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Autonomous Mobile Robots for Exploratory Synthetic Chemistry

Dai, Tianwei; Vijayakrishnan, Sriram; Szczypiński, Filip T.; Ayme, Jean-François; Simaei, Ehsan; Fellowes, Thomas; Clowes, Rob; Kotopanov, Lyubomir; Shields, Caitlin E.; Zhou, Zhengxue; Ward, John W.; Cooper, Andrew I.

Authors

Tianwei Dai

Sriram Vijayakrishnan

Jean-François Ayme

Ehsan Simaei

Thomas Fellowes

Rob Clowes

Lyubomir Kotopanov

Caitlin E. Shields

Zhengxue Zhou

John W. Ward

Andrew I. Cooper



Abstract

Autonomous laboratories can accelerate discoveries in chemical synthesis, but this requires automated measurements coupled with reliable decision-making1,2. Most autonomous laboratories involve bespoke automated equipment3--6, and reaction outcomes are often assessed using a single, hard-wired characterization technique7. Any decision-making algorithms8 must then operate using this narrow range of characterization data9,10. By contrast, manual experiments tend to draw on a wider range of instruments to characterize reaction products, and decisions are rarely taken based on one measurement alone. Here we show that a synthesis laboratory can be integrated into an autonomous laboratory by using mobile robots11--13 that operate equipment and make decisions in a human-like way. Our modular workflow combines mobile robots, an automated synthesis platform, a liquid chromatography--mass spectrometer and a benchtop nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometer. This allows robots to share existing laboratory equipment with human researchers without monopolizing it or requiring extensive redesign. A heuristic decision-maker processes the orthogonal measurement data, selecting successful reactions to take forward and automatically checking the reproducibility of any screening hits. We exemplify this approach in the three areas of structural diversification chemistry, supramolecular host--guest chemistry and photochemical synthesis. This strategy is particularly suited to exploratory chemistry that can yield multiple potential products, as for supramolecular assemblies, where we also extend the method to an autonomous function assay by evaluating host--guest binding properties.

Citation

Dai, T., Vijayakrishnan, S., Szczypiński, F. T., Ayme, J.-F., Simaei, E., Fellowes, T., Clowes, R., Kotopanov, L., Shields, C. E., Zhou, Z., Ward, J. W., & Cooper, A. I. (2024). Autonomous Mobile Robots for Exploratory Synthetic Chemistry. Nature, 635, 890-897. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08173-7

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 8, 2024
Publication Date 2024
Deposit Date Feb 19, 2025
Journal Nature
Print ISSN 0028-0836
Electronic ISSN 1476-4687
Publisher Nature Research
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 635
Pages 890-897
DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08173-7
Keywords Chemical synthesis,Supramolecular chemistry
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3489140