EPA/600/R-94/125
                        Proceedings             October 1994


 WORKSHOP ON GREEN SYNTHESES AND PROCESSING

            IN CHEMICAL MANUFACTURING
                    Omni Netherland Plaza
                       Cincinnati, Ohio
                       July 12-13, 1994
      Sponsored by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency:

               Office of Research & Development
             Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
                    Cincinnati, Ohio 45268

        Office of Prevention, Pesticides and Toxic Substances
                   Washington, D.C.  20460
                      Co-sponsored by:

                 National Science Foundation
                  Arlington, Virginia 22230

                   Contract No. 68-CO-0068
                      Coordinated by:

                 Eastern Research Group, Inc.
             Lexington, Massachusetts 02173-3198


                      Project Officer:
                      Randy Revetta
CENTER FOR ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH INFORMATION

                 Work Assignment Manager:
                     Thomas J. Powers
     RISK REDUCTION ENGINEERING LABORATORY
       OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
      U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
                CINCINNATI, OHIO  45268

                                           ^.9 Printed on Recycled Paper

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                                 NOTICE
      These Proceedings have been reviewed in accordance with the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency's peer and administrative review policies and
approved for presentation and publication. Mention of trade names or
commercial products does not constitute endorsement or recommendation for
use.
                                     n

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                               CONTENTS

       Foreword                                                      v
       Abstract                                                      vj
       Figures                                                       ^i
       Tables                                                         x

  I.   Introduction                                                    j

 II.   Presentations - Opening Plenary Session                          4

       Next Generation Manufacturing Systems and the
       Environment:  The Federal Agenda
            Joseph Bordogna, National Science Foundation                4

       Benign Organic Synthesis
            James Bashkin, Washington University                       12

       Benign Biosynthesis
            Jerome Schultz, University of Pittsburgh                    28

       Benign Engineering Approaches
            C. Thomas Sciance, DuPont Experimental Station            47

       Computer-Based Methods for Finding Green  Synthesis
       Pathways and Industrial Processes for Manufacturing
       Chemicals: A View From 10,000 Feet
            Peter P. Radecki, Michigan Technological University          66

III.    Breakout  Sessions                                             79

IV.    Presentations - Closing Plenary Session                          81

       Workgroup on Benign Engineering Approaches                   81

       Workgroup on Biosynthesis                                     39

       Workgroup on Chemical Synthesis                                95

      Workgroup on Computer-Based Methods                        101

V.    Closing Remarks                                             110
                                  111

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                  CONTENTS (continued)






Appendices



Appendix A:  List of Workshop Participants                     A-l




Appendix B:  Workshop Agenda                              B-l




Appendix C:  Minutes of Individual Breakout Groups            C-l
                             IV

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                                 FOREWORD

    Today's rapidly developing and changing technologies and industrial products
 and practices frequently carry with them the increased generation of materials
 that, if improperly dealt with, can threaten both public health and the
 environment. The U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency is charged by Congress
 with protecting the Nation's land, air, and water resources. Under a mandate of
 national environmental laws, the Agency strives to formulate and implement
 actions leading to a compatible balance between human activities and the ability
 of natural systems to support and nurture life. These laws direct the EPA to
 perform research to define our environmental problems, measure the impacts,
 and search for solutions.

    The Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory is responsible for planning,
 implementing, and managing research, development, and demonstration programs.
 These provide an authoritative defensible engineering basis in support of the
 policies, programs, and regulations of the EPA with respect to drinking water,
 wastewater, pesticides, toxic substances, solid and hazardous wastes, and
 Superfund-related activities. This publication is one of the products of that
 research and provides a vital communication link between researchers and users.

   The Workshop on Green Syntheses and  Processing in Chemical Manufacturing
 was designed to provide an insight into the state of the art of environmentally
 benign chemical manufacturing.  The recommendations of the workshop are
 summarized in these proceedings.  The perspectives and recommendations coming
 out of this Workshop will help federal research directors  make decisions regarding
 the support of research and development  related to benign  synthesis and
manufacturing.
                                                 E. Timothy Oppelt, Director
                                      Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory

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                                ABSTRACT

      The Workshop on Green Syntheses and Processing in Chemical
Manufacturing was held in Cincinnati, Ohio, on July 12 and 13,  1994. The
purpose of the workshop was to solicit information from industry, academia, and
government regarding research related to the advancement of environmentally
benign chemical manufacturing processes.

      Keynote addresses in Organic Synthesis, Biosynthesis, Engineering
Approaches, and Computer-Based Methods specifically related to benign
technology were presented by leading experts.  The workshop attendees were
subdivided into smaller groups  addressing each of these four key areas.  Proposed
research topics were ranked according to their overall priority; the time frame
within which an impact of the proposed research would be felt; what combination
of industrial, academic, and government efforts is appropriate; and the need and
justification for Federal funding.
                                    VI

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                                 FIGURES
Number

Figure 1.

Figure 2.

Figure 3.


Figure 4.


Figure 5.

Figure 6.

Figure 7.


Figure 8.

Figure 9.

Figure 10.


Figure 11.


Figure 12.


Figure 13.


Figure 14.


Figure 15.


Figure 16.
R&D Issues in a Changed World

Concurrent Integration of Innovation and Wealth Creation

Organization of the National Science and Technology
Council (NSTC)
Page

   4

   5

   7
Organization of the NSTC Committee on the Environment     9
and Natural Resources

Chemical Structure of Taxol                                13

Helton's Synthesis of Taxol                                 14

Traditional versus Environmentally Benign Methods of        17
Synthesizing Water

Traditional Cholorine-Based Oxidation Reactions             18

Oxygen and Hydrogen Peroxide as Clean Oxidizing Agents    19

Preparation of Murray's Dimethyldioxirane as a Clean         20
Oxidizing Agent

Conventional Pathway for Synthesizing para-                 22
Nitrodiphenylamine

Generation of a Meisenheimer Intermediate via               23
Chlorobenzeneversus Direct Nucleophilic Attack

Synthesis of para-Nitrodiphenylamine Without Using          25
Chlorobenzene

Overall Stoichiometry of the Tetramethyl-ammonmm          26
Hydroxide-Catalyzed Synthesis of para-Nitrosodiphenylamine
Percent Yield of Nitro and Nitroso Diphenylamine
Products with Varying Aniline: Nitrobenzene Ratios
  26
Production of Organic Chemicals in the United States, 1993   29
                                    Vll

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Number
                           FIGURES (continued)
Page
Figure 17.       Current and Potential Biomass Feedstocks in the             31
                United States

Figure 18.       A Total-System Perspective on Bioprocessing                 32

Figure 19.       A Biparticle Fluidized Bed Operating in                     33
                Countercurrent Mode

Figure 20.       Process Flowsheet for the Biological Production of            34
                Ethanol from Wastepaper

Figure 21.       Breakdown of Ethanol Production Costs by Process Area      35

Figure 22.       Sensitivity of Ethanol Selling Price to Major Process          36
                Parameters

Figure 23.       Typical Concentrations of Products Leaving Fermenters       37

Figure 24.       Relationship  Between Product Concentration and Selling      38
                Price

Figure 25.       Relationship  Between Selling Price and Worldwide            38
                Production of Various Fermentation Products

Figure 26.       Production of High-Fructose Corn Syrup by Enzymatic        39
                Methods

Figure 27.       Economics of High-Fructose Corn Syrup Production          40

Figure 28.       Potential Applications of Enzymes in Environmentally         41
                Benign Chemical Processing

Figure 29.       Enzymatic Enhancement of Chemical Reaction Rates         42

Figure 30.       Lipase-Catalyzed Polymerization Reaction                   43

Figure 31.       Relationship  Between Pressure and Degree of Polymer-       45
                ization in a Supercritical Solvent System

Figure 32.       Enzymatic Catalysis in the Gas Phase                        46

Figure 33.       Enzymatic Catalysis in Pure Reactants                       46
                                    vm

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Number
Figure 34.
Figure 35.
Figure 36.
Figure 37.
Figure 38.
Figure 39.
Figure 40.
Figure 41.
Figure 42.
Figure 43.
Figure 44.
Figure 45.
Figure 46.
Figure 47.
Figure 48.
Figure 49.
Figure 50.
Figure 51.
FIGURES (continued)

Evolution of Engineering Paradigms
Predicted Time Course for Developing Sustainable
Technologies
Pollution Prevention Ideas
Limitations Inherent to the Production of Maleic Acid
via a Fixed Bed Reactor
Innovations Required for the New Synthetic Pathway
The Role of Lattice Oxygen Chemistry in the New
Synthetic Pathway
Riser Reactor Developed for the New Synthetic Pathway
Riser versus Fluid Bed Oxidation
Alternative Processes for HCN Production
Effect of Feed Purity and Conversion
Homogeneous versus Heterogeneous Catalysts
Process Concept: Acid-Catalyzed Hydrolysis of Biosludge
Clean Technology Targets
Stages of Process Development and Implementation
Computer-Based Tools for Use in the Early Planning
Stages of Process Design
Computer-Based Tools for Use in Industrial-Scale Process
Design
Computer-Based Tools for Use During the Industrial
Production Stage
Object-Oriented Programming and Concurrent Software

Page
48
50
53
56
56
57
58
59
61
63
64
65
66
69
70
72
74
77
Development
                   IX

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                               TABLES
Number

Table 1.


Table 2.

Table 3.

Table 4.
Recommendations of the Workgroup on Benign Engineering
Approaches

Recommendations of the Workgroup on Benign Biosynthesis

Recommendations of the Workgroup on Chemical Synthesis

Recommendations of the Workgroup on Computer-Based
Methods
Page

  82


  90

  97

 102

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                             I.  INTRODUCTION
       In recent years, efforts have intensified to identify alternative chemical or
 biochemical processes that are both environmentally friendly and economically
 attractive. The chemical and allied industries, broadly defined as those industries
 employing processes involving chemical reactions that have the potential to cause
 the formation of undesirable by-products or the emission of toxic compounds, are
 responsible for the bulk of the environmental pollution associated with
 manufacturing activities.

       To explore issues related to environmentally benign synthesis, a two-day
 workshop was organized under the joint sponsorship of the U.S. Environmental
 Protection Agency's (EPA's) Office and Research and Development (ORD),
 EPA's Office of Prevention, Pesticides and Toxic Substances (OPPTS), and the
 National Science Foundation (NSF).  This meeting, entitled  "Workshop on Green
 Syntheses and Processing in Chemical Manufacturing," was held in Cincinnati,
 Ohio, on July 12 and  13,  1994. At this workshop, more than 50 chemists,
 biochemists, and chemical engineering experts representing industrial,  academic,
 and government institutions met to discuss the research needed to advance the
 development and adoption of environmentally benign chemical manufacturing
 processes (see Appendix A).

      An overview of the background and goals of the workshop was provided by
 Thomas Powers of ORD's Water and Hazardous Waste Research Treatment
 Division, who chaired  the opening session.  Following several administrative
 announcements, T. Powers introduced Subhas Sikdar, Director  of the Water and
Hazardous Waste Treatment Research Division.  After welcoming participants to
Cincinnati, Dr. Sikdar  described the workshop as part of an ongoing joint effort
through which EPA and NSF are attempting to develop an integrated program in
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 support of environmentally benign chemical manufacturing.  As stated by Dr.
 Sikdar, the specific goal of the workshop was to identify critical areas of research
 and development (R&D)  in which government assistance and/or partnerships with
 industry and academia could be expected to offer the greatest benefit in meeting
 the dual goal of maintaining the economic vitality of the chemical manufacturing
 industry while at the same time reducing the industry's disproportionate
 contribution  to environmental pollution.  The case for so-called green chemistry
 has attracted a great deal of attention in the past year,  beginning with a white
 paper entitled "Chemistry for a Clean World," published by the European
 Community's Chemistry Council in June, 1993.  More recently, green chemistry
 has been the subject of articles in professional journals such as Science and
 Chemical and Engineering News.  The scope of this workshop would be somewhat
 broader, moving beyond chemical processes per se to include chemical engineering
 and economic feasibility issues.

       Dr. Sikdar concluded his introductory presentation by reviewing the
 proposed agenda for the two-day meeting (Appendix B).  The first afternoon of
 the workshop would be  devoted to an overview of issues in advanced
 manufacturing as seen from  the perspective of the National Science and
 Technology Council, followed by a series of formal presentations on issues related
 to green syntheses and manufacturing processes. The following morning, the
workshop would break into smaller workgroups that would attempt to answer four
questions related to general areas covered in the plenary speakers' presentations:

       • Question #1:   What research and development must be exploited to
                      accelerate the development of benign organic synthesis?
       • Question #2:   What research and development must be exploited to
                      accelerate the development of benign biosynthesis?
       • Question #3:  What engineering methods must be developed to aid in the
                      cost-effective manufacturing of chemicals by benign routes?

