| Literature DB >> 26076112 |
Marek Tobiszewski1, Mariusz Marć2, Agnieszka Gałuszka3, Jacek Namieśnik4.
Abstract
The concept of green chemistry is widely recognized in chemical laboratories. To properly measure an environmental impact of chemical processes, dedicated assessment tools are required. This paper summarizes the current state of knowledge in the field of development of green chemistry and green analytical chemistry metrics. The diverse methods used for evaluation of the greenness of organic synthesis, such as eco-footprint, E-Factor, EATOS, and Eco-Scale are described. Both the well-established and recently developed green analytical chemistry metrics, including NEMI labeling and analytical Eco-scale, are presented. Additionally, this paper focuses on the possibility of the use of multivariate statistics in evaluation of environmental impact of analytical procedures. All the above metrics are compared and discussed in terms of their advantages and disadvantages. The current needs and future perspectives in green chemistry metrics are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: E-Factor; EATOS; Eco-Scale; atom economy; eco-footprint; environmental impact; green analytical chemistry metrics; green chemistry metrics
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26076112 PMCID: PMC6272361 DOI: 10.3390/molecules200610928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1EF evaluation procedure based on Biological Resource Footprint, Energy Footprint and Build-up land Footprint (compiled from Fu et al., 2015) [15].
The numerical values of E-Factors in different chemical industry sectors [25].
| Industry Sector | Product Tonnage | E-Factor (kg Waste/kg Product) |
|---|---|---|
| Oil refining | 106–108 | <0.1 |
| Bulk chemicals | 104–106 | <1.0 to 5.0 |
| Fine chemicals industry | 102–104 | 5.0 to > 50 |
| Pharmaceutical industry | 10–103 | 25 to > 100 (25 to >200 *) |
* data proposed by Dunn associated with a so-called ‘chiral era’ of pharmaceuticals [29].
Examples of green chemistry metrics applied to organic synthesis.
| Parameter | Formula | Short Characteristics | Comments | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| It is used to estimate the percentage of carbon in the reagents used in organic synthesis that remain in the final desired product | This parameter is dedicated to evaluation of the greenness of organic synthesis based solely on carbon accounting | [ | ||
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| This parameter quantifies a percentage of the final product in all reagents and materials used in organic synthesis | Reagents having low or very low environmental impact (e.g., sodium chloride or acetic acid) are excluded from calculation of EMY | [ | |
| The MI takes into account reaction efficiency, stoichiometry, amount of solvents, all reagents and auxiliary substances used in synthesis. | This parameter has a value of 1 for an ideal synthesis, in which the total mass of input is equal to the mass of product | [ | ||
| The RME factor is inversely related to the overall E-factor described by Sheldon. The RME offers a better and easy way of identification of the best or the worst reactions that have influence on whole industrial process or synthesis. | This parameter was described very precisely by Andraos and Sayed (2007). The final version of RME equation depends on conditions of reaction or process (recovery of reaction solvents or post-reaction materials). This parameter is most effective in efforts to reduce waste at the intrinsic and global level | [ | ||
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| This parameter defines percentage ratio of the mass of final product to the mass of all products (final product and byproducts) obtained in synthesis. The solvents are excluded from calculations | It provides fast and simple evaluation of the greenness of a process or individual reaction in terms of produced waste. Nowadays it is seldom used | [ | |
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| Evaluation of this parameter takes into account actual masses of materials used in the process | This parameter has a value of 0 only if all materials (solvents, catalysts | [ | |
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| This parameter is calculated in case of syntheses in which one or more reagents are used in excessive amount | The SF has a value of 1 for stoichiometric reactions. If the reaction is nonstoichiometric the SF > 1 |
Figure 2The example of NEMI pictogram. The field is green if the requirements of criterion are fulfilled.
Penalty points applied for the calculation of final analytical Eco-Scale score.
| Sub-Total Penalty Points | Total Penalty Points | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Reagents | |||
| Amount | <10 mL (<10 g) | 1 | Amount penalty points × hazard penalty points |
| 10–100 mL (10–100 g) | 2 | ||
| >100 mL (>100 g) | 3 | ||
| Hazard | None | 0 | |
| Less severe hazard | 1 | ||
| More severe hazard | 2 | ||
| Instruments | |||
| Energy | <0.1 kWh per sample | 0 | |
| <1.5 kWh per sample | 1 | ||
| >1.5 kWh per sample | 2 | ||
| Occupational hazard | Hermetization of analytical process | 0 | |
| Emission of vapors to the atmosphere | 3 | ||
| Waste | None | 0 | |
| <1 mL (<1 g) | 1 | ||
| 1–10 mL (1–10 g) | 3 | ||
| >10 mL (>10 g) | 5 | ||
| Recycling | 0 | ||
| Degradation | 1 | ||
| Passivation | 2 | ||
| No treatment | 3 | ||
The penalty points for selected analytical solvents and reagents.
| Solvents/Reagents | Pictograms | Signal | Penalty Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| dichloromethane | warning | 2 | |
| hexane | danger | 8 | |
| diethyl ether | danger | 4 | |
| methanol | danger | 6 | |
| ethyl acetate | danger | 4 | |
| MTBE | danger | 4 | |
| acetone | danger | 4 | |
| benzene | danger | 6 | |
| isooctane | danger | 8 | |
| acetonitrile | danger | 4 | |
| isopropanol | danger | 4 | |
| toluene | danger | 6 | |
| chloroform | danger | 2 | |
| elemental mercury | danger | 8 |