The Cundari Group collaborates with many leading experimental and theoretical groups across the United States and the World. Collaborators come in all forms; from an individual faculty in support of their/our external grant projects, to national centers like the CENTC NSF Chemical Innovation Center and the DOE-BES sponsored Center for Catalytic Hydrocarbon Functionalization (CCHF), or just an old-fashioned desired to do cool science with people we like!
Collaboration lies at the heart of our group's approach to science. Moreover, the emerging paradigm in modern scientific research in academia has moved towards a multi-investigator, multi-disciplinary model, which has long been the norm at national and industrial laboratories. Hence, these collaborations provide a great training ground for Cundari Group researchers as they prepare for the next step in their careers.
Below is a list of some of our more recent friends:
- Mary Anderson; Modeling of Human Glutathione Synthetase (Texas Woman's University)
- Jincheng Du; Design, Synthesis and Construction of Metal-Organic Based Electronic Devices (UNT/CASCaM)
- Bruce Gnade; Design, Synthesis and Construction of Metal-Organic Based Electronic Devices (UT-Dallas)
- Jay Groves; Group 9 Porphyrin Catalysis (Princeton University)
- Brent Gunnoe; Catalytic Olefin Hydroarylation (University of Virginia)
- Greg Hillhouse; Late Transition Metal Chemistry & Catalysis (University of Chicago)
- Pat Holland; N2 Fixation & Low-Coordinate Transition Metal Complexes (University of Rochester)
- Mohammad Omary; Design, Synthesis and Construction of Metal-Organic Based Electronic Devices (UNT)
- Tim Warren; Nickel and Copper Catalysis (Georgetown University)
- Angela Wilson; CO2 Sequestration (Michigan State University)
- Peter Wolczanski; Chemistry of Non-Innocent Ligands (Cornell University)
- Melanie Sanford; Oxy-functionalization of Hydrocarbons (UM/CENTC)
- John F. Hartwig (University of California, Berkeley)
- ExxonMobile
- Reata Pharmaceuticals