Waste office paper comes to a sticky end

Article written by Debbie Houghton

Paper cannot be recycled into new paper indefinitely

A process for generating aluminium–aluminium bonding adhesives from waste office paper could give a purpose to paper than can no longer be recycled into more paper. 

Paper can typically only be recycled as a new paper product 3–4 times, after this the fibres become too short to be used in new paper or cardboard. Finding alternative ways of reusing this readily available resource is crucial.

To read the full article please visit Chemistry World.

Low-temperature microwave-assisted pyrolysis of waste office paper and the application of bio-oil as an Al adhesive
Zhanrong Zhang, Duncan J. Macquarrie, Mario De bruyn, Vitaliy L. Budarin, Andrew J. Hunt, Mark J. Gronnow, Jiajun Fan, Peter S. Shuttleworth, James H. Clark and Avtar S. Matharu  
Green Chem., 2014, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C4GC00768A, Paper

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Walter Leitner and Jürgen Klankermayer – Winners of the European Sustainable Chemistry Award

We are delighted to announce that Walter Leitner, Green Chemistry Editorial Board Chair, has been awarded the 2014 European Sustainable Chemistry Award alongside Jürgen Klankermayer, also from the Institute of Technical and Macromolecular Chemistry at the RWTH Aachen University.

The European Sustainable Chemistry Award is intended to be a prestigious scheme to raise the profile of sustainable chemistry and be a spur to innovation and competitiveness. The ESCA was initially launched in 2010 by EuCheMS and its current prize amounts to €10,000. A full list of sponsors can be found on the website.

The Award covers innovations in the following scientific areas:

– the use of alternative synthetic pathways, that increase resource efficiency and selectivity e.g. with the help of catalysis or natural processes

– the use of alternative feedstocks which are safer and/or renewable e.g. based on biomass

– the use of alternative reactor design and reaction conditions, such as use of solvents which deliver health and environmental benefits, or increased yield and reduced waste and emissions

– the design and use of chemicals and chemical products that are, for example, less environmentally harmful than current alternatives, or inherently safer with regard to hazardous concerns

Visit the website for more information on the EuCheMS and the prizes awarded.

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Renewable Chemicals from Lignin Symposium

A one day symposium is being held on 18th November 2014 in London, UK on the subject of Renewable Chemicals from Lignin. This event aims to bring together researchers from academia and industry at all levels interested in the chemistry, processing and applications of lignin in order to share the science, address the challenges in the field and build collaborations for the future.

The following four topics will be covered with a range of presentations from UK and international speakers.

  • Lignin structure
  • Bio-catalytic conversion
  • Chemo-catalytic breakdown
  • Applications

The programme of this meeting will feature both oral, flash poster and conventional poster presentations. The Scientific committee involved in organising the event includes: Tim BuggUniversity of Warwick, (Chair), Simon McQueen MasonUniversity of York, Rob FieldJohn Innes Centre, Norwich, Mike JarvisUniversity of Glasgow and Adrian HigsonNNFCC, York and Bio Base NWE project.

Registration is now open, so visit the website to find out more!

Renewable Chemicals from Lignin, Chemistry Centre, London, UK, 18th November 2014

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A graphene photocatalysed synthesis of chiral alcohols

James Sherwood is a guest web-writer for Green Chemistry. James is a research associate in the Green Chemistry Centre of Excellence at the University of York. His interests range from the certification and application of bio-based products, to the understanding of solvent effects in organic synthesis.

The asymmetric, enzymatic reduction of ketones has been enhanced with a graphene derived light harvesting photocatalyst. Typically the use of reducing enzymes for specialty chemical synthesis is restricted by the cost of the redox cofactor. In this example the enzyme cofactor is recycled via a rhodium complex. The energy needed to do this is delivered by the chlorophyll mimicking graphene. Enantioselectivity to the resulting alcohols is high, and applicable to both aliphatic and aromatic ketones.

Graphene photocatalysis bio-catalysis chiral alcohols

The scientists from KRICT responsible for this research believe that artificial photosynthesis using functionalised graphene shows promise for energy generation and sustainable chemical production in the near future, with applications including carbon dioxide sequestering reactions already proven as viable.

Check out the full article – online now!

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Green Chemistry Impact Factor rises to 6.85

We are delighted to announce that Green Chemistry’s Impact Factor* has risen to a new high of 6.85!

A huge thank you goes to all of our authors, referees and Editorial and Advisory Board members for their help and support on the Journal.

Green Chemistry is celebrating fifteen years of publishing cutting edge research on the development of alternative sustainable technologies and to mark the occasion we have invited contributions from authors who have green coverhighly cited articles from each of the past 15 years. The result is a growing collection which you can read online here.

We invite you to submit your latest research on sustainable chemistry and technology to Green Chemistry.

Read more about the 2013 Impact Factors from across RSC Publishing on the RSC Publishing Blog.

*The Impact Factor provides an indication of the average number of citations per paper. Produced annually, Impact Factors are calculated by dividing the number of citations in a year by the number of citeable articles published in the preceding two years. Data based on 2013 Journal Citation Reports®, (Thomson Reuters, 2014).

