green chemistry: introduction and applications

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Green Chemistry: Introduction and Applications Rich Engler Program Manager Green Chemistry Program Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics US Environmental Protection Agency [email protected]

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Green Chemistry: Introduction and Applications. Rich Engler Program Manager Green Chemistry Program Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics US Environmental Protection Agency [email protected]. History of Environmental Protection. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Green Chemistry: Introduction and

Applications

Rich EnglerProgram Manager

Green Chemistry ProgramOffice of Pollution Prevention and Toxics

US Environmental Protection Agency

[email protected]

Page 2: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

History of Environmental Protection

For decades environmental protection has meant controlling exposure to hazardous substances

Page 3: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Risk = (Hazard, Exposure)

The Past: Managing Risk

Historical focus

Page 4: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Persistence (slide from Paul T. Anastas)

Page 5: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

2007, CBS News

Wal-Mart Recalls Lead-

Laced Baby Bibs

2010, Ottawa CitizenBisphenol A Found in Unlikely

Place: Cash Receipts

2008, US News Your Shower Curtain Might Be Bad for You

2008, ABCNews

Parents Concerned Over

Potentially Toxic Baby

Bottles

2010, Bloomberg NewsWegmans stops selling reusable bags after lead tests

2010, ScienceFormaldehyde in Clothing: Nothing to Sneeze At

2007, NY Times

China Investigates Tainted

Toothpaste2010, ABC Health & Well Being

Not so sweet: Chemicals in

Fragrances

2010, TelegraphSwimming pool disinfectants linked to cancer

2010, NY TimesHydrocarbons in Cereal Stoke New Debate Over Food Safety

2010, St. Petersburg Times

Study: Lead found in children's drinks

and fruit products

2010, Salon.com

The poison crib: When

protective chemicals harm

2010, NY Times

McDonald’s to Recall

Glasses, Citing Cadmium

2010, The Sun Chronicle

Toxic Beauty

2010, Maine Public Broadcasting NetworkReport: Cosmetic Products Contain High Levels of Toxic Chemicals

2010

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2010, The Environment Report

HEAVY METAL IN TOY JEWELRY

2009, Science News

Toxic playgrounds

2009, The Daily GreenStudy: Halloween Face Paint Laced with Lead

2009, NPRToxic Chinese Drywall Creates A Housing Disaster

2009, USA Today

Plastic chemical linked

aggression in toddler girls

2009, BBC NewsDeet bug repellent 'toxic worry'

2009, CNN Money

Mattel fined $2.3

million over lead in

toys

2009, The Charleston GazetteStudy finds food-wrapper chemicals in blood

Page 6: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Environmental Regulations

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AJAASBCAA

ESAA-AECAFFRAA

FEAPRAIRA

NWPAACODRA/NMSPAA

FCRPAMMPAA

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110

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80

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PPAPPVAIEREAANTPAGLCPAABACZARAWRDAEDPOPARECACAAAGCRAGLFWRAHMTUSANEEA

SDWAASARA

BLRAERDDAAEAWANOPPAPTSAUMTRCAESAAQGANCPA

TSCAFLPMARCRANFMACZMAA

NEPAEQIACAAEPAEEAOSHAFAWRAANPAA

FRRRPASOWADPA

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Page 7: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Control Technologies

• Gloves• Respirators• Self-contained breathing apparatus• “Moon suits”• Stack scrubbers• Waste water treatment

Page 8: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

• Must use control technologies to protect humans and the environment

• Control technologies are expensive

• Protecting humans and the environment is expensive

Control Technologies

Page 9: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Pollution Prevention Act:Risk Management Hierarchy

PollutionPrevention

SourceReduction

Recycling

Disposal

Treatment

Page 10: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Risk = (Hazard, Exposure)

Managing Risk

Source reduction focus

Page 11: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Green Chemistry – Definition

Green Chemistry is the design of chemical products or processes to reduce or eliminate the use or generation of hazardous substances.

Page 12: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Green Chemistry Overview

• Greener synthetic pathways• Greener solvents/reaction

conditions• Designing greener chemicals• Inherently safer chemistry• Process analytical chemistry

Page 13: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Green = Good Chemistry

Green chemistry is just good chemistry.

Why do we need to call it “green”?

Chemists routinely accept hazard that is unacceptable outside the lab.

Page 14: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Why Use Hazardous Chemicals?

• Necessary to perform function• Don’t know the hazard• Can handle the hazard• Speed/Work well• That’s the way we’ve always done it

Page 15: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Why Green Chemistry?

• Reduce costs• Raw materials, energy, EH&S, disposal,

reporting• Reduced need for capital

investment• Reduce time to market• Encourage investors• Minimize unknown future liability

Page 16: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Chemicals in Products Can Pose Big Risk to Companies

Source: GreenBiz.com

WASHINGTON, April 6, 2007 -- In the wake of costly litigation, product sales bans, and reputational damage arising from asbestos, toxic materials in cosmetics and toys, and Teflon-related chemicals, U.S. investors are becoming increasingly wary of toxic chemical risks - in products, in supply chains, and in their own portfolios.

Page 17: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

“Green Really Means Business”

Source: Newsweek

September 23, 2008 — “…Environmental concerns have…emerged as a dominant driver of global corporations, marrying an old impulse to be good stewards of the planet with an equally ancient desire to make money. That marriage may well eradicate the quaint distinction between profit motive and public good, opening up a brand-new world of business practices and investment opportunities.”

Page 18: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Business?