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       •  Question #4:  What models, databases, and algorithms must be developed
                      to make benign, manufacturing more facile?

At the end of the second day of the meeting, the group was scheduled to
reconvene as a whole to discuss the conclusions and recommendations reached by
the workgroups, particularly as those conclusions related to the need for short-,
medium-, and long-term government assistance. These recommendations will be
helpful to both EPA and NSF in their decision-making process for federal funding
in this area.

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          II. PRESENTATIONS - OPENING PLENARY SESSION
Next Generation Manufacturing Systems and the Environment:

The Federal Agenda

      Joseph Bordogna, National Science Foundation


      A schematic representation of the variety of issues that currently impinge

on thinking about research and development priorities at the federal level is

depicted in Figure 1. Much effort is being invested in issues related to

manufacturing and the environment. With the establishment of the National

Science and Technology Council (NSTC) in November, 1993, there is a

centralized structure for decisions about how to allocate the $70 billion the

federal government spends on research and development each year. The
       Cognitive
       Revolution
    Diverse
    Workforce

      Defense
      Conversion
                     Data
                     Explosion
        Global
        Economy
                Shared
                Wealth
Dual
Use
                 International
                 Partnerships

                    Finite
                    Resources


                 Environmental
                 Imperatives
Demographic
Shifts
                    Figure 1. R&D Issues in a Changed World

                                 4

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proceedings of this workshop will be very useful to guide the decisions of NSTC,
particularly to the extent that workshop participants could address the full
spectrum of issues from discovery to regulation that fall under the combined aegis
of the EPA and NSF.

      Decisions concerning the allocation of federal R&D funding are presently
being evaluated by two main criteria: the extent to which proposed efforts
promote innovation and the extent to which these efforts contribute to the
creation of wealth in the United States (see Figure 2).  In this regard, a
distinction is to be made between innovation, defined as new knowledge applied
to things you did not know how to do before, and productivity, new knowledge
that helps you do better things you already know how to do.  In the context of
         ANALYSIS
            REDUCTION
  DISCOVKRY OF
  NKW KNOWLEDGE,
  HASIC LAWS
INNOVATION
         &
   WEALTH
  CREATION
                          PROCESSES
                          SYSTEMS
          T
          E
          C
          H
          N
          O
          L
          O
          G
          Y
DEVICES
IDEAS
                                  SYNTHESIS
                                 INTEGRATION
                       DESIGN
                    MANUFACTURE
                    MAINTENANCE
                                                                 CAIMTAI.
                                                                FORMATION/
                                                                INVESTMENT
            Figure 2.  Concurrent Integration of Innovation and Wealth Creation

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wealth creation, innovation is key, for innovation and wealth creation to go hand-
in-hand. However, it is not sufficient just to have the science and engineering
elements in place; for wealth creation to occur, it is also necessary for the
resulting technology to fill a need in terms of prevailing economic and policy
contexts.  Moreover, for a process to realize its wealth-creating potential, all five
aspects of the process (i.e., the science, engineering, technology, policy context,
and economic context) must develop in parallel.

       To illustrate the changing economic and political context for manufacturing
in the United States, the change in demands on industry over the past several
decades are described.  For much of the 20th century, it was sufficient for
manufacturers to pick two of three desirable attributes:  good, fast, and cheap.
Beginning in the 1980s,  it became necessary for manufacturers to assure that
processes met all three of these criteria.  For the 1990s and beyond, a fourth
criterion - clean - has been added to the list.  From this point forward,
environmental considerations must become part of the front-end design process
for any manufacturing interest.

       Perhaps the best indication of the federal government's increasing
awareness of the importance of science and technology to the overall well-being
of the United States was the November  1993, Executive Order, which established
the National Science and Technology Council within the Executive Office of the
President.  The NSTC was organized to  offer advice directly to the President in a
manner similar to that previously provided only by the National Security Council
and the National Economic Council. The most important undertaking of the
NSTC  is to decide how the federal R&D budget allocation should be used. In
the past, federal R&D expenditures have been  summarized  on a single page in
the budget, where R&D outlays were divided into four general categories: basic
research, applied research, development, and facilities.  In lieu of this somewhat
"fuzzy" breakdown, one goal of the NSTC is to look at federal R&D expenditures

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 in terms of their impact on functions that the government exists to fulfill.  Thus,

 the NSTC has organized itself into nine committees, one dedicated to each of

 these priority functions (see Figure 3).  Each of these Committees is chaired by

 an Executive Branch member.
             National Science & Technology Council
                                 (NSTC)
              Education
              & training
 Health,
Safety &
 Pood
  Civilian
 Industrial
Technology
National
Security
                                               Resources
        Figure 3.  Organization of the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC)



       Manufacturing issues fall within the purview of the NSTC Committee on

Civilian Industrial Technology.  The Civilian Industrial Technology Committee is

an extremely important one, because it is the only committee in government that

has representatives from both the private  and public sectors working together.

One initiative, the Partnership for a New  Generation of Vehicles, involves

executive vice presidents from the "Big Three" automobile manufacturers as well

as representatives from seven government agencies.

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      The Subcommittee on Manufacturing Infrastructure has five working
groups, each dedicated to an area the Subcommittee views as particularly worthy
of federal support:
         Manufacturing Systems, dedicated to the advancement of next-
         generation manufacturing systems (e.g., agile/flexible manufacturing,
         intelligent manufacturing systems, quality initiatives)
         Engineering Tools for Design and Manufacturing, which will attempt to
         answer the question of how best to deal with the decline in the machine
         tool industry (e.g., concurrent engineering, virtual prototyping)
         Manufacturing Processes and Equipment, the working group that will
         promote the development of environmentally benign processes; rapid
         physical prototyping; and intelligent sensors, controls, and actuators
         Manufacturing Education and Training (e.g., TRP projects, teaching
         factories)
         Manufacturing Technology Deployment (e.g., MTCs, TRP projects)
       An NSTC Committee of relevance to the issues being discussed at the
workshop is the Committee on the Environment and Natural Resources, the
organizational structure of which is illustrated in Figure 4. This committee has a
Subcommittee on Technology and Engineering Research, the purview of which
cuts across numerous areas of environmental concern, including air quality, toxic
substances, and others.  Currently, this subcommittee's efforts are focused in two
main areas. The first, determining how to facilitate the commercialization of
extant environmental technologies that for various reasons have not yet reached
the market, is probably  about a $100 million effort.

       The other main interest of this subcommittee - long-term environmental
technology research and development needs - is also the subject of a document
entitled "Technology for a Sustainable Future."  This document outlines the three

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                                 Committee on the Environment
                                     and Natural Resources
                                         Executive Council
        Social & Economic
        Sciences Research
          Subcommittee
   Technology &
Engineering Research
   Subcommittee
            Global Change
             Research
            Subcommittee
  Biodiversity &
   Ecosystem
    Research
                                        Science and Policy
                                           Assessment

                                               Federal Policy
                                                Formulation
Resource Use &
 Management
  Research
Subcommittee
Water Resources/
Coastal & Marine
  Environment
   Research
                    Air Quality
                    Research
                   Subcommittee
          Toxic Substances &
            Hazardous and
          Solid Waste Research
            Subcommittee
            Natural
           Disasters
           Research
          Committee
     Figure 4.  Organization of the NSTC Committee on the Environment and Natural Resources



 main goals that will guide the Administration's efforts to develop an integrated,

 long-term environmental technology strategy:


        • Encourage development of avoidance technologies and adoption of the
          low-waste/no-waste tenets of industrial ecology


        • Forge stronger public-private partnerships to foster rapid diffusion of
          research results to environmental technology users


        • Foster use of environmentally sound and socially appropriate
          technologies worldwide
The definition of sustainable development set forth by the Bruntland Commission

in 1987 ("development that meets the needs of the present without compromising

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the ability of future generations to meet their own needs"), was used as a basis for
environmental technology as "technology that advances sustainable development
by reducing risk, enhancing cost-effectiveness, improving process efficiency, and
creating products and processes that are environmentally  beneficial or benign."
In this context, technology includes hardware, software, systems, and services.
With a vision of long-term economic growth that creates jobs while improving and
sustaining the  environment, the overall thrust of the contemplated program is to
move the environmental technology paradigm from one of cleanup and control to
one of anticipation, avoidance, and assessment.

      The "Technology for a Sustainable Future" document is expected to be the
focus of extensive interaction among representatives from industry, academia,  and
government  over the next year.  Based on these interactions, the President will
enunciate an Environmental Technology Strategy  for the U.S. on Earth Day,
1995.

      Noting  that it is common for people in government to think about
manufacturing primarily if not exclusively in terms of parts assembly, it will be
important for the chemical manufacturing community to make its R&D needs
known to policymakers. Among areas of research and development considered to
be at the leading edge  of chemical  technology and manufacturing are the
following:

       •  Environmental Technology
       •  Biotechnology
       •  Chemical Processes
       •  Process Design
                                     10

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        •  Process Equipment, Analytic Devices and Sensors, and Materials of
          Construction
        •  Microtechnology and Microsystems Technology

 Given the stiff competition for federal research dollars, it will be important for
 chemists  and chemical engineers to make a case for environmental technologies
 as a potential source of wealth creation.  Toward this end, Robert Wellek of the
 NSF has  estimated that the global market for environmental technologies
 amounted to nearly $300 billion  in 1992 and that this market could grow to
 roughly $425 billion per year by  1997.

       Turning to the issue of pollution prevention, there remains considerable
 debate  regarding the potential of pollution prevention strategies as a catalyst for
 innovation, new market opportunities, and wealth creation.  On the one hand,
 U.S. businesses spent $91  billion in 1989  for pollution control and abatement, and
 it was recently estimated that cleanup of  Superfund hazardous waste sites could
 cost as much as $700 billion, much of which will  also  come from U.S. businesses.
 In light of these and other costs,  avoidance of problems through pollution
 prevention has become an option of choice for many U.S. chemical
 manufacturers.  On the other hand, responding to environmental challenges has
 almost always been a costly and complicated proposition in which "win-win"
 solutions are rare. Because of this, some globally managed corporations have
 elected  to move their production facilities out of  the U.S. to areas that place a
 lower value on less polluting manufacturing.  Given these conflicting viewpoints,
 this emphasizes that there  is a great deal  of wealth  that  can be made through
 green manufacturing, and an important part of that process is obtaining the
 funding needed for research in this area.

      It is important that the activities of the NSTC Committee on  Environment
and Natural Resources mesh with NSF's ongoing Environment and Manufacturing
                                     11

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Initiatives.  Within the Environment Initiative, emphasis is placed on the
development of new products, materials, and processing methods to minimize
pollution, while the Manufacturing Initiative concentrates on environmentally
conscious means of scaling up production, actual plant processing and equipment
design, and reuse of by-products for reducing manufacturing costs. Often, the
same R&D skills are used in both research initiatives, leading to opportunities for
cooperative and  synergistic planning.

      Recently, a number of integrating themes have been developed as priority
areas for the NSF  Environmental Initiative; these integrating themes include
Biodiversity, Water and Watersheds, Environmental Technology, and Resource
Use and Management.  The Environmental Technology theme is that
fundamental research in environmentally conscious technologies, monitoring
technologies, and remediation technologies increases our capabilities with regard
to environmentally benign manufacturing, materials, water and energy
technologies, and the application of  existing technologies to new environmental
problems. In support of this theme  and in partnership with other agencies -
including EPA - NSF plans to initiate cooperative research efforts supporting the
design and development of new products and materials,  especially those that
involve streamlining synthetic methods and enhancing product biodegradability.
Benign Organic Synthesis
      James Bashkin, Washington University

      The state of the art of synthetic organic chemistry is often equated with the
tremendous advances that are occurring in the synthesis of highly complex natural
products of known or potential pharmaceutical importance.  An example of this
type of advance is the synthesis of Taxol, an anti-cancer agent derived from the
bark and needles of yew trees (Figure 5). Achieving total synthesis of Taxol is
                                     12

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                                            OAc 0
                        Taxol
                         Figure 5. Chemical Structure of Taxol

 remarkable not only because of the complex structure of the target molecule, but
 also because of the number and complexity of chemical transformations that make
 up the synthetic process (see Figure 6).

