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Jonathan Paul Clayden | |
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Born | Kampala, Uganda | 6 February 1968
Nationality | British |
Awards | Royal Society of Chemistry's Merck Prize Royal Society of Chemistry's Stereochemistry Prize Royal Society of Chemistry's Corday-Morgan Medal |
Scientific career | |
Institutions | University of Bristol University of Manchester University of Cambridge |
Thesis | The asymmetric epoxidation of allylic phosphine oxides: a stereocontrolled synthesis of allylic systems (1993) |
Doctoral advisor | Stuart Warren |
Website | www |
Jonathan Paul Clayden CChem FRSC (born 6 February 1968) is a Professor of organic chemistry at the University of Bristol.
Whilst at secondary school, he represented the UK at the International Chemistry Olympiad in 1986, winning a bronze medal. In 1992 he obtained his PhD[1] at the University of Cambridge working with Dr Stuart Warren on asymmetric synthesis using phosphine oxide chemistry. He then carried out a postdoc with Prof Marc Julia and in 1994 became a lecturer in organic chemistry at the University of Manchester where he became a reader in 2000 and a Professor of Organic Chemistry in 2001. In 2015 he moved to a chair in chemistry at the University of Bristol.
His research interests encompass various areas of synthesis and stereochemistry, particularly where conformation has a role to play: asymmetric synthesis, atropisomerism,[2] organolithium chemistry, remote stereochemical effects[3] and dynamic foldamer chemistry.[4] He is one of the authors of the organic chemistry textbook - Organic Chemistry by Clayden, Greeves, Warren and Wothers.[5] He also wrote Organolithiums: Selectivity for Synthesis,[6] which concerns the use of organolithium compounds in organic synthetic reactions.
From 2005 to 2011 he was editor-in-chief of the Open Access Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry.