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Transforming the organic chemistry laboratory
experience with greener laboratory experiments
The challenge of greening the chemistry curriculumUO green organic chemistry curriculum: Keys to our successRecent developments - experiments and momentum
http://greenchem.uoregon.edu
Department of Chemistry and Materials
Science Institute
University of Oregon
Green chemistry offers many practical and
fundamental advantages for chemistry education
Table 1 Starting Material Employed in Classic Organic Laboratory Syntheses
1902-1980
Date Author
Acetanilide 4-Bromoacetanilide Benzoin
Starting Materials Required (grams)
Aniline Acetanilide Benzaldehyde
1902 Levy, 4th ed. 46.2 50.0
1915 Cohen, 3rd ed. 25.0 5.0 25.01933 Adkins 28.0 13.5 10.0
1941 Fieser, 2nd ed. 18.2 13.5 25.0
1963 Adams 20.0 13.5 16.0
1980 Drust 10.0 5.2 10.0
Adapted from: From Microscale Organic Laboratory by D.W. Mayo, R.M. Pike and S.S.
Butcher, 1985
• Alternative processing methods. Rapid, high yield transformationsat room temperature - catalysis
• Better understanding of how molecular structure dictates desirableand undesirable properties - Structure-Activity Relationships (SARs)
Hazardless, completely recyclable products
• “Waste” or renewable resources as raw materials
• Integrating green chemistry into the curriculum
Green chemistry challenges for the academic
community
Green chemistry is a multidisciplinary field, involvingfundamental sciences, business, law and engineering
How can we bring green chemistry into an already
crowded chemistry curriculum?
Challenges• Overcoming the misconception that
green chemistry is less rigorous• Finding experiments that illustrate
green chemistry concepts and areeffective in the teaching labs
• Involving students in the process ofgreening the curriculum
• Building a community to support thedevelopment and use of the curriculum
Strategies• Replace rather than add course material• Modernize the curriculum using the
latest green chemistry developments• Ensure quality through thorough testing• Provide a wide range of choices• Help others learn from our experience
Process used to develop and teach greener
laboratory procedures
We teach this simple process to
our students as we implement it.
Identify hazards
or inefficiencies
Find/develop
alternative methods
Test efficacy
of new procedure
Assess existing
procedure
Greener
alternative
Reed, S.M.; Hutchison, J.E. J. Chem. Ed. 2000, 77, 1627-1629.
H
H
Br+ Br
2
BrH
H
CCl4 or CH2Cl2
N H N H +Br3 Br Br2
H
H
ethanol
ethanol
TRADITIONAL
GREEN
Laboratory Skills:
Reaction set-up
Vacuum filtration
Melting point determination
Green Lessons Taught:
Less toxic solvents can be selected
Hazardous reagents can be generated in situ
Djerassi, C; Scholz, C.R. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1948, 70, 417.
H
H
HBr
H Br
1. HBr2. 30% H2O2
ethanol, reflux
GREENER
A safer bromination of an olefin
McKenzie, L. C.; Huffman, L. M.; Hutchison, J. E. J. Chem. Ed. 2005, 82, 306-310.
Analysis using green metrics
• Appropriate metrics for teaching laboratories:
– Enhance student safety
– Reduce the volume and hazard of the wastestream
– Ease reliance on environmental controls
– Improve reaction efficiency
McKenzie, L. C.; Huffman, L. M.; Hutchison, J. E. "The evolution of a green
chemistry laboratory experiment greener brominations of stilbene," Journal of
Chemical Education 2005, 82, 306-310.
• Atom economy, percent experimental atom
economy, E factor, effective mass yield
Solventless Aldol Condensation
O
O
OCH3
OCH3
H3CO OCH3
O
+
1. NaOH2. H3O+ workup
mp 40-42 oCmp 42-45 oCmp 178 - 181 ° C
Rothenberg, G.; Downie, A. P.; Raston, C. L.; Scott, J. L.
J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2001, 123, 8701-8708.
Raston, C. L.; Scott, J. L. Green Chemistry 2000, 2, 49-52.
Chemical Concepts:
Melting point determination
and depression
Aldol condensation reaction
Recrystallization skills
Green Lessons:
Solventless reactions
Atom economical reactions
Liquid CO2 as a green extraction solvent
Chemical Concepts:
Solid/liquid extraction
Natural products (terpenes)
Spectroscopy
Phase transitions
Green Lessons:
Use of safer solvents
Prevention of waste
Green materials processing
Traditional Method
Green Method
McKenzie, L. C.; Thompson, J. E.; Sullivan, R.; Hutchison, J. E. "Green
chemical processing in the teaching laboratory: A convenient liquid CO2
extraction of natural products," Green Chem. 2004, 355-358.