       While not disputing the importance of synthesizing compounds of
 pharmaceutical value, the broadening of our view of state-of-the-art organic
 synthesis to include the synthesis of commodity and  specialty chemicals might
 afford the opportunity to develop equally impressive advances in the form of new
 versions of old reactions that do not carry the "environmental baggage" of
 traditional industrial processes.  Moreover, new organic synthetic techniques can
 be brought to  bear in  the manufacturing of many materials that are prepared via
 organic chemical reactions. Examples of the breadth of areas in which synthetic
 organic chemistry and organic chemical reactions impact on manufacturing and
society are:
                                     13

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                                      OAc
                                             OP
                              HO
                          TBSO
             D
          OTES
TBSO'
OTES
                            TBSO-
                                       II
                                           OTES
                                 TBSO'
            J. ,4m. Chem. Soc. 1994, 116, 1597-1598
           J. Am.  Chem.  Soc. 1994, 116, 1599-1600

              Figure 6.  Holton 's Synthesis of Taxol
                         14

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        • Natural, semisynthetic, and synthetic fibers used in clothing
        • Paper pulp used to form paper
        • Polyurethane coatings that protect automobiles
        • Structural plastics used to build medical devices and other equipment
        • Rubber chemicals used in the manufacture of automobile tires and other
          products
        • Specialty fluids necessary to the operation of the Space Shuttle

 Chemical processes involved in the preparation of materials for these purposes
 include the bleaching of paper pulp,  the uv-stabilization and crosslinking of
 polymers, protection of automobile tires from oxidative breakdown, and
 modification of fibers to improve stain resistance and wear.

        Given the wide-ranging importance of commodity and specialty chemicals
 to society, another "leading edge" of organic synthesis is embodied in attempts to
 replace traditional synthetic processes with environmentally benign  alternatives.  It
 is possible to develop benign organic syntheses that eliminate the waste of the old
 process while at the same time offering a more economically viable method of
 producing the target molecule.  Because of this, the economics of benign synthesis
 can be very attractive even  without considering costs related to the environmental
 elements of the equation.

       One important barrier to the development of environmentally benign
 syntheses has been the tendency of organic chemists to focus exclusively on the
 target molecule (product).  Many organic chemists feel successful if they are able
 to synthesize a target molecule - even if the yield is small and the synthetic
process requires a  large number of intermediate steps.  In almost every such
process, however, by-products other than the  target molecule are also generated.
In the past, chemical manufacturers have typically viewed these by-products as
                                     15

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annoying but not terribly important wastes. In academic pursuits, where even
very low-yield syntheses may represent important intellectual advances, reaction
by-products do not always receive much attention.  As awareness of the
environmental impact of chemical processes has increased, it becomes clearer that
all of the by-products of chemical reactions must be taken into account.
Although many organic chemists are working on the synthesis of very complex
molecules,  few people are engaged in the development of new synthetic methods
that replace traditional bond-making and bond-breaking reactions or oxidation
reactions with environmentally acceptable  alternatives.

       To promote the development of new organic reactions that meet
environmental criteria, the application of the concept "the conservation of useful
mass" could help. The key tenet of this concept is to incorporate all of the atoms
in the starting materials in the product to the extent possible. Where reaction by-
products are unavoidable, these by-products should themselves be benign
compounds.

       To illustrate  the conservation of useful mass concept in a simplistic
manner, two different methods of producing water were outlined in Figure 7.
Using traditional methods, a mixture of an acid and a base produces water; both
organic or  inorganic reactants could be used in this process.  Although this type
of reaction has the desired effect of producing water, it does not meet the criteria
of conserving useful mass, since one equivalent of salt is produced  for each
equivalent  of water.  If the goal of the process is synthesizing water, salt is a
waste product that will have to be dealt with in some way. Alternatively, water
could be synthesized via a reaction between hydrogen and oxygen.  This  pathway
results in a full conservation of useful mass, since all of the atoms of the starting
materials are incorporated in the product.
                                     16

-------
           The Synthesis of Water.  1.

               Acid 4- Base = Salt + Water

                 An Inorganic example:

               HC1 + NaOH = NaCl + H2O

                 Using an Organic Acid:

       MeCOOH + [NMe4+]OH- = [MeCO2-][NMe4+]
                                + H2O

        Water is produced, but so is an equivalent of
                         salt.
         The Synthesis of Water.  2.

                 H2 + 1/2O2 = H20

     There is no wasted mass. AH of the mass of the
        starting materials is incorporated into the
                     product.
Figure 7. Traditional versus Environmentally Benign Methods of Synthesizing Water

                        17

-------
      A more sophisticated example of environmentally benign alternatives to
traditional reaction processes could be the oxidation reactions such as those used
in the bleaching of paper pulp. Traditionally, these reactions have been carried
out using a variety of chlorine-based bleaches (Figure 8).  In these reactions,
                                     C12
                                     oci-
                                     C1O2
                                    C1O3-
                                    C1O4-

                                 Examples:
                              C12 + 2e- = 2 Cl-
                              +  ci2
HCl
                Figure 8. Traditional Cholorine-Based Oxidation Reactions

chlorine gas acts as an oxidizing agent by accepting two electrons, in the process
generating two equivalents of chloride ion.  Although effective in achieving the
desired oxidation, the halogen-based bleaching process produces waste chloride
anion and chlorinated organics that will have to be dealt with in some manner.
Similarly, chlorine gas is commonly used in the functionalization of benzene,
generating starting materials for nucleophilic aromatic substitution reactions.
Waste products associated with these types of reactions include two equivalents
of chloride  waste: one in the form of hydrochloric acid and the other in the form
                                      18

-------
   of chloride that will act as a leaving group during the nucleophilic displacement
   step of the reaction.

        To accomplish the same goal in a more environmentally benign way,
   oxygen and hydrogen peroxide could be used as oxidizing agents in place of
  halogen-based compounds. As Figure 9 illustrates, the only by-products of such
  oxidations would be two equivalents of water.  All of the atoms of the starting
  materials are incorporated in the reaction products, so this process, too, satisfies
  the criteria for conservation of useful mass.
       O2 and H2O2  as Clean Oxidizing Agents
0  + 2e- + 2H
                                                H,0
                               2^2
                                                 2H,0
             Figure 9. Oxygen and Hydrogen Peroxide as Clean Oxidizing Agents

       There are a number of difficulties in attempting to use oxygen and
hydrogen peroxide as oxidizing agents, most involving the problem of how to
control the oxidation reaction once it begins. Normally, such reactions require
the use of a catalyst that helps modify the reactivity and selectivity of oxygen.  It
is extremely difficult to avoid overoxidation to carbon dioxide or carbon monoxide
in a methane-to-methanol conversion, for example, unless the reaction is carried
                                   19

-------
out in the presence of methane monooxygenase, a metalloenzyme that acts to
control the rate and extent of the oxidation reaction. Development and industrial
exploitation of metal catalysts that can replace environmentally dangerous
oxidizing agents should be an area in which increased efforts have a great deal of
potential. In some cases, such catalysts have already been developed  and need
only be exploited by industry.  One example of such catalyst development is the
use of a manganese dimer to accelerate the decomposition of sodium perborate,
allowing the bleaching of fabrics to take place at low temperatures.

      Another approach to modulating oxidation reactions involves the use of
highly-oxygenated reactive intermediates.  The development of a distillable
oxidizing agent, dimethyldioxirane, by Murray and colleagues  at the University of
Missouri, St. Louis, is shown in Figure 10. Because it is distillable, this oxidizing
          0                    H->O, NaHCO3
                 +  KHSO5	*-
       acetone      potassium                  ,.    ....   .
                   rL™,*                    dimethyldioxirane
Caroate
   1. Murray, R. W.; Jeyaraman, R., /. Org. Chem. 1985,50, 2847.
   2. Waldemar, A.; Hadjiarapoglou, L.; Top. Curr. Chem. 1993,164,
      45-62.
        Figure 10. Preparation of Murray's Dimethyldioxirane as a Clean Oxidizing Agent

agent can be readily separated from organic by-products, and because it uses a
regenerable acetone as the oxygen carrier, it can also be recycled. By providing

                                    20

-------
  an oxidation pathway that is totally devoid of inorganic by-products, this kind of
  reagent is currently receiving very serious attention in industry.

        An example of green chemistry, which can be economically as well as
  environmentally rewarding, is an alternate pathway to 4-nitro dybenzylamine.  A
  precursor, 4-nitro dyphenylamine, used in making the additives that prevent the
  oxidative  breakdown of automobile tires by ozone, can be made by traditional
  means (see Figure 11).  In this process, benzene is functionalized via an oxidative
  chlorination reaction. The resulting chlorobenzene is nitrated, producing water
  and a para-chloronitrobenzene intermediate.  Finally, aniline or formaniline is
  added in the presence of a base, where it acts as a nucleophile to displace the
 chloride leaving group and form the target product.

       The traditional synthetic pathway is limited by the formation of an
 equivalent of salt, also produced for each equivalent of para-nitrodiphenylamine
 produced. Given that compounds based on para-nitrodiphenylamine are
 produced on a scale of approximately 300 million pounds per year worldwide, the
 associated salt waste stream represents a significant challenge.  The problem is
 complicated further by the fact that the waste salt is contaminated by aromatic
 amine impurities that are structurally related  to benzidine, a known human
 carcinogen.

      To evaluate the potential for environmental and human health risks
 associated  with conventional methods of producing para-nitrodiphenylamine, an
 attempt was made to devise a synthetic pathway through which the target
 compound could be produced without generating any salt.  The major problem
 that had  to be overcome  was  finding a way to perform a nucleophilic substitution
reaction without a leaving group, or using hydride as a leaving group. Direct
nucleophilic attack of the nitrobenzene produces a Meisenheimer complex that is
                                     21

-------
                                           Cl
    + Cli
                                 HC1  +
                                           Cl
                  HNO3	  H20
          Cl
NH2
Cl
                        K2C03
                                        HN
         •O'^O
                                                   + KC1
                        -o'NS
   Figure 11.  Conventional Pathway for Synthesizing para-Nitrodiphenylamine





                           22

-------
structurally similar to that produced in the chlorination reaction, except that the
structure does not include a good leaving group (Figure 12).
        Conventional Nucleophilic Aromatic Substitution for Chloride
            NOo
                                                          N02
                    NU'
Nu
Cl
                                          =N
                                              ,o. cr
            ci
                                                          Nu
             Nucleophilic Aromatic Substitution for Hydrogen
                   NO2
                           NU"
       Nu.
        H' Y—/   ~ v
                    N
     N
N02
                 Nu  H
 Nu
                                  -H"
Nu
         Figure 12. Generation of a Meisenheimer Intermediate via Chlorobenzene
                        versus Direct Nucleophilic Attack
                                    23

-------
      To achieve the desired product, a method had to be found to replace a
hydride - whether in the form of a proton plus two electrons, a hydrogen radical
and an electron, or a hydride ion -  in order to aromatize the ring. The method
chosen was to use aniline as a starting material in the presence of a catalytic base,
tetramethylammonium hydroxide (see Figure 13). In this system, the catalytic
base deprotonates aniline, generating an anilide nucleophile. This nucleophile
attacks the nitrobenzene molecule, forming a Meisenheimer complex in which the
no-longer aromatic nitro group can act as a hydride acceptor.  Depending on the
concentration of nitrobenzene present, the reaction yields varying combinations of
para-nitrosodiphenylamine, para-nitrodiphenylamine, and azobenzene. The nitro
and nitroso compounds are readily hydrogenated, generating more of the desired
para-nitrodiphenylamine product.  Azobenzene can be hydrogenated to produce
aniline, which can be recycled in the reaction.  Thus, the only by-product of the
reaction  is distilled water.

       The overall stoichiometry of the catalyzed reaction is summarized in Figure
14. In this reaction, nitrobenzene plus anilide in the presence of a catalytic base
yields para-nitrosodiphenylamine plus water.  This reaction avoids both the
chlorination of nitrobenzene and the subsequent removal of the chloride ion
during the nucleophilic substitution step, and the only by-product  of the process is
distilled  water.  The oxygen atom in the water comes from the nitro group, one
hydrogen comes from the aniline, and the other comes from the Meisenheimer
intermediate.

       The overall synthetic yield of the nitro and nitroso compounds is 90% or
greater,  depending on the anilinemitrobenzene ratio of the reaction mixture
(Figure  15).  Since nitrobenzene is much cheaper than para-chloronitrobenzene,
this route not only avoids environmental clean-up problems but is actually more
cost-effective than the conventional process for synthesizing para-
                                      24

-------
                                                     TMA+
                    + TMA(OH)
                    + H20
       tfTTMA*  N02
                           Ortho Attack
                                                   Phenazine
Intramolecular
  Pathway
                              N02
                     N
Intermolecular
  Pathway
                                                            Azobenzene
       13. Synthesis of para-Nitrodiphenylamine Without Using Chlorobenzene
                                  25

-------
                              catalytic
                              base
       Figure 14.  Overall Stoichiometty of the Tetramethylammonium Hydroxide-Catalyzed
                           Synthesis of para-Nitrosodiphenylamine
               Mole Ratio
          Aniline :Nitrobenzene
       Yield*
                1.32
                11.9
                51.5
15
55
86
30
35
9
^Reverse phase HPLC was used to analyze the reaction mixtures.  The external standard metr.od

was used to quanntaie reaction yields using a Vydac 210HS54 ( 4.6 X 250 mm) column and t"V

detection at 254 run. Yields are normalized to total moles of 4-NODPA and 4-NDPA produced it

each AN:MB ratio.
            Figure 15. Percent Yield of Nitro and Nitroso Diphenylamine Products
                         with Varying Aniline: Nitrobenzene Ratios
                                          26

-------
 nitrodiphenylamine. Monsanto has taken this alternative mode of synthesis to a
 pilot plant stage, and the economics of the process thus far look very promising.

