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Hillary Langat '13, Allison Boyaris '12, Professor Timothy Chapp, Shawon Akanda '12, Barsha Baral'13.
Hillary Langat '13, Allison Boyaris '12, Professor Timothy Chapp, Shawon Akanda '12, Barsha Baral'13.

The chemicals in pharmaceutical drugs must be carefully controlled to ensure that only one specific 3-D arrangement of each molecule ends up in the drug. However, separating very similar chemicals from a solution can pose significant challenges to researchers. This summer Shawon Akanda ’12, Barsha Baral ’13, Allison Boyaris ’12 and Hillary “Kip” Langat ’13, are working under Visiting Assistant Professor of Chemistry Timothy Chapp to separate phosphine enantiomers. Their project is titled “Enantioselective Liquid-Liquid Extraction.”

 

Akanda’s, Boyaris' and Langat’s summer research was funded through the Edward and Virginia Taylor Fund for Student/Faculty Research in Chemistry, established in 2008 through a gift from Ted ’46 and Virginia to inspire students interested in chemical research and to facilitate their work with outstanding faculty.

 

Two molecules can share the same general structure but have different arrangements in 3-D space. If two such molecules are mirror images of one another, they are called enantiomers. Chapp’s group is working to separate the enantiomers of phosphines, or a phosphorus atom with one lone pair of electrons that is bound to three organic groups.

 

Phosphines can be made water soluble, and so the group is trying to create a guest-host complex where a large host molecule is added to an aqueous, or water-based, solution containing two phosphine enantiomers. The goal is to synthesize a host that binds to only one enantiomer, which the host molecule would then carry into an organic layer. The aqueous and organic layers can then be separated, with only one enantiomer remaining in each of the layers.

 

Boyaris, a chemistry major, and Langat, an economics and chemistry double major, are synthesizing the phosphines for the project. They are testing several different phosphines, each of which is synthesized in enantiomeric pairs. During the synthesis process, Boyaris and Langat must keep their products completely dry. This means that until the phosphines are completed, they must be kept under inert gasses and their glassware must be flame-dried. The two rely heavily on phosphorus NMR spectroscopy to ensure that each step in their synthesis has been carried out successfully.

 

Akanda, a chemistry and art double major, and Baral, a biochemistry and art double major who joined the group recently, are working to synthesize host molecules that maximize efficiency at separating the enantiomers. The enantioselectivity of the host molecule, or the molecule’s preference to bind to only one enantiomer, depends on the shape and structure of the host, and so Akanda and Baral are experimenting with different host molecules to see which are the most selective. They employ NMR, IR and LC-MS techniques to test their results.

 

The students have enjoyed their previous work with Professor Chapp, and they look forward to gaining inorganic chemistry experience in Chapp’s lab. This particular method of separating enantiomers is also relatively “green,” as the host compounds that Akanda and Baral are synthesizing can often be detached from the guest and reused, minimizing waste and energy that would have gone into recreating the hosts.

 

The group is traveling to Colgate later in the summer to present their results, which are applicable in pharmaceutical work. Because enantiomers have nearly identical properties, their separation necessitates innovative thinking. Chapp’s lab group is helping to reveal new methods of separating phosphine enantiomers, furthering current knowledge in this field.

 

Hillary Langat is a graduate of Tenwek High School in Southwest Kenya; Allison Boyaris graduated from St Ignatius College Prep (Chicago); Shawon Akanda is a graduate of Manhattan Center for Science and Mathematics (N.Y.); Barsha Baral graduated from Grover Cleveland High School in Queens (N.Y.).

You will live through a scale of change that has never happened in human history. Your ability to design — to think critically, to see potential, to connect the dots that others can’t, to communicate with nuance and compassion, to inspire — all the skills of a Hamilton education — will be critically important in the global transformation that you will guide and lead.

Bruce Mau 2025 Commencement speaker

Mau urged the graduates to think of them not as challenges, but “entrepreneurial opportunities.” He told those gathered, “You will live through a scale of change that has never happened in human history. Your ability to design — to think critically, to see potential, to connect the dots that others can’t, to communicate with nuance and compassion, to inspire — all the skills of a Hamilton education — will be critically important in the global transformation that you will guide and lead.”

