peoplepill id: parisa-mehrkhodavandi
PM
1 views today
1 views this week
Parisa Mehrkhodavandi

Parisa Mehrkhodavandi

The basics

Quick Facts

Work field
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Parisa Mehrkhodavandi is a Canadian chemist who is one of the inventors of Dinuclear indium catalysts and their use for (co)polymerization of cyclic esters.

Biography

Parisa Mehrkhodavandi completed her undergraduate degree in chemistry at the University of British Columbia in 1998. Following this, Mehrkhodavandi pursued graduate studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology under the supervision of Richard R. Schrock. In 2002, Mehrkhodavandi graduated with her Ph.D. completing a thesis work focused on polymerization and catalysis. She conducted a post-doctoral research stint at the California Institute of Technology working together with John E. Bercaw and Robert H. Grubbs. Mehrkhodavandi returned to the University of British Columbia as faculty in 2005 and was later promoted to associate professor in 2013.

Over her career, Mehrkhodavandi has been recognized with numerous awards, including but not limited to:

  • Alexander von Humboldt Fellowship (2015)
  • UBC Killam Research Fellowship (2015)
  • Ichikizaki Travel Award (2008, 2010)
  • Government of France Mobility Award (2008)
  • NSERC University Faculty Award (2005)
  • NSERC Post Graduate Scholarship (2001)

Research

Mehrkhodavandi is interested in developing catalysts that are highly active and enantioselectivefor the polymerization of lactide. Currently, catalysts for similar polymerizations must strike a balance between activity and enantioselectivity; the highly-active catalysts have poor enantioselectivity and vice-versa.

Mehrkhodavandi’s research focuses on catalysis, where her group is pursuing new ligand design strategies. Her work has contributed to new synthetic routes for biodegradable polymers, and fundamental mechanistic insights. Her group has a specific interest in the formation of catalysts that would allow for enantioselective organic reactions/transformations, such as chiral dinuclear indium complexes. The group is also working on the development of biodegradable polyesters using these ligands along with cyclic esters. This is being done in 3 main ways: the first of which is the use of Lewis acid metal centers with chiral ligand supports to open cyclic lactones to ring-opening polymerizations. The second is the use of a chiral indium salen catalyst that allows for more precise iso-selectivity similar to chiral aluminum salen catalysts, but with higher activity than aluminum catalysts. The final method utilizes an ethoxy-bridged dinuclear indium catalyst that allows for the creation of diblock polymers due to its high activity and selective control.

Mehrkhodavandi’s research interests involve developing catalysts for ring-opening polymerizations. Ring-opening polymerizations involve opening up a ring-molecule via. nucleophillic attack to form a nucleophillic monomer, which can then continue the reaction to form a polymer. For different combinations of nucleophiles and rings, different catalysts are required.

Publications

Mehrkhodavandi has published a significant amount of publications over her career. In recent works, Mehrkhodavandi writes about the role of the first alkoxide-bridged indium complex and the zinc analogues as important catalysts in the ring opening polymerization of lactides into polylactic acid. The article pertains to how the indium complex bearing either the chiral or achiral ligand allows for the polymerization of racemic lactide into a highly heterotactic polylactic acid and how the indium complex along with the chiral ligand polymerizes meso-lactide into virtually atactic polylactic acid. Mehrkhodavandi discusses the mechanisms of these reactions in detail, along with the synthesis of the catalysts and activity of the resulting polymers. In another paper, Mehrkhodavandi writes about the use of an indium catalyst as a catalyst for lactide polymerization that has both high activity and high enantioselectivity - other lactide polymerizations feature either high activity or high enantioselectivity.. The results demonstrate site control as the primary factor behind the selectivity of the catalyst.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Parisa Mehrkhodavandi is in following lists

By field of work

By work and/or country

comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Parisa Mehrkhodavandi
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes