, IL, United States; 2Chemistry, Ohio University, Athens, OH, United States.

9:40 AM 168. Ruthenium Complexes as DNA Photonuclease in the Treatment of Malignant Skin CarcinomaDevi Kalyan Karumanchi,1 Jeff Rack,2 Patty K.-L. Fu.1

1Department of Chemistry, Governors State university, University Park, IL, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, Ohio University, Athens, OH, United States.

10:00 AM 169. 2-Phenyl-1-10-Phenanthroline: Reactivity with Gold(III)SaltsSibrina N. Collins,1 Jeanette A. Krause,2 Sara E. Wiswell,1 John C. Warren,3 Sayan D. Chatterjee,4 William B. Connick.2

1Department of Chemistry, College of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States; 3Department of Chemistry, Youngstown State University, Youngstown, Ohio, United States; 4Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:40 AM 170. Ligand Redox Activity Observed at Cu(II) and Zn(II)- Pyridyl(pyrrolide)

ComplexesJaime A. Flores, Robert J. Wolfe, Jose G. Andino, Hyunsoo Park, Kenneth G. Caulton.Department of Chemistry, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, United States.

11:00 AM 171. Electronic Structure Effects on the Photoinduced Ligand Exchange and DNA Binding of Ru(II) Polypyridine Bisthioether ComplexesRobert N. Garner, Lauren E. Joyce, Claudia Turro.Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.

11:20 AM 172. Remediation of Ground Water Arsenic Using a Synthetic Dithiol, Merloc B9Lisa Y. Blue,1,2 Abhijit Mukherjee,3 E. Railey White,2 Alan Fryar,4 David A. Atwood.2

1Department of Research and Development, Merloc, LLC, Lexington, KY, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, United States; 3Bureau of Economic Geology, University of Texas, Austin, TX, United States; 4Department of Earth & Environmental Sciences, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, United States.

11:40 AM 173. The Effects of the Dimethylether Bridging Moiety in the H-Cluster of the Clos-tridium pasteurianum Hydrogenase on the Mechanism of H2 Production: A Quantum Mechanics/Molecular Mechanics StudySteven Trohalaki, Ruth Pachter.Air Force Research Laboratory, Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States.

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Thursday, June 17, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:00 PMNew Vistas in Biotechnology: Chemistry, Materials and Applications III303, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Alamgir Karim, Rajesh NaikPresider: Hendrik Heinz

9:00 AM 174. Advances in Combinatorial and High-Throughput Screening of Biofunctional PolymersCarson Meredith.School of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, Georgia Tech, Atlanta, GA, United States.

9:30 AM 175. Nanotopography of Phase Separated Polymer Blend Scaffolds for Cell SeedingJolanta E. Marszalek,1 Alamgir Karim,1 Charles K. Thodeti,2 Ravi Kumar Ada-pala,2 Carl G. Simon.3

1Department of Polymer Engineering, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States; 2Northeastern Ohio Universities Colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy, Rootstown, OH, United States; 3Polymer Division, NIST, Gaithersburg, MD, United States.

9:55 AM 176. Block Copolymer Thin Films for Protein NanopatterningKevin A. Cavicchi.Department of Polymer Engineering, The University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:40 AM 177. Combinatorial Design of a Four-Helix Bundle Protein Using High-Throughput

Thermal ScanningThomas J. Magliery.Departments of Chemistry and Biochemistry, The Ohio State University, Colum-bus, OH, United States.

11:20 AM 178. Interaction of Nanomaterials with Human Blood Proteins and PlateletsSilvia H. De Paoli Lacerda.CBER, FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, BETHESDA, MD, United States.

Thursday, June 17, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:00 PMSmall Business Innovations in the Chemical & Materials Industry307, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: Nina Joshi(Invited Only)

9:00 AM 179. Support Groups That I UseRonald J. Versic.Administration, Ronald T. Dodge Co., Dayton, Ohio, United States.

9:40 AM 180. Government Contracting for Chemical and Materials Small BusinessesMeredith Threatt.(SWCO PTAC), Southwest Central Ohio Procurement Technical Assistance Cen-ter, Dayton, OH, United States.

10:20 AM Coffe Break10:40 AM 181. IP 101 for Entrepreneurial Companies

Harry J. Guttman.Stipkala LLC, Stipkala LLC, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

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11:20 AM 182. Access to CapitalAmy J. Stose, Deborah A. Fitzwater.Department of Business Banking, PNC Bank, Dayton, OH, United States.

Thursday, June 17, 2010 9:05 AM – 12:00 PMNanomaterials: Synthesis, Structures, Functionalization and Applications III310/311, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Liming Dai, Lawrence Drummy, Benji MaruyamaPresider: Satish Kumar

9:05 AM 183. Synthesis of Photo-Open Polymer Nanocapsules: A New Approach towards Gene DeliveryTejal J. Deodhar,1 Jacob J. Weingart,1 Yun Chen,2 Jun J. Hu,1 Liu Qin.2

1Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States; 2De-partment of Biology, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

9:30 AM 184. Thermal Stability of Enzymes Is Significantly Increased by Encapsulation into N-Isopropylacrylamide NanoparticlesAnna M. Leech, Jeremy P. Walker.ICx Agentase, Pittsburgh, PA, United States.

9:55 AM 185. Actuation of Oxidation Responsive Nanoparticles by Oxidoreductase EnzymesJermaine D. Johnson, Justin J. Bohn, Jeremy P. Walker.ICx Technologies, Pittsburgh, Pa, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:40 AM 186. Developments in Polymer/Carbon Nanotube Composite Films and Fibers

Satish Kumar.School of Polymer, Textile and Fiber Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technol-ogy, Atlanta, Ga, United States.

11:10 AM 187. Programmable Transdermal Delivery of Addictive Drugs Using Carbon Nano-tubes MembranesJi Wu,1 Kalpana Paudel,2 Caroline Strasinger,2 Dana Hammell,2 Audra Stinch-comb,2 Bruce Hinds.1

1Chemical and Materials Engineering Department, University of Kentucky, Lex-ington, KY, United States; 2College of Pharmacy, University of Kentucky, Lexing-ton, KY, United States.

11:35 AM 188. Thermal Conductivity of Nanofluids Containing Polyalphaolefins (PAOs) and Mul-tiwalled Carbon Nanotubes (MWNTs)David H. Wang,1,3 Javier Narvaez,2,4 Lois Gschwender,2 Loon-Seng Tan.1

1Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Nanostructured & Biological Materials Branch (AFRL/RXBN), Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, United States; 2Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Thermal Sciences & Management Branch (AFRL/RXBT), Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, United States; 3Multiscale Composites and Polymers Division, University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, Ohio, United States; 4Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, University of Dayton, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

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Thursday, June 17, 2010 9:20 AM – 11:40 AMAnalytical Chemistry I202, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: James Gord

9:20 AM 189. Electrodeposited V2O5 as a Prospective Catalyst for an H2S Amperometric BiosensorJason A. Bennett, James E. Pander III.School of Science, Penn State Erie, The Behrend College, Erie, PA, United States.

9:40 AM 190. On-Trap Derivatization of Short-Chain Fatty AcidsMace Mattieson.Department of Chemistry, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, Michigan, United States.

10:00 AM 191. Elemental Analysis of a Variety of Dried, Powdered, Kelp Food Supplements for Heavy Metals Via Energy Dispersive X-Ray FluorescenceDanielle Garshott, Elizabeth MacDonald, Meghann Mouyianis, Elizabeth Roberts-Kirchhoff, Mark A. Benvenuto.Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, University of Detroit Mercy, Detroit, MI, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:40 AM 192. Insights into Spontaneous Grafting of Aryldiazonium Ions for the Modification of

Carbon ElectrodesKristin K. Cline, Rachel Saylor, Christa Snyder.Department of Chemistry, Wittenberg University, Springfield, OH, United States.

11:00 AM 193. Spectroelectrochemical Sensing of Pyrene Metabolites 1-Hydroxypyrene and 1-Hydroxypyrene-Glucuronide in a Single AnalysisRobert A. Wilson, Carl J. Seliskar, William R. Heineman.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

11:20 AM 194. Purification of Gold Nanoplates Directly on Surfaces for Enhanced Localized Sur-face Plasmon Resonance (LSPR) BiosensingSrinivas Reddy Beeram, Zamborini Francis.department of chemistry, university of louisille, louisville, ky, United States.

Thursday, June 17, 2010 9:20 AM – 11:20 AMOrganic Chemistry III203, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: David Johnson

9:20 AM 195. Synthesis of Phenylated AlkoxyterephthalatesRachel Sayers, William A. Feld.Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States.

9:40 AM 196. Synthesis of Haplomyrtin AnalogsArnoud M. van Duijn, William A. Feld.Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

10:00 AM 197. Nickel-Catalyzed Direct Synthesis of 1,4-Difunctionalized CompoundsSanjeewa K. Rodrigo, Hairong Guan.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

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10:20 AM Coffee Break10:40 AM 198. New Spin Trap Nitrone Conjugate of Calix[4]pyrrole: Design, Synthesis, and

CharacterizationShang-U. Kim,1,2 Kevin M. Nash,1 Yangping Liu,2 Jay Zweier,2 Antal Rockenbau-er,3 Frederick A. Villamena.1,2

1Department of Pharmacology, Davis Heart & Lung Research Institute, College of Medine, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States; 2Center for Biomedical EPR Spectroscopy and Imaging, Davis Heart & Lung Research Insti-tute, College of Medicine, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States; 3Chemical Research Center, Institute of Structural Chemistry, Budapest, Pusz-taszeri, Hungary.

11:00 AM 199. Synthesis, Characterisation and In-Vitro Cytotoxic Activities of Mononuclear Ru(II) ComplexesSreekanth Thota,1 Subhas Somalingappa Karki,2 Jan Balzarini,3 Erik De Clecq.4

1DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACEUTICAL CHEMISTRY, S.R.COLLEGE OF PHARMACY, WARANGAL, ANDHRA PRADESH, India; 2department of pharmaceutical chem-istry, kles college of pharmacy, BANGALORE, India; 3department of pharmacol-ogy and medicine, rega institute of medical reasearch, leuven, Belgium; 4de-partment of pharmacology and medicine, rega institute of medical reasearch, Belgium.

Thursday, June 17, 2010 1:00 PM – 2:00 PMPlenary Lecture IV312 Theatre, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Barry Farmer, James Gord, David Johnson, Hilmar Koerner, Loon-Seng Tan, Steven Trohalaki

1:00 PM 200. Innovative Technology Needs To Meet Air Force Operation Energy RequirementsWilliam E. Harrison.Propulsion Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States.

1:50 PM. Break

Thursday, June 17, 2010 2:00 PM – 4:40 PMAnalytical Chemistry II202, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: James Gord

2:00 PM 201. Screening for Residual Metals in CNT Structures and Their Bioavailability In Vi-tro Using ICP-MSJulia Kuhlmann,1 Karolin K. Kroening,1 Chaminda Jayasinghe,2 Sarah Pixley,3 Vesselin Shanov,2 Joe A. Caruso,1 William R. Heineman.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 2Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, University of Cin-cinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 3Department of Cancer and Cell Biology, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

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2:20 PM 202. Quantitative Determination of Securinine, a Potential Anticancer Agent, from Securinega suffruticosa Plant Leaves by LC-ITMSSimuli L. Wabuyele,1 David Wald,2 Yan Xu.1

1Department of Chemistry, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States; 2Department of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

2:40 PM 203. Forensic Proteomics – Rapid Protein Analysis by MALDI-TOF/TOF MS with On-Plate Digestion and Stable Isotope Labeled Peptide StandardsColin G. Barry.U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Forensic Chemistry Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

3:00 PM 204. 2D Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Spectroscopic Analysis of Polyvinylidene Fluoride (PVF2)Eric B. Twum,1 Xiaohong Li,1 Elizabeth F. McCord,2 Peter A. Fox,3 Peter L. Rinaldi.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States; 2Cen-tral Research and Development, E. I. duPont de Nemours and Co., Wilmington, DE, United States; 3Experimental Station, DuPont Performance Polymers, Wilm-ington, DE, United States.

3:20 PM Coffee Break3:40 PM 205. Modeling NMR Features of Secondary Metabolites from Black Raspberry (Ru-

bus occidentalis L.) Fruits Against Chemical Assay Results for Identifying Active ComponentsLiladhar Paudel,1 Faith J. Wyzgoski,2 Peter L. Rinaldi,1 R. Neil Reese,3 Mustafa Ozgen,4 Artemio Z. Tulio,6 A. Raymond Miller,5 Joseph C. Scheerens,5 James K. Hardy.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University-Mansfield, Mansfield, Ohio, United States; 3Department of Biology and Microbiology, South Dakota State University, Brookings, South Dakota, United States; 4Department of Horticulture, Gaziosmanpasa University, Tasliciftlik, Tokat, Turkey; 5Department of Horticulture and Crop Science, The Ohio State University, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, Wooster, Ohio, United States; 6Department of United States Food and Drug Administration, Center for Food and Safety and Applied Nutrition (CFSAN), Summit-Argo, Illinois, United States.

4:00 PM 206. Characterization of Poly(lactide)-Poly(ethylene Glycol) by NMRLinlin Li, Amanda R. Knapp, Peter L. Rinaldi, Wiley J. Youngs.Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

4:20 PM 207. 2D-NMR Studies of the Backbone and Chain End Structure in PFPE FluoropolymersXiaohong Li,1 Elizabeth F. McCord,2 Peter A. Fox,2 Jon L. Howell,3 Peter L. Rinaldi.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States; 2Experimental Station, DuPont Performance Polymers, Wilmington, DE, United States; 3Experimental Station, EI DuPont de Nemours and Co, Wilmington, DE, United States.

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Thursday, June 17, 2010 2:00 PM – 5:10 PMChemical Education Symposium I302/303, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: Suzanne Lunsford

2:00 PM 208. Development of Peer-Led Team Learning: Lessons Learned and New DirectionsPratibha Varma-Nelson.Center for Teaching and Learning, IUPUI Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN, United States.

2:40 PM 209. Alcohols, Acids and Esters, Their Structure-Nomenclature Can Be Easy and Fun with Octachem ModelJoaquin Palacios.Physical-chemistry, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico City, D.F, Mexico.

3:00 PM 210. Development of an Inquiry-Based Organic Instructional Laboratory Using Micro-wave-Assisted Organic Synthesis (MAOS)S. Shaun Murphree, Theodore G. Bean.Department of Chemistry, Allegheny College, Meadville, PA, United States.

3:20 PM Coffee Break3:50 PM 211. Engineering Low Bandgap Polymers That Utilize Quinoidal Resonance Structure

Stabilization by Thienothiophene with Fine-Tuning of HOMO Energy Level: Ap-plications in Organic Solar CellsNabil Kleinhenz, Huaxing Zhou, Sam C. Price, Liqiang Yang, Wei You.Department of Chemistry, University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, United States.

4:10 PM 212. Incorporation of Civic Engagement into the General Chemistry Curriculum: Ap-proaches, Problems, Successes and FailuresDavid W. Johnson.Department of Chemistry, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH, United States.

4:30 PM 213. Lights, Camera, Action! Benefits of Game Show Review in Freshman ChemistryThomas W. Stringfield, Gene F. Kramer, Pete Bender.Department of Chemical Sciences, University of Cincinnati - Raymond Walters College, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

4:50 PM 214. Transforming Gen Chem Labs at a Large University from “Cookie Cutter” to “Guided Inquiry”Edith Preciosa Kippenhan.Chemistry, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States.

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Thursday, June 17, 2010 2:00 PM – 5:00 PMChemistry and Materials for Alternative Energy II308/309, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Benjamin Leever, Steven Zabarnick

Presider: Christopher Bailey

2:00 PM 215. Interfacial Synergy between Energy and NanomaterialsRandy L. Vander Wal,1 Gordon M. Berger,2 Michael J. Kulis,2 Kenneth W. Street,3 Gary H. Hunter,3 Laura J. Evans.3

1Energy and Mineral Engineering, Penn State University, University Park, PA, United States; 2The Universities Space Research Association/NCSER, Cleveland, OH, United States; 3The NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, OH, United States.

2:30 PM 216. Transition-Metal Nitrides and Carbides as Electrode Materials for Electrochemical CapacitorsPriyanka Pande,1 Paul Rasmussen,1,2 Levi T. Thompson.1,3

1Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States; 3Hydrogen Energy Technology Laboratory, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States.

2:50 PM 217. Silicon-Coated Carbon Fibers for Lithium-Ion Battey AnodesGerard K. Simon,1,3 David J. Burton,2 Tarun Goswami,3 Benji Maruyama.1

1Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, United States; 2Applied Sciences, Inc, Cedarville, OH, United States; 3Department of Biomedical, Industrial and Human Factors Engineering, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States.

