Home Physical Sciences Green and Sustainable Chemistry
Article Publicly Available

Green and Sustainable Chemistry

Published/Copyright: September 1, 2009
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

_

Green and Sustainable Chemistry

10–13 January 2006, Delhi, India

The Second International Symposium on Green/Sustainable Chemistry will be held 10–13 January 2006 in Delhi, India. This conference aims to promote the activities of green and sustainable chemistry worldwide. It is becoming widely recognized that the development of sustainable technologies and prevention of pollution is the smarter and more effective way of managing the environment. Technologies and methods are being pursued to identify cleaner products and processes that can be implemented proactively. It has been said that “the revolution of one day becomes the new orthodoxy of the next.” Most importantly, we need the relevant communities—scientific, engineering, educational, and others—to work together for a sustainable future through green chemistry.

The main themes of the conference will be:

  • collaborations among academia, government, and industry, and scientists for green and sustainable chemistry

  • the status of green chemistry activities in industry

  • education to promote green and sustainable chemistry

  • new approaches to products and processes for green and sustainable chemistry

  • the role of biocatalysts in chemical synthesis

  • green chemicals, processes, and technologies in pharmaceutical, agrochemical, and food product industries

  • alternative synthesis (ionic liquids, super critical solvents, microwave, water based, solid phase, and photochemical)

See Mark Your Calendar for contact information

www.greenchemistryindia.com

_

Page last modified 30 August 2005.

Copyright © 2003-2005 International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.

Questions regarding the website, please contact edit.ci@iupac.org

Published Online: 2009-09-01
Published in Print: 2005-09

© 2014 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co.

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Masthead
  2. From the Editor
  3. Contents
  4. Achieving Important Goals with the Right Combination of “Hard Cash” and Volunteers
  5. Advancement of Harmonized Approaches for Crop Protection Chemistry in Latin America
  6. Challenges for Chemists
  7. An Update on the Kilogram
  8. Lida Schoen Made Knight of the Order of Orange-Nassau
  9. Address to Younger Chemists
  10. In Memorium: Jacques-Emile Dubois (1920–2005)
  11. Emerging Issues in Developing Countries
  12. Simples and Compounds: Another Opinion
  13. Erratum: Wolfram vs. Tungsten
  14. Terminology for Biomedical (Therapeutic) Polymers
  15. Teaching School Children About Pesticides and Health
  16. Towards Defining Materials Chemistry
  17. Thermodynamics of Ionic Liquids, Ionic Liquid Mixtures, and the Development of Standardized Systems
  18. Ionic Liquids Database
  19. Future Plans
  20. For Further Information
  21. Chemical Structure and Physical Properties of Cyclic Olefin Copolymers (IUPAC Technical Report)
  22. Polyaniline: Thin Films and Colloidal Dispersions (IUPAC Technical Report)
  23. Terminology in Soil Sampling (IUPAC Recommendations 2005)
  24. Numbering of Fullerenes (IUPAC Recommendations 2005)
  25. Gaseous Fluorides of Boron, Nitrogen, Sulfur, Carbon, and Silicon and Solid Xenon Fluorides in All Solvents
  26. Polymers in Novel Applications
  27. Bio-Based Polymers: Recent Progess
  28. Macromolecules
  29. Fats, Oils, and Oilseeds Analysis and Production
  30. Carbohydrates
  31. Polymer-Based Materials
  32. Fine Chemistry and Novel Materials
  33. Water Contamination by Arsenic
  34. Humic Science
  35. Green and Sustainable Chemistry
  36. Photochemistry
  37. Organic Synthesis
  38. Macromolecules
  39. Chemistry and Chemical Engineering
  40. Mark Your Calendar
Downloaded on 17.2.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/ci.2005.27.5.37a/html
Scroll to top button