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SUMMARY:What to Do When Your Published Results Are Questioned
LOCATION:Chemistry A101
TZID:America/Denver
DTSTART:20221114T160000
UID:2026-04-28-12-33-41@natsci.colostate.edu
DTSTAMP:20260428T123341
Description:Join us for the November Colorado ACS Meeting\nWhat to Do When 
 Your Published Results Are Questioned\n\nPresentation by:\nDr. George Stan
 ley\nColorado State University &amp\; Louisiana State University\n\nChair-
 Elect of Colorado Section of ACS\n\nMonday\, Nov. 14\, 2022\, 4:00 pm\, A1
 01\n\nColorado State University\n\n1301 Center Ave.\, Fort Collins\, Color
 ado 80523\n\n&nbsp\;\n\nAbout the Seminar\n\nWe published a Science paper 
 in 2020 on “Highly active cationic Co(II) hydroformylation catalysts” 
 (Science\, 367\, 542–548 (2020)). Drs. Franke and Zhang’s very recent 
 Science paper on “Hydroformylation catalyzed by unmodified cobalt carbon
 yl under mild conditions” (Science\, 377\, 1223–1227 (2022)) claims th
 at they could not reproduce our catalysis results and that the likely cata
 lyst in our system is the long and well-known HCo(CO)4 catalyst. Dr. Frank
 e is a rhodium hydroformylation expert at Evonik\, a German chemical compa
 ny that does a good bit of hydroformylation. George will discuss how he an
 d his Science co-authors are responding to Franke and Zhang’s paper. The
  good news is that our catalyst is real and works as published.\n\n&nbsp\;
 \n\nAbout the Speaker\n\nProf. Stanley received his B.S. in Chemistry from
  the University of Rochester (1975\, undergrad research with Rich Eisenber
 g)\, Ph.D. with F. Albert Cotton at Texas A&amp\;M University (1979)\, and
  a NATO &amp\; CNRS Postdoctoral Fellow with John Osborn at the Universit
  Louis Pasteur in Strasbourg\, France (1979-81).  He started his academi
 c career in 1981 at Washington University in St. Louis.  In 1986 he moved
  to Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge where he was the Cyril &amp\
 ; Tutta Vetter Alumni Professor of Chemistry.  George retired from LSU in
  July\, 2019\, became an Emeritus Professor\, and moved to Loveland\, Colo
 rado to escape Louisiana humidity.  George Chaired the Inorganic Chemistr
 y Gordon Research Conference in 2005 and was Chair of the Organometallic s
 ubdivision of the Inorganic Chemistry division of the ACS in 2009.  He is
  Past-Chair of the Industrial &amp\; Engineering Chemistry (IEC) division 
 of ACS.  Society honors include ACS Fellow (2011) and AAAS Fellow (2014).
   Prof. Stanley’s research interests involve carbonylation catalysis\, 
 especially hydroformylation with mono- and bimetallic complexes. 4:00 pm
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