3:10 PM Coffee Break3:40 PM 218. Single-Molecule Interfacial Electron Transfer Dynamics at Dye-Sensitized TiO2

NanoparticlesYuanmin Wang, Yufan He, H. Peter Lu.Department of Chemistry, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio, United States.

4:00 PM 219. Electron Transfer Dynamics between 9-anthracenecarboxylic Acid and TiO2 Nanoparticles with Applications for Novel Photovoltaic DevicesLynetta M. Mier,1 Terry L. Gustafson,1 Arthur J. Epstein.1,2

1Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States; 2Department of Physics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.

4:20 PM 220. Electrolyte-Dependent Photovoltaic Responses in Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells Based on an Osmium(II) Dye of Mixed DenticityAnthony C. Onicha, Felix N. Castellano.Department of Chemistry and Center for Photochemical Sciences, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio, United States.

4:40 PM 221. Photosynthetic-Nanocrystal AssembliesJoseph M. Slocik,1 Alexander O. Govorov,2 Rajesh R. Naik.1

1Nanostructured and Biologicals Materials Branch, Air Force Research Lab, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2Department of Physics and Astronomy, Ohio Uni-versity, Athens, OH, United States.

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Thursday, June 17, 2010 2:00 PM – 5:10 PMComputational Materials Science: Theory, Modeling, & Simulation IV304, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Kelly Anderson, Soumya Patnaik

2:00 PM 222. Modeling Challenges in Developing New Thermoelectric Energy Conversion MaterialsDouglas Dudis,1 Michael Check,1 John Ferguson,1 Joel Schmidt,1 Chenggang Chen,2 Bevan Elliott,2 Joseph Shumaker,2 Michael Leamy.3

1AFRL/RXBT, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States; 2University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, OH, Unit-ed States; 3Department of Mechanical Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technol-ogy, Atlanta, GA, United States.

2:30 PM 223. Surfactant and Polymer-Induced Modification of Post-Impact Drop Spreading and Heat TransferMilind A. Jog.Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

3:00 PM 224. Temperature Dependence of the Gramicidin Channel ConductanceThomas L. Beck,1 Hyundeok Song.2

1Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 2Department of Physics, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

3:20 PM Coffee Break3:50 PM 225. Atomistic Scale Thermal Transport in Amorphous Materials and Its Interfaces

Ajit K. Roy, Vikas Varshney, Soumya Patnaik, Barry Farmer.Thermal Sciences and Materials Branch (AFRL/RXBT), Air Force Research Labo-ratory, Wright Patterson AFB, OH, United States.

4:25 PM 226. Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Interface Thermal Conductance in Longitudi-nally Connected Carbon Nanotube JunctionsVikas Varshney,1,2 Jonghoon Lee,1,2 Ajit K. Roy,1 Barry L. Farmer.1

1Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Day-ton, OH, United States; 2Universal Technology Corporation, Dayton, OH, United States.

4:40 PM 227. Phonon Transmission in Functionalized Carbon Nanotube: Wave Packet StudyJonghoon Lee,1,2 Vikas Varshney,1,2 Ajit K. Roy,1 Barry L. Farmer.1

1Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright Patterson, Ohio, United States; 2Universal Technology Corporation, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

4:55 PM 228. Diamonds Made of Graphite: Calculations on Novel High-Symmetry Carbon CagesRoderick M. Macrae.School of Mathematics and Sciences, Marian University, Indianapolis, IN, United States.

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Thursday, June 17, 2010 2:00 PM – 5:10 PMInorganic Chemistry II204, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: David Johnson

2:00 PM 229. Synthesis and Reactivity of Iron Pincer ComplexesPapri Bhattacharya, Jeanette A. Krause, Hairong Guan.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

2:20 PM 230. New Methodology for the Synthesis of Periodic Mesoporous Organosilicas (PMO’s) with Bridging Phenyl GroupsT. Kenneth McBride,1 Wendy L. Burns,1 Christopher T. Burns.2

1Department of Chemistry and Physics, Bellarmine University, Louisville, Ken-tucky, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, University of Louisville, Louis-ville, Kentucky, United States.

2:40 PM 231. Developing a New Methodology for the Synthesis of Periodic Mesoporous OrganosilicasWendy L. Burns,1 Christopher T. Burns.2

1Department of Chemistry and Physics, Bellarmine University, Louisville, Ken-tucky, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, University of Louisville, Louis-ville, Kentucky, United States.

3:00 PM 232. Rich Coordination Chemistry of Copper(I) with a Poor Sigma Donor PyridylpyrrolideJaime A. Flores, Robert J. Wolfe, Jose G Andino, Hyunsoo Park, Kenneth G. Caulton.Department of Chemistry, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, United States.

3:20 PM Coffee Break3:50 PM 233. Synthesis of FeSb2 Nanorods and Nanoparticles by Solvothermal Synthesis

RoutesJoel E. Schmidt, Douglas S. Dudis, Joseph A. Shumaker, Harry A. Seibel.Materials and Manufacturing Directorate AFRL/RXBT, Air Force Research Labora-tory, WPAFB, OH, United States.

4:10 PM 234. Synthesis of Lanthanide Chelates for Detection of Capsaicin in SolutionChristopher G. Gulgas, L. Wyatt Colvin.Department of Chemistry and Physics, Longwood University, Farmville, Virginia, United States.

4:30 PM 235. Synthesis and Anticancer Properties of silver(I)- and gold(I)-N-Heterocyclic Car-bene ComplexesTammy J. Siciliano,1 Michael C. Deblock,2 Khadijah M. Hindi,3 Semih Durmus,3 Matthew J. Panzner,3 Claire A. Tessier,3 Wiley J. Youngs.3

1Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University at Mansfield, Mansfield, OH, United States; 2Department of Biology, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States; 3Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

4:50 PM 236. A Systematic Study of Growth Conditions on the Composition, Structure and Properties of Sr2FeMoO6 Films Grown Via Pulsed Laser DepositionTricia L. Meyer,1 Patrick M. Woodward,1 Thomas R. Lemberger.2

1Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States; 2Department of Physics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.

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Thursday, June 17, 2010 2:00 PM – 5:10 PMNanomaterials: Synthesis, Structures, Functionalization and Applications IV310/311, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Liming Dai, Lawrence Drummy, Benji Maruyama

2:00 PM 237. Electronic Properties of Graphene Nanoribbons Produced by Chemical Unzipping of Carbon NanotubesAlexander Sinitskii, Dmitry V. Kosynkin, Ayrat Dimiev, James M. Tour.Department of Chemistry, Rice University, Houston, TX, United States.

2:25 PM 238. Multi-Layer Graphene Petals Grown on Flat Substrates by Plasma CVDChandra S. Rout,1 Anurag Kumar,1 Chris Muratore,2 Roger Gerzeski,2 Timothy S. Fisher.1,2

1Birck Nanotechnology Center, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, United States; 2RXBT, Air Force Research Laboratory, WPAFB, OH, United States.

2:50 PM 239. How To Embellish Au NRs: Controlling the Growth Mode of Ag, Pd and Pt on the AuKyoungweon Park, Richard A. Vaia.Nanostructured and Biological Materials Branch, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States.

3:20 PM Coffee Break3:50 PM 240. Isolation and Characterization of Magic-Numbered Silver Clusters

Terry P. Bigioni.Department of Chemistry, The University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States.

4:10 PM 241. Sonochemical Assisted Synthesis of Silver Nanoparticles and the Decoration of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes and Graphene OxideK. A. Shiral Fernando,3 Nicholas D. McNamara,1 Barbara Harruff,3 Marcus Smith,1 Elena Guliants,1 Christopher E. Bunker.2

1University of Dayton, Dayton, OH, United States; 2Wright Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States; 3University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, OH, United States.

4:30 PM 242. Connecting Carbon Nanotube Growth Termination to Catalyst MorphologyDmitri N. Zakharov,1 Seung Min Kim,1 Cary L. Pint,2 Placidus B. B. Amama,3 Robert H. Hauge,2 Benji Maruyama,4 Eric A. Stach.1

1School of Materials Engineering and Birck Nanotechnology Center, Purdue Uni-versity, West Lafayette, IN, United States; 2Department of Physics and Astron-omy, and Department of Chemistry, Richard E. Smalley Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology, Rice University, Houston, TX, United States; 3Univer-sity of Dayton Research Institute, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH, United States; 4Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Labora-tory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States.

4:50 PM 243. Highly Conductive Graphene Nanoribbons by Longitudinal Splitting of Carbon Nanotubes Using Potassium VaporDmitry Kosynkin, Alexander Sinitskii.Smalley Institute for Nanoscale Science & Technology, Rice University, Houston, TX, United States.

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Thursday, June 17, 2010 2:00 PM – 5:10 PMPolymer Chemistry203, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: Loon-Seng Tan

2:00 PM 244. Towards the Synthesis of Amphiphilic Nanoparticles Using Crosslinked PolystyrenesJames Baker, Nicholas Moon, Andrea Charif, Coleen Pugh.Department of Polymer Science, The University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States.

2:20 PM 245. Surface Segregation in Blends Containing Macrocyclic ChainsShih-Fan Wang, Jonathan Janoski, David E. Dabney, Chrys Wesdemiotis, Rod-eric P. Qurik, Mark D. Foster.Department of polymer science, The University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

2:40 PM 246. Novel PET/In-Situ Fabricated Sheet-Like Titanium Compound Nanocomposite with Excellent Processing and High Effective Uv Shielding AbilitiesBin Sun,1 Kun Zhang,1 Heng Zhang,1 Wei Wang,2 Siwei Leng,3 Meifang Zhu,1 Stephen Z. D. Cheng.3

1State Key Lab for Modification of Chemical Fibers and Polymer Materials, Col-lege of Material Science and Engineering, Donghua University, Shanghai, China; 2Key Laboratory of Science and Technology of Eco-textile, Ministry of Education, College of Chemical Science and Engineering, Donghua University, Shanghai, China; 3The Maurice Morton Institute and Department of Polymer Science, The University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

3:00 PM 247. Poly(arylene Ether)s Via Nucleophilic Aromatic Substitution Reactions of 3,5-Difluoro Aromatic SystemsEric Fossum, Sridevi Kaiti, Daan van Beek, Kevin Tienda, Zhenning Yu, Gigi Kusmus, Kim Kern, Fadwa Constandinidis.Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States.

3:20 PM Coffee Break3:50 PM 248. Synthesis and Study of Resorcinarene- and Calixarene-Core Polylactide Star

PolymersPerry S. Corbin.Chemistry, Ashland University, Ashland, OH, United States.

4:10 PM 249. Main-Chain Functionalized Degradable Polyesters: A Versatile Synthetic Route to FunctionalizationWilliam Storms, Coleen Pugh.Polymer Science, University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States.

4:30 PM 250. Synthesis of Cyclic-b-Linear PEG-b-PCL Copolymers for Controlled Drug DeliveryGladys R. Montenegro, Coleen Pugh.Department of Polymer Science, The University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, United States.

4:50 PM 251. Synthesis of Urea Peptoid Oligomers, Their Ability To Self Assemble and Cou-pling to Polymers Prepared under RAFT ControlNeil Ayres.Department of Chemistry, The University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

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Thursday, June 17, 2010 2:00 PM – 5:00 PMSmall Business Innovations in the Chemical & Materials Industry307, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: Nina JoshiPresider: Joseph Sabol(Invited Only)

2:00 PM 252. Challenges in Building a Small BusinessDavid B. Curliss, Jason E. Lincoln.Performance Polymer Solutions Inc., Performance Polymer Solutions Inc., Mo-raine, Ohio, United States.

2:40 PM 253. Sell the Dream: Disruptive Technology from Concept to ProductionPatrick J. Hood.Cornerstone Research Group, Inc., Cornerstone Research Group, Inc., Dayton, OH, United States.

3:20 PM Coffee Break3:50 PM 254. Prior Speakers Panel Discussion: Facilitator, Joseph Sabol, PhD

Joseph E. Sabol.Sabol Consulting, Sabol Consulting Services, Racine, WI, United States.

3:55 PM Introductory Statements by Panel Members4:10 PM Open Discusiion with the Audience

Thursday, June 17, 2010 2:00 PM – 4:30 PMPoster Session II103, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: James Gord, David Johnson, Loon-Seng Tan

255. Soft Lewis Acid-Catalyzed Cycloisomerization ReactionsZezhou Wang.Department of Chemistry, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI, United States.

256. Synthesis of Medium-Sized Azacycles Via Metallocarbenoid-Derived Ammonium Ylide RearrangementsOksana M. Pavlyuk, Mark C. McMills.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Ohio University, Athens, Ohio, United States.

257. Photoinduced Reaction between Eosin Y and DODCI: A Model System for the Photodynamic EffectRoderick M. Macrae, Carrie Upchurch.School of Mathematics and Sciences, Marian University, Indianapolis, IN, United States.

258. Validation of an Ibuprofen Impurity Method To Meet Current ICH GuidelinesDavid B. Shepherd, Dorothy J. Ogden.R&D Analytical, Eurand, Inc., Vandalia, Ohio, United States.

259. Synthesis and Characterization of Nanoparticulated RifampicinLakshmi Sai Priyanka Guttikonda, Patty K.-L. Fu.Department of Chemistry, Governors State University, University Park, IL, United States.

260. Novel Metalloporphyrins as Potential Photodynamic Therapeutic AgentsAlex Blinder, Sheetal Gangula, Patty K.-L. Fu.Department of Chemistry, Governors State University, University Park, IL, United States.

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261. Solid-Phase Synthesis of N-Carboxyalkyl Unnatural Amino AcidsLindsey G. Fischer, Martin J. O’Donnell, William L. Scott.Chemistry & Chemical Biology, Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, Indianapo-lis, IN, United States.

262. Synthetic 2-Chloro-3-aryl-4(3H)-Quinazoliniminium Salts That Are Effective Against Leukemic and Mammary Tumor Cell Proliferation In VitroJean-Pierre H. Perchellet,1 Elisabeth M. Perchellet,1 Andrew M. Waters,1 Kusum L. Chan-dra,2 John Desper,2 Sundeep Rayat.2

1Division of Biology, Anti-Cancer Drug Laboratory, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kan-sas, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas, United States.

263. Mechanical Stability of the C2A Domain from Human Synaptotagmin 1Li Duan, Ruxandra Dima.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

264. Synthesis of a Series of Multi-Dentate, Aromatic Ligands Utilizing 3,5-Difluoro-2,6-DiaminopyridineJohn Williams, Natalie Datien, Mark A. Benvenuto.Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, University of Detroit Mercy, Detroit, MI, United States.

265. Isolation and Characterization of Peptides That Interact with GrapheneLaurie L. Wissler,1 Sharon E. Jones,1 Sang Nyon Kim,1 Yue Cui,2 Seva Khambadkone,1 Mi-chael C. McAlpine,2 Rajesh R. Naik.1

1Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, United States; 2Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Princeton Univer-sity, Princeton, New Jersey, United States.

266. Microwave Assisted Polycondensation of Polyimides by [4, 4´-(Hexafluoroisopropylidene) Diphthalic Anhydride, Pyromellitic Dianhydride] and [2, 4, 6-Trimethyl-m-Phenylenediamine]. Power, Time and Solvent EffectHugo Mendoza, Joaquin Palacios.Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico.

267. Can Rhodamine-123 Analogs Be Used To Overcome Multidrug Resistance in Photodynamic Therapy?Christopher J. Halbrook, Guilherme L. Indig.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, United States.

268. Identification of Sea Turtle Leeches Using DNA BarcodingTriet M. Truong, Audrey E. McGowin, Adrian M. Corbett.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States.

269. Optimizing the Expression of Alkaline Phytase in Pichia pastorisMimi Yang, Pushpalatha Murthy, Steven C. Johnson.Department of chemistry, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, Michigan, United States.

270. Design and Synthesis of Unsymmetrical p-Extended Push-Pull Porphyrins through b-PositionYongming Deng, Hong Wang, Rohit Deshpande.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, United States.

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271. Synthesis and Structural Characterization of Terphenyl Scaffolded S-C-S Palladium Pincer Complexes and Studies of Their Catalytic Activity in the Suzuki Coupling ReactionPaul R. Challen,1 Man Lung Desmond Kwan,1 John D. Protasiewicz,2 Wilson Luu,1 Mark J. Johnson,1 Amy R. Krystosik,1 David W. Beach,1 David F. Essi,1 Sean P. Steenberg.1

1Department of Chemistry, John Carroll University, University Heights, Ohio, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States.