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Plant plastics reach for the stars – Green Chemistry article in Chemistry World

Aminoethoxy ethanol substituted phosphazene

Virginia Nykänen and colleagues at Aalto University, Finland have transformed rice starch into a temporally stable, optically transparent, biodegradable plastic with a high degree of mechanical strength and good thermal resistance.

This important step towards bioplastics made from simple and sustainable resources has potential applications in food packaging and biomedical materials.

Read the full article here in Chemistry World.

This paper is free to access until 8 September, so download it now:

V P S Nykänen et al, Green Chemistry, 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c4gc00794h

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3rd International Symposium on Green Chemistry

The 3rd International Symposium on Green Chemistry will be taking place from May 3–7, 2015 in La Rochelle, France.

ISGC-2015 will bring together all those who are involved with research in green chemistry: academic scientists, R&D researchers, key opinion leaders, and young researchers. A unique scientific program is planned with speakers from international academic institutions, companies in chemical, biotechnological, cosmetical and pharmaceutical sectors, start-ups and engineering.

The symposium will offer 200 oral communications (flash & oral communications) and several poster sessions. During ISGC-2015 the organizing committee with the expertise of the scientific committee will present green chemistry awards: an ISGC “Green Chemistry” award, a Young Researcher award (<40years) and poster awards.

Each topic will be introduced by a plenary lecture delivered by an eminent scientist of the field. Several plenary speakers have already been confirmed including:

ISGC 2015 invites all interested researchers to apply to the call for communication, so visit the website for further information and to get involved now!

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2nd International Symposium on C–H Activation

Congratulations to Daniel Zell and Tatiana Besset, who were awarded Royal Society of Chemistry poster prizes at the 2nd International Symposium on C–H Activation.

Green Chemistry was pleased to sponsor the symposium, which took place from June 30th – July 3rd, 2014 in Rennes, France with the aim of presenting to academic and industry researchers the recent researches and developments of C-H bond activation/functionalization.

The symposium was attended by Chao-Jun Li, Editorial Board member of Green Chemistry who presented the poster prize to Daniel Zell, University of Göttingen, Germany for his poster entitled “Meta-selective C−H bond alkylation by ruthenium catalysis”.

Tatiana Besset, University of Rouen, France was also awarded a poster prize for her poster with the title “Direct introduction of fluorinated groups on alkenes and alkynes”.

For more details about the meeting, visit the symposium website.

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Catalytic upgrading of fermentation alcohols

James Sherwood is a guest web-writer for Green Chemistry. James is a research associate in the Green Chemistry Centre of Excellence at the University of York. His interests range from the certification and application of bio-based products, to the understanding of solvent effects in organic synthesis.

Direct self-condensation of bio-alcohols in the aqueous phase

Fermentation strategies for the production of bio-fuels will continue to grow in importance, and as they do, problems with retrieving the products from dilute fermentation broths and the low energy content of short-chain alcohols will be magnified. A partnership between the energy company Shell and the Qingdao Institute of Bioenergy and Bioprocess Technology is addressing this challenge by using catalysis to condense bio-ethanol or bio-butanol via the Guerbet reaction to give improved, higher-alcohol biofuels.

An immobilised iridium catalyst was successful in converting 1-butanol in aqueous solution to 2-ethyl-1-hexanol with >85% selectivity over five consecutive reactions. The upgrading of ethanol was less selective to a single product: In addition to 1-butanol, 2-ethyl-1-butanol and even traces of 1-octanol were observed. A phenanthroline ligand is required to facilitate the aqueous phase reaction, conditions that mimic the environment of a fermentation broth. This approach also negates the usual requirement of hydrogen gas to reduce the β-unsaturated aldehyde intermediate, with the reaction proceeding under air.

These results all indicate that this reaction shows great potential for producing biofuels, as well as many other useful chemicals, in a cheaper and more efficient way.

Check out the full article – online now!

Direct self-condensation of bio-alcohols in the aqueous phase

G. Xu, T. Lammens, Q. Liu, X. Wang, L. Dong, A. Caiazzo, N. Ashraf, J. Guan and X. Mu, Green Chem., 2014, Advance Article.
DOI: 10.1039/C4GC00510D
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Congratulations to the poster prize winners at NSC2014

Congratulations to the poster prize winners at NSC2014 (16th Nordic Symposium on Catalysis). Green Chemistry and Catalysis Science & Technology were pleased to sponsor a poster prize each at the symposium, which were awarded as follows:

Green Chemistry poster prize
awarded to Aron Dombovari, University of Oulu
for “Photocatalytic processing of algae

Catalysis Science & Technology poster prize
awarded to Jacob O. Abildstrøm, Technical University of Denmark
for “Investigation of Mesoporous TS-1 for the Catalytic Formation of N-oxides

The prize winners received a certificate and a book from Royal Society of Chemistry Books.

You can read more about the Poster Award and find out about the Nordic Symposium on the UiO website.

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