Assignment - Green Chemistry
Assignment - Green Chemistry
JULY 2014
GREEN CHEMISTRY
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Paul Anastas and John C. Warner developed the 12 principles of green chemistry.
These principles help to explain what the definition means in practice. The
principles cover such concepts as:
the design of processes to maximize the amount of raw material that ends up in
the product;
the use of safe, environment-benign substances, including solvents, whenever
possible;
the design of energy efficient processes;
The best form of waste disposal: not to create it in the first place [2].
The 12 Principles of Green Chemistry
1. Prevention
It is better to prevent waste than to treat or clean up waste after it has been created
[1]. This is a fundamental principle. The preventative action can change
dramatically many attitudes among scientists developed in the last decades. Most
of the chemical processes and synthetic routes produce waste and toxic secondary
substances. Green Chemistry can prevent waste and toxic by-products by designing
the feedstock and the chemical processes in advance and with innovative changes
[3].
2. Atom Economy
Synthetic methods should be designed to maximize the incorporation of all
materials used in the process into the final product [1]. All synthetic methods until
now were wasteful and their yields between 70-90% [3]. Green Chemistry supports
that synthetic methods can be designed in advance to maximize the incorporation
of all reagents used in the chemical process into the final product, eliminating the
need to recycling the by-products The concept of Atom Economy was developed
by Barry Trost of Stanford University, United State America, for which he received
the Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Award in 1998. It is a method of
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expressing how efficiently a particular reaction makes use of the reactant atoms
[3].
3. Less Hazardous Chemical Synthesis
Wherever practicable, synthetic methods should be designed to use and generate
substances that possess little or no toxicity to human health and the environment
[1]. Green Chemistry must strive, wherever practical, to design safer synthetic
methods by using less toxic substances as well as the products of the synthesis.
Less toxic materials mean lower hazards to workers in industry and research
laboratories and less pollution to the environment [3].
4. Designing Safer Chemicals
Chemical products should be designed to effect their desired function while
minimizing their toxicity [1]. At present, there are around 100,000 chemical
substances and materials in the market [3]. Most of these substances have been
characterized as to their physiochemical properties and toxicities, but there is lack
of eco-toxicological data for most of them. From the 1980s there are more
stringent regulations and new chemicals are monitored more effectively [3].
5. Safer Solvents and Auxiliaries
The use of auxiliary substances [e.g., solvents, separation agents, etc.] should be
made unnecessary wherever possible and innocuous when used. [1] Green
Chemistry initiated big changes in chemical laboratories and in the last decade
there are less toxic solvents in chemical laboratories and alternative techniques. [3]
6. Design for Energy Efficiency
Energy requirements of chemical processes should be recognized for their
environmental and economic impacts and should be minimized. If possible,
synthetic methods should be conducted at ambient temperature and pressure [1].
REFERENCES
1.
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
INTRODUCTION
The term sustainable development began to gain wide acceptance in the late
1980s, after its appearance in Our Common Future, also known as The
Brundtland Report. The result of a UN-convened commission created to propose
a global agenda for change in the concept and practices of development, this
signaled the urgency of re-thinking our ways of living and governing [1].
Literature offers over 100 definitions on sustainable development, mostly oriented
towards separate sectors e.g. environmental, economic, civilization or
emphasizing managerial, technical or philosophical/political decisions, and thus
expressing rather different concepts of sustainable development. [Munasinghe,
1993; Pearce et al, 1989; Pezzey, 1989; Pezzoli, 1997].
The Brundtland Report described sustainable development as the "Development
that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs [1].
In a world with a continuously increasing population and limited resources, the
idea of a sustainable development is of major importance now, as it is for the
future. Only research and innovation will allow the development of economic and
social networks and processes that fulfill the requirements of sustainability. The
future has to be planned with vision, creativity, and fantasy, including brand new
approaches and the exploration of the unknown. Sustainability, in science and
technology, begins when we start thinking of how to solve a problem or how to
turn science into technology. [3]
In this paper, the concept of sustainable development is considered and also the
efforts (impact of Green Chemistry) to address sustainability.
People are entitled to a healthy and productive life in harmony with nature.
Nations have the sovereign right to exploit their own resources, but without
causing environmental damage beyond their borders.
Nations shall cooperate to conserve, protect and restore the health and
integrity of the Earth's ecosystem. The developed countries acknowledge the
responsibility that they bear in the international pursuit of sustainable
development in view of the pressures their societies place on the global
environment and of the technologies and financial resources they command.
Environmental issues are best handled with the participation of all concerned
citizens. Nations shall facilitate and encourage public awareness and
participation by making environmental information widely available.
Nations shall enact effective environmental laws, and develop national law
regarding liability for the victims of pollution and other environmental
damage. Where they have authority, nations shall assess the environmental
impact of proposed activities that are likely to have a significant adverse
impact.
objectives of the subject. Green chemistry, however, also recognizes that there are
significant consequences to the use of hazardous substances, ranging from
regulatory, handling and transport to liability issues. To limit the definition to deal
with waste only would be to address only part of the problem. Finally, the
definition of green chemistry includes the term hazardous. It is important to note
that green chemistry is a way of dealing with risk reduction and pollution
prevention by addressing the intrinsic hazards of the substances rather than those
circumstances and conditions of their use that might increase their risk. Therefore,
green chemistry offers a viable path for achieving sustainability goals across the
chemical industry. That is, there is the potential to develop industrial technologies
that could provide goods, products, and services in a way that does not reduce the
supply chain of resources, harm the environment and human health, or limit the
opportunities and choices for future generations. [3]
If Green [Sustainable] Chemistry is an essential component in the feasibility of
Sustainable Development, it then begs the question what then is Sustainable
Chemistry and how does it promote Sustainable Development?
As mentioned earlier, Sustainable development encompasses three fundamental
approaches: economic, environmental, and social development. It is therefore
necessary to see how Green Chemistry inter-relates with these components.
The impact of green chemistry on sustainable economic development has to do
largely with, reducing or total prevention of waste where possible, efficient use of
raw materials [atom economy], efficient energy utilization and use of renewable
feedstock. These measures summaries four out of the twelve principles of green
chemistry and they have a direct bearing on developing the economic fortunes of
any institution where it is put to use. Costs are saved by reducing waste [which is
becoming increasingly expensive to dispose of, especially when hazardous] and
energy use [likely to represent a larger proportion of process costs in the future] as
well as making processes more efficient by reducing materials consumption [atom
economy]. Furthermore, an increasing use of renewable resources [feedstock] will
render the manufacturing industry more sustainable. These reductions lead to
economic benefit in terms of both feedstock consumption and energy requirement.
[11]
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Chemists from all over the world are using their creative and innovative skills to
develop new processes, synthetic methods, analytical tools, reaction conditions,
catalysts, etc. under the new green chemistry cover. Some of these are:
1.
REFERENCES
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3.
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9.
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12. International Council for Science (2003). ICSU Report of the CSPR
Assessment Panel on Environment and its Relation to Sustainable
Development
13. ENDS (January 2004). Retailers voice support for REACH chemicals reform.
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