272. Interactions of Hsp70 Chaperones with Fe-S Cluster Scaffold Proteins ISU/IscUWen-I. Luo,1 James A. Cowan.1,2

1Ohio State Biochemistry Program, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.

273. Quantification of CH-p Interactions: A Cautionary Note to Simplified Models for Aromatic InteractionsBright U. Emenike, Benjamin W. Gung.Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Miami University, Oxford, OH, United States.

274. Investigations into the Aerobic Synthesis of Triazoles Via Copper CatalystAnthony Lam, Daniel T. Esterline.Department of Chemistry, Thomas More College, Crestview Hills, KY, United States.

275. Tailoring Carbohydrates To Capture Shiga Toxin VariantsHailemichael O. Yosief, Suri S. Iyer.Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

276. Manipulations with Fused-Ring SydnonesErik Dihrkop, Kenneth Turnbull.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States.

277. Observation of Reversible Block Copolymer Micellization by NMR RelaxationGregg M. Wilmes, David J. Arnold, Kevin S. Kawchak.Chemistry, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI, United States.

278. Development of an Argyrophilic Protein ProfileStephanie M. Bilinovich, Michael C. Deblock, Matthew J. Panzner, Wiley J. Youngs, Thomas C. Leeper.Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

279. Poly(arylene Ether)s Bearing Pendant BenzoxazolesDisraeli Kusmus, Eric Fossum.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States.

280. Site-Directed Mutagenesis of the Protein-Protein Contacts in the Yeast mRNA Processing ComplexJillian A. Parker, Thomas C. Leeper.Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

281. Identification and Characterization of Highly Conserved Proteins from the Photosynthetic Bac-terium Rhodobacter sphaeroidesAaron T. Setterdahl, Kacee Lett, George A. Huth, Samantha Strom, Megan Lamb, John W. Halfacre.Department of Chemistry, Indiana University Southeast, New Albany, IN, United States.

282. Hemoglobin: A Reliable Indicator of Blood in Archaeological Materials?Daniel Fraser,1 Ruth Ann Armitage.2

1Department of Chemistry and Physical Science, Lourdes College, Sylvania, OH, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI, United States.

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283. A Two Method Comparison of Acylation Techniques for Sydnones, Using Montmorillonite K-10 Clay or Bismuth Triflate/Lithium Perchlorate under Thermal or Microwave ConditionsAmber Rumple, Kenneth Turnbull, Jennifer Fischer.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States.

284. Gold Catalyzed Intramolecular [4 + 3] Cycloadditons between Furan and Propargyl AcetatesRyan C. Conyers, Ben Gung.Chemistry and Biochemistry, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, United States.

285. Identification of Polycystin 1 on Erythrocytes Using a Cell Surface Immunofluorescence Stain-ing ProtocolTimothy T. Dick, Sarah W. Abuonk, Nancy J. Pettibone, Angela M. Shouse.Department of Biology, Owensboro Community and Technical College, Owensboro, Kentucky, United States.

286. Investigation of Carbocations in a Solvent-Free EnvironmentMeghan R. Wagner, James Mack.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

287. Metallomics: A New Approach To Study the Metallome of Macrophages and Its Response upon InfectionQilin Chan,1 Michael S. Winters,2 George S. Deepe,3 Joseph A. Caruso.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 2Depart-ment of Infectious Diseases, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 3Veterans Affairs Hospital, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincin-nati, OH, United States.

288. Formation of a Sydno[3,4-a]indolone and Reactions ThereofDaniel Brown, Ryan Vikan, Kenneth Turnbull.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

289. Novel Synthetic Approach to an Antifouling Furoic AcidBenjamin R. Eyer, S. Shaun Murphree.Department of Chemistry, Allegheny College, Meadville, PA, United States.

290. Microwave-Assisted Benzylic BrominationJeremy D. Mason, S. Shaun Murphree.Department of Chemistry, Allegheny College, Meadville, PA, United States.

291. Copoly(arylene Ether)s Carrying Pendant (3-Sulfonated) Phenyl Sulfonyl GroupsKimberly Kern, Fadwa Constandinidis, Eric Fossum.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

292. Metabolic Effects on Mitochondrial Trans-Membrane Potential and Cellular Morphology in CV-1 CellsMelissa Pergande, Guilherme Indig.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, UW-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States.

293. Investigation of Metalloproteins as Putative Biomarkers in Cerebrospinal Fluid To Predict Cere-bral VasospasmYaofang Zhang,1 Joseph F. Clark,2 Gail Pyne-Geithman,3 Joseph Caruso.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 2Depart-ment of Neurology, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 3Department of Neurosurgery, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

294. Towards the Total Synthesis of HaplomyrtinNora E. Hunter, William A. Feld.Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

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295. A Comparison of Atmospheric Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons Profiles from Pine Needles and High-Volume Samplers To Determine Pine Needles’s Useability as a SamplerTimothy A. Tomashuk, Audrey McGowin.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Oh, United States.

296. Biophysical Properties and Oxygenation Potential of High Molecular Weight Glutaraldehyde Polymerized Human Hemoglobins Maintained in the Tense and Relaxed Quaternary StatesNing Zhang,1 Yiping Jia,2 Guo Chen,1 Pedro Cabrales,3 David R. Harris,1 Andre F. Palmer.1

1William G. Lowrie Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States; 2Laboratory of Biochemistry and Vascular Biology, Division of Hematology, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), Food and Drug Administration (FDA), United States; 3Department of Bioengineering, University of California, San Diego, United States.

297. Primary Amine-Metal Lewis Acid Derived Bifunctional Catalysts for Enantioselective ReactionsPhilias Daka, Zhenghu Xu, Alex Alexandru, Hong Wang.DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY AND BIOCHEMISTRY, MIAMI UNIVERSITY, OXFORD, OHIO, United States.

298. Toxicity of Platinum Group Metals in Chick Embryo TibiotarsiJessica Dagher,1 Tai Lam,1 Jennifer Monahan,1 Kent Weaver,1 Allie Meyerhoefer,1 Marjorie Markopoulos,1 Britney NeJame,2 Jacob Cowley,2 Robert Slaughter,3 Larry Burggraf,3 Zofia Ga-gnon,2 Ioana Pavel.1

1Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States; 2Depart-ment of Environmental Science and Policy, Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY, United States; 3Department of Engineering Physics, Air Force Institute of Technology, Wright Patterson, OH, United States.

299. Functionalized, Semicrystalline Poly(ether Ketone)s Via In Situ Modification ChemistryRaghavendhar Reddy Kotha, Eric Fossum.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

300. Synthesis, Biophysical Properties and Pharmacokinetics of Ultrahigh Molecular Weight Tense and Relaxed State Polymerized Bovine HemoglobinsYipin Zhou,1 Paul W. Buehler,2 Pedro Cabrales,3 Yiping Jia,2 Guoyong Sun,1 David R. Harris,1 Amy Tsai,4 Marcos Intaglietta,4 Andre F. Palmer.1

1Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, The Ohio State University, columbus, ohio, United States; 2Food and Drug Administration, Bethesda, Maryland, United States; 3La Jolla Bioengineering Institute, La Jolla, California, United States; 4Department of Bioengineer-ing, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California, United States.

301. Structural-Based Computational Drug Design: Potential Inhibitors for Influenza Virus NeuraminidaseLishan Liu, Jason W. Ribblett.Department of Chemistry, Ball State University, Muncie, IN, United States.

302. Microwave-Assisted N-Alkylations of IsatinsCharles M. Clay.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Fairborn, OHIO, United States.

303. Synthesis and Activity of a Novel Chiral N-Heterocyclic Carbene-Gold CatalystMichael R. Holmes, Benjamin Gung.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, United States.

304. Reduction of Dibenzoyl Disulfide: A Convenient Strategy for the Synthesis of ThiolsHilary Richards, Steven Worden, Douglas J. Schauer.Chemical Technology, Ivy Tech Community College, Lafayette, IN, United States.

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305. Reductive Cleavage Mechanism of Co-C Bond in Cobalamin-Dependent Methionine SynthaseMercedes Alfonso-Prieto,2 Xevi Biarnés,2 Manoj Kumar,1 Carme Rovira,2 Pawel M. Kozlowski.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, United States; 2Com-puter Simulation Group, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.

306. Azidodeoxysugars: Synthesis and Application in Heterocycle FormationPeter Norris, Traci Clymer, Krista Cunningham, Antony Okumu.Chemistry, Youngstown State University, Youngstown, Ohio, United States.

307. Inhibitors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Antigen 85Diaa A. Ibrahim, Kevin R. Trabbic, Samuel S. Adams, Aditya K. Sanki, Julie Boucau, Donald R. Ronning, Steven J. Sucheck.Department of Chemistry, The University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States.

308. Cytotoxicity Assessment to Human Lung Macrophages after Exposure to Multi-Walled Carbon NanotubesLin Zhu,1,3 Amanda M. Schrand,1 Andrey A. Voevodin,4 Dong W. Chang,3 Liming Dai,2 Saber M. Hussain.1

1AFRL/711 HPW/RHPB, Air Force Research Lab, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States; 2De-partment of Chemical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States; 3Department of Chemical and Material Engineering, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH, United States; 4AFRL/RXBT, Air Force Research Lab, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States.

309. pH-Dependent Release Kinetics of a PEGylated Protein from a Nano Hydroxyapatite-Coated Poly(caprolactone Fumarate) 2D FilmDaniel H. Kwak,1 Ha H. Pham,1 Saumya Saurabh,1 Jinku Kim,2 Jeffrey O. Hollinger.2

1Department of Chemistry, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States; 2Bone Tissue Engineering Center, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States.

310. Synthesis and Characterization of a Series of Highly Multi-Dentate Ligands All Incorporating Tris-(2-Aminoethylene)-Amine and Metal Complexes ThereofBenjamin Czierniawski, Malinda Killu, Mark A. Benvenuto.Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, University of Detroit Mercy, Detroit, MI, United States.

311. Synthesis and Characterization of a Series of Multi-Dentate Ligands Incorporating Bis(2-Hy-droxyphenyl)ethylenediamine, and Some of Their Lanthanide Metal ComplexesJennifer Kubert, Meghann Mouyianis, Mark A. Benvenuto.Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, University of Detroit Mercy, Detroit, MI, United States.

312. Electrooxidation of Iron, Cobalt, Nickel and Copper Metalloporphyrins on Edge Plane Pyrolytic Graphite Electrodes and Their Electrocatalytic Ability towards the Reduction of Molecular Oxy-gen in Acidic MediaGregory L. Richards, Shawn M. Swavey.Department of Chemistry, University of Dayton, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

313. Incorporation of SENCER Principles into an Environmental Chemistry CourseDavid W. Johnson.Department of Chemistry, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH, United States.

314. Studies on Dyanmics, Mechanism and Characterization of the Thermal Degradation Products of Beta-Carotene by GC-MSYuan Zhao, David W. Johnson, Mark Masthay.Department of Chemistry, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH, United States.

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315. Reduction of Perchlorate from Contaminated Waters Using Zero Valent Iron, Palladium as a Catalyst, and UV LightQiuming A. Zhao.Department of Civil Environmental Engineering, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

316. Quantitative Analysis of Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs in the River Raisin by GC-MSJennifer Bates, Ruth Ann Armitage.Department of Chemistry, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI, United States.

317. Characterization of Secondary Organic Aerosols from the Ozonolysis of a-PineneLynn Mazzoleni, Annie Putman.Department of Chemistry, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, Michigan, United States.

318. Toward Rapid Detection of Methionine Sulfoxide in ProteinsMorwena Jane V. Solivio, Edward J. Merino.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

319. Chemistry in Water: Coupling Reactions Using Fenton’s ReagentJennifer L. Meyer,1 Mark D. Naber,1 Christopher Sears-Dundes,1 Richard P. Hotz,1 Allan R. Pinhas.2

1Department of Chemistry, College of Mount St. Joseph, Cincinnati, OH, United States; 2De-partment of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

320. NMR Characterization of the Structure and Morphology of PolyphosphazeneJessi A. Baughman, Matthew P. Espe.Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

321. Prediction of LSER r1 Coefficient Using QSSRPriyank Shah, David S. Ballantine.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, United States.

322. Chemists and Other Scientists as Senior AthletesWendell L. Dilling.Department of Chemistry, Central Michigan University, Mt. Pleasant, Michigan, United States.

323. Chemical Analysis of Melamine in MilkJessica Arnett, Katherine Stickney.Department of Chemistry, University of Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN, United States.

324. Hosting a Science Day for Homeschooled ChildrenJacob P. R. Deitsch, Edith P. Kippenhan.Department of Chemistry, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States.

325. Activation Energy and Collision Frequency through the Rate Law for an Iodine Clock ReactionNick Sharma, Simon Fraser, Myung Han.Department of Physical Sciences, Columbus State Community College, Columubs, Ohio, United States.

326. Urinary Analysis of Cyclophosphamide: Development and Comparison of MethodsDale A. Shoemaker, Jeffrey L. McLaurin.National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

327. Lewis Acidic Metal Complexes Utilizing Ortho-Metalated IminesJohn F. Beck, Joseph A. R. Schmidt.Department of Chemistry, The University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States.

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328. Reduction of Perchlorate from Contaminated Waters Using Zero Valent Iron, Palladium as a Catalyst, and UV LightQiuming Amy Zhao.Department of Civil Environmental Engneering, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

329. Advanced Liquid Chromatography Method Development for Separation of Atmospheric Water-Soluble Organic CompoundsSandra S. Orlowski, Lynn R. Mazzoleni.Department of Chemistry, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI, United States.

330. Biopolymers To Modify Permeability for In Situ Alcohol Flushing of TCESangchul Hwang, Nelson Anaya, Katherine Benn, Ingrid Padilla.Department of Civil Engineering, University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez, PR, Puerto Rico.

Friday, June 18, 2010 8:00 AM – 9:00 AMPlenary Lecture V312 Theatre, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Barry Farmer, James Gord, David Johnson, Hilmar Koerner, Loon-Seng Tan, Steven Trohalaki

8:00 AM 331. Climate Change and Atmospheric Chemistry in the ArcticPaul Shepson.Departments of Chemistry and Earth and Atmospheric Sciences and Purdue Climate Change Research Center, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, United States.

8:50 AM. Break

Friday, June 18, 2010

Friday, June 18, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:10 PMBiological Chemistry206, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: David Johnson

9:00 AM 332. Practical Aspects of NMR Relaxation Experiments To Study Protein Dynamics in SolutionWazo Myint, Lakshmi Menon, Rieko Ishima.Dept of Structural Biology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pitts-burgh, PA, United States.

9:20 AM 333. Directing the Binding of Potential Activating Agents into the Active Site of Aged Acetylcholinesterase after Exposure to Organophosphorus Nerve Agents: A Computational InvestigationJeremy M. Beck, Siva Muthukrishnan, Jason D. Brown, David A. Critser, Chris-topher M. Hadad.Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.

9:40 AM 334. Role of Force Orientation in the Mechanical Response of Biological FilamentsKelly E. Haines, Harshad Joshi, Ruxandra I. Dima.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

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10:00 AM 335. Convenient Stop Codon Scanning Mutagenesis Method for Alanine and Unnatu-ral Amino Acid ScanningLihua Nie, Thomas J. Magliery.Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:50 AM 336. Binding of OP Nerve Agents with Butyrylcholinesterase and Its Mutants: A Com-

putational StudyShubham Vyas, Christopher M. Hadad.Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.

11:10 AM 337. Differential Expression of Proteins in Response to Arsenic Stress in Chlamydo-monas reinhardtiiChamari Walliwalagedara,1 Harry van Keulen,2 Belinda Willard,3 Robert Wei.1

1Department of Chemistry, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States; 2Department of Biological Geological and Environmental Sciences, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States; 3Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, United States.

11:30 AM 338. Enhanced Organophosphate Hydrolysis with Enzyme-Chaperone Chimeras and Organic/Inorganic HybridsPatrick B. Dennis,1,2 Matthew B. Dickerson,3 Wendy J. Crookes-Goodson,1 Caitlin Knight,1,2 Arnon Heyman,4 Oded Shoseyov,4 Nils Kroeger,5 Kenneth H. Sandhage,6 Rajesh R. Naik.1

1Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Day-ton, Ohio, United States; 2UES, Dayton, Ohio, United States; 3Research Asso-ciateship Program, National Research Council, Washington D.C., United States; 4Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot, Israel; 5Department Chemistry and Biochemistry, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, United States; 6Department of Materials Science Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, United States.

