MRS Meetings and Events

 

DS01.07.05 2023 MRS Fall Meeting

Continuous Flow Synthesis of Pyridinium Salts Accelerated by Multi-Objective Bayesian Optimization with Active Learning

When and Where

Nov 29, 2023
4:00pm - 4:15pm

Sheraton, Third Floor, Fairfax B

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

John Dunlap1,2,Jeffrey Ethier1,2,Amelia Putnam-Neeb1,3,Abigail Doyle4,Timothy Swager5,Christopher Crouse1,Luke Baldwin1

Air Force Research Laboratory1,UES, Inc.2,National Research Council3,University of California, Los Angeles4,Massachusetts Institute of Technology5

Abstract

John Dunlap1,2,Jeffrey Ethier1,2,Amelia Putnam-Neeb1,3,Abigail Doyle4,Timothy Swager5,Christopher Crouse1,Luke Baldwin1

Air Force Research Laboratory1,UES, Inc.2,National Research Council3,University of California, Los Angeles4,Massachusetts Institute of Technology5
We report a human-in-the-loop implementation of the multi-objective experimental design via Bayesian Optimization platform (EDBO+) towards the optimization of butylpyridinium bromide synthesis under continuous flow conditions. The algorithm simultaneously optimized reaction yield and production rate (or space-time yield) and generated a well defined Pareto front. The versatility of EDBO+ was demonstrated by expanding the reaction space mid-campaign by increasing the upper temperature limit. Incorporation of continuous flow techniques enabled improved control over reaction parameters compared to common batch chemistry processes, while providing a route towards future automated syntheses and improved scalability. To that end, we applied the open-source Python module, nmrglue, for semi-automated NMR analysis, and compared the acquired outputs against those obtained through manual processing methods from spectra collected on both low-field (60 MHz) and high-field (400 MHz) NMR spectrometers. The EDBO+ based model was retrained with these four different datasets and the resulting Pareto front predictions provided insight into the effect of data analysis on model predictions. Finally, quaternization of poly(4-vinylpyridine) with bromobutane illustrated the extension of continuous flow chemistry to synthesize functional materials.

Keywords

chemical synthesis

Symposium Organizers

Milad Abolhasani, North Carolina State University
Keith Brown, Boston University
B. Reeja Jayan, Carnegie Mellon University
Xiaonan Wang, Tsinghua University

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature