Overview of Green Chemistry
Green Synthesis
Atom Economy
Greenhouse Effect
Chemicals and Reactions
100

The definition of green chemistry. 

The design of chemical products and processes that reduce or eliminate the use or generation of hazardous substances.

100

A solvent used in green synthesis. 

Water, ionic liquids, polyethylene glycols, and some scandium fluids. 

100

The importance of atom economy

Preventing pollution on a molecular level.

100

One example of a greenhouse gas

Carbon Dioxide, Methane, Nitrous Oxide, etc. 

100

A property of chemicals used in green chemistry.

Degradable chemicals. 

200

The number of principles in green chemistry. 

12

200

The definition of green synthesis.

The synthesis of metal nano-particles using plant or plant parts.
200

The highest possible amount of atom economy.

100%

200
A negative effect of the greenhouse effect. 

Global warming, rising sea levels, etc. 

200

A property that chemicals are designed to have less of.

Toxicity 
300

The importance of green chemistry. 

Helps the environment by reducing harm from toxic chemicals. 

300
A method used for green synthesis.

Ball milling, microwave irradiation, photocatalysis, ultrasound-assisted synthesis, etc.

300

The type of reaction that has the highest atom economy. 

Addition reactions

300

A cause of the greenhouse effect. 

Burning fossil fuels, deforestation, farming, and livestock production.
300

Conditions used for chemical reactions.

Room temperature and pressure 
400

The areas of chemistry that green chemistry applies to.

All of them 

400
Properties of catalysts that are used in green synthesis. 

Non-harmful and preferably solid.

400

What having a high atom economy means.

Most atoms of the starting material and reactants end up in the final product. 

400

A positive of the greenhouse effect.

It keeps the earth at a temperature able to support life and protects us from UV radiation.

400

The name of starting materials used in chemicals reactions and are renewable. 

Feedstocks

500

The father of green chemistry.

Paul Anastas

500

The definition of a dry media reaction. 

A chemical reaction in the absence of a solvent. 

500

The formula for atom economy

mass of atoms in desired product/mass of atoms in product x 100

500

The type of energy emitted from the earth's surface. 

Infrared radiation

500

Chemicals avoided in green chemistry

Chemical derivatives