Chapter 16 Green Chemistry
Chapter 16 Green Chemistry
Chapter 16 Green Chemistry
sustainability
and Green
Chemistry
Sustainability
Treat the earth well: it was not given
to you by your parents, it was loaned
to you by your children. We do not
inherit the Earth from our Ancestors,
we borrow it from our Children.
Waste
Materials
Hazard
Risk
Energy
Why do we need Green Chemistry ?
1. Prevention
It is better to prevent waste than to treat or clean up waste after it has been created.
2. Atom Economy
Synthetic methods should be designed to maximise the incorporation of all materials
used in the process into the final product.
9 Catalysis
Catalytic reagents (as selective as possible) are superior to stoichiometric reagents.
Chemical
Process
“A raw material of feedstock should be
renewable
rather than depleting wherever technically and
economically practical”
Non-renewable Renewable
Resource Depletion
• Renewable resources can be made
increasingly viable technologically
and economically through green
chemistry.
Biomass Nanoscience
• Energy
• Global Change
• Resource Depletion
• Food Supply
• Toxics in the Environment
Energy
uThe vast majority of the energy
generated in the world today is from
non-renewable sources that damage
the environment.
n Carbon dioxide
n Depletion of Ozone layer
n Effects of mining, drilling, etc
n Toxics
Energy
u Green Chemistry will be essential in
n developing the alternatives for energy
generation (photovoltaics, hydrogen, fuel
cells, biobased fuels, etc.) as well as
n continue the path toward energy efficiency
with catalysis and product design at the
forefront.
Global Change
§ Concerns for climate change, oceanic
temperature, stratospheric chemistry
and global distillation* can be
addressed through the development
and implementation of green chemistry
technologies.