Professor of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison. Associate Editor, ACS Catalysis. Big ol nerd, all contexts. 🇺🇸🇰🇷🇨🇦🏳️🌈 (he/him/his)
Tehshik Yoon
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Come be my newest colleague!
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Really proud of Riley's preprint on a new class of chiral Lewis acid photocatalysts. This project benefitted from a terrific collab with @chemguyeli.bsky.social chemrxiv.org/engage/chemr...
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Last night, the 2025 Roger Adams Award recipient - Prof. Eric Jacobsen - delivered a fantastic lecture at the National Organic Symposium. Prof. John Wood provided a brilliant introduction.
The award is sponsored by @OrgReactions and @OrgSynth
Congratulations!
Very excited to share our recent article in JACS where we showed that we could capture mechanoradicals formed during polymer degradation and use them to grow polymers back to high MWs or prime them for depolymerization! pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
In @science.org for chemsky this week, @tehshik.bsky.social teams up with @chemguyeli.bsky.social to showcase the versatile advantages of pairing a pybox ligand with a carbazole chromophore in one molecular catalyst
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Excited to share our new preprint, which was years in the making! chemrxiv.org/engage/chemr...
New reactions are typically developed by trial and error. How can we speed up this process? Read on to learn how we used DNA scaffolding to perform >500,000 parallel reactions on attomole scale.
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Plastics pervade every aspect of modern life, yet effective mechanical recycling remains a major challenge. This is, in part, because of the mechanical forces that are involved in reprocessing, which break polymer chains and generate mechanoradicals, leading to a reduction in molecular weight and diminished material properties. This work introduces a robust strategy to capture and redirect these reactive intermediates, enabling value-preserving recycling pathways for widely used polymers polystyrene (PS) and poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA). By employing ball milling to induce chain scission, we demonstrate that mechanoradicals can be trapped by bis(butyl trithiocarbonate), yielding polymers with trithiocarbonate (TTC) end groups. Polymers degraded via ball milling showed significant reduction in molecular weight, ≈90% lower than the pristine polymers. These low molecular weight, TTC-functionalized polymers then served as macroinitiators for light-mediated controlled polymerization or, in the case of PMMA, as mediators for depolymerization under mild conditions. Chain extension of the degraded materials led to restored or increased molecular weight compared to the pristine polymers. Shear oscillatory rheology experiments revealed a recovery of entangled polymer properties, as evidenced by the reappearance of the rubbery plateau. We further showed that this “capture-and-repair” strategy is compatible with multiple cycles of degradation and chain extension, achieving repeated molecular weight recovery over three cycles. Additionally, we found that ball milling alone lowers the thermal depolymerization temperature of PMMA, enabling up to ≈44% depolymerization at 220 °C. Together, these findings highlight mechanoradical capture as a promising strategy to both enhance circularity and improve overall performance of mechanically recycled plastics.
Modern organic synthesis relies upon the availability of chiral catalysts to control the stereochemistry of bond-forming reactions. Several families of chiral catalysts have become recognized as “privileged” structures because of their notable generality ...
www.science.org
Discovering and optimizing reactions is central to synthetic chemistry. However, chemical reactions are traditionally screened using relatively low-throughput methods, prohibiting exploration of diver...