       There are a number of nucleophiles other than aniline that can be used in
 aromatic substitution reactions designed to avoid the use of chlorobenzenes. For
 those interested in more information, the following references are offered:

       • "Methods of Preparing Anti-ozonants for Rubber Chemicals," M.K.
         Stern and J.K. Bashkin, U.S. Patent 5,117,063.
       • "The Direct Coupling of Aniline and Nitrobenzene: A New Example of
         Nucleophilic Aromatic Substitution for Hydrogen," M.K. Stern, F.D.
         Hileman, J.K. Bashkin, /. Am. Chem. Soc., 1992, 114, 9237-9238.
       • "Process for preparing/7-nitroaromatic amides and products thereof,"
         J.K. Bashkin, M.K. Stern, U.S. Patent 5,331,099.
       • "Animation of Nitrobenzene via Nucleophilic Aromatic Substitution for
         Hydrogen: Direct Formation of Aromatic Amide Bonds," M.K.  Stern,
         B.K. Cheng, /. Org. Chem.,  1993, 58, 6883-6888.

       There is information relating to green processes currently sitting on shelves
in universities and industry.  The main obstacle  to commercial application of
some processes is the difficulty of raising the capital needed to build new
chemical plants. Federal assistance in this area - perhaps in the form of new
guidelines regarding the tax treatment of capital expenditures - would provide a
useful counterbalance to penalties that are rightly imposed for chemical processes
that pollute.  In addition, federal funding should play an important role in
educating academic scientists about and supporting research on the standard
bond-making and bond-breaking  reactions that need to be re-examined from the
perspective of environmentally benign organic synthesis.
                                     27

-------
Benign Biosynthesis
      Jerome Schultz, University of Pittsburgh

      Since the term benign biosynthesis is a relatively new one, the area may be
approached from two distinct points of view.  First, benign biosynthesis can be
defined in terms of utilizing what might otherwise be considered waste; included
within this definition would be efforts involving the use of biotechnology to
convert agricultural wastes to chemical feedstocks (e.g., lignocellulose to ethanol)
or to treat conventional feedstocks in ways that reduce their potential to pollute
(e.g., desulfurization of coal).  Second, it is important to keep in mind that most
of conventional biotechnology is based in aqueous systems,  which could pose
problems for large-scale manufacturing in that most of these systems are relatively
dilute.  Another definition of benign biosynthesis, therefore, involves exploring
ways in which enzymes and other biotechnologic approaches to chemical synthesis
might be applied to non-aqueous systems.

      To set a general framework for the discussion,  a table from the July, 1994
issue of Chemical and Engineering News lists most of the organic chemicals
currently produced in the United States (see Figure 16).  This table raises two
important issues regarding biosynthetic approaches to organic chemistry.  First,
most of the chemicals on the list are produced in the range of millions to billions
of pounds.  One question, therefore, is whether biotechnologic techniques can
realistically be expected to achieve production levels in this range.  Second, most
chemicals on the list are low molecular weight compounds,  whereas the efforts of
the biotechnology industry have  been focused mainly on production of large
pharmaceutical compounds. Thus,  a second question  concerns how adaptable
existing biotechnologic techniques will be to the production of smaller molecules.
                                     28

-------



Acetic Acid, synthetic
Acetone
Acrylonitrile
Aniline
Benzene
Bisphenol A
1,3-Butadiene
1-Butanol
Caprolactam
Chloroform
Cumene
Cyclohexane
Dioctyl phthalate
Ethanol, synthetic
Ethanolamines
Ethylbenzene
Ethylene
Ethylene dichloride
Ethylene glycol
Ethylene oxide
2-Ethylhexanol
Formaldehyde
Isobutylene
Isopropyl alcohol
Maleic anhydride
Methanol, synthetic
Methyl tert-butyl ether
Methyl chloride
Methyl ethyl ketone
Methyl methacrylate
Methy (chloroform
Methylene chloride
Perchloroethylene
Phenol, synthetic
Phthalic anhydride
Propylene
Propylene glycol
Styrene
Terephthalic acid
Toluene
Vinyl acetate
Vinyl chloride
o-Xylene
p-Xylene

- — — -•-— >*• gams, wnviii^iai rTOOUCtlon
Chem and Eng News - July 1994
Millions
Pounds
3656
2462
2508
1011
13416
1286
3092
1328
1359
476
4489
2000
245
740
706
11758
41244
17945
5228
5684
688
3041
1146
1236
424
10542
24053
849
556
1088
452
354
271
3718
854
22398
885
10063
7837
6664
2827
13746
884
5757
Total 240966

% change
(1983-1993)
23
£m W
24
•»~
19
34
27
50
24
37
28
24
25
17
-18
-31
34
33
30
36
w w
15
I w
3
44
28
34
2
29
24
97
52
4
22
-23
-39
-50
29
2
38
45
32
28
6
31
50
ww
12
29

Figure 16.  Production of Organic Chemicals in the United States, 1993





                               29

-------
      To address the issue of biomass feedstocks, Figure 17 shows data
developed by Charles Scott and colleagues at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
These data indicate that millions of tons of waste materials could potentially be
used to replace petroleum as a feedstock for chemical production.  With potential
feedstocks in the 3 trillion ton range, the volume of biomass  resources is large
enough to have a significant impact on the production of industrial organic
chemicals.  Altogether, chemicals that could  be synthesized from agricultural
feedstocks have a total value of approximately  $110 billion per year.  Most
promising in this regard, 25% of these chemicals that represent oxidation
products could potentially be produced by microorganisms.

      The potential use of wastepaper as a chemical feedstock offers another
example  of an evolving biotechnology. Because wastepaper is already being
"harvested," raw material costs should be vanishingly small.  At the same time,
the amount of wastepaper currently processed is enough to produce on the order
of 4 million gallons of ethanol per year,  and  at a competitive price (i.e., less than
$ I/gallon). As such, use of wastepaper as a feed material for the production of
ethanol may well represent the first entry into the industrial market of a
lignocellulose-based commodity chemical.

      For a chemical manufacturing plant to be built around a bioprocess, two
important criteria must be met.  First, the proposed feedstock must be able  to
compete  with the fluctuating and currently low cost of fossil materials, and
secondly, an adequate supply of the feedstock must be assured.  From this
perspective, waste materials may be the most useful feedstocks for initial market
penetration.  Second, the manufacturer must have the advanced technology
required  to process this material. In  this regard, research directed toward
development of more effective biocatalysts and more  advanced bioprocessing
systems may be especially useful.
                                     30

-------
PRODUCTION
(Millions of Drv Tons/Yr)
FEEDSTOCK
CROPS:
LIGNOCELLULOSE
STARCH CROPS
FORAGE GRASSES
WASTE:
AGRICULTURAL
LIVESTOCK
INDUSTRIAL
MUNICIPAL
FORESTRY
TOTAL
Current
391
103
26

390
290
60
125
110
1495
Potential

1565*
1575*
414

390
325
60
160
140
3064*
'Since some of the same land area may be required by both lignocellulose
and starch crops, the quoted potential biomass for each could be mutually
exclusive. The total potential feedstock includes only one of these sources.
Figure 17.  Current and Potential Biomass Feedstocks in the United States
     (Source:  "Production of Organic Chemicals via Byconversion,"
                 U.S. DOE Report EGG-2645, 1991.)
                                31

-------
       From a biochemical engineering perspective, the most effective approach is
to consider the entire biosynthetic process (Figure  18). Particularly if benign
biosynthesis is the goal, it is no longer sufficient to think of the acquisition of
feedstocks and the disposal of waste products as separate processes; rather, it is
necessary to consider the system as a whole, from input to output. Not only must
chemical engineers consider the material balance around an entire plant, but it is
also becoming increasingly important to think of material balances around the
economy as a whole.  From this broader perspective, it may well turn out that
waste materials produced by one industrial sector are ideal feedstocks for
another.
                           n
                                       CARBOHYDRATE!
                                                   REFINING AND
                                                    CHCMICAL
                                                   •IOCHEMICAI
                                                   CONVERSION
                                                                 REFINED Oil 3
                                   CORN NEFHtENV
                  Figure 18. A Total-System Perspective on Bioprocessing
                             (Source: Dr. Charles Scott.)
                                       32

-------
        Another important consideration in biochemical processing is scale, since
 catalyst-based processes often involve flow dynamics that are not easily scaled up
 to the larger systems required for production in the millions of gallons or millions
 of tons range.  In the petrochemical industry, similar problems have been
 overcome by development of fluidized bed technologies (Figure 19).  Using the
                         FLJIDIZED-3ED
                         REACTOR •
                                                    ?ART!CLE RETURN
                                                    (IF NECESSARY)
                                                    ..QUID EFFLUENT
                                                  -EXPANSION SECTION
                                                  TO ENHANCE
                                                  DISENGAGEMENT OF
                                                  GAS PHASE AND
                                                  SECONDARY
                                                  PARTICLES
                                                  -BOTTOM TAPER TO
                                                  ENHANCE "ARTICLE
                                                  SEPARATION
                      SECONDARY PARTICLES
                      TO PRODUCT RECOVERY
_J
                                              LIQUID FEED STREAM
                                              (4 'NLETS)
                                                  MULTIVANE PARTICLE
                                                    lOVAL VALVE
            Figure 19. A Biparticle Fluidized Bed Operating in Countercurrent Mode
                               (Source: Dr. Charles Scott.)
fluidized bed model, it is usually possible to construct very large systems that
behave very similarly to smaller, pilot-scale systems.  If fluidized bed behavior can
be adapted to biochemical processing, it might be possible for advanced
separation systems such as adsorption to replace or augment less efficient
processes such as  distillation.  At the same time, it might also be possible to
combine two or more processing steps.
                                        33

-------
      Figure 20 illustrates how fluidized bed bioreactors could be incorporated
into a biochemical production process.  In this case, ethanol is produced from
*
WATER
WASTEPAPER
MAKE-UP \_X
WAHR 	 i}
I

SOLID WASH (OR
*" BOILER fflO
AnvAMrrn RECYCLED ENZYMES *v \ J
r » HYDROLYSIS
SYSTEM
GLUCOSE
PRODUCT STREAM
a
M WASTE STREA
u
o
2 OFF-GAS OFF-GAS CO-
o » » *
| FIUIOIZED BED f

v •* 	 -"\ r
X \ E COOLING
rn rrp ENZYME ., '
RECOVERY ** 	 REAGIHIS
REACIOR ;
* WITH UNREACTED SOLIDS
r-*- ETIIANOI Oil GAS
DILUTE f^\ I
ponnurr niSIIIIAllOH } 	 ' WAIER fOR
•*^*~ foR nHAN"l ~*"^~ ' 	 --••"• -' - "" 	 ""'
PRODUCTION
• .» FIUIOIZED -BED «. •
''• . BIOREACTOR . cl
• * . FOR CELIUI ASE
.."„ PRODUCTION .". .
W \4/
f GLUCOSE f
NUTRIENTS
' . OR RLCYCLl
° • flUIDIZFD BIO
WASTE ' / FOR WASHWAHR
SOLIDS r- ••! TR(ATMINI
III MR
     Figure 20. Process Flowsheet for the Biological Production of Ethanol from Wastepaper
                            (Source: Dr. Charles Scott.)
wastepaper feedstocks.  The flow chart in Figure 20 illustrates the basic difference
in viewpoint between chemists and chemical engineers, in that chemical engineers
must consider both the energy and mass balances of industrial processes.  Thus,
to gain a perspective on the process as a whole, a chemical engineer must
consider all streams coming into and going out of the plant.  To a chemical
engineer, energy must be viewed as a cost in much the same way that materials
are a cost of the process as a whole.
                                      34

-------
       Another obstacle to the development of biochemical industrial processes
 arises from the relative lack of in-house biochemical engineering expertise in the
 chemical manufacturing industry. Although most manufacturing interests have
 experts in chemical or petrochemical engineering on hand, relatively few employ
 individuals with training in biochemical engineering. As a result, it is common for
 engineers unfamiliar with biochemical unit processes to overestimate the costs of
 biological elements of the process. Intuitively, chemical engineers are likely to
 expect enzymes or microorganisms for biosynthetic processes to comprise a large
 part of the total cost of the process.  In fact, as Figure 21  illustrates, costs
             50r
                                                              I Feedstock
                                                              | Capital
                                                              [Operating
                                                              I Energy
             Figure 21. Breakdown of Ethanol Production Costs by Process Area
                       (Source:  Chemical Engineering Progress.)

associated with biochemical elements comprise only a small fraction of total
process costs. In this particular process, which involves using hydrolytic enzymes
to produce ethanol from a cellulose feedstock, the costs associated with feedstock,
treatment, and utilities are significantly higher than those associated with
production of the enzyme. Thus, economics of the process are far more
                                      35

-------
 dependent on materials and energy costs than on the cost of the catalyst or other
 biological components.

       A sensitivity analysis of the same production process (Figure 22) confirms
 that major benefits in terms of process improvements lie not in reducing the cost
       o>
       CTJ
       o
        c
       JO
       75
        c
        O
       O
                 Yield    Cone.    Rate   Enzyme Agitation
Figure 22.  Sensitivity of Ethanol Selling Price to Major Process Parameters
                      (Source:  Chemical Engineering Progress.)
of the enzyme but rather in increasing the yield of the conversion and/or
concentration of the product. These two parameters, which together comprise
recovery cost of the product, represent an especially important component of total
biosynthetic costs, since microorganisms used in aqueous biochemical processing
typically grow only in very dilute solutions.  As a result,  industrial processes
currently using microorganisms tend to have very low yields - in most cases lower
than 10% (Figure 23).
                                    36

-------

Product
Acetone/butanol/ethanol mixture
Antibiotics by established processes (e.g.,
penicillin G)
Cyanocobalamin
Enzymes (e.g., serum protease)
Ethanol
Lipids
Organic acids (e.g., citric acid, lactic acid)
Riboflavia
Single-cell proteins (e.g., yeast where entire
dry biomass is product)
Concentration
(*!-')
18-20
10-30
0.02
2-5
70-120
10-30
40-100
10-15
30-50

              Figure 23.  Typical Concentrations of Products Leaving Fermenters
                     (Source: Handbook of Biochemical Engineering.)

       The inverse relationship between product concentration and selling price is
illustrated in Figure 24.  When the concentration of product is low,  as is the case
with many pharmaceutical biotechnology products, the selling price tends to be
high. Conversely, only compounds that can readily be produced at high
concentrations can be marketed at low selling prices. By the same token, when
economies of scale can be achieved, biological products can be competitive on a
price per weight basis (Figure 25).  The obvious conclusion is that efficient and
economical bioprocessing will require methods of producing materials at higher
concentrations than can be obtained using conventional biochemical processes.
                                     37

-------
 10"






 10-


 10»





10-i


10"


10
        10-
                •Water
                       Ethanol
             Amino acids
                             .Citric acid, monosodium glutamate

                                  , Penicillin
                                    ^.Threonine
                 Antibiotics

                 MicrobUi
                 proteases
                     AmyUses
                          Research/diafnostk
                          enzymes
Glycerophospate
dehydrogenase


 Luciferase
                                I	I
                                             Urokinase-

                                       Therapeutic enzynws^^^^
                                   I     I    Jill
          io-<   jo-   to*   10-    io>   IP    10*    io>   io»    i    10*
                                Seilin«pnce($ kf)
Figure 24.  Relationship Between Product Concentration and Selling Price
             (Source: Handbook of Biochemical Engineering.)
      10
      10
        13


     10
              Interferon
                   .Human Factor VIII
                     Human Growth Hormone



                               • Rennin
                    Insulin • "

                  Vitamin 8,2*


                           Benzyl Penicillin


                                     Citric Acid*
                                     Baker's Yeast'
                                                           • Cheese
                                                             •Beer
                        10'
                          r2
                         1       102    104    10s    108
                                                                    10
                                                                      ,10
                         World Production (tons/annum)
      Figure 25. Relationship Between Selling Price and Worldwide
              Production of Various Fermentation Products
            (Source:  Handbook of Biochemical Engineering.)
                                    38

-------
        Production of high-fructose corn syrup through the enzymatic conversion
  of glucose to fructose (Figure 26) represents an example of a successful large-
  scale process using biochemical methods. Worldwide, the total market for high-
  fructose corn syrup is about 6 million tons per year, which translates to roughly
                       CHO                          CH2OH
                  H-C-OH                      C = 0
                 HO — C — H      Glucose    HO — C — H
                        I	^         |
                  H — C — OH  Isomerase     H — C — OH
                        I                             I
                  H-C-OH     ™°C       H-C-OH
                       CH2OH                       CH2OH
                    D-Glucose                  D-Fructose
           Figure 26. Production of High-Fructose Corn Syrup by Enzymatic Methods

 $20 billion. As in the earlier example, analysis of the economics of high-fructose
 corn syrup production indicates that the biological component - enzyme -
 accounts for only a small fraction of the total production cost (Figure 27).

       Turning to a different area of biochemical  processing, consider the issue of
enzymes as tools in environmentally benign chemical processing. To illustrate  the
broad variety of areas in which enzymes might play a role in benign processing,
Figure 28 shows a list of potential applications prepared by Alan Russell  of the
University of Pittsburgh.
                                     39

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                 Production cost of MFCS           US (cents/lb)
                 a. Raw com cost (1980)            9^03
                 b. Return from by-products
                        Oil                        1.38
                        Feed  (Gluten)             2.79
                        Meal  (Gluten)             0.75
                 c. Net raw material cost, a-b         4.11
                 d. Other costs
                        Enzyme                   0.40
                        Operating Labor            2.00
                        Utilities                   0.70
                 e. Total variable cost               7.31
                 f. Fixed overhead costs             2.00
                        Freight                    1.75
                 g.Totil                           11.06
                 h.Capital investment cost          2.40 - 4.50
                 i. Total (42% HFCS)               13.46 -15.56
                j. Total (55% HFCS) + 15%         15.48 -17.89
               Figure 27. Economics of High-Fructose Corn Syrup Production
                             (Source:  Dr. Alan Russell.)


The remainder of this presentation focuses on four general areas:


       • Enzymes as Catalysts

       • Enzymes in Supercritical  Fluids

       • Enzymes in the Gas Phase

       • Enzyme  Catalysis in Pure Reactants


       Regarding the use of enzymes as catalysts, Figure 29 presents data showing

the enhancement of chemical reaction rates possible with use of enzymes as

alternative to heavy  metal catalysts. In one set of data, addition of a pig liver
                                      40

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       Enzymes in organic solvents

          Bioluminescence Enhancement
          for Chemical Detection

          Specialty Monomer Synthesis

          Specialty Polymer Synthesis
       Enzymes in Reverse Micelles

         Bioluminescence Enhancement
         for Chemical Detection

         Pesticide Degradation

         Nerve Gas Degradation
       Enzymes in Gas Phase

          Oxidation/Reduction of volatile compounds

          Nerve Gas degradation

          Waste Gas Treatment
   Thermophilic Enzymes

       Sterilizable Biosensors

       Self-Cleaning Membranes

       Catalysis of viscous fluids

       Contamination Resistant
       Bioprocessing

       Rapid Bioprocessing


Supercritical Fluids

    Polymer Synthesis

    Peptide Synthesis

    Defined Sequence Polymers

    Metal Extraction (Ur, Hg, Pb)

    Environmentally Benign
    Chemical Processing

    Protein Purification

    Chemical Waste
    Extraction/Remediation
                              Stabilization of Thennolysin

                              Diabetes Treatment

                              Bioactive Membrane Synthesis

                              Bioactive Fiber Synthesis

                              Bioactive Bead Synthesis

                              Oil-Spill Clean-Up
Figure 28. Potential Applications of Enzymes in Environmentally Benign Chemical Processing


                                         41

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           Substrate     Catalyst      Rate         Temperature
                                     Constant
                                     IVT sec
           Ethyl Butyrate    H20          1CT5            100
            (Hydrolysis)
                          OH'          KT1            25
                        Pig Liver        104            25
                        Esterase
           Enzyme      Substrate     Product      Enzyme Catalyzed Rate
                                                  Un-Catalyzed Rate
           Hexokinase    Glucose, ATP  Glucose-6-P       > 1010
           Phosphorylase Glucose-P,    Glycogenn+1        > 1011
                        Glycogenn
           Alcohol       Ethanol, NAD  Acetaldehyde      > 109
               Figure 29.  Enzymatic Enhancement of Chemical Reaction Rates
                             (Source: Dr. Alan Russell.)

esterase increased the rate of ethyl butyrate hydrolysis by 8 orders of magnitude
compared with a hydroxide catalyst. Other enzymes have been demonstrated to
increase reaction rates between 9 and 11 orders of magnitude in comparison
withuncatalyzed rates for a variety of other types of biochemical reactions,
including phosphorylation reactions, polymerizations, and acetaldehyde
production.

       Next, supercritical fluids may be used as solvents  to carry out biochemical
reactions.  Thermodynamic properties of supercritical fluids, which are gases
compressed to a level at which they behave as fluids, offer more degrees of
freedom than can be obtained using conventional solvents.  Although supercritical
                                      42

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   fluids have been used in extraction processes, their use as solvents for biochemical
   reactions is relatively new. The advantage of supercritical fluids is that
   separations can be made markedly more efficient and inexpensive by changing the
   pressure at the end of a reaction to convert the solvent to a gas.

         Figure 30 shows an example of the potential value of supercritical fluids as
  solvents for enzyme-catalyzed reactions.  A polymerization reaction that  Alan
                            CC13CH2 -
                                   0      Bis(2,2,2-trichloroethyl) Adipate
                                             CH,CC13
                                HOCH,
                                        "CH,OH
                                        LJPASE
                                               1,4-butanediol
                       HOHC,
                               FURTHER POLYMERIZATION
                   Figure 30.  Lipase-Catalyzed Polymerization Reaction
                             (Source: Dr. Alan Russell.)
Russell has been exploring where an adipate and a butanediol are exposed to a
lipase that promotes the polymerization reaction is depicted.  When using
supercritical fluoro-form as a solvent, it is possible to control the reaction to
                                      43

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produce polymers of a defined molecular weight (Figure 31).  In this system, the
polymer grows as a function of time, but changing pressure of the supercritical
fluid changes solubility of the polymer, eventually causing it to precipitate out of
solution. Thus, it is possible to generate polymers of any desired molecular
weight simply by adjusting the pressure under which the reaction is conducted.

       A third example of potential biosynthetic applications of enzymes deals
with use of enzymes on solid supports as catalysts for gaseous substrates (Figure
32).  This approach is especially useful for oxidation-reduction reactions, where a
proton acceptor or exchanger must be present.  In a redox reaction, the enzyme is
supported on a solid matrix to which some type of solvent or fluid also adsorbs,
and the reactant is present in the gas phase. The advantage of this system is that
the nicotinamide cofactor stays with the enzyme and can be recovered for reuse.
As a result,  this expensive cofactor can be recycled, whereas in an aqueous system
the cofactor would be lost.

       A final example involves benign synthesis that does not use a catalyst at all
- i.e., a system in which the reactants themselves are the liquid phase.  To
illustrate this concept, consider a  reaction in which methyl methacrylate and
hexanol are mixed together as pure liquids (Figure 33).  When the lipase catalyst
is  added to the mixture, methacrylate can be separated out and the remaining
reactants can be recycled.  Thus,  in this system, a concentrated form of reactants
is  used to generate a concentrated product without unwanted by-products.

       In summary, this presentation has focused on three main ideas:
         For biochemical engineering to have a significant impact on industrial
         processes, it must function on a scale capable of generating products in
         large volumes, which for most industrial chemicals is in the millions of
         pounds range.
                                     44

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                             *  Enzyme
                             I  Monomers
                      CHKHKH Soluble Polymer

                               Precipitated Polymer
                        INCREASING PRESSURE
    a  a
            0»
                           Q»
                                                   D*O»O-BJ
MKMKOwO-fJ
 Dw
Raactor after
completion of
biocAUlytic
polymerization
                                       o»
                                       0*0*
                                       CHHHKrt
                Molecular Weight Distribution ofSolubU (S) and Solid (P) Phtun
Pressure
(p«i)
900
1600
2400
3000
Molecular
Weight of the
Soluble
Polymer
•987
1424
2586
2849
Average
Molecular
Weight and
Diapenity of the
Soluble Polymer
"937 (1.07)
1037 (1.11)
1371 (1.18)
1762 (1.23)
Average Molecular
Weight and
Diipenity of the
Precipitated Polymer
•1020 (1.02)
1677 (1.03)
2774 (1.03)
3357 (1.05)
The alcoholyaia of bis<2,2,2-trichloroethyi) adipate by 1,4-butanediol catalyzed by

porcine pancreatic  lipaae  impended in fluorofonn at 50  "C.   The  error in

determination  of polymer molecular weight* i« ±5  %.   «The extraction* for the

biocatalysia experiment performed at 900 p*i wen performed in a supercritical fluid

extractor in which the minimum preMure achievable ia 1200 pai.
    Figure 31. Relationship Between Pressure and Degree of Polymerization
                        in a Supercritical Solvent System
                          (Source:  Dr. Alan Russell.)
                                       45

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                 OH
3-methyl-2-butcn-1 -ol
               NAD
             3-methyl-2-butenal
 Bakers yeast
    alcohol
dehydrogenasc
NADH
                                   Uopropanol
         Conversion:  Avg 8% over 150 hours
          Figure 32. Enzymatic Catalysis in the Gas Phase
        Methyl Methacrylate
                2-Ethyl Hexanol
                                Upase (Candida cylindracea )
              2-Ethylhexyl Methacrylate

                 $/#
                                          Methanol
          Figure 33. Enzymatic Catalysis in Pure Reactants
                             46

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        •  Problems with dilute aqueous chemistry remain to be resolved, but
          promising methods for dealing with these problems have begun to be
          developed.
        •  With development of new technologies, enzymes can be used as catalysts
          in organic syntheses, but these applications will require new thinking on
          the part of industrial chemists and chemical engineers.
 Regarding the last point, the most likely scenario for broader use of enzymes as
 catalysts involves joint efforts between the traditional organic chemistry industry
 and the emerging biotechnology industry.  In this scenario, the smaller
 biotechnology companies could create and provide the needed catalysts to larger
 chemical companies engaged in industrial-scale organic synthesis.
 Benign Engineering Approaches
       C. Thomas Sciance, DuPont Experimental Station

       The concept of engineering paradigms was defined as "patterns that
 determine the rules of the game."  Since ideas and concepts outside the prevailing
 paradigm usually remain invisible,  behaviors that have been rewarded in the past
 are reinforced even in the face of considerable evidence that the future will be
 different.

       Figure 34 outlines the paradigms that have defined the boundaries of
 chemical engineering over the past several decades.  For many years, chemical
 engineering was dominated by a growth-centered paradigm in which rewards came
 from increasing capacity and solving problems quickly. Under this paradigm,  it
was often better to proceed simultaneously on several possible solutions to a
technical problem rather than to waste time attempting to determine which
solution was best.  Technical mistakes were corrected during subsequent
expansions, and economies of scale dominated capital decisions.
                                     47

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               GROWTH
               • Speed
               • Expandability and flexibility
               • Economies of scale
               • Add capacity
               EFFICIENCY
               • Reduce fixed costs (people, physical plant)
               • Reduce variable costs (materials, energy)
               • Economies of scope
               • Rationalize capacity
               SUSTAINABLE ECONOMIC GROWTH
               • Globalization (production, markets, labor)
               • Life cycle thinking (materials, process, products)
               • Strategic growth
               • Minimal environmental impact
               • Economies of balance
                    Figure 34. Evolution of Engineering Paradigms

      In recent years, as the global chemical industry suffered hard times, the
growth-centered paradigm was supplanted by a new paradigm centered on
efficiency.  This new paradigm emphasized differentiation of products through
quality and customer service, reducing costs, and various types of rationalization
such as disinvestment, mergers, and downsizing.  Under the efficiency-centered
paradigm, excess capacity became a burden rather than an opportunity. At the
same time, rewards were more likely to come from cost-conscious management
than from economies of scale. As a result, technical options and innovations have
been studied more carefully and implemented more cautiously than in the past.

      Chemical engineering is currently under-going another paradigm shift, this
time to a paradigm that has sustainable economic growth as its central organizing
                                     48

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 principle. Rewards in the next decade and beyond will come from strategic
 thinking that leads to an economically viable compromise between business and
 societal needs.  Technology will play an essential role in this process, but it will
 have to take into account many more variables than ever before.  Under this
 paradigm, effective management will consist of learning how to cooperate
 effectively in order to compete more effectively.  A multidisciplinary approach will
 be required, not only because of the complexity of the technology but also
 because of the variety of interests that must be considered.  At the same time,
 new tools and techniques will be needed to improve  the selection and execution
 of research and development programs.

       To describe the situation, testimony to a Congressional committee by
 Braden Allenby of AT&T in May  of 1994 is quoted:

       In leading industrial firms, we are moving conceptually beyond end-of-pipe
       and emission control technologies, beyond even pollution prevention and
       waste reduction programs.  It is not that we are  reducing such activities in
       an absolute sense. Rather,  we are recognizing that they are not, by
       themselves, adequate to allow us to  live in equilibrium with natural
       systems.  They are an important dimension of the solution, but by no
       means the only one.
       This understanding is leading to a fundamental change in the way the
       environmental impacts of materials and products are being managed
       around the world. Most importantly, it is now clear that any
       environmental assessment of materials must include consideration of
       impacts across the lifecycle of materials - from their mining or initial
       production, to their use in commerce and products and return of the
       components or materials to  the economy.  Fixating on any single lifecycle
       state of a material runs the risk of failing to recognize more serious risks
       posed  at other stages.

The  logical conclusion is that decisions in the future will have to take into account
a longer time horizon and a much broader scope than was ever necessary in the
past.  This necessity may in turn lead to some reversal of the trend toward
                                     49

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decision-making at lower and lower levels of industrial organizations.  In the
future, it will be necessary for those in leadership positions to view a wider field
and operate in a longer time horizon than is currently the norm.

       A graph from a report prepared by a Dutch government group studying
the time horizon likely to be involved in achieving the development of sustainable
technology is illustrated by Figure 35. This group found that, starting from a new
situation, it may take 10 years or more to progress to some form of sustainable
technology.  From an existing  situation, several decades may be required.  Using
DuPont's five adipic acid  plants as an example, it would cost billions of dollars
and take more than a decade to replace this investment, even if technologically
and economically attractive options were currently available.
  bmlsslon
  level
           100
            75
            SO
            25
                      'ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION'
                                   curb
                          'END OF PIPE1
                               shift
                                'PROCESS-INTEGRATED'
                                        adapt
                                                     'SUSTAINABLE TECHNOLOGY*
                                                               renewal
                         10
25
                          starting  from the existing situations
                          starting  from new situations
           Figure 35. Predicted Time Course for Developing Sustainable Technologies
               (Source:  "Sustainable Development: a Challenge to Technology.r'
                         J.LA. Jansen and Ph. J. Vergragt, 6-92.
                  Ministry for Housing, Physical Planning and Environment.
                        Technical University of Delft, Netherlands.)
                                       50

-------
       It is important to keep in mind that not every good technical idea that
 would improve the environment is economically viable.  Without economic
 viability a  good technical idea is not a technology at all - it is merely a fact or a
 bit of knowledge.  Clearly there is room for technical improvements that are both
 environmentally advanced and that meet the economic criteria necessary to
 implement them.  Economic growth and environmental protection are inextricably
 linked, however, and competent engineers are going to have to learn how to deal
 with both.

       One area having a great deal of potential value is generic science related
 to pollution prevention.  The only example of truly generic research in this area
 that a group of chemists and chemical engineers at a meeting several years ago of
 the Council for Chemical Research (CCR) were able  to cite, concerned work at
 UCLA on avoiding making aerosols in the range of droplet sizes that are difficult
 to collect.  Concluding that most waste prevention or avoidance work is extremely
 process-specific, and that prevention is both conceptually and intellectually a more
 difficult problem than clean-up, the CCR and NSF jointly published a list of areas
 in which  basic pollution prevention research is needed. Items listed in the joint
program  announcement included the following:

      •  New  chemistries and methodologies for on-demand, on-site production
         and consumption of toxic intermediates for use in manufacturing
      •  New, more highly selective catalysts to increase product yield and reduce
         by-product formation in chemical manufacturing
      •   Low-energy separation technologies for feedstock purification and
         recycling

      •   Improved  membranes and membrane/molecular  sieve  technologies that
        integrate transport and reaction  to enhance specificity
      •  Alternative chemical syntheses that bypass toxic feedstocks and solvents
        such as chloro- and nitrocarbons
                                    51

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       •  New processing methods that eliminate production of hard-to-entrap
         micron-sized aerosols

       •  Alternative chemical syntheses that eliminate or combine process steps,
         resulting in a net reduction of pollutants

       •  Design of novel low-temperature or other energy-efficient methods for
         chemical synthesis and processing
      Approaching the same problem from a slightly different perspective, the

Chemical Manufacturers' Association (CMA) has published as part of its

Responsible Care™ series a book called Designing Pollution Prevention into the

Process.  Whereas the CCR/NSF list begins from technologies and their possible

applications, the CMA document contains an appendix listing pollution prevention
ideas from a perspective that is more process-oriented (see Figure 36).  This

appendix is another good source for stimulating thinking about waste prevention.


      One of the most difficult tasks in process design is asking the right

questions to begin with. Three areas were presented in which asking the right

questions is particularly important:
         Fundamental beliefs and assumptions (e.g., What business are we in?
         Why are we making this product? Why do we use the materials we do?)

         Factors that govern investment behavior (e.g., Is management willing to
         innovate?  Is capital available?  What is the time scale?  Is there an
         investment hurdle rate?

         What we "know" that may not be right (e.g., What were our past
         "failures" and have the reasons for failure changed?  Could cooperation
         help?  Could leveraging  help?)
The Strategic Decisions Group (which attempts to apply mathematical methods
such as decision tree analysis to decisions about research and development)
advocates separating the probability of technical success from the probability of


                                     52

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           Pollution Prevention Ideas

              Byproduct/Coproducts
                 Quantity and Quality
                 Uses and Outlets
              Catalysts
                 Composition
                 Preparation and Handling
                 Effectiveness
              Intermediate Products
                 Quantity and  Quality
                 Properties
              Process Conditions/Configuration
                 Temperature
                 Pressure
                 Corrosive Environment
                 Batch vs. Continuous Operations
                 Process Operations/Designs
Product
   Process Chemistry
   Product Formulation
Raw Materials
   Purity
   Vapor Pressure
   Water Solubility
   Toxicity
   Regulatory
   Form of Supply
   Handling and Storage
Waste Streams
   Quantity and Quality
   Composition
   Properties
   Disposal
            Figure 36. Pollution Prevention Ideas (Source:  Chemical Manufacturers'
                 Association, Designing Pollution Prevention into the Process)

 commercial success/given technical success.  If the probability is low that a

 technical success will be implemented in the industrial R&D community, it usually

 makes more sense to look for something else to do.


       An example of a situation in which benign engineering played a significant

 role in process selection, is DuPont's experience in synthesizing adiponitrile, a

 nylon intermediate.  Thirty years ago, adiponitrile was made by chlorinating

 butadiene and then reacting the product with sodium cyanide to make adiponitrile

 and salt.  The selection of butadiene as  a  feedstock got the process off to an

 environmentally good start, since butadiene is a by-product of ethylene

manufacturing. On the other hand, buying caustic and chlorine, making salt, and
                                       53

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then throwing it away is neither an especially cost-effective nor a very green thing
to do.

      DuPont had been trying since 1939 to directly produce hydrocyanate
butadiene, but the company was unable to produce a linear isomer.  It was not
until they tried  a new type of catalysis which had not previously been industrially
applied  that this problem was solved.  This process, which was the first industrial
application of coordination catalysis, eliminated the use of chlorine and the salt
waste stream.  As a result, this process at one time comprised the most valuable
set of patents in DuPont's possession.  This invention led DuPont to embark on
the largest commercial process development on new chemistry in the company's
history.  Over a short period of time, plants using the older technology fell off
one by one, and the new process was adopted throughout the company. As with
any  entirely new process,  of course, a whole host of other problems arose that
required a constant stream of further innovations over the next 25 years - but the
process  remains a fine example of the fact that economic and environmental
concerns do not have to oppose one another.  In fact, it is the continual stream of
innovation and  creativity rather than the invention or catalyst per se that makes or
breaks such a process conversion.

      The importance of thinking as far into the future as possible is illustrated
by the various catalysts and reactor types that have been used in the
hydrogenation of adiponitrile to produce hexamethylenedi-amine.  DuPont had
concentrated on developing a cheap high-pressure catalyst that minimized the cost
of synthesis but, because of its slightly lower yield, required a large refining train.
One competitor used  a very expensive high-pressure catalyst that had
exceptionally high yield and thus minimized the refining investment.  Another
competitor used a slurry process that was intermediate in yield, minimizing energy
consumption and investment. Ah1 of these companies improved their processes
for years, and all became economically equivalent.  From  the perspective of 50
                                     54

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 years ago, all of these processes seemed about the same. From today's
 perspective, however, the high-yield process that does not make impurities to
 begin with would certainly be preferred.  Because of their early investment
 decisions and hard-won expertise in their own processes, however, all companies
 are locked in to continuing their current methods.  The point is that once a
 company starts on a particular path of capital investment, the choices of
 generations of successors may be significantly constrained. Minimizing such
 constraints requires thinking as far into the future as possible before selecting a
 process.