Page 19: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Principles of Green Chemistry

• Prevent waste• Maximize atom economy• Design less hazardous syntheses • Design safer chemical products• Use safer solvents and reaction

conditions• Increase energy efficiency

Page 20: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Principles of Green Chemistry

• Use renewable feedstocks• Avoid chemical derivatization• Use catalysts, not stoichiometric

reagents• Design chemical products to

degrade after use• Analyze in real time to prevent

pollution• Minimize the potential for

accidents

Page 21: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Green Chemistry Design Framework (Slide from

Paul T. Anastas)

Across the life-cycle

Waste Prevention

Atom Economy

Design ForDegradation

Less HazardousReagents

Renewable Feedstocks

Design for Safety and Security

Green AnalyticalMethods

Benign Solvent Systems

Use of Catalysis

Benign Product Design

Unnecessary Derivatives

Energy Considerations

OriginsOf Materials Manufacturing Distribution Use End of Life

Page 22: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Green Chemistry across Industrial Sectors (Slide from Paul T. Anastas)

• Defense and aerospace• Adhesives, coatings, corrosion inhibitors

• Automotive• Solvents, polymers, fuels

• Household cleaners• Surfactants, fragrances, dyes

• Cosmetics• Builders, chelating agents, dyes

• Agriculture• Pesticides, fungicides, fertilizers

• Electronics• Solder, housings, displays

• Pharmaceuticals• Solvents, reagents

Page 23: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Avoid using solvents, separation agents, or other auxiliary

chemicals. If these chemicals are necessary, use innocuous

chemicals.

Page 24: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Use Safer Solvents/Reaction Conditions

• CargillDow LLC (now NatureWorks LLC)

Lactic acid LactidePoly(lactic acid)

CargillDow, LLC

2002 Greener Solvents Award

OO

O

**n

OH

OH

O

O

O

O

O

Page 25: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Increase Energy Efficiency

• Traditional urethane paint• Highly toxic diisocyanates; VOC

emissions• Requires high-temperature cure

• BASF primer• No diisocyanate; low VOC• Rapid cure with hand-held UV lamp

2005 Greener Solvents Award

Page 26: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Analyze in Real Time to Prevent Pollution

• Nalco

Nalco Corp

Corrosion inhibitor

biocide

Scale control

Cooling water

2008 Greener Reaction Conditions Award

Page 27: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Manufactured Wood Adhesive

• Professor Li, OSU/Columbia Forest Products/Hercules (now Ashland)

• Formaldehyde-free manufactured wood adhesive

• Adhesive modeled on mussel adhesive protein

• Plywood, MDF, particle board

Page 28: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Pfizer: sertraline (Zoloft)

NH

Cl

Cl

NH2

+

Cl

Cl

NH

Cl

Cl

N

Cl

Cl

O

Cl

Cl

D-mandelatetetralone

HCl/EtOAc1. D-mandelic acid EtOH2. MeOH rex

MeHN2/EtOH H2, PdC/CaCO3

EtOH

imine sertraline

TiCl4/MeHN2

Toluene/hexanesor THF

H2, Pd/CTHF

mult. rex HCl/EtOAc

(Pfizer, Inc.)

Page 29: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Who is Going Green?

• Dow• DuPont• BASF• Bayer• Rohm & Haas *• Eastman• Nalco• Engelhard*• PPG• Cargill• ADM• SC Johnson• P & G

• Pfizer• Merck• Eli Lilly• Roche• Bristol-Myers Squibb

Page 30: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Green Chemistry

• A philosophy, not a discipline.• Not a solution to all

environmental problems.• The most fundamental

approach to preventing pollution.

• Pays off!

Page 31: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

http://www.epa.gov/greenchemistry

[email protected]

Page 32: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

For further informationhttp://www.epa.gov/greenchemistry/pubs/pgcc/industry_sector.html#pharmaceuticalshttp://www.epa.gov/greenchemistry/pubs/pgcc/industry_sector.html#pulphttp://www.epa.gov/greenchemistry/pubs/pgcc/industry_sector.html#buildings

EPA-Design for the Environment:http://www.epa.gov/dfe/

ACS-Green Chemistry Institute: http://portal.acs.org/portal/acs/corg/content?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=PP_TRANSITIONMAIN&node_id=830&use_sec=false&sec_url_var=region1&__

uuid=58351cd2-100d-45cd-9652-f51d3a4994b0 (numerous webinars)

NSF Standard for Greener Products and Processes:http://www.nsf.org/business/sustainability/product_greener_chemicals.asp

? program=SustainabilityClean Production Action and GreenScreen for Safer Chemicals:

http://www.cleanproduction.org/Greenscreen.php Paul T. Anastas, Yale University:

http://www.chem.yale.edu/faculty/anastas.htmlJohn Warner: http://www.warnerbabcock.com/

Great Lakes Green Chemistry Network: www.glgc.org (numerous webinars)

Page 33: Green Chemistry:  Introduction and Applications

Questions

Cognizant of GHS implementation in the region, what are the best paths forward?

• Focus upon sectoral activities such as pharmaceuticals, automotive, pulp and paper products, commercial institutional sectors, etc.?

• Present best practices by major stakeholders?• Explore “drivers” along the supply chain?• Clarify the terms of the Green Chemistry Standard (NSF/GCI-

355), its relationship with GHS?• Present main actors in Green Chemistry (governmental

agencies, academia, industry, non-governmental organizations) and their information sharing process?

• What would be the best format for such follow-up activities?• How could the USG/U.S. Department of Commerce continue to

be of assistance on GC, and inclusive of the ACCSQ?