Lewis Base Catalysis in Organic Synthesis, 3 Volume Set
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Edwin Vedejs was born in 1941 in Riga, Latvia. After completion of his BS (University of Michigan, 1962) and PhD (University of Wisconsin, 1966), he spent a postdoctoral year with E. J. Corey at Harvard. Prof. Vedejs then joined the chemistry faculty at the University of Wisconsin (1967). In 1999, he returned to the University of Michigan as the Moses Gomberg Professor of Chemistry. Work in the Vedejs group combines topics at the interface of methodology, total synthesis, heterocycle chemistry, stereochemistry, and related mechanistic studies. Prof. Vedejs has won several awards: Alexander von Humboldt Senior Scientist Award, 1984; Professore a Contratto, University of Bologna, Italy, 1988; Helfaer Professor, 1991-1996 (UW); Pharmacia&Upjohn Teaching Award, 1996 (Chemistry Dept, UW). Robert M. Bock Professor (UW), 1997-98; Paul Walden Medal, Riga Technical University (1997); H. C. Brown Award for Creative Research in Synthetic Methods, 2004 (ACS). Grand Medal of the Latvian Academy of Sciences, 2005. Order of the Three Stars, Latvia, 2006. Honorary Doctorate, Riga Technical University 2010.
Scott E. Denmark was born in New York on 17 June 1953. He obtained an S. B. degree from M.I.T. in 1975 and a D. Sc. Tech degree in 1980 from the ETH-Zürich under the direction of Professor Albert Eschenmoser. That same year he began his career as assistant professor at the University of Illinois. He was promoted to associate professor in 1986, full professor in 1987 and then in 1991 named the Reynold C. Fuson Professor of Chemistry. Professor Denmark?s research interests focus on the invention of new synthetic reactions and elucidating the origins of stereocontrol in novel, asymmetric transformations. He has pioneered the concept of chiral Lewis base activation of Lewis acids for catalysis in main group chemistry. His group has also developed palladium-catalyzed cross-couplings with organofunctional silicon compounds. In addition he is well-known for the development and application of tandem cycloadditions of nitroalkenes for the synthesis of complex natural and unnatural nitrogen containing compounds. In recent years, his group has investigated the use of chemoinformatics to identify and optimize catalysts for a variety of organic and organometallic reactions. Professor Denmark has won a number of honors for both research and teaching including: an NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award, A. C. Cope Scholar Award (ACS), Alexander von Humboldt Senior Scientist Award, Pedler Lecture and Medal (RSC), the ACS Award for Creative Work in Synthetic Organic Chemistry, the Yamada-Koga Prize, the Prelog Medal (ETH-Zürich), the H. C. Brown Award for Creative Research in Synthetic Methods (ACS), Robert Robinson Lecture and Medal (RSC), the ISHC Senior Award in Heterocyclic Chemistry, Paul Karrer Lectureship (Uni Zürich), the Frederic Stanley Kipping Award for Research in Silicon Chemistry (ACS), and the Harry and Carol Mosher Award (Santa Clara Section, ACS). He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry and the American Chemical Society. He edited Volume 85 of Organic Syntheses, was Editor of Volumes 22-25 of Topics in Stereochemistry and was a founding Associate Editor of Organic Letters (1999-2004). After serving on the editorial board from 1994-2003, he became Editor in Chief and President of Organic Reactions, Inc. in 2008.