Mau concluded, “In its broadest sense, design is leadership. With what you have experienced here at Hamilton, you have the power to show people a future more exciting than their past and inspire them to work together on the journey to a new world.”

Delbert “Del” Gonzales

Soper Merrill prize winner Del Gonzales spoke about the community he has found at Hamilton. “When I got here, I was convinced I had somehow tricked admissions. … I couldn’t believe that I belonged,” he said. “To make myself believe I belonged, I threw myself into everything … And I know I wasn’t alone.”

But, Gonzales explained, “Somewhere along the way, the need to prove myself and the disbelief shifted into a sense of belonging. And that’s because of this community. Although we all have different majors and interests and have been on different sports teams and clubs, I think we can all say we are each graduating with a major in ‘community.’”

He said an instructor defined it as communal effervescence. “It’s this shared feeling of energy and excitement when people come together for the same purpose or event,” Gonzales suggested.

He cited examples. “... It’s in the small things. It’s a professor pulling you aside after class just to say ‘you’ve got something.’ It’s a friend texting ‘you were amazing’ after your show,” he said. “We talk a lot about Hamilton’s resources, but the real resource isn’t that $1 billion dollar endowment. It’s the people — the friends, mentors, staff, and family.”

“And if you’re ever in doubt, like I was, if you ever forget that you do belong, I hope you hear the voices of the people who believed in you here, and I hope you carry those voices forward. Because out in the world, it will matter that we uplift each other, that we stay connected. That we don’t just believe in ourselves, but keep believing in each other,” Gonzales concluded.

Alexandra “Allie” Ennis

For Allie Ennis, Hamilton has been about how people show up for each other. She recalled her first campus visit when she and her family were pleasantly surprised by the number of people who held doors open for them. “There was a pervasive, intentional kindness,” she explained. Ennis recalled that kindness when earlier this year she was asked by someone new on campus: “‘What makes Hamilton so special?’ ‘What makes Hamilton, Hamilton?’ This is a place where people hold doors for one another — literally and metaphorically,” she explained.

“It may seem like a small thing, but what are you saying when you hold a door for someone? ‘I see you, you go first, come with me.’ And those are not such small things. I also came to Hamilton thinking I was done with math because I wasn’t particularly good at it,” Ennis said. “Until freshman year Calculus when Professor Cockburn pulled me into her office and said ‘You should stick with this!’ She opened a door because she saw me in a way I hadn’t seen myself. Now, I’m graduating as a math major and have had some of my most meaningful experiences tutoring math at our QSR Center.

“We showed up for each other — in every thesis presentation, every concert at Wellin Hall, every handshake line after an IM basketball game,” Ennis said. “In small moments and big, the Class of 2025 has held the door open for one another, and we’ve been brave enough to run through it. Our class came to Hamilton in the wake of extended isolation. We do not take community for granted.

“Today, as we leave the Hill and enter the exciting, messy world that waits for us, let’s remember to hold the door open because that is who we are.”

Ray Halbitter, Baccalaureate

In his baccalaureate remarks, Halbritter explained that “One of the guiding principles we follow as Oneida people is to do all things for the benefit of the Seventh Generation. We know that our actions and choices have a far-reaching impact and seek to always act with our grandchildren’s grandchildren in mind,” he said. “The evolution of this college from its humble beginnings and the community it is building today serve as a prime example of this kind of vision.

“You have spent so much time learning about what interests you, where your passions lie and what you want to be,” he said. “Everything you have learned about the world and yourself during your time in college has prepared you for the role you will take on in the world outside.

”When you leave this world, you will be remembered for what you contribute to this spectrum and the lives you touched by doing so – not for what you acquire or how widely your name is known. What matters most is that you are doing the work you were meant to do and living the life that you are meant to live.

“You will be most successful when you follow your own instructions for this world and proceed in friendship with those who do the same,” Halbritter suggested.

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