11:50 AM 339. Coupling between Sequential Allostery in a GroEL Mutant and Protein FoldingNathan Smith, Pooja Shrestha, George Stan.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

Friday, June 18, 2010 9:00 AM – 11:55 AMChemical Education Symposium II202/203, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: Suzanne Lunsford

9:00 AM 340. Mercury Bioaccumulation in Bat Populations in the Southeastern U.S. National Park UnitsCathleen J. Webb.Department of Chemistry, Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green, KY, United States.

9:40 AM 341. Peer-Reviewed Open Access Publishing: The Teaching/Learning/Publishing LandscapeAlexander Scheeline.Department of Chemistry, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break

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10:50 AM 342. Introducing Students to Quantitative Measurements in the Chemistry LaboratoryTed M. Clark.Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.

11:10 AM 343. The New ACS Curriculum: Is “Quant” Dead?J. Faye Rubinson.Department of Chemistry, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, United States.

11:35 AM 344. Headspace Analysis of a Simulated Oil Spill: Demonstration of the Utility and Limitations of Retention Times for Qualitative Analysis in a Gas Chromatograph-ic ExperimentLois A. Zook-Gerdau.Chemistry, Muskingum University, New Concord, OH, United States.

Friday, June 18, 2010 9:00 AM – 11:50 AMChemistry and Materials for Alternative Energy III308/309, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Benjamin Leever, Steven ZabarnickPresider: Steven Zabarnick

9:00 AM 345. Homogeneous Catalysis of Hydroperoxide Decomposition in Liquid HydrocarbonsZachary J. West, Ryan K. Adams, Steven Zabarnick.Energy and Environmental Engineering Division, University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, OH, United States.

9:20 AM 346. The Use of Gas Chromatography for Biogas AnalysisAmanda M. Andersen,1 Jennifer L. Aurandt,1 John Seeley.2

1Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Kettering University, Flint, MI, United States; 2Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Oakland University, Roches-ter, MI, United States.

9:40 AM 347. The Production of Biomethane through Anaerobic Fermentation of BiomassTiffany Snow, Jennifer Aurandt.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Kettering University, Flint, MI, United States.

10:00 AM 348. Production of Hydrogen from Aluminum Nanoclusters and Water: Simulation Using Density Functional TheoryPaul N. Day,1,2 Kiet A. Nguyen,1,3 Ruth Pachter.1

1Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States; 2General Dynamics Information Technology, Dayton, OH, United States; 3UES, Inc., Dayton, OH, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:50 AM 349. Characterization of Metal Oxide Additives and Their Role in Cu/ZnO-Based Cata-

lysts for Catalytic Reduction of Carbon Dioxide to MethanolJohn P. Baltrus,1 Sittichai Natesakhawat,1,2 Bryan Morreale.1

1National Energy Technology Laboratory, U.S. Department of Energy, Pittsburgh, PA, United States; 2Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, Uni-versity of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States.

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11:10 AM 350. Microbial Growth and Biofilm Formation: GC-MS Analysis and Traditional Culture of Jet A and Alternative FuelsLori M. Balster, Loryn L. Bowen, Lisa M. Brown, Susan S. Mueller, Linda M. Shafer, Max Tsao, Marlin D. Vangsness.Energy & Environmental Engineering, Bioenvironmental Group, University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, OH, United States.

11:30 AM 351. Hexadecane Hydrotreating as a Surrogate for Fischer-Tropsch Upgrading to Aviation Fuel Using a Co/MoO3/Silica-Alumina CatalystHeinz Robota, Jeremy Jones.University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

Friday, June 18, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:10 PMChemistry for Peace: Building on the Dayton Accords307, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer/Presider: Steven Trohalaki

The aims of the Symposium are: 1) Environmental chemistry, research, and remediation applications; 2) Chemistry as an implement for peace, e.g., green energy, science, and technology; and 3) Solidifying the sister-city relationship between Dayton and Sarajevo.

9:00 AM 352. Energy for World PeaceWade Adams, Richard E. Smalley.The Richard E. Smalley Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology, Rice University, Houston, TX, United States.

9:40 AM 353. Energy and the Future: Opportunities for the WorldDouglas Dudis.Air Force Research Laboratory, Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:50 AM 354. An Introduction to the Green Energy and Information Center – The Environ-

mental Branch of the Dayton International Peace MuseumRalph Dull.Green Energy and Information Center, Dayton International Peace Museum, Dayton, OH, United States.

11:10 AM 355. Evolution of Metabolism for Destruction of DoD PollutantsJim Spain.School of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, United States.

11:50 AM 356. Remediation of Sulfide-Contaminated GroundwaterTravis Q. Battiest, Clovis A. Linkous.Department of Chemistry, Youngstown State University, Youngstown, OH, United States.

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Friday, June 18, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:10 PMLaser-Based Technologies for Chemical Measurements I204, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: James Gord, Sukesh RoyPresider: James Gord

9:00 AM 357. Recent Advances in Femtosecond-CARS for High-Bandwidth Diagnostic Applica-tions in Combustion SystemsWaruna D. Kulatilaka,1 Sukesh Roy,1 James R. Gord.2

1Spectral Energies, LLC, Dayton, OH, United States; 2Propulsion Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States.

9:40 AM 358. High-Speed Hybrid fs/ps Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Scattering Spectroscopy in Chemically Reacting FlowsJoseph D. Miller,1 Mikhail N. Slipchenko,1 Terrence R. Meyer,1 Hans U. Stauffer,2 James R. Gord.2

1Department of Mechanical Engineering, Iowa State University, Ames, IA, United States; 2Propulsion Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:50 AM 359. Pulse Shaping for Single-Beam CARS Spectroscopy and Imaging

Paul J. Wrzesinski,1 Dmitry Pestov,1 Vadim Lozovoy,1 Bingwei Xu,2 Sukesh Roy,3 James R. Gord,4 Marcos Dantus.1,2

1Department of Chemistry, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, United States; 2Biophotonic Solutions Inc., East Lansing, MI, United States; 3Spectral Energies LLC, Dayton, OH, United States; 4Propulsion Directorate, Air Force Re-search Labs, Wright-Patterson AFB, United States.

11:30 AM 360. Tunable Diode Laser Absorption Measurements in Supersonic FlowsMichael S. Brown,1 Dominic L. Barone,1 Todd Barhorst,1 William F. Terry.2

1Aerospace Propulsion Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Pat-terson AFB, OH, United States; 2Innovative Scientific Solutions, Inc., Dayton, OH, United States.

Friday, June 18, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:05 PMMaterials for Aerospace and Space Applications I310/311, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Jeff Baur, Michael Meador, Loon-Seng Tan

9:00 AM 361. Low-Melt Viscosity Imide Resins Based on Asymmetric DianhydridesKathy C. Chuang,1 Jim M. Criss,2 Eric A. Mintz.3

1Polymer Branch, NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, OH, United States; 2M & P Technologies, Marietta, GA, United States; 3Center for Polymers & Com-posites, Clark Atlanta University, Atlanta, GA, United States.

9:30 AM 362. Addition of Octastyrenyl Polyhedral Oligomeric Silsesquioxane on Properties of Bismaleimide Resins Cured with Diallybisphenol AJiang Zhu, Andre Lee.Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, Michigan State Uni-versity, E. Lansing, MI, United States.

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9:55 AM 363. Electrothermal Polymer Nanocomposite ActuatorsAaron T. Sellinger,1,2 David H. Wang,3 Loon-Seng Tan,1 Richard A. Vaia.1

1Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2National Research Council, Washington, DC, United States; 3University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, OH, United States.

10:20 AM Coffe Break10:40 AM 364. Polarization Controlled Photomechanical Bidirectional Bending Behaviors of Poly-

domain Azo-Liquid Crystalline Polymer NetworksKyungmin Lee, Timothy J. Bunning, Timothy J. White.Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Wright-Patterson Air Force Research Laboratory, WPAFB, Ohio, United States.

11:05 AM 365. Broadening of a Polymer Stabilized Negative Dielectric Anisotropy Cholesteric Notch by a Low DC FieldMadeline Duning, Lalgudi V. Natarajan, Vincent Tondiglia, Timothy White, Richard L. Sutherland, Timothy J. Bunning.Materials and Manufaturing Directorate, Air Force research laboratory, WPAFB, OH, United States.

11:25 AM 366. Tunable Hyper-Reflective FiltersMichael E. McConney, Timothy J. White, Jennifer Hurtubise, Vince P. Tondiglia, Lalgudi Natarajan, Timothy J. Bunning.Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, WPAFB, OH, United States.

11:50 AM 367. Photoinduced Broadening of Cholesteric Liquid CrystalsAlex Freer, Timothy J. White, Nelson Tabiryan, Timothy J. Bunning.Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States.

Friday, June 18, 2010 9:00 AM – 12:10 PMPoster Session III103, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: James Gord, David Johnson, Loon-Seng Tan

368. Determination of PAHs in First and Second Hand Cigarette SmokeClaude Al Fahel, Muneer Jaber, Candice Jones, Elizabeth Rosza.REEL Organic Chemistry Lab, Clevelend State University, Clevelend, OH, United States.

369. Lead Concentration in Urban Garden SoilMarilynn Barcus, Sherry Cucci.REEL General Chemistry Lab, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

370. Heavy Metal Concentrations in Local RiversMeaghan Spann, Elizabeth Looney.REEL General Chemistry Lab, Cleveland State University, Clevelend, OH, United States.

371. Concentrations of Arsenic in CCA-Treated WoodEmiliya Akhumian, Ahamad Maarouf, Adam Salem.REEL General Chemistry Lab, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

372. Determination of Tetracycline in Beef Tissues Using High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC)Anam Khan, Chantale Salem, William Waters.REEL Organic Chemistry Lab, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

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373. Lead (Pb) Concentrations in Gasoline EmissionsIgor Deynega, Mark Galay, Maryana Skotsen.REEL General Chemistry Lab, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

374. Usage of Coffee Grounds in the Removal of Mercury Ions from Drinking WaterErik Schepens, Andrew Sadowski, Alyssa Petko.REEL General Chemistry Lab, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

375. Leaching of Bisphenol A into Foods during the Canning ProcessAndrej Gabrovsek.REEL Organic Chemistry Lab, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

376. Determination of 1,4-Dioxane in MouthwashArsela Gishto.REEL Organic Chemistry Lab, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

377. Lead Detection in Potential Community GardenBrittany Elmlinger, Rachel Elasser.REEL General Chemistry Lab, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

378. Determination of Lead and Copper in the Drinking Water of Cleveland’s Central WardAlexander Swift.REEL General Chemistry Lab, Clevelnd State University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

379. Accumulation of Arsenic and Toxic Heavy Metals in Chinese Brake Fern (Pteris Vittata)Katie Lemmeyer, Jerome McGinty.REEL General Chemistry Lab, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

380. Dissemination of Environmental Chemistry Research: From the Classroom to the Lab to the PublicVictoria Mason, Ted M. Clark.Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.

381. Ambitious Characterization of Heavy Metals Found in Urban Soil in the Greater Columbus, OH AreaJason Eng, Jason Stybel, Ted M. Clark.Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.

382. Analysis of the Nitrate Ion Concentration in Pickerington, Ohio: A REEL Undergraduate Re-search ProjectKelsey Peer-Bostic, Brianna Mitchell, Jens Hemmingsen.Department of Chemistry, Capital University, Columbus, OH, United States.

383. Analysis of Maumee River Water for Nitrate IonMarilyn Archambeault.Department of Chemistry, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH, United States.

384. Analysis of Mixed-Metal Fluoride Perovskites Synthesized by First-Semester Chemistry Stu-dents at Capital UniversityPrince N. Otchere, William J. Clark, Jr.Department of Chemistry, Capital University, Columbus, Ohio, United States.

385. Analysis of Water for Nitrate, Chloride and Phosphate Ions near the Alum Creek Combine Sewer Overflow in Bexley, Ohio: A REEL Undergraduate LaboratoryBethany R. Davies, Kathryn Dove, Kori Keeton, Megan Meinert, Devin Mills, Katie O’Donnell, Jillian Stelmach, Ryan Williams, Jens Hemmingsen, Margaret E. Ginn-Pease.Department of Chemistry, Capital University, Columbus, OH, United States.

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386. Effect of Time and Eutrophication on Nitrate and Nitrite Levels in Stream SamplesHeidi M. Buckeye, Isaac Asamoah, John C. Difrancesco, Andrew S. Fellure, Ian A. Freshwa-ter, Pierce M. Freshwater, Shane Z. Guzman, Wesley C. Johnson, Heather N. Nauman, Mort Javadi.Biological Sciences, Columbus State Community College, Columbus, Ohio, United States.

387. Environmental Remediation of Contaminated Groundwater Using Zero-Valent Iron NanoparticlesAdam I. Keller, Yassir Sheikhaldeen, Isaac Rampersaud.Department of Physical Sciences, Columbus State Community College, Columbus, Ohio, United States.

388. Analysis of Nitrate in Portage River WaterAdrienne Snyder, Kimberly Verhoff.Department of Chemistry, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH, United States.

389. Synthesis of an Ellagitannin Derived from 6-chloro-6-DeoxyglucoseJacob A. Venoy, Klaus B. Himmeldirk.Chemistry & Biochemistry, Ohio University, Athens, OH, United States.

390. Qualitative and Quantitative Analyses of Lipidic Binders in Paint of Archaeological SamplesChristina Phillips, Ruth Ann Armitage.Deparment of Chemistry, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI, United States.

391. Analysis of a Series of Ancient Herodian Coins – The Biblical ‘Widow’s Mites’ – Via Energy Dis-persive X-Ray Fluorescence SpectrometryDanielle Garshott, Elizabeth MacDonald, Meghann Mouyianis, Mark A. Benvenuto.Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, University of Detroit Mercy, Detroit, MI, United States.

392. PLTL Games as Aids to MemorizationJillien H. Whiteside, Tracey A. Murray.Department of Chemistry, Capital University, Columbus, Ohio, United States.

393. Recent Developments in Nondestructive Radiocarbon Dating of Fragile Organic Artifacts and TextilesRuth Ann Armitage, Deidre Hardemon.Department of Chemistry, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI, United States.

394. Examination of the Patent Medicines and Nostrums Archived at the Henry Ford Museum Via Energy Dispersive X-Ray Fluorescence and Multi-Nuclear NMRDanielle Garshott,1 Elizabeth MacDonald,1 Thomas Sanday,1 Andrew Diefenbach,1 Mary Fa-hey,2 Mark A. Benvenuto.1

1Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, University of Detroit Mercy, Detroit, MI, United States; 2The Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village, Dearborn, MI, United States.

395. Chemists and Artists: Both See Beauty, but Communicate It in Different WaysDavid W. Johnson,1 Mark Masthay,1 Alan Strathmann,2 Nick Voegler.2

1Department of Chemistry, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH, United States; 2Department of Art and Technology Studies, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States.

396. Synthesis and Application of Colloidal Silver for Use in an Undergraduate LaboratoryKristi L. Liddell, Joseph T. Keiser.Department of Chemistry, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, United States.

397. Determination of Composition of Synthetic Lubricating Motor Oils by GC-MSChristopher Frye, David S. Ballantine.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, United States.

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398. Green Energy, Chemiluminescence, and Fuel CellTushar Goswami.Beavercreek High School, Beavercreek, Ohio, United States.

399. Multi-Exponential Lifetime Analysis for Temperature Sensors Based on Luminescent Europium ComplexesLukas T. Kromer, Jeffrey A. Gray.Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Ohio Northern University, Ada, OH, United States.

400. Differentiation in Nitrogen Loading between Minor and Major Municipal Wastewater Treatment Systems in the Upper Scioto River WatershedRyan M. Griffin.Department of Chemsitry, Capital University, Columbus, Ohio, United States.

401. Substituent Effects on a Regioselective Template ReactionTravis D. Neimeister, Britni Morand, Richard P. Hotz.Department of Chemistry, College of Mount St. Joseph, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

402. Synthesis and Characterization of the Novel Perovskite Series K(CuXM1-x)F3, for M = Ni, Mn and CoAshley Wolf, Timothy Wagner.Chemistry, Youngstown State University, United States.

403. Synthesis and Characterization of the Novel Perovskite Series (AxB1-x)CoF3, for A = Na+, K+, and NH4

+

Caleb J. Tatebe, Ashley Wolf, Timothy R. Wagner.Department of Chemistry, Youngstown State University, Youngstown, OH, United States.

404. Gas Chromatography of Nail Polish Removers: A Consumer Product Teaching ExperimentThomas N. Loegel, Neil D. Danielson.Chemistry and Biochemistry, Miami University, Oxford, OH, United States.