       Another example of new process development is the process developed for
 producing tetrahydrofuran (THF). Because the existing process required energy-
 intensive and reactive starting materials and because it was expensive,  DuPont
 wanted to develop a new process for THF synthesis.  This example is particularly
 relevant to this workshop since the process selected required innovations in
 engineering as well as in chemistry.

      As Figure 37 illustrates, one intermediate in the THF pathway is maleic
 anhydride. Using a fixed bed system, this compound can be made from readily
 available hydrocarbons, but the fixed bed process has a number of limitations,
including the high cost of the fixed bed reactor.  To address this problem, DuPont
engineers determined that three major new inventions or developments would be
required:

      •  A transport bed reactor that would allow the reaction to take place
         while at the same time using a flywheel mechanism to regenerate the
         catalyst

      • An attrition-resistant catalyst (since the catalyst would be moving around
        so much in the system)
      • A hydrogenation  catalyst for the final step of the reaction
                                    55

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                               H
                         H,C'
                                  H
H,(T  H
                                 T



                            l^-X^r
                     Fixed Bed Limitations
                  • 1-1.5% butane in air
                  • Single pass-high conversion
                  • 45-50% yield
                  • Expensive reactors
    Figure 37. Limitations Inherent to the Production of Maleic Acid via a Fixed Bed Reactor

The relationship of these advances to the proposed synthetic pathway are

illustrated in Figure 38.
CH3CH2CH2CH3
1 VPO
HO2CCH=CHCO2H
H2 1 Pd/Re/C
Q

Three Major Inventions
Transport Bed Reactor
Attrition Resistant Catalyst
Hydrogenation Catalysts For
Aqueous Maleic Acid






             Figure 38.  Innovations Required for the New Synthetic Pathway
                                 56

-------
       Figure 39 illustrates the role of lattice oxygen chemistry in the new
 synthetic pathway. In essence, the process involves pumping oxygen through an
        Reaction
           VxOy + C4H10 — VxOy_7  +

        Regeneration
                   VxOy.7  +  3.5 02	 VxOy
                Metal oxide acts as oxygen source
        Figure 39.  The Role of Lattice Oxygen Chemistry in the New Synthetic Pathway

oxide catalyst and then regenerating it. That is, the metal oxide is used to pump
oxygen into the butane, and then separately - but in the same piece of equipment
- is regenerated. The reactor itself is illustrated in Figure 40. Conceptually, the
reactor is relatively simple; the reaction itself takes place in one part of the
reactor, while the catalyst is regenerated in another part of the reactor and fed
back into the reaction  chamber.

      Advantages of the riser reactor over fluidized bed  oxidation reactions
include advances in both the safety and the greenness of the process. The
incorporation of separate catalyst redox zones  offers independent control. In
addition, selectivity is better at higher conversion, and oxygen levels are lower
                                    57

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          Off-gas
Maleic Anhydride I
                                                  Stripper
          Standpipe
                                          Riser
                                           Butane
             Figure 40. Riser Reactor Developed for the New Synthetic Pathway

(see Figure 41). At the same time, the riser reactor offers a more concentrated
product stream, high throughput, a low catalyst inventory, and a reduced risk of
explosions. Its main limitations lie in the operational complexity of the system,
which is a problem only if the complexity precludes a solution, and in the need
for an attrition-resistant catalyst.  To meet the latter need, DuPont has developed
a  special encapsulated catalyst with an attrition-resistant shell that still permits
the mass transfer required.

      At least at the pilot level, the new process clearly works better than the old
one. Getting everything to keep working as intended, however, is an enormous
engineering problem - particularly when it comes to scale-up. DuPont is
currently building a plant in Spain for industrial-scale testing of the new process.
                                      58

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                      Figure 41.  Riser versus Fluid Bed Oxidation

 This exercise is expensive, but if the process works as envisioned it will offer an
 important new option for engineers to apply in the design of other alternative
 synthetic processes.

       As a final example of process selection, the alternative methods of
 manufacturing hydrogen cyanide (HCN) come to mind. The two methods that
 are widely used in industry are the Andrussow process, which is the most
 economical for large-scale production of HCN, and the Degussa process, which is
 most appropriate for intermediate-scale production (see Figure 42). Although
 DuPont uses the Andrussow process for its own HCN production, some of the
 company's process development people have begun to think about  the needs of
 small-scale HCN users. Although HCN is a useful, reactive material, it is
poisonous and will explosively polymerize if allowed to become too acidic or too
                                    59

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basic.  If shipped, it must be inhibited, which may introduce problems related to
removing the inhibitor.  In addition, HCN is difficult to make because it is a very
endothermic reaction carried out at high temperature. Thus, to accommodate the
needs of small-scale users, the ideal process would provide a controllable, safe
process for making small amounts of HCN at the point of use.

       The process that DuPont engineers have proposed for this purpose is
depicted in the lower portion of Figure 42. The essence of the process is using
microwave energy to generate the necessary heat in situ.   The idea is that if the
heat can be generated in a fixed bed, it should be  possible to make HCN with no
waste streams and no need to recycle ammonia. The process should be relatively
easy to control, and should greatly reduce  inventory.  In fact, if the reaction is
done in a carbon bed, only ammonia  need be fed to the system continuously.
Although it is not yet clear whether this process can be made economical, it is
another example of how thinking in terms  of balance might lead to entirely new
synthetic pathways.

       It is not usual for industrial engineers to be given the opportunity to
develop and commercialize completely new processes.  It is far more common for
innovation to be required within the constraints of an existing system. For this
reason, a list of individual process improvements that might be expected to
broaden the range of environmentally attractive and economically viable choices
available to engineers confronted with this type of task follows:

       •  Improvements related to feedstocks
       •  Improvements related to ordinary chemical processes (e.g., mechanical
         separations, optimum networks/model-based control)
       •  Improvements related to unusual reactions or reaction conditions (e.g.,
         supercritical water oxidation, "Bioprocessing Plus")
                                     60

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 Degussa vs Andrussow HCN
Degussa (AH°298= -60 kcals/mole)
CH4 + NH3	^  HCN + 3H2
• external heating and heat exchangers
• high yield and investment
• medium scale
Andrussow (AH°298= - -50 kcals/mole)
CH4 + NH3 +  [CyN2]	^ HCN + [H2O]
• internal combustion for heat
• lower yield and investment
• high capacity but more waste
   Microwave HCN Process

    CH4 + NH3  	^ HCN + 3H2
             1200° C, Pt/AI2O3

Advantages
»Quick startup and shutdown (rapid heating)
• On-site production and consumption
• Reduced potential for exposure
> High yield (>95%)
1 Essentially no waste stream

      Figure 42. Alternative Processes for HCN Production
                  61

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         Improvements related to unusual separations (e.g., pressure-recovery
         desalination, solids transfer columns, melt crystallizations, physical and
         physicochemical separations)
         Methods of avoiding separations (e.g., heterogeneous versus
         homogeneous catalysis, chemical reactions, avoiding or substituting
         solvents, precise reaction control)
It is recommended that government and private industry select some of the more
promising of these possibilities for concerted joint efforts that in many cases
would need to be both long-term and multidisciplinary.  Candidate projects
attractive in this regard include developing alternative methods of producing a
vacuum, producing better tools both for modeling and developing processes that
already have environmental considerations embedded in them, promoting
research into advanced oxidation treatment systems (particularly supercritical
water oxidation), developing chemically resistant polymeric membranes and
tailored asymmetric structures for unusual separations, and investigating the
applicability of solvent-free melting and freezing purifications to the chemical
industry.

       Specific examples of process improvements that are already being
addressed are the effects of feed purity and conversion, the use of heterogeneous
catalysts, and process improvements related to the treatment of biosludge.

       Figure 43 shows the effect of inert substances in feedstocks. In this case,
inert substances comprise 10% of the feedstock in a process that runs a 50%
conversion.  The need to purge inert substances from the feedstock causes an
additional 10% loss of feedstock materials. Because of this, the reaction system is
three times as large as it might otherwise be, and a great deal of energy is
consumed merely circulating the impure feedstock through the system.  Since low
feed purity increases losses,  equipment costs, energy consumption, and waste, the
use of a purer feedstock might well be worth the extra cost.  Similarly, since low
                                     62

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         100 IbF
          10lbl
                                               Purge® 50% Inert
90  100  100
P + F + I
                                                            90P
       n   Low conversion increases equipment cost
           and energy consumption.
       n   Low feed purity increases losses, equipment
           cost, energy consumption and waste.
                  Figure 43. Effect of Feed Purity and Conversion

conversion increases equipment costs and energy consumption, higher conversion
might be worth some loss of yield or investment in a different catalyst.

      While homogeneous catalysts are often very selective, the need to recover
and recycle the catalyst and solvents can often outweigh the advantages of a
homogeneous system.  Because of this,  heterogeneous catalysts may be preferable
in some situations, particularly those involving acid-based conversions. Figure 44
shows a simple  fixed bed system of the  sort described earlier for small-scale
production of hydrogen cyanide.  Although somewhat more complex, a slurry
system would provide many of the same benefits.
                                  63

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                 HOMOGENEOUS CATALYSTS
             Reactant
             Catalyst
             + Solvent   j i
                                                  Product to
                                                  Purification
                                                Separation
                                                Train
                                                  Purge
              HETEROGENEOUS CATALYSTS
                               Catalyst
            Reactant
Product to
Purification
                Figure 44.  Homogeneous versus Heterogeneous Catalysts

      In the area of biosludge treatment, Figure 45 is a flow chart illustrating a
process currently being contemplated for the acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of
biosludge. As a step toward DuPont's corporate goal of zero-discharge
processing, this process could be used for the treatment within plant boundaries
of biosludge that may contain various industrial contaminants such as trace
metals.  The goal is to eliminate the purge stream.

      A good rule of thumb in new process design appears to be to seek
methods of solving problems that make the process simpler rather than more
complicated.  It might  be very fruitful to go back and  take a second look at
processes that were developed but not exploited in the past because they were not
considered economically viable at the tune they were developed.  Many of these
                                    64

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                    ACID CATALYZED HYDROLYSIS OF BIOSLUDGE:
                              PROCESS CONCEPT
    6500 T/rt WATER
    45 T/d BOD'
    66T/dCOD
                RECYCLE
                0.5 T/0 SOLIDS
                3.0 T/d COD
                132 T/d WATER
                N2. C02 ?
CONCENTRATE AND
PURGE TO INCINERATION
OR LANDFILL
0.5 T/d SOLIDS
12 T/d WATER
                                                              MINERAL ACID
                            HYDROLYSIS REACTOR
             COOLER
                           180 C. 5 MIN. MINERAL ACID
              Figure 45. Process Concept: Acid-Catalyzed Hydrolysis ofBioshidge


processes may be much more appealing in the context of current goals and

priorities. Most important is the need to expand the scope of our thinking to

include larger, more complex systems, more disciplines, and a longer time scale.

Although attention to unit parts and unit operations will remain an important

part of chemical engineering, the demands of sustainable development will
increasingly require this broader view.
                                        65

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Computer-Based Methods for Finding Green Synthesis
Pathways and Industrial Processes for Manufacturing Chemicals:
A View From 10.000 Feet
      Peter P. Radecki, Center for Clean Industrial and Treatment
      Technologies/Michigan Technological University

      A graphic depicting the trade-offs between unit costs and pollution
prevention associated with various types of approaches to the problem of making
chemical manufacturing processes greener is shown in Figure 46. Most current
approaches fall into the general category of management practices.  These
approaches, which include pollution audit activities such as inventory control,
materials  management, and energy utilization analysis, may reduce unit
production costs in some instances but may increase these costs in others.  At the
                                          APPLICATION OF
                                              EXISTING
                                          TECHNOLOGIES
MANAGEMENT
  PRACTICES
                                                       NEW
                                                 TECHNOLOGIES
                                                 AND INNOVATIVE
                                                USES OF EXISTING
                                                 TECHNOLOGIES
                           Pollution Prevention
                      Figure 46. Clean Technology Targets
                                  66

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same time, these approaches offer only modest improvements from the
perspective of pollution prevention.