D-limonene
Orange Peel Steam distilland/or
Organic solvent
Orange PeelCO2(liquid)
No organic solvent
Liquid CO2 extraction in the teaching laboratory
Target audience: Sophomore-level organicchemistry laboratory
• Introduction• Identification of Chemical Hazards• Chemical Exposure and
Environmental Contamination• Evaluation of Chemical Hazards• Introduction to Green Chemistry• Alternative Solvents• Alternative Reagents• Reaction Design and Efficiency• Alternative Feedstocks and Products
Plus 19 Green Organic Chemistry Experiments
Green Organic Chemistry Laboratory Manual
Fall term 2003
Synthesis, separations, spectroscopy
1. Solventless Aldol condensation
2. Bromination of an alkene
3. Preparation/distillation of
cyclohexene
4. Synthesis of adipic acid
5. Oxidative coupling of alkynes
6. Gas phase porphyrin synthesis
7. Solvent effects on kinetics
8. Molecular mechanics modeling
Winter term 2004
Synthesis, spectroscopy, applications
1. Electrophilic iodination with KI/NaOCl
2. Palladium-catalyzed aryl halide/alkyne
coupling
3. Polymer-supported oxidation chemistry
4. Friedel-Crafts acylation of ferrocene
5. Thiamine-mediated benzoin condensation
6. Self-assembled monolayers/patterning
7. Combinatorial synthesis of antibiotics
Laboratory curriculum project implementation
0
50
100
150
200
250
97-
98
98-
99
99-
00
00-
01
01-
02
04-
05
Number of
Students
"After taking this course I have a much better opinion of chemistry .... I feel likeI am learning something that has an actual important application to the realworld."
"I have decided to get a minor in chemistry so I can make more consciousdecisions regarding chemistry and avoid destructive practices for my health orthe environment."
• Teaches students a rational procedure for analyzing/minimizing
hazards
• Empowers students to use chemistry to solve environmental
problems - "Ambassadors of Green Chemistry"
• Changes the way students and society view chemicals, chemistry
and chemists - "Know the hazards, not all chemicals are hazardous"
The approach changes the way students think about
chemical hazards and chemistryWe are generating less waste and a less hazardous waste stream.
Winter term disposal numbers (14.2L of aqueous, 1L of flammableorganic and 1kg of solid waste for 180 students)
The project has been great for University public relationsMore than 20 articles have now been published around the world
Enhances student recruitingWe have seen strong interest from undergrads and grads who want tobe part of green chemistry
Opportunity to upgrade curriculum and facilitiesUniversity invested in a showcase lab facility to highlight the program
Improved educational atmosphereThe new lab setting is an excellent learning environment
Our experience introducing green chemistry - there
are many incentives
The new green chemistry labGreen chemistry offers many practical and
fundamental advantages for chemistry education
Table 1 Starting Material Employed in Classic Organic Laboratory Syntheses
1902-1980
Date Author
Acetanilide 4-Bromoacetanilide Benzoin
Starting Materials Required (grams)
Aniline Acetanilide Benzaldehyde
1902 Levy, 4th ed. 46.2 50.0
1915 Cohen, 3rd ed. 25.0 5.0 25.01933 Adkins 28.0 13.5 10.0
1941 Fieser, 2nd ed. 18.2 13.5 25.0
1963 Adams 20.0 13.5 16.0
1980 Drust 10.0 5.2 10.0
Adapted from: From Microscale Organic Laboratory by D.W. Mayo, R.M. Pike and S.S.
Butcher, 1985
Next steps
More labs!
Disseminate our and other’s labs via the GEMs
database
Promote the community through workshops,
symposia and collaborations
Build the “business case” for green chemistry
Workshop participants 2001-present
“Green chemistry will be more expensive”
Must carefully consider costs of reagents, solvents, disposal, engineeringcontrols, new labs, etc.
“There are no lab exercises available and I don’t have time to develop my own”
A wide range of experiments are now in development around thecountry. There should be a lot of choice soon.
“There is no room in the curriculum for new material”
Don’t add, replace.
“The curriculum will not train students to work with hazardous materials”
Most students will not work with hazardous substances after organic.Don’t have to work with hazardous substances to learn proper technique.
“Green is political, not scientific…green chemistry is not rigorous”
Designing better products and better processes is what synthetic chemistsdo. Green chemistry provides a new challenge.
Addressing the case for green chemistry
Prof. Ken Doxsee
Dr. Scott Reed
Ms. Lallie McKenzie
Mr. Marvin Warner
Ms. Lauren Huffman
Dr. Julie Haack
Dr. Rob Gilbertson
Mr. Gary Succaw
Dr. John Thompson
Ms. Kathryn Parent
Ms. Anna Shope
Dr. Leif Brown
Mr. Gerd Woehrle
and the Students of CH337G and CH338G
Acknowledgments
The Alice C. Tyler Perpetual Trust
The University of Oregon