405. Metal Ion Analysis Using the Water Adsorbent Polymer Polyacrylate: An Adaptable Science ExperimentLing Zhou, Neil D. Danielson.Chemistry and Biochemistry, Miami University, Oxford, OH, United States.

406. Organocatalysis in the Sophomore Organic Chemistry LaboratoryKenneth E. Walsh, Edmir O. Wade.Department of Chemistry, University of Southern Indiana, Evansville, IN, United States.

407. Cellular Automata Model of the Distribution of Gases in the Earth’s AtmosphereEdur Basha Boyini Palli, Paul G. Seybold.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

408. Investigation of the Direct Synthesis of Polyimide-Organoclay NanocompositesThomas Morgan, Isabelle Lagadic.Chemistry, Northern Kentucky University, Highland Heights, KY, United States.

409. Exploring Synthetic Parameters for the Preparation and Properties of Functional OrganoclaysJennifer Hand, Isabelle Lagadic.Chemistry, Northern Kentucky University, Highland Heights, KY, United States.

410. Indirect Determination of Phosphate Compounds Using Calcium Suppression by Atomic Ab-sorption Spectroscopy: An Open-Ended Inquiry Teaching ExperimentMatthew P. Collins, Neil D. Danielson.Chemistry and Biochemistry, Miami University, Oxford, OH, United States.

411. Probing the Nature of Metal-Phosphonate Interactions by FTIR SpectroscopyJ. Radler, Douglas J. Schauer.Chemical Technology, Ivy Tech Community College, Lafayette, IN, United States.

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412. Quantum Chemical Study of the Energetics and Directionality of Acid-Catalyzed Aromatic Ep-oxide Ring OpeningsRory Korzan, Brian Upton, Kenneth Turnbull, Paul Seybold.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

413. Cyclic Voltammetry Detection of Lead at Crown Ether Modified ElectrodesPhuong Khanh Quoc Nguyen, Suzanne Lunsford.Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

414. Spectroelecctrochemical Sensing in an Ionic Liquid MatrixCynthia A. Schroll, William Heineman.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

415. Investigation of Chlorophosphazene Cyclic Oligomers and Byproducts from the Ring-Opening Polymerization of the Chlorophosphazene TrimerDavid J. Bowers, Jessi Baughman, Matthew J. Panzner, Vincenzo Scionti, Matthew Espe, Chrys Wesdimiotis, Wiley J. Youngs, Claire A. Tessier.Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, Akron, OH, United States.

416. Photophysical Properties of a Series of Octaethyl Tetraphenyl PorphyrinsJonathan L. Flikkema,1,2 Joy E. Haley,1,3 Weijie Su,1,4 Jonathan E. Slagle,1,5 Daniel G. McLean,1,5 Thomas M. Cooper.1

1Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2SOCHE Student Research Program, Dayton, OH, United States; 3UES, Inc., Dayton, OH, United States; 4General Dynamics Information Technology, Dayton, OH, United States; 5Science Applications International Corporation, Dayton, OH, United States.

417. Conformational Studies of 2,4-Pentanedione in the Gas Phase and SolutionMarkeata Lee, Roviere Colson, Christopher Lupai, Daqing Gao, Suzzane Seleem.Department of Natural Sciences, Central State University, Wilberforce, Ohio, United States.

418. Adsorption of Manufactured Nanoparticles on Synthetic BiofilmEndalkachew Sahle-Demessie, Haragewine Tadesse.NRMRL, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

419. Self-Assembly of Colloidal Metal Nanoparticles and Plasmon-Mediated Energy TransferAnil Desireddy,1 Gardelle Bastien,1 Joshi Chakra,1 Sestak Michelle,2 Little Scott,2 Kumar San-tosh,1 Marsillac Sylvain,2 Collins Robert,2 Bigioni Terry.1

1Department of Chemistry, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States; 2Department of Physics and Astronomy, and the Wright Center for Photovoltaics Innovation and Commercial-ization, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States.

420. Simultaneously Detection of Trace Metals by Anodic Stripping Voltammetry Using Carbon Nanotube ElectrodesXuefei Guo,1 Mark Schulz,2 Vesselin N. Shanov,2 William R. Heineman.1

1Department of Chemistry, Univerisity of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States; 2College of Engineering, Nanoworld and Smart Materials and Devices Laboratory, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

421. Synthetic 5-oxo and 5-thio Derivatives of 1,4-Diaryl Tetrazoles That Inhibit Tumor Cell Prolif-eration and 3-Hydroxy-3-Methylglutaryl-Coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) Reductase ActivityJean-Pierre H. Perchellet,1 Elisabeth M. Perchellet,1 Andrew M. Waters,1 Aditya S. Gundu-gola,2 Kusum L. Chandra,2 Sundeep Rayat.2

1Division of Biology, Anti-Cancer Drug Laboratory, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kan-sas, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas, United States.

422. Rapid Detection of Influenza Viruses Using Magnetic NanoparticlesYun He, Suri S. Iyer.Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

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423. Design, Implementation, and Assessment of an Undergraduate Protein Purification Protocol Using Riboflavin Binding ProteinJamie Schwefel,1 Kyle O. Daly,1,2 Tracey Arnold Murray.1

1Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Capital University, Columbus, OH, United States; 2School of Natural Resources and Environment, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States.

424. 2009 ACS Director-at-Large Election: How To Elect Two Candidates with Each Being Elected by a Majority of the VotersWendell L. Dilling.Department of Chemistry, Central Michigan University, Mt. Pleasant, Michigan, United States.

425. Small Business Issues in the Era of the Great RecessionDavid M. Manuta.Professional Consulting, Manuta Chemical Consulting, Inc., Waverly, OH, United States.

426. Using LinkedIn for Networking, Job Search, and Better BusinessFrank Butwin.Consultant, Perrysburg, OH, United States.

427. Dielectric Properties of Biaxially Oriented Micro and Nanolayered FilmsJoel Carr, Matthew Mackey, Anne Hiltner, Eric Baer.Macromolecular Science and Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States.

428. Low Loss and High Energy Density in Poly(vinylidene Fluoride)/Polysulfone Multilayer Dielec-tric FilmsJung-Kai Tseng, Matt Mackey, Joel Carr, Anne Hiltner, Eric Baer, Lei Zhu.Department of Macromolecular Science and Engineering, the Center for Layered Polymeric Systems, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States.

429. Dielectric Properties of Micro and Nanolayered PC/PVDF FilmsMatt Mackey,1 Anne Hiltner,1 Eric Baer,1 Lei Zhu,1 Lionel Flandin,3 Mason Wolak,2 James Shirk.2

1Department of Macromolecular Science and Engineering, Center for Layered Polymeric Sys-tems (CLiPS), Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States; 2US Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC, United States; 3LMOPS UMR 5041, CNRS Université de Savoie, 73376 LE Bourget Du Lac Cedex, France.

Friday, June 18, 2010 9:20 AM – 11:50 AMAnalytical Chemistry III205, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: James Gord

9:20 AM 430. Determination of Methoxyamine Conjugated DNA-AP Sites by Liquid Chroma-tography and Tandem Mass SpectrometryLan Li, Yan Xu.Department of Chemistry, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

9:40 AM 431. Metal Loading Capability, DNA Photocleavage, and Photo-Cytotoxicity of Soil Hu-mic AcidsVarun Chander Reddy Lenkala, Patty K.-L. Fu.Department of Chemistry, Governors State University, University Park, IL, United States.

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10:00 AM 432. Preparation, Charecterization, and Cytotoxicity Testing of Inverse Micelle Encap-sulated Rifampicin NanoparticlesBhargav Guntupalli, Patty K.-L. Fu.Department of Chemistry, Governors State University, University Park, IL, United States.

10:20 AM Coffee Break10:50 AM 433. Monitoring Protein Regulation between Normal Human Skin Cells and Malignant

Melanoma Cells – A Proteomic ApproachSreekanth Penumetsa, Patty K.-L. Fu.Chemistry, Governors State University, University Park, Il, United States.

11:10 AM 434. Photophysical Properties of Rifampicin Nanoparticles and Its Application in Can-cer TherapyJyothirmaye Bandaru, Patty K.-L. Fu.Department of Chemistry, Governors State University, University Park, IL, United States.

11:30 AM 435. Photocytotoxicity of Methylated Naphthoquinone on Human SkinRahul A. Khanke, Patty K.-L. Fu.Department of Chemistry, Governors State University, University Park, IL, United States.

Friday, June 18, 2010 1:10 PM – 4:30 PMChemistry and Materials for Alternative Energy IV308/309, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Benjamin Leever, Steven Zabarnick, Lei ZhuPresider: Lei Zhu

1:10 PM 436. Electroactive Polymers for Electrical Energy StorageQing Wang.Materials Science and Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, Univer-sity Park, PA, United States.

1:40 PM 437. Nano-Scale Layered Approaches to Improving Breakdown Strength in Polymer-Clay NanocompositesScott P. Fillery,1,2 Hilmar Koerner,1 Eric Dunkerley,3 Daniel F. Schmidt,3 Michael F. Durstock,1 Richard A. Vaia.1

1Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2National Research Council, Washington, DC, United States; 3Department of Plastics Engineering, University of Massachusetts Low-ell, Lowell, MA, United States.

2:10 PM 438. Nanoparticles Assemblies for Energy StorageMaxim N. Tchoul,1 Scott P. Fillery,1 Hilmar Koerner,2 Lawrence F. Drummy,2 Pe-ter A. Mirau,1 Michael F. Durstock,1 Christopher W. Beier,3 Richard L. Brutchey,3 Richard A. Vaia.1

1Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2UES Inc., Dayton, OH, United States; 3Department of Chemistry, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, United States.

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2:40 PM 439. Electric Energy Storage in Ferroelectric PolymersFangxiao Guan,1 Jing Wang,1 Jilin Pan,2 Qing Wang,2 Lei Zhu.1,3

1Polymer Program, Institute of Materials Science and Department of Chemical, Materials and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, United States; 2Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, United States; 3Department of Macromo-lecular Science and Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

3:10 PM Coffee Break3:30 PM 440. Thermally Robust Polymer Film Dielectrics for Aerospace Power Conditioning

CapacitorsNarayanan Venkat,1 Thuy D. Dang,2 Zongwu Bai,1 Jeffery T. Stricker,3 Jennifer N. DeCerbo.3

1Multi-scale Composites and Polymers Division, University of Dayton Research Institute, 300 College Park Drive, Dayton OH, United States; 2Nanostructured and Biological Materials Branch, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patter-son AFB, OH, United States; 3Electrical technology and Power systems Branch, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States.

4:00 PM 441. Biopolymer Materials for Electronics, Dielectric and Photonics ApplicationsFahima Ouchen,1 Donna M. Joyce,2 James E. Grote.1

1AFRL/RXPS, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States; 2AFRL/RYTA, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patter-son Air force Base, OH, United States.

Friday, June 18, 2010 1:10 PM – 5:10 PMLaser-Based Technologies for Chemical Measurements II204, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: James Gord, Sukesh RoyPresider: Sukesh Roy

1:10 PM 442. Chemical Sensing and Imaging in Combustion Environments Using Terahertz Spectroscopy and ImagingJason Deibel,1,2 Lin Ma,4 Sebastian B. Zhang,4 Weiwei Cai,4 James R. Gord,5 Sukesh Roy,6 Nicholas Schroeder,3 Satya Ganti,3 Stanley Smith,1 Douglas T. Petki.1,2

1Department of Physics, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States; 2Department of Electrical Engineering, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States; 3Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States; 4Department of Mechanical Engi-neering, Clemson University, Clemson, SC, United States; 5Propulsion Director-ate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright Patterson AFB, OH, United States; 6Spectral Energies LLC, Dayton, OH, United States.

1:50 PM 443. Terahertz Imaging of Biological Tissues: Reacting, Adapting and Innovating for Medical ApplicationsAnita R. Taulbee-Combs,1 Gilbert E. Pacey.2

1Department of IDCAST, UDRI, Dayton, Ohio, United States; 2Department of Chemistry, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, United States.

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2:30 PM 444. Far-Infrared Remote Chemical Sensing and Threat DetectionMichael A. Gord,1 Anita R. Taulbee-Combs,2 David C. Hufnagle,3 Gilbert E. Pacey,3 Carla R. Benton,4 Douglas A. Petkie,4 Satya Ganti,4 Jason A. Deibel,4 Michael C. Moulton,5 James R. Gord.5

1Dayton Christian High School, Miamisburg, OH, United States; 2University of Dayton Research Insitute, Dayton, OH, United States; 3Department of Chem-istry and Biochemistry, Miami University, Oxford, OH, United States; 4Depart-ments of Physics and Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States; 5Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, United States.

3:10 PM Coffee Break3:30 PM 445. Effect of Meso-Substitution and b-Bromo Substitution on the Photophysical

Properties of PorphyrinsJoy E. Haley,1,2 Weijie Su,1,3 Jonathan E. Slagle,1,4 Jennifer L. Monahan,1,5 Dan-iel G. McLean,1,4 Thomas M. Cooper.1

1Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, WPAFB, OH, United States; 2UES, Inc., Dayton, OH, United States; 3General Dynamics Information Technology, Dayton, OH, United States; 4Science Applica-tions International Technology, Dayton, OH, United States; 5Southwestern Ohio Council for Higher Education, Dayton, OH, United States.

3:50 PM 446. Thermal Conductivity Measurements of RuOx NanorodsJamie J. Gengler,1,2 Andrey A. Voevodin,1 Denis Music,3 Felix H.-U. Basse,3 Ralf Hassdorf,4 Jochen M. Schneider.3

1Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Thermal Sciences and Materials Branch, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States; 2Spectral Energies LLC, Dayton, OH, United States; 3Materials Chemistry, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany; 4Institute of Materials Research, DLR German Aerospace Centre, Cologne, Germany.

4:30 PM 447. Optical Visualization of Energy Release Following Ignition of Energetic NanomaterialsHans U. Stauffer,1 William K. Lewis,2 Christopher E. Bunker,1 Sukesh Roy,3 James R. Gord.1

1Propulsion Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, United States; 2Sensors Technology Office, University of Day-ton Research Institute, Dayton, OH, United States; 3Spectral Energies, LLC, Dayton, OH, United States.

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Friday, June 18, 2010 1:20 PM – 3:10 PMMaterials for Aerospace and Space Applications II310/311, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Jeff Baur, Michael Meador, Loon-Seng TanPresider: Jeff Baur

1:20 PM 448. Autonomic Healing in Polymers and CompositesScott R. White,1,2 Nancy R. Sottos,4 Jeffrey S. Moore,3 Amit J. Patel,4 Mary M. Caruso,3 Andrew R. Hamilton,5 Benjamin J. Blaiszik.2

1Department of Aerospace Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Cham-paign, Urbana, IL, United States; 2Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, United States; 3Department of Chemistry, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, United States; 4Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, United States; 5Depart-ment of Mechanical Science and Engineering, U, Urbana, IL, United States.

1:50 PM 449. Shape Memory Polymer Innovations in AerospaceTat Tong, Thomas J. Barnell, Thomas W. Margraf, Michael R. Maddux, Jason M. Hermiller, David E. Havens, Chris D. Hemmelgarn.Cornerstone Research Group, Inc., Dayton, OH, United States.

2:20 PM 450. Novel Approach to Synthesizing Polyaspartimide-Polyurea Based Shape Memory PolymersJoseph A. Shumaker,1,3 Amber J. W. McClung,2,3 Shawna A. Matthys,3 Jeffery W. Baur.3

1University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, Ohio, United States; 2National Research Council Research Associate, WPAFB, Ohio, United States; 3Air Force Research Laboratory, WPAFB, Ohio, United States.

2:40 PM 451. Electropun Smart Polymeric CompositesPatrick T. Mather,1 Xiaofan Luo,1 Erika D. Rodriguez.2

1Biomedical and Chemical Engineering, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, United States; 2Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, United States.

Friday, June 18, 2010 1:30 PM – 4:10 PMChemical Education Symposium III202/203, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: Suzanne Lunsford

1:30 PM 452. Critical Thinking in Early Childhood EducationDaniel D. Bombick.Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, United States.

2:10 PM 453. Teaching Chemistry Content & Pedagogy – A Project-Based Learning Approach at the Graduate LevelKatherine W. Stickney, Jennifer Drake.Department of Chemistry, University of Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN, United States.

2:30 PM 454. Will It Blend: Large Lecture Course, Clickers, and Team-Based Learning?Mark D. McClain,1 Susan C. Warner,2 Donald S. Humphreys.2

1Department of Science and Mathematics, Cedarville University, Cedarville, Ohio, United States; 2Center for Teaching and Learning, Cedarville University, Cedarville, Ohio, United States.

