April 22, 2024
Aaron Teator to present Chemistry Seminar
Aaron Teator, assistant professor of chemistry at the University of Kansas, will be the speaker for this week's Chemistry Seminar. Teator will present "A functional materials platform based on amide activation" at 1:05 p.m. Thursday, April 25, in Room 4 of King Hall.
Abstract: The ability to rationally design the physical properties exhibited by synthetic polymers for next-generation engineering applications is one of the grand challenges in modern polymer chemistry. Post-polymerization modification methods play a pivotal role in achieving this goal by providing the ability to fine-tune and enhance the properties of well-defined polymers after their initial synthesis. This approach unlocks nearly unlimited possibilities for tailoring materials to specific applications, in particular when functionalization is achieved in the absence of designer monomers and/or functional groups. This presentation will discuss our efforts in the development of new post-polymerization functionalization methodologies that exploit the native functional groups of easily accessible synthetic macromolecules.
Teator earned a bachelor's degree in chemistry in 2012 from the University of Nevada, Reno prior to joining the University of Texas at Austin, where he completed a doctorate in chemistry in 2016. His dissertation work with Christopher Bielawski focused on the design and development of novel photoswitchable transformations. Teator subsequently joined the lab of Frank Leibfarth at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as a postdoctoral fellow. His work at UNC focused on the design and development of stereoselective ionic polymerizations. Teator joined the faculty at the University of Kansas as an assistant professor in 2021, where his group is focused on the design and synthesis of new, functional synthetic macromolecules.