This presentation explores the application of reaction kinetics and physical organic chemistry to process development in the pharmaceutical industry. As a QbD approach, mechanistic understanding through kinetic modeling enables accurate prediction and optimization of complex chemical reactions, addressing key challenges such as reproducibility, scale-up, and safety.
Using benzylation of aniline as a case study, detailed mechanistic identification dramatically improved model accuracy and was utilized in the reaction improvement itself. The models demonstrated excellent extrapolability, enabling prediction under untested conditions and semi-batch optimization with minimal experiments. Moreover, coupled scale-down simulation combining kinetics and heat transfer models was demonstrated for highly exothermic reactions. The fine-tuned heat transfer model achieved highly accurate temperature prediction even in small-scale reactors.
This methodology enables synthetic chemists to leverage mechanistic understanding for reaction development while providing engineers with high-precision models for process design and optimization.

Yuya Orito
Senior scientist, Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd.
Dr. Yuya Orito is an organic chemist at Daiichi-Sankyo Co., Ltd., with extensive experience in pharmaceutical process chemistry spanning over 17 years. Dr. Orito earned his B.Pharm.Sc. and M.Pharm.Sc. degrees from Hokkaido University and a Ph.D. in pharmaceutical science from Kumamoto University. While working as a researcher at the pharmaceutical company, he was a visiting scholar with Prof. Guy C. Lloyd-Jones at the University of Edinburgh. His research interests span widely across enabling chemical processes, from chemical safety to novel analytical methodologies, grounded in high-precision kinetic modeling technology for chemical reactions based on physical organic chemistry. Dr. Orito enthusiastically presents his research in both industrial and academic settings.
References:
Orito, Y. ACS Omega 2025, 10 (9), 9266–9274. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.4c09609.
Orito, Y. Org. Process Res. Dev. 2025, 29 (7), 1757–1765. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.oprd.5c00107.