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2:50 PM 455. From High School to Ph.D: Reacting to the Question, “What Can You Do with a Degree in Chemistry?”Jennifer N. Williams, Sidney Jones, Simuli Wabuyele.Department of Chemistry, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH, United States.

3:10 PM Coffee Break3:30 PM 456. Communicating Chemistry in the Classroom and to the General Public

Bassam Z. Shakhashiri.Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States.

3:50 PM 457. Color, Light, Vision and Perception in ChemistryBassam Z. Shakhashiri, Rodney Schreiner, Jerry Bell.Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States.

Friday, June 18, 2010 1:30 PM – 5:00 PMMinority Leaders in Nanomaterials Research307, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizer: Merlin Theodore(Invited Only)

1:30 PM Introductory Remarks1:40 PM 458. Modeling of Random Unidirectionally Fiber-Reinforced Composites

Stephen Davis.Department of Aerospace Engineering, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, United States.

2:10 PM 459. Molecular Simulations of Peptide Binding to SilicaYen Ngo,1 S. Bacon.2

1College of Arts & Science, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States; 2Prairie View A & M University, Prairie View, TX, United States.

2:40 PM 460. Biological Effects of Carbon Foam on the Neuroblastoma Cell LineHadil Issa.Department of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering, University of Dayton, Day-ton, OH, United States.

3:10 PM Coffee Break3:30 PM 461. On the Effect of Deposition Conditions on the Optical and Surface Characteris-

tics of Zirconium-Based Oxide, Oxynitride, and Nitride Thin FilmsIssac Fernandez.Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX, United States.

4:00 PM 462. Oxidation of BMI 5250Stephanie Reed.Dayton Early College Academy High School, Dayton, OH, United States.

4:30 PM 463. Phototresponsive Azobenzene Liquid Crystal Polymer NetworksYanira Torres.Department of Mechanical Engineering, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida, United States.

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Saturday, June 19, 2010

Saturday, June 19, 2010 9:00 AM – 5:00 PMHigh School Chemistry Teacher Workshop307-309, Dayton Convention CenterOrganizers: Bonnie Buddendeck, Paul Fleitz, Suzanne Lunsford

9:00 AM 464. Simple Stimulating Classroom DemonstrationsJohn J. Fortman.Department of Chemistry, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, United States.

11:00 AM Coffe Break11:20 AM 465. A Vibrant Classroom – 37 Years’ Worth!

Linda Ford.The Seven Hills School, Cincinnati, OH, United States.

11:40 AM 466. Lighting the Fire for Science!Andrew Felczan.Wyoming High School, United States.

12:00 PM Lunch Break1:00 PM 467. Motivating Students in Chemistry

Elizabeth Dabrowski.Magnificat High School, United States.

1:20 PM 468. A STEM OverviewPat Fife.Kettering Fairmont High School, United States.

1:40 PM Coffee Break2:00 PM 469. Surviving the First Five Years of Chemistry Teaching

Christina Tetzlaff.Indian Springs School, United States.

2:20 PM 470. Students Teaching Younger Students: The Chem Buddies ProgramBonnie Buddendeck.Centerville High School, United States.

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Author Name Publication NumberAuthor Name Publication Number

CeRMACS 2010 Author Index

Abuonk, Sarah W. .....................................285Acharya, Rajendra ....................................149Adams, Ryan K. ........................................345Adams, Samuel S. ....................................307Adams, Wade ....................................152, 352Adapala, Ravi K. .......................................175Aga, Rachel S. ..................................... 3, 117Agnes, Richard ...........................................58Aizenberg, Joanna ......................................21Akbar, Sheikh A. .........................................22Akhumian, Emiliya ....................................371Al Fahel, Claude .......................................368Alexander, Max ...........................................11Alexandru, Alex ........................................297Alfonso, Dominic ......................................162Alfonso-Prieto, Mercedes ...........................305Altamimi, Rashid ......................................150Aluru, Vamsi Krishna ...................................20Amama, Placidus B. B. ..............................242Amar, Jacques G. ......................................111Ananthoji, Ramakanth ........................... 38, 42Anaya, Nelson ..........................................330Andersen, Amanda M. ...............................346Anderson, Kyle D. .......................................94Andino, Jose G. .................................170, 232Ansari, Haris ..............................................22Archambeault, Marilyn ..............................383Armitage, Ruth Ann ............ 282, 316, 390, 393Arnett, Jessica .........................................323Arnold, David J. ........................................277Arnold, Michael S. .....................................123Arnold, Zachary ..........................................87Arnold, Zachary S. ......................................59Arnold Murray, Tracey ...............................423Asamoah, Isaac ........................................386Atwood, David A. ......................................172Aurandt, Jennifer ......................................347Aurandt, Jennifer L. ..................................346Ayres, Neil ...............................................251Bachawala, Praveen ..................................151Bacon, S. ................................................459Baer, Eric.................................. 427, 428, 429Bai, Zongwu ............................................440Bailey, Christopher A. .........................109, 155Baker, James ...........................................244Ballantine, David S. ..... 123, 124, 125, 321, 397Balster, Lori M. .........................................350Baltrus, John P. ........................................349Balzarini, Jan ...........................................199

Banda, Srikanth R. ...................................167Bandaru, Jyothirmaye ...............................434Barcus, Marilynn ......................................369Barhorst, Todd .........................................360Barnakov, Yu A. ........................................121Barnell, Thomas J. ....................................449Barone, Dominic L. ...................................360Barry, Colin G. .........................................203Basilion, James P. .......................................58Basse, Felix H.-U. .....................................446Bastien, Gardelle ......................................419Bates, Jennifer .........................................316Battiest, Travis Q. .....................................356Baughman, Jessi ......................................415Baughman, Jessi A. ..................................320Baur, Jeffery W. ........................................450Beach, David W. .......................................271Bean, Theodore G. ....................................210Bechel, Vernon .........................................163Beck, John F. ..................................... 77, 327Beck, Jeremy M. .......................................333Beck, Thomas L. ................................. 45, 224Becker, Matthew L. .....................................54Bedford, Nicholas M. .................................134Beecher, Matthew C. ...................................41Beeram, Srinivas Reddy ............................194Beier, Christopher W. ................................438Bell, Jerry ................................................457Bender, Pete ............................................213Benin, Vladimir ........................................140Benn, Katherine .......................................330Bennett, Jason A. .....................................189Benton, Carla R. .......................................444Benvenuto, Mark A. ............. 86, 191, 264, 310,

311, 391, 394Benzinger, Stephen B. ...............................110Berger, Gordon M. ....................................215Berrigan, John D. .......................................65Berry, Rajiv .............................................163Berry, R. J. ................................................44Bhandari, Rohit ..........................................80Bhattacharya, Papri ..................................229Bhymer, Clayton .........................................83Biarnés, Xevi ...........................................305Bibi, Omar ...............................................136Bigioni, Terry P. ......................... 111, 112, 240Bilinovich, Stephanie M. ............................278Birnkrant, Michael J. ...................................53Bisht, Kirpal .............................................102

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Blaiszik, Benjamin J. .................................448Blinder, Alex ............................................260Blue, Lisa Y. .............................................172Bohn, Justin J. .........................................185Bombick, Daniel D. ...................................452Boucau, Julie ...........................................307Bowen, Loryn L. .......................................350Bowers, David J. ......................................415Boyini Palli, Edur Basha .............................407Breitzman, Timothy ..................................163Broome, Ann-Marie .....................................58Brott, Lawrence ..........................................96Brown, Daniel ..........................................288Brown, Jason D. .......................................333Brown, Lisa M. .........................................350Brown, Michael S. .....................................360Brown, Ronald C. ...............................127, 161Brutchey, Richard L. ..................................438Buckeye, Heidi M. .....................................386Buddendeck, Bonnie .................................470Buehler, Paul W. .......................................300Buldum, Alper ............................................15Bunger, Ashley ...........................................28Bunker, Christopher E. .......................241, 447Bunning, Timothy J. ......52, 53, 93, 94, 96, 126,

144, 364, 365, 366, 367Burda, Clemens ..........................................58Burggraf, Larry ................................... 39, 298Burke, Aaron R. ..........................................74Burns, Christopher T. .........................230, 231Burns, Wendy L. ................................230, 231Burton, David J. .......................................217Butwin, Frank ..........................................426Cabrales, Pedro .................................296, 300Cai, Weiwei ..............................................442Cai, Ye ......................................................65Carr, Joel ..........................................427, 428Carranza, Susana .......................................18Carri, Gustavo A. ........................................54Caruso, Joseph .........................................293Caruso, Joe A. ..........................................201Caruso, Joseph A. .....................................287Caruso, Mary M. .......................................448Castellano, Felix N. ............................107, 220Caulton, Kenneth G............................170, 232Cavicchi, Kevin A. .....................................176Chabinyc, Michael .....................................153Chakra, Joshi ...........................................419Chakraborty, Sumit ...................................166Challen, Paul R. ........................................271Chan, Qilin ..............................................287Chandra, Kusum L. ............................262, 421

Chang, Dong W. .......................................308Charif, Andrea ..........................................244Chatterjee, Sayandev ................................103Chatterjee, Sayan D. .................................169Chavez, Jorge L. ................................... 26, 67Check, Michael .........................................222Chen, Chenggang .....................................222Chen, Guo ......................................... 64, 296Chen, Yun................................................183Cheng, Stephen Z. D..........................157, 246Cheng, Yu ..................................................58Cherqaoui, Driss .......................................165Chettiar, Uday K. ........................................51Chiang, Long .............................................. 9Chuang, Kathy C. .....................................361Clark, Joseph F. ........................................293Clark, Ted M. ............................ 342, 380, 381Clark, Jr., William J. ..................................384Clay, Charles M. .......................................302Cliffel, David E. ..........................................55Cline, Kristin K. ........................................192Clymer, Traci ............................................306Cochran, Justin ........................................153Collins, Matthew P. ....................................410Collins, Sibrina N. .....................................169Colson, Roviere ........................................417Colvin, L. W. ............................................234Connick, William .......................................103Connick, William B. ...................................169Constandinidis, Fadwa ........................247, 291Conyers, Ryan C. ......................................284Cook, Teresa L. ..........................................32Cooper, Thomas M. ...................... 74, 416, 445Coppage, Ryan ...........................................23Coppage, Ryan H. .......................................88Corbett, Adrian M. ....................................268Corbin, Perry S. ........................................248Cowan, James A. ......................................272Cowley, Jacob .................................... 39, 298Crespo-Hernández, Carlos E. ........................70Crespo-Hernandez, Carlos ...........................75Criss, Jim M. ............................................361Critser, David A. .......................................333Crookes-Goodson, Wendy J. .......................338Cucci, Sherry ...........................................369Cui, Yue ..................................................265Cunningham, Krista ..................................306Curliss, David B. .......................................252Czierniawski, Benjamin .............................310Dabney, David E. ......................................245Dabrowski, Elizabeth .................................467Dagher, Jessica .................................. 39, 298

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Dai, Liming .......................... 12, 118, 119, 308Daka, Philias ............................................297Dale, H. ....................................................14Dalton, Matthew J. ....................................109Daly, Kyle O. ............................................423Dang, Thuy D...........................................440Danielson, Neil D. ...................... 404, 405, 410Dantus, Marcos ........................................359Datien, Natalie .........................................264Davidson, Molly ..........................................67Davidson, Molly E. ......................................26Davies, Bethany R. ...................................385Davis, Kevin ..............................................11Davis, Michael C. ........................................98Davis, Stephen .........................................458Day, Paul N. ....................................5, 16, 348De Clecq, Erik ..........................................199De Paoli Lacerda, Silvia H. .........................178Deblock, Michael C. ...........................235, 278DeCerbo, Jennifer N. .................................440Deepe, George S. .....................................287Deibel, Jason ...........................................442Deibel, Jason A. .......................................444Deitsch, Jacob P. R. ...................................324Deng, Yongming .......................................270Dennis, Patrick B. .....................................338Deodhar, Tejal J. .......................................183Deshpande, Rohit .....................................270Desireddy, Anil .........................................419Desper, John ............................................262Deynega, Igor ..........................................373Dick, Timothy T. .......................................285Dickerson, Matthew B. .............45, 65, 66, 131,

134, 338Diefenbach, Andrew ..................................394Difrancesco, John C. .................................386Dihrkop, Erik ............................................276Dilling, Wendell L. ........................ 89, 322, 424Dima, Ruxandra ................................. 46, 263Dima, Ruxandra I. ....................................334Dimiev, Ayrat ...........................................237Dove, Kathryn ..........................................385Doyle, Michael J. ......................................... 6Drachev, Vladimir P. ....................................51Drake, Jennifer .........................................453Drummy, Lawrence F. ................... 66, 134, 438Dryden, D................................................121Du, Feng .................................................119Duan, Jinsong ........................................5, 13Duan, Li ..................................................263Dudis, Douglas ..................................222, 353Dudis, Douglas S. ..............................164, 233

Dull, Ralph ..............................................354Duncan, Jared M. .....................................117Duning, Madeline ......................................365Dunkerley, Eric .........................................437Durmus, Semih ........................................235Durstock, Michael ............................... 13, 158Durstock, Michael F. ..... 109, 134, 155, 437, 438Dutmer, Brendan C. ..................................124Edmonds, Byron P. ....................................109Ekiert, Thomas F. ........................................11Elasser, Rachel .........................................377Elliott, Bevan ...........................................222Elmlinger, Brittany ....................................377Emami, F. S. ..............................................44Emenike, Bright U. ...................................273Eng, Jason ...............................................381Enlow, Jesse ........................................ 92, 96Enlow, Jesse O. ..........................................94Epstein, Arthur ............................................ 9Epstein, Alexander ......................................21Epstein, Arthur J. .....................................219Espe, Matthew .........................................415Espe, Matthew P. ....................... 114, 115, 320Essi, David F. ...........................................271Esterline, Daniel T. ....................................274Evans, Laura J. .........................................215Eyer, Benjamin R. .....................................289Eyink, Kurt ..............................................126Fahey, Mary .............................................394Fairchild, Christopher ..................................81Fang, Yunnan .............................................65Fannin, Harry B. ................................... 38, 42Farajian, Amir A. ......................................... 3Farmer, Barry ...........................................225Farmer, Barry L. .......................2, 49, 226, 227Farmer, Robin S. ................................... 20, 24Felczan, Andrew .......................................466Feld, William A. .................... 30, 195, 196, 294Fellure, Andrew S. ....................................386Ferguson, John .........................................222Fernandez, Issac ......................................461Fernando, K. A. Shiral ...............................241Fife, Pat ..................................................468Fillery, Scott P. ..................................437, 438Fischer, Jennifer .......................................283Fischer, Lindsey G. ....................................261Fisher, Timothy S. .....................................238Fitzgerald, George ....................................... 6Fitzwater, Deborah A. ................................182Flandin, Lionel ..........................................429Flikkema, Jonathan L. ...............................416Flores, Jaime A..................................170, 232

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Florian, Pierre ............................................98Flynn, Cory ................................................11Fogle, Jeffrey D. .........................................30Ford, Linda ..............................................465Fortman, John J. ......................................464Fossum, Eric ............... 143, 247, 279, 291, 299Foster, Mark D. .............................. 40, 56, 245Fox, Peter A. .....................................204, 207Francis, Zamborini ....................................194Fraser, Daniel ...........................................282Fraser, Simon ...........................................325Freer, Alex ...............................................367Freshwater, Ian A. ....................................386Freshwater, Pierce M. ................................386Fried, Joel R.............................................164Fryar, Alan ...............................................172Frye, Christopher ......................................397Fu, Patty K.-L. .......76, 167, 168, 259, 260, 431,

432, 433, 434, 435Fujiyama-Novak, Jane H. .............................18Gabrovsek, Andrej ....................................375Gagnon, Zofia .................................... 39, 298Galay, Mark .............................................373Gallagher, Daniel ........................................96Gangula, Sheetal ......................................260Ganguli, Sabyasachi ....................................17Ganti, Satya .....................................442, 444Gao, Daqing ............................................417Garcia, David N. .......................................131Garg, Niti ..................................................57Garner, Robert N. .....................................171Garshott, Danielle ...................... 191, 391, 394Gengler, Jamie J. ......................................446Gerzeski, Roger ........................................238Gilbert, Thomas M. ...................................124Ginn-Pease, Margaret E. ............................385Gishto, Arsela ..........................................376Glusac, Ksenija D. .............................. 71, 135Golovaty, Dmitry ........................................73Gooch, Todd W. ........................................122Goodson, Wendy J. ...................................131Gord, James R. ....357, 358, 359, 442, 444, 447Gord, Michael A. .......................................444Goswami, Tarun .......................................217Goswami, Tushar ......................................398Govorov, Alexander O. ..............................221Grandinetti, Philip J. ....................................98Grant, John T. ............................... 52, 93, 126Gray, Jeffrey A. ........................................399Griffin, Ryan M. ........................................400Griner, Angela ............................................11Grote, James E.........................................441

