Green chemistry
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| Links | http://www.nsf.gov/policies/reuse.jsp |
Green chemistry , also known as sustainable chemistry, refers to environmentally friendly chemicals and processes that result in: reduced waste, eliminating costly end-of-the-pipe treatments; safer products; and reduced use of energy and resources—all improving the competitiveness of chemical manufacturers and their customers.
It includes:
- Design of alternative synthetic pathways for new or existing chemicals which do not utilize toxic reagents or solvents or do not produce toxic by-products or co-products.
- Design or redesign of useful chemicals and materials such that they are less toxic to health and the environment or safer with regard to accident potential.
Appropriate areas of investigation[expansion needed] include: chemical synthesis and catalysis; analysis and detection; separation processes; and reaction mechanisms.
Examples include:
- Use of innovative methods such as catalysis and biocatalysis; photochemistry or biomimetic synthesis; and use of alternative starting
materials which are innocuous or renewable.
- Use of creative reaction conditions, such as using solvents which have a reduced impact on health and the environment or increasing reaction selectivity thus reducing wastes and emissions.
Note on available content.[1]
Notes
- ↑ Note there is a lot more on the above source page that might be useful. Or use APDS to find more, or search just NSF.
External links
- Wikipedia:Green chemistry
- Green chemistry at NSF (note this is a public domain site, except where noted, so the content can be ported here.)
References
U.S EPA [1]
| Authors | Chris Waterguy |
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| License | CC-BY-SA-3.0 |
| Organizations | NSF/EPA Partnership for Environmental Research, Program Guideline |
| Ported from | http://web.archive.org/web/20170218032447/https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/stis1996/nsf9645/nsf9645.txt (original) |
| Cite as | Chris Waterguy (2008–2025). "Green chemistry". Appropedia. Retrieved November 28, 2025. |