

#Iub chemistry mestrenova full
The hand sanitizer stations will be in high-traffic areas such as near building entrances and elevators, and in lobbies, Anderson said.Īnderson said IU also purchased large amounts of hand sanitizer - pallets full of small bottles of the germ killer - through Hawkins Bailey Warehouse in Bedford, co-owned by former IU basketball star Damon Bailey. Now, IU's Facility Operations has a contract with Cintas for it to provide hand sanitizer stations - either free-standing or wall-mounted - in about 4,000 areas across all of IU's campuses, Anderson said. IU purchased more than 600 gallons of hand sanitizer from Cardinal Spirits since March to meet its needs when it wasn't available through other sources. The good news for IU is that supply chains are opening up, making it easier to obtain hand sanitizer, said Cherie Anderson, emergency management coordinator. Compound 1 was kindly supplied by Professor Nicola Pohl (Indiana University, Bloomington, IN), compounds 210 were bought from Carbosynth Ltd (Compton, UK) and compounds 1113 were kindly donated by Professor Tadasu Urashima (Obihiro University of Agriculture & Veterinary Medicine, Obihiro, Japan). State-of-the-art 600 MHz and 800 MHz instruments with HCN cold probes dedicated to BioNMR are housed in the METACyt Biomolecular NMR Laboratory in Simon. Karty said he can make about 50 to 100 gallons at a time. The NMR Facility provides 7 Varian/Agilent high resolution NMR spectrometers in from 200 MHz to 800 MHz to perform all modern solution-state experiments. Karty said he'll continue to make hand sanitizer as needed, and as long as he can get the ingredients at reasonable costs. Requests for hand sanitizer and information about costs should be placed through department chairs, who can contact him or Department of Chemistry chair Caroline Chick Jarrold, he added.

The sanitizers for the College of Arts and Sciences can be obtained in 5-gallon buckets, 3-ounce spray bottles or 1-quart bottles, Karty said. He'd previously helped advise Bloomington-based Cardinal Spirits on a formula for making large batches of hand sanitizer, which IU has purchased. Karty volunteered his services after the need for more hand sanitizer was mentioned in a chemistry department meeting. Karty, with the assistance of director of undergraduate laboratories Norman Dean, whipped up 32 gallons of hand sanitizer and 32 gallons of surface sanitizer on May 22, and began distributing them a week later. Jon Karty, a senior scientist in the College of Arts and Sciences' Department of Chemistry, volunteered to make batches of hand and surface sanitizers to protect those in his department and the College.