Gschwender, Lois ......................................188Gschwender, Lance A. .................................86Guan, Fangxiao ........................................439Guan, Hairong .................... 101, 166, 197, 229Gudmundsdottir, Anna D. ...........................128Gulgas, Christopher G. ..............................234Guliants, Elena .........................................241Gundugola, Aditya S. ................................421Gung, Ben ...............................................284Gung, Benjamin .......................................303Gung, Benjamin W. ...................................273Guntupalli, Bhargav ..................................432Guo, Xuefei .............................................420Gupta, Maneesh K. .....................................66Gupta, Vinay K. ........................................102Gustafson, Terry L. ...................................219Guttikonda, Lakshmi Sai P..........................259Guttman, Harry J. .....................................181Guzman, Shane Z. ....................................386Hadad, Christopher M. .....29, 71, 147, 333, 336Hagen, Joshua A. .......................................25Haines, Kelly E. ........................................334Halbrook, Christopher J. ............................267Haley, Joy E. ............................... 74, 416, 445Halfacre, John W. .....................................281Hamann, Thomas W. .................................145Hamilton, Andrew R. .................................448Hammell, Dana ........................................187Han, Myung .............................................325Hand, Jennifer .........................................409Harbaugh, Svetlana V. ........................... 26, 67Hardemon, Deidre ....................................393Hardy, James K. .......................................205Harper, Eric S. ..........................................133Harris, David R. .................................296, 300Harrison, William E. ..................................200Harruff, Barbara .......................................241Hassan, Ashraf A. .......................................60Hassdorf, Ralf ..........................................446Hatton, Benjamin .......................................21Hauge, Robert H. ......................................242Havens, David E. ......................................449Hawker, Craig ..........................................153He, Jian ....................................................14He, Yufan .......................................... 72, 218He, Yun ...................................................422Heineman, William ....................................414Heineman, William R. ................. 193, 201, 420Heinz, Hendrik ..................................... 44, 47Hemmelgarn, Chris D. ...............................449Hemmingsen, Jens ............................382, 385Henderson, John J. ...................................155

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Hermiller, Jason M. ...................................449Hersam, Mark ..........................................158Heyman, Arnon ........................................338Higgins, Steven R. ....................................104Hill, L. B. ...................................................44Hils, J. E. .................................................140Hiltner, Anne ............................. 427, 428, 429Himmeldirk, Klaus B. ................................389Hindi, Khadijah M. ....................................235Hinds, Bruce ............................................187Hinds, Bruce J. ...........................................19Hochbaum, Allon ........................................21Hollinger, Jeffrey O. ..................................309Holmes, Michael R. ...................................303Hood, Patrick J. ........................................253Hotz, Richard P. .................................319, 401Hou, Jianhui ............................................154Howell, Jon L. ..........................................207Hu, Bin .....................................................10Hu, Jun J. .........................................113, 183Hu, Ying ..................................................135Huang, Chung-Hsuan ..................................18Hufnagle, David C. ....................................444Humphreys, Donald S. ..............................454Hunter, Gary H. ........................................215Hunter, Nora E. ........................................294Hurtubise, Jennifer ............................144, 366Hurwitz, Frances ......................................115Hussain, Saber M. ....................................308Hussey, Stephen ......................................105Hutchins, Kelley M. ...................................145Huth, George A. .......................................281Hwang, Sangchul......................................330Iarve, Endel .............................................163Ibrahim, Diaa A. .......................................307Indig, Guilherme ......................................292Indig, Guilherme L. ...................................267Intaglietta, Marcos ....................................300Ishima, Rieko ...........................................332Iskrenova-Tchoukova, Eugeniya ..................160Issa, Hadil ...............................................460Ittes, Marlyssa .........................................115Iyer, Suri S. ......................................275, 422Jaber, Muneer ..........................................368Jacob, Z. .................................................121Jaggannagari Brahmananda, Sarika ..............76Jakhmola, Anshuman ..................................80Jakubiak, Rachel ..... 50, 52, 92, 93, 94, 96, 126Janoski, Jonathan .....................................245Jarid, Abdellah .........................................165Javadi, Mort .............................................386Jayasinghe, Chaminda ...............................201

Jayasinghe, Manori ...................... 7, 36, 37, 48Jayasinghe, Manori I. ..................................35Jespersen, M. L. .........................................44Jia, Yiping .........................................296, 300Jiang, Hao ......................... 52, 92, 93, 96, 126Jiang, Lin ..................................................90Jin, Rongchao ............................................57Jog, Milind A. ...........................................223Johnson, David W. ....... 140, 212, 313, 314, 395Johnson, Glenn R. ......................................66Johnson, Jermaine D. ................................185Johnson, Mark J. ......................................271Johnson, Steven C. ...................................269Johnson, Wesley C. ...................................386Jones, Candice .........................................368Jones, Derek .....................................128, 148Jones, Jeremy ..........................................351Jones, Ross E. ...................................... 38, 42Jones, Sidney ..........................................455Jones, Sharon E. ......................................265Joseph, Jojo .............................................157Joshi, Chakra P. ........................................111Joshi, Harshad .........................................334Joyce, Donna M. .......................................441Joyce, Lauren E. .......................................171Kaiti, Sridevi ............................................247Kalinichev, Andrey G. ................................160Kannan, Ramamurthi ................................109Karim, Alamgir .........................................175Karingithi, Robert N. ............................. 38, 42Karki, Subhas S. .......................................199Karumanchi, Devi Kalyan ...........................168Kaseman, Derrick C. ...................................98Kashat, Candice N. M. N. .............................86Kawchak, Kevin S. ....................................277Keeton, Kori .............................................385Keiser, Joseph T. .......................................396Keller, Adam I. .........................................387Kelley-Loughnane, Nancy .................25, 26, 67Kenney, Malcolm E. ............................. 58, 106Kern, Kim ................................................247Kern, Kimberly .........................................291Ketcha, Daniel M. .......................................34Khalil, Mouhamad .....................................139Khambadkone, Seva .................................265Khan, Anam .............................................372Khanke, Rahul A. ......................................435Khattab, Tawfik A. ....................................132Kildishev, Alexander V. ................................51Killu, Malinda ...........................................310Kim, Dong-Shik ..........................................68Kim, Jinku ...............................................309

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Kim, Namil ................................................73Kim, Seung Min ........................................242Kim, Sang Nyon .......................................265Kim, Shang-U. .........................................198Kinstle, Thomas H. ...................................107Kippenhan, Edith P. ...................................324Kippenhan, Edith Preciosa ..........................214Kirkpatrick, R. J. .......................................160Klahr, Benjamin M. ...................................145Kleinhenz, Nabil .......................................211Knapp, Amanda R. ....................................206Knauss, Kevin G. ......................................104Knecht, Marc R. ....................23, 27, 80, 82, 88Knight, Caitlin ..........................................338Knight, Caitlin L. ......................................131Knue, Emilee ...........................................100Koerner, Hilmar .................................437, 438Kolopajlo, Larry ........................................146Korzan, Rory ............................................412Kosynkin, Dmitry ......................................243Kosynkin, Dmitry V. ..................................237Kotha, Raghavendhar Reddy ......................299Kozlowski, Pawel M. ..................................305Kramer, Gene F. .......................................213Krause, Jeanette A.............. 101, 166, 169, 229Kravats, Andrea N. .....................................48Krein, Douglas M. .......................................74Kroeger, Nils ............................................338Kroening, Karolin K. ..................................201Kroger, Nils ................................................65Kromer, Lukas T. ......................................399Krystosik, Amy R. .....................................271Kryukov, Yevgen .......................................111Kuang, Zhifeng ..........................................49Kubert, Jennifer .......................................311Kuhlmann, Julia ........................................201Kulatilaka, Waruna D.................................357Kulis, Michael J. ........................................215Kumar, Anurag .........................................238Kumar, Manoj ...........................................305Kumar, Santosh ........................................112Kumar, Satish ..........................................186Kuppa, Vikram K. .....................................159Kusmus, Disraeli ......................................279Kusmus, Gigi ...........................................247Kutney, Amanda M. .....................................31Kwak, Daniel H. ........................................309Kwan, Man Lung Desmond .........................271Kyu, Thein .................................................73Lagadic, Isabelle .................. 99, 100, 408, 409Lam, Anthony ..........................................274Lam, Tai ............................................ 39, 298

Lama, Bimala ...........................................114Lamb, Megan ...........................................281Lawson, Daniel B. .....................................120Leamy, Michael ........................................222LeClair, Jeffrey P. ........................................91Lee, Andre ...............................................362Lee, Jiyoung ..............................................46Lee, Jonghoon ...................................226, 227Lee, Kyungmin .........................................364Lee, L. J. ...................................................22Lee, Markeata ..........................................417Leech, Anna M. ........................................184Leeper, Thomas C. .............................278, 280Leever, Benjamin ......................................158Leever, Benjamin J....................................155Lemberger, Thomas R. ..............................236Lemmeyer, Katie ......................................379Leng, Siwei ..............................................246Lenkala, Varun Chander R..........................431Lett, Kacee ..............................................281Lew Yan Voon, Lok C. ................................... 3Lewis, William K. ......................................447Li, H. ......................................................121Li, Linlin ...........................................141, 206Li, Lan ....................................................430Li, Quan ....................................................12Li, Qian ...................................................128Li, Shuo ..................................................164Li, Xiaohong .....................................204, 207Li, Yannian ................................................12Li, Zhen ....................................................60Liddell, Kristi L. ........................................396Liebman, Joel F. .......................................165Lincoln, Jason E. ......................................252Linkous, Clovis A. .....................................356Liou, Deng-Yuan .......................................115Liu, Lishan ...............................................301Liu, Yangping ...........................................198Loegel, Thomas N. ....................................404Looney, Elizabeth .....................................370Lozovoy, Vadim ........................................359Lu, H. Peter ....................................... 72, 218Luckarift, Heather R. ...................................66Luk, Hoi Ling ...........................................147Lunsford, Suzanne ....................................413Luo, Wen-I. .............................................272Luo, Xiaofan ............................................451Lupai, Christopher ....................................417Luu, Wilson .............................................271Lyons, Daniel A. .......................................109Ma, Lin ....................................................442Maarouf, Ahamad .....................................371

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Maatallah, Mohamed .................................165MacDonald, Elizabeth ................. 191, 391, 394Mack, James ........... 28, 32, 128, 148, 151, 286Mackey, Matthew ......................................427Mackey, Matt ....................................428, 429Macrae, Roderick M. ..................... 97, 228, 257Macri, Katherine .......................................137Maddux, Michael R. ...................................449Magliery, Thomas J. ...........................177, 335Malkovskiy, Andrey V. ..................................56Mante, Michael .........................................104Manuta, David M. .....................................425Marder, Seth R. ..........................................65Margraf, Thomas W. ..................................449Markopoulos, Marjorie .................... 39, 87, 298Markopoulos, Marjorie M. .............................59Marks, Tobin ............................................158Marszalek, Jolanta E. ................................175Maruyama, Benji ...............................217, 242Mason, Jeremy D. .....................................290Mason, Victoria ........................................380Massiot, Dominique ....................................98Masthay, Mark ...................................314, 395Masthay, Mark B. .................................. 38, 42Mather, Patrick T. ......................................451Matthys, Shawna A. ..................................450Mattieson, Mace .......................................190Mayy, M. .................................................121Mazzoleni, Lynn ........................................317Mazzoleni, Lynn R. .............................. 91, 329McAlpine, Michael C. .................................265McBride, T. K. ..........................................230McCallum, Adam ......................................100McClain, Mark D. ......................................454McClung, Amber J. W. ...............................450McConney, Michael E. ................... 94, 144, 366McCord, Elizabeth F. ...........................204, 207McGinty, Jerome .......................................379McGowin, Audrey......................................295McGowin, Audrey E. ..................................268McLaurin, Jeffrey L. ..................................326McLean, Daniel G......................... 74, 416, 445McMills, Mark C. .......................................256McNamara, Nicholas D. .............................241Medvetz, Doug A. .....................................141Mei, Jianguo ............................................155Meinert, Megan ........................................385Meller, Jaroslaw ..........................................45Mendoza, Hugo ........................................266Menon, Lakshmi .......................................332Meredith, Carson ......................................174Merino, Edward J. .....................................318

Meyer, Jennifer L. .....................................319Meyer, Tricia L. .........................................236Meyer, Terrence R. ....................................358Meyerhoefer, Allie .......................... 39, 87, 298Meyerhoefer, Allie J. ....................................59Meyers, Joseph D. ......................................58Michelle, Sestak .......................................419Mier, Lynetta M. ........................................219Miles, Kelsey ..............................................11Miles, Kelsey C. ..........................................34Miller, A. R. ..............................................205Miller, Joseph D. .......................................358Miller, Philip A. ..................................... 38, 42Milletti, Maria C. .........................................81Mills, Devin ..............................................385Mintz, Eric A. ...........................................361Mirau, P. A. ................................................44Mirau, Peter A. .........................................438Mirzakulova, Ekaterina V. ...........................135Mitchell, Brianna ......................................382Modarelli, David A. ............. 116, 149, 150, 157Mohanty, Ashok ..........................................57Mollenhauer, David ...................................163Moller, James C. .......................................163Monahan, Jennifer ....................39, 74, 87, 298Monahan, Jennifer L. ........................... 59, 445Montenegro, Gladys R. ..............................250Moon, Nicholas .........................................244Moore, Jeffrey S. ......................................448Morand, Britni ..........................................401Moreno, Monica ........................................138Morgan, Thomas ................................ 99, 408Morreale, Bryan........................................349Moulton, Michael C. ..................................444Mouyianis, Meghann .................. 191, 311, 391Mueller, Susan S. ......................................350Mukherjee, Abhijit ....................................172Muldoon, Allison M. ...................................103Muratore, Chris ........................................238Murphree, S. Shaun ................... 210, 289, 290Murray, Tracey A. .....................................392Murthy, Pushpalatha .................................269Music, Denis ............................................446Muthukrishnan, Sivaramakrishnan ..............147Muthukrishnan, Siva .................................333Myint, Wazo .............................................332Naber, Mark D. .........................................319Naik, Rajesh ..............................................96Naik, Rajesh R. .. 23, 25, 45, 49, 65, 66, 82, 88,

94, 134, 221, 265, 338Narayanan, Latha .......................................26Narimanov, E. E. ......................................121

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Narvaez, Javier ........................................188Nash, Kevin M. .........................................198Nataraj, G. ..............................................121Natarajan, Lalgudi ....................................366Natarajan, Lalgudi V. .................... 53, 144, 365Natesakhawat, Sittichai .............................349Nauman, Heather N. .................................386Neimeister, Travis D. .................................401NeJame, Britney ................................. 39, 298Nepal, Dhriti ..............................................13Ngo, Yen .................................................459Ngo, Y. H. ..................................................44Nguyen, Kiet A. ...............................5, 16, 348Nguyen, Phuong Khanh Quoc .....................413Nguyen, Tuan....................................116, 157Ni, Xingjie .................................................51Nie, Lihua ................................................335Niu, Jianbing ............................................... 4Noginov, M. A. .........................................121Norris, Peter ...................................... 33, 306Nyon-Kim, Sang .........................................25O’Donnell, Katie .......................................385O’Donnell, Martin J. ..................................261O’Malley, Matthew J. ...................................11Ogden, Dorothy J. ....................................258Okumu, Antony ........................................306Olin, Tracy ...............................................113Olin, Tracy C. ...........................................115Onicha, Anthony C. ............................107, 220Orlowski, Sandra S. ..................................329Ortiz, Nancy ..............................................84Otchere, Prince N. ....................................384Ouchen, Fahima .......................................441Ozgen, Mustafa ........................................205Pacardo, Dennis B. ............................... 23, 82Pacey, Gilbert E. ................................443, 444Pachter, Ruth ..................... 5, 13, 16, 173, 348Padilla, Ingrid ..........................................330Palacios, Joaquin ...............................209, 266Palmer, Andre F. .....................63, 64, 296, 300Pan, Jilin .................................................439Pande, Priyanka .......................................216Pander III, James E. .................................189Pang, Wei ..................................................86Panthi, Krishna .........................................107Panzner, Matthew J. ............ 141, 235, 278, 415Paraboon, Jirapun .....................................108Parikh, Kunal S. .........................................22Park, Byung-Wook ......................................68Park, Hyunsoo ...................................170, 232Park, Kyoungweon .............................. 13, 239Parker, Jillian A. ........................................280

Parquette, Jon R. ......................................116Parvani, Sahar M. .......................................98Pate, Brian D. ..........................................156Patel, Amit J. ...........................................448Patnaik, Soumya ......................................225Patnaik, Soumya S. ....................................45Paudel, Kalpana .......................................187Paudel, Liladhar........................................205Pavel, Ioana ................................. 39, 87, 298Pavel, Ioana E. ...........................................59Pavlyuk, Oksana M. ..................................256Payton, John L. ..........................................69Peer-Bostic, Kelsey ...................................382Penumetsa, Sreekanth ..............................433Perchellet, Elisabeth M. ......................262, 421Perchellet, Jean-Pierre H. ....................262, 421Pergande, Melissa .....................................292Pestov, Dmitry .........................................359Peterson, Amanda K. ..................................85Petki, Douglas T........................................442Petkie, Douglas A. ....................................444Petko, Alyssa ...........................................374Petrenko, Roman ........................................45Pettibone, Nancy J. ...................................285Pham, Ha H. ............................................309Phillips, Christina ......................................390Pinhas, Allan R. ........................................319Pint, Cary L. ............................................242Pischera, Anna M. .....................................115Pixley, Sarah ............................................201Platz, Matthew S. .....................................147Polster, Christopher S. .................................62Poole, James S. ........................................110Poulsen, Nicole ...........................................65Price, Sam C. ...........................................211Prochaska, Andrew ...................................125Protasiewicz, John D. .......................... 69, 271Pugh, Coleen ............................ 244, 249, 250Puneet, Pooja .............................................14Punnamaraju, Srikoundinya .........................61Putman, Annie .........................................317Pyne-Geithman, Gail .................................293Qin, Liu ...................................................183Quandt, Robert W. ......................................41Qurik, Roderic P. .......................................245Rack, Jeff .........................................167, 168Radler, J. .................................................411RajanBabu, T. V. .........................................31Rameez, Shahid .........................................63Rampersaud, Isaac ...................................387Ranaweera, R. A. A. U. ..............................128Rao, Apparao M. .........................................14

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Rao, Shreyas .............................................22Rasmussen, Paul ......................................216Rayat, Sundeep .................................262, 421Reed, Stephanie .......................................462Reese, R. N. ............................................205Reichardt, Christian .............................. 70, 75Renfus, Daniel J. ......................................124Reynolds, John R. .....................................155Ribblett, Jason W. .....................................301Richards, Gregory L. .................................312Richards, Hilary ........................................304Riley, John K. ...........................................129Rinaldi, Peter L. ........... 141, 204, 205, 206, 207Robert, Collins .........................................419Roberts-Kirchhoff, Elizabeth .......................191Robota, Heinz ..........................................351Rockenbauer, Antal ...................................198Rodrigo, Sanjeewa K. ................................197Rodriguez, Erika D. ...................................451Romano, Natalie C. ...................................116Ronning, Donald R. ...................................307Rose, Davin ...............................................97Rosenzweig, Shirley ..................................130Rosza, Elizabeth .......................................368Rout, Chandra S. ......................................238Rovira, Carme ..........................................305Roy, Ajit K. .......................... 17, 225, 226, 227Roy, Sukesh ....................... 357, 359, 442, 447Rubinson, J. F...........................................343Rumple, Amber ........................................283Rusnak, Andrew J. ....................................127Sabol, Joseph E. .......................................254Sadowski, Andrew ....................................374Sahle-Demessie, E. ............................. 60, 130Sahle-Demessie, Endalkachew ...................418Salem, Adam ...........................................371Salem, Chantale .......................................372Sanday, Thomas .......................................394Sanders, Kevin J. ........................................98Sandhage, Kenneth H. ........................ 65, 338Sanki, Aditya K. .......................................307Santosh, Kumar .......................................419Saurabh, Saumya .....................................309Savant, Deepa .........................................141Sayers, Rachel .........................................195Saylor, Rachel ..........................................192Schauer, Douglas J. ...........................304, 411Scheeline, Alexander .................................341Scheerens, Joseph C. ................................205Schepens, Erik .........................................374Schmidt, Daniel F. ....................................437Schmidt, Joel ...........................................222

Schmidt, Joseph A. R. ......................... 77, 327Schmidt, Joel E. .......................................233Schneider, Jochen M. ................................446Schrand, Amanda M. .................................308Schreiner, Rodney .....................................457Schroeder, Nicholas ..................................442Schroll, Cynthia A. ....................................414Schulz, Mark ............................................420Schwefel, Jamie .......................................423Scionti, Vincenzo ......................................415Scott, Little ..............................................419Scott, William L. .......................................261Sears-Dundes, Christopher ........................319Seeley, John ............................................346Seibel, Harry A. ........................................233Seleem, Suzzane ......................................417Seliskar, Carl J. ........................................193Sellinger, Aaron T......................................363Sethi, Manish .............................................27Setterdahl, Aaron T. ..................................281Sevinc, Papatya C. ......................................72Seybold, Paul ...........................................412Seybold, Paul G. .......................................407Seyler, Jeff ..............................................136Shafer, Linda M. .......................................350Shah, Priyank ..........................................321Shakhashiri, Bassam Z. ......................456, 457Shalaev, Vladimir M. ...................................51Shanov, Vesselin ......................................201Shanov, Vesselin N. ..................................420Shao, Hui ................................................116Sharma, Nick ...........................................325Sheikhaldeen, Yassir .................................387Shepherd, David B. ...................................258Shepson, Paul ..........................................331Shian, Samuel ...........................................65Shirk, James ............................................429Shoemaker, Dale A. ..................................326Shoseyov, Oded .......................................338Shouse, Angela M. ....................................285Shrestha, Pooja ............................. 35, 37, 339Shumaker, Joseph ....................................222Shumaker, Joseph A. ..........................233, 450Sichula, Vincent A. ...................................135Siciliano, Tammy J. ...................................235Siegel, Avram W. ........................................24Silverman, Richard B. .................................43Simon, Carl G. .........................................175Simon, Gerard K. ......................................217Simpson, M. C. ..........................................69Singh, Kristi .............................................134Sinitskii, Alexander ............................237, 243

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Sisler, David ..............................................92Skidmore, S. C. ........................................143Skotsen, Maryana .....................................373Skove, Malcolm J. .......................................14Skrabalak, Sara E. ................................ 84, 85Slagle, Jonathan E. ............................416, 445Slagle, Jonathan M. ....................................74Slaughter, Robert ............................... 39, 298Slipchenko, Mikhail N. ...............................358Slocik, Joseph M. ......................23, 88, 94, 221Smalley, Richard E. ...................................352Smith, Daniel ...........................................108Smith, Marcus ..........................................241Smith, Nathan..........................................339Smith, Stanley .........................................442Snow, Tiffany ...........................................347Snyder, Adrienne ......................................388Snyder, Christa ........................................192Sokolov, Alexei P. .......................................56Solivio, Morwena Jane V. ...........................318Song, Hyundeok .......................................224Sorescu, Dan ...........................................162Sorial, George A. ................................ 60, 130Sottos, Nancy R. ......................................448Soucek, Mark D. .......................................132Southerland, Benjamin K. ............................34Spain, Jim ...............................................355Spann, Meaghan ......................................370Sperry, David C. .........................................62Spoutz, Patrick ...........................................81Stach, Eric A. ...........................................242Stan, George ................. 7, 35, 36, 37, 48, 339Standard, Jean M. ......................................41Stauffer, Hans U. ...............................358, 447Steckl, Andrew J. ................................ 61, 134Steenberg, Sean P. ...................................271Steidl, Rebecca J. .......................................41Stelmach, Jillian .......................................385Stickney, Katherine ...................................323Stickney, Katherine W. ..............................453Stinchcomb, Audra ...................................187Stone, Morley O. ......................... 1, 25, 26, 67Storms, William ........................................249Stose, Amy J............................................182Strasinger, Caroline ..................................187Strathmann, Alan .....................................395Street, Kenneth W. ...................................215Stricker, Jeffery T. .....................................440Stringfield, Thomas W. ..............................213Strom, Samantha .....................................281Studniarz, Stanley A. ..................................79Stybel, Jason ...........................................381

Styers-Barnett, David ...............................137Su, Weijie .........................................416, 445Su, Xin ......................................................19Su, Z. .......................................................14Sucheck, Steven J. ...................................307Sun, Bin ..................................................246Sun, Guoyong ..........................................300Sun, Lirong ................................... 52, 93, 126Sutherland, Richard L. ......................... 53, 365Sutter, Thomas M. ......................................73Swavey, Shawn M. ....................................312Swift, Alexander .......................................378Sylvain, Marsillac ......................................419Tabiryan, Nelson .......................................367Tabor, Christopher ......................................13Tadesse, Haragewine ................................418Tan, Loon-Seng ...............9, 109, 129, 188, 363Tatebe, Caleb J. ........................................403Taulbee-Combs, Anita R. ....................443, 444Taylor, Barney E. ......................................155Tchoul, Maxim N. ......................................438Terry, Bigioni ............................................419Terry, William F. ........................................360Tessier, Claire A. ........................ 141, 235, 415Tetzlaff, Christina ......................................469Thayer, John S. ..........................................78Thodeti, Charles K. ...................................175Thompson, Levi T. ....................................216Thorp, Katie ................................................ 8Thota, Sreekanth ......................................199Threatt, Meredith .....................................180Tienda, Kevin ...........................................247Tomashuk, Timothy A. ...............................295Tonddast-Navaei, Sam ................................36Tondiglia, Vincent .....................................365Tondiglia, Vincent P. .............................. 53, 92Tondiglia, Vince P. ..............................144, 366Tong, Tat .................................................449Torres, Yanira ...........................................463Tour, James M. .........................................237Trabbic, Kevin R. ......................................307Tran, Kristina L. ........................................102Treat, Neil ...............................................153Trefry, John C. ............................................59Tremain, Scott M. .....................................142Tritt, Terry M. .............................................14Trohalaki, Steven ......................................173Truong, Triet M. ........................................268Tsai, Amy ................................................300Tsao, Max ................................................350Tseng, Jung-Kai ........................................428Tsukruk, Vladimir V. ....................................94

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Tulio, Artemio Z. .......................................205Tun, Zin-Min ............................................141Turnbull, Kenneth ............... 276, 283, 288, 412Turner, Brian N. ..........................................55Turner, Daniel A. .........................................29Turro, Claudia ..........................................171Twum, Eric B. ...........................................204Unroe, Marilyn .........................................163Upchurch, Carrie ......................................257Upton, Brian ............................................412Urbas, Augustine ....................................9, 12Urbas, Augustine M. ................................8, 53Vaia, Richard A. .............13, 239, 363, 437, 438van Beek, Daan ........................................247van Duijn, Arnoud M. ................................196Van Dyke, Mark ........................................108van Keulen, Harry .....................................337Vander Wal, Randy L. .......................... 18, 215Vangsness, Marlin D. .................................350Varma-Nelson, Pratibha .............................208Varshney, Vikas .................... 44, 225, 226, 227Vasquez, Daniela M. ..................................142Vassilaras, Plousia E. .................................106Venkat, Narayanan ...................................440Venoy, Jacob A. ........................................389Verhoff, Kimberly ......................................388Vernon, Jonathan P. ....................................65Versic, Ronald J. .......................................179Vikan, Ryan .............................................288Villamena, Frederick A. .............................198Voegler, Nick ............................................395Voevodin, Andrey A. ..........................308, 446Vogt, R. Aaron ...........................................75Vyas, Shubham .................................. 71, 336Wabuyele, Simuli ......................................455Wabuyele, Simuli L. ..................................202Waddell, Daniel C. ......................................28Wade, Edmir O. ........................................406Wagner, Meghan R. ...................................286Wagner, Timothy ......................................402Wagner, Timothy R. ..................................403Wald, David .............................................202Walker, Jeremy P. ..............................184, 185Walliwalagedara, Chamari ..........................337Walsh, Kenneth E. ....................................406Wang, Chien-Lung ....................................157Wang, David H. ......................... 129, 188, 363Wang, Huan ................................................ 7Wang, Hong ................................ 90, 270, 297Wang, Jing ..............................................439Wang, Qing.......................................436, 439Wang, Shih-Fan ........................................245

Wang, Wei ...............................................246Wang, Yuanmin .................................. 72, 218Wang, Zezhou ..........................................255Ward, Logan ............................................163Warner, Susan C. ......................................454Warren, John C. .......................................169Waters, Andrew M. ............................262, 421Waters, William ........................................372Weaver, Kent ................................ 39, 87, 298Weaver, Kent M. .........................................59Webb, Cathleen J. .....................................340Wei, Robert .............................................337Weingart, Jacob J. .............................113, 183Wesdemiotis, Chrys ..................................245Wesdimiotis, Chrys ...................................415West, Zachary J. .......................................345Wheeler, Robert ..........................................17White, E. R. .............................................172White, Scott R. .........................................448White, Timothy ........................................365White, Timothy J. ............... 144, 364, 366, 367Whiteside, Jillien H. ..................................392Wickman, Kristy .......................................... 3Willard, Belinda ........................................337Williams, John ..........................................264Williams, Jennifer N. .................................455Williams, Ryan .........................................385Williamson, Chester ..................................128Wilmes, Gregg M. .....................................277Wilson, Robert A. ......................................193Winter, Jessica O. .......................................22Winters, Michael S. ...................................287Wissler, Laurie L. ......................................265Wiswell, Sara E. .......................................169Wolak, Mason ..........................................429Wolf, Ashley ......................................402, 403Wolfe, Robert J. .................................170, 232Woodward, Patrick M. ................................236Wooley, Dawn P. .........................................59Worden, Steven .......................................304Wright, Brian D. .......................................141Wrzesinski, Paul J. ....................................359Wu, Ji ............................................... 19, 187Wu, X. ......................................................35Wu, Xiongwu .............................................37Wu, Yue ..................................................154Wyzgoski, Faith J. .....................................205Xia, Zhenhai ............................................... 4Xiao, Shumin .............................................51Xu, Bingwei .............................................359Xu, Yan ............................................202, 430Xu, Zhenghu ............................................297

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Yang, Keqin ...............................................14Yang, Liqiang ...........................................211Yang, Mimi ..............................................269Yocum, Brandon .........................................11Yosief, Hailemichael O. ..............................275You, Wei ..................................................211Youngs, Wiley J. .......... 141, 206, 235, 278, 415Yu, Dingshan ..................................... 12, 118Yu, Jing .....................................................54Yu, Wumin .................................................40Yu, Zhenning ...........................................247Yuan, Hsiao-Kuan .......................................51Zabarnick, Steven ....................................345Zakharov, Dmitri N. ..................................242Zamborini, Francis P. .................................138Zhang, Heng ............................................246Zhang, Jie ...............................................101Zhang, Kun..............................................246Zhang, Ning .............................................296Zhang, Sebastian B. .................................442Zhang, Yaofang ........................................293Zhao, Qiuming A. ........................ 95, 315, 328Zhao, Yuan ..............................................314Zhou, Huaxing .........................................211Zhou, Ling ...............................................405Zhou, Yipin ..............................................300Zhu, Jiang ...............................................362Zhu, Lin ..................................................308Zhu, Lei ................................... 428, 429, 439Zhu, Meifang ...........................................246Zimmerman, L. B. ......................................22Zook-Gerdau, Lois A. ................................344Zweier, Jay ..............................................198

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Hosted by the Dayton Section of the American Chemical Society

The 41st Central Regional Meeting of the American Chemical Society

Dayton, Ohio 16–19 June 2010

Chemistry:Chemistry:Chemistry:Reacting to Provide Reacting to Provide Reacting to Provide New TechnologiesNew TechnologiesNew Technologies

CeRMACS-2010 Sponsors The Central Region and the Dayton Section of the American Chemical Soci-ety owe a debt of thanks to all CeRMACS-2010 sponsors. Without their gen-erosity and gracious support, this meeting would not have been possible.

Wright Materials Research

Air Force Research Laboratory

Dayton Section, Central Region, Cleveland Section.

ACS Division of Chemical Education

ACS Division of Polymer Chemistry

AFOSRAFOSRAFOSRAir Force Office of Scientific Research

SCHB ACS Division of Small Chemical Businesses

BIOL ACS Division of

Biological Chemistry

INOR ACS Division of

Inorganic Chemistry

46551 ACS-CR Cover_mp.indd 1 6/8/2010 11:55:25 AM