       The goals of the workshop are more closely related to the right side of the
diagram - that is, finding ways of applying existing technologies that will provide
large payoffs in pollution prevention while maintaining production costs at an
acceptable level.  The ideal that we are moving toward is represented in the
lower-right quadrant of the diagram - a situation in which the development of
new technologies or the innovative use of existing technologies enhances pollution
prevention while at the same time decreasing the production costs of the material
in question.   Thus, the ultimate goal of benign process development is to achieve
source reduction in such a way that unit production costs remain constant or go
down.

       Current reality is far from this ideal.  In many cases, for example, advances
in industrial process design are held as corporate secrets. As a result, what
scientists in academic or government laboratories consider state-of-the-art may
actually be quite different from what is already being implemented in industry.  In
addition, the results of a Hoechst Celanese study in which 80% of about 200
pollution prevention projects spanning a whole range of chemical processes were
found to have a high cost impact.  Thus, while maintaining or even reducing
production costs is a goal of green chemistry, the reality is that most of the
projects we are talking about are going to cost money.  Processes described as
"the low-hanging fruit" have already been picked by the large chemical companies
who have  been proactive in the area of process pollution prevention.  Despite
impressive engineering capability, going beyond these projects is not likely to
occur on a large scale in the near future due to the combination of market forces,
structural  barriers, political considerations, and emphasis on short-term funding
that all come to bear on the issue.
                                     67

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       Two of the main barriers to the sort of holistic development that is
 necessary to attain the goal of environmentally benign manufacturing are the
 "culture of verification" that currently pervades our thinking about environmental
 issues, and the emphasis on highly quantitative, single-medium, chemical-by-
 chemical measurements that characterize our thinking about monitoring and
 regulation.  These inhibit environmental impact-based approaches and favor low-
 risk, end-of-pipe solutions to environmental problems.  Some means of measuring
 progress is needed, and the techniques needed to measure progress in pollution
 prevention may be very different from those developed to measure progress in
 areas related to chemical-by-chemical monitoring and regulation.

       Another important barrier to holistic development has to do with
 corporate realities in an age of compliance.  In some ways this is related to the
 issue of verification, in that monies spent on chemical-by-chemical monitoring and
 reporting are not available for long-range research and development or other
 types of green planning.  This is true not only in industry, but also in the public
 sector, since  the tax dollars required to run federal and state environmental
 agencies charged with establishing regulations and monitoring compliance are  also
 part of the financial equation. The focus on compliance also results in a
 corporate structure that separates treatment and environmental expertise from
 process design expertise.  With the relevant individuals in different parts of a
 company, it should not be surprising that environmental considerations are not
 routinely incorporated in new process  design.  The costs of compliance induce
 investment in oil producing countries and elsewhere to turn oil into chemicals.
 Increasingly,  overseas interests are providing the value added to basic resources
 instead of this being done in the United States.

      A series of diagrams outlining the major stages of new process
 development  and implementation are shown in Figure 47. It is estimated that
construction of entirely new plants, and therefore, the synthesis steps shown in
                                     68

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             SYNTHESIS STEPS
             STATEMENT OF NEED
                MOLECULAR
                DESCRIPTION
                SYNTHESIS
                 PATHWAY
               IDENTIFICATION
                SYNTHESIS
                 REACTOR
                 SCALE-UP
        INDUSTRIAL PROCESS DESIGN
           LARGE SCALE PLANNING
                CONCEPTUAL
                 PROCESS
                  DESIGN
                PRELIMINARY
                  DESIGN
                  DETAIL
                  DESIGN
               CONSTRUCTION
           INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION
          FEEDSTOCK
          PRODUCTION
Figure 47. Stages of Process Development and Implementation

                        69

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this figure, account for about 5% of capital expenditures in any given year, while

industrial process design and production in plant revamps account for the bulk of

the remaining 95%.  This distribution reflects the fact that it is not often the case

that one gets the opportunity to design a new process from the ground up. Much

more common are situations in which engineers are asked to modify an existing

system so that the system will fulfill more or different needs.



      Figure 48 lists computer tools  that might be of use during the preliminary

stages such as molecular description,  synthesis pathway identification, and

synthesis reactor scale-up.  Although  in this diagram the computer-based

approaches and the development steps to which they apply generally correlate, a

direct, one-to-one relationship does not necessarily hold.
              STATEMENT OF NEED
                MOLECULAR
                DESCRIPTION
                   SYNTHESIS
                    PATHWAY
                IDENTIFICATION
                   SYNTHESIS
                    REACTOR
                   SCALE-UP
Molecular Structure Prediction
Chem/Phys/Bip Property Databases
Toxicity Modeling
Marketing Information Resources
Chem/Phys/Bio Property Prediction


Retrosynthetic Pathway Prediction

Synthetic Pathway Prediction
Catalyst Design Tools
Catalytic Pollutant Prediction (Rudd)
Kinetics Equation Solvers
Thermodynamic Modeling Tools
Metabolic Pathway Descriptors
Electrolyte System Modeling

"Generic" Reactor Modeling Tools
Neural Networks
Dynamic Modeling
Control System Design Tools
    Figure 48. Computer-Based Tools for Use in the Earfy Planning Stages of Process Design


                                      70

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       In terms of the computer-based tools available for use in the early
planning stages of process design, there is a distinction between those that are
available  for more or less generic application and those more likely to be
developed in-house and considered highly proprietary. Examples of the former
include molecular structure prediction packages and consortia-funded databases
of physical-chemical biological properties.  When the development process
reaches the stage of catalyst design, design of the reactor itself, or design of
control systems, however, computer-based tools tend to be "home grown"
packages  developed  by academic or industrial researchers for use in a specific
manufacturing situation; as  such, these tools are much less likely to be available
outside the sponsoring company. There is  a fair amount of movement in the
direction  of creating generic reactor modeling tools that would  allow chemical
engineers to experiment with variables such as reaction conditions, the inclusion
of additives or inhibitors,  and so on. With such tools, engineers could relatively
easily evaluate a half-dozen different types of reactors to determine which might
work best for a given synthetic pathway.

       Computer-based tools that might be used during the industrial process
design stage are listed in Figure 49. For the most part, the goal of the large-scale
planning tools is to allow  a means of taking a proactive look at potential impacts
over the 40- or 50- or 100-year lifetime of the contemplated process.  This is an
important advance over existing programs most of which involve after-the-fact
analysis of problems only  after it is too late to do anything about them.

       As a specific example of the types of tools envisioned as particularly useful,
a project to develop  a program which would enable corporate planners to view a
matrix of industrial processes used to manufacture a given feedstock from the
perspective of an environmental inventory has been proposed.  This matrix would
allow planners, particularly those with multinational operations, to determine
where it might make economic sense to reduce output from one plant and
                                     71

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               LARGE SCALE PLANNING
                      CONCEPTUAL
                       PROCESS
                         DESIGN
                     PRELIMINARY
                         DESIGN
                            t
                         DETAIL
                         DESIGN
                    CONSTRUCTION
Land Use Planning Tools
GIS Data Presentations
Chem. Industry Planning (Rudd)
Regulatory Databases
Clean Process Advisory System
                                               EPA/DOE P2 Module (planned)
Flowsheet Simulators
Batch Processing Tools
Separation Modeling
Technology Vendor Models
Stochastic Tools
Pinch Technology Modeling
Control System Design Tools
Construction Management Tools
Safety and Reporting Aids
          Figure 49. Computer-Based Tools for Use in Industrial-Scale Process Design


 increase output from another.  Similarly, such a matrix would help  identity areas

 in which environmentally-motivated changes in process design are economically

 viable versus areas in which they are not.



       The Clean Process Advisory System is a program through which CenCITT

 and two industrial consortia, the Center for Waste Reduction Technologies and

 the National Center for Manufacturing Sciences, are attempting to  assure that

 information about process options is made more widely available to process

 engineers.  At present, the designer's awareness of options for achieving a

particular process goal are  often limited to information that he or she happens  to

hear about from other process designers. The goal of the Clean Process Advisory

System, which is currently about a year old, is to make available a comprehensive
                                     72

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  list of all the options that are available to achieve a specific goal - for example,
  ways of separating materials which result in less environmental impact.  Thus, for
  example, if someone comes up with a new membrane separation process that
  could be used to replace an energy-consuming distillation process, the Advisory
  System would make this information available to process engineers who may be
  confronted with a parallel situation in which distillation is not the best or most
  desirable way of achieving the targeted separation.

        Another example is a multi-million-dollar, multi-year program that the
  Water and Wastewater Research Division  of the Risk Reduction Engineering
  Laboratory is trying to develop in conjunction with the Department of Energy.
  This program which falls somewhere between conceptual process and preliminary
  design, would attempt to develop a pollution prevention module that could be
  tied to conventional process flow sheet simulators. The availability of such a
  module would make it much easier for environmental considerations to be taken
  into account during each step of the design process.

       Regarding the potential of pinch technology in the context of
 environmentally benign manufacturing, efforts are currently under way to develop
 tools to look at mass exchange in much the same way that pinch technologies for
 energy conservation look at heat exchange.

       Turning to the industrial production  stage, most existing computer-based
 tools apply to this final segment of the development process as  shown in Figure
 50.  Many gains have already been realized  from tools available in the areas of
 pollution auditing, total quality management, and safety assessments.  In the area
 of environmental  impact,  however, most existing packages focus on chronic
 emissions and other problems from an after-the-fact perspective. An important
goal will be to get similar types of information made available for use earlier in
the design process.
                                    73

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                      STARTUP
                          1
                      NORMAL
                    OPERATION
                    FEEDSTOCK
                    PRODUCTION
                      END-USE
                    PRODUCTION
                   i
             REUSE
WASTE
          Recycler Databases
            Dynamic Simulation
            Control & Shutdown Modeling

            Pollution Audit Tools
            Customized Process Simulators
            Empirical Control Modeling
            Safety, HAZOP Tools
            Neural Networks
            General Circulation Models
            TQM Facilitators
            Compliance Reporting Aids
            Exposure-Related Databases

            Inventory Management Tools
Solvent Substitution/Compatibility
Material Selection Aids
Design for Disassembly Tools
Concurrent Engineering Packages
Life Cycle Assessment Tools

  Environmental Fate Modeling
  Toxicity Modeling
  Waste  Inventory Databases
  Remediation Techs Databases
  Treatment Techs Databases
        Figure 50.  Computer-Based Tools for Use During the Industrial Production Stage


      As an example of an area in which many tools are available but integration

is needed, the programs designed to facilitate decisions related to solvent

substitution and solvent compatibility are available. There are at least a half-

dozen different efforts under way in this area, including several at National Labs,

several  at various industrial consortia, and at least one being funded by EPA.

Because these systems were developed in parallel, however, there may be overlap

among them as well as problems related to the fact that the various programs

cannot "talk" to one another.  Currently, the National Center for Manufacturing

Sciences is trying to come up with  a way to tie all of these systems together, but

this is a very costly undertaking.  Better front-end planning might have resulted in

tremendous cost  savings for everyone involved.
                                      74

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        A few more general observations about current computer-based tools can
 be made.  For the most part, existing programs are independent, stand-alone
 tools, each of which can only offer limited benefits in terms of making process
 design more environmentally friendly. In addition, commercial software
 development is going to tend to focus on marketable products, whether or not
 these products address the most important aspects of green process design.  As a
 result, federal funding should be earmarked for programs in areas in which
 market forces alone cannot be expected  to provoke sufficient interest on  the part
 of software developers.

        New releases of commercially available programs generally tend to focus
 on front-end features such as user interface, robustness, and speed. What is
 really needed, however, is advancement of the "workhorse" databases that
 underlie these programs.  Data acquisition programs only rarely have significant
 commercial potential; as a result, almost all currently available tools focus on
 issues of treatment, liability,  compliance, or management.

       The greatest capability of existing  chemical synthesis tools is in dealing
 with high-purity systems.  In  these systems, it is sometimes possible to make
 synthetic and retrosynthetic predictions .related to a single chemical. When it
 comes to predicting the behavior of real-world chemical feedstocks, however, the
 utility of these systems falls off dramatically, even for very  standard feedstocks.  It
 has been only recently that a good surrogate for gasoline has appeared in the
 literature, and that analysis received funding only because there was a great deal
 of interest in leaking underground storage tanks at  the time. The coarseness of
 modeling tools for commodity chemicals is perhaps best reflected in the fact that
 it is not at all uncommon for predictions about the  physical properties of mixed-
 species feedstock components to have errors on the order of 20-30%, and these
 errors are compounded many times over when the predicted values are
propagated through an entire process. Therefore, while molecular modeling
                                    75

-------
techniques and molecular-level surface chemistry tools may be useful in providing
conceptual insights, correlation with actual industrial experience is rare, and
meaningful stochastic analyses are virtually impossible.

      In the area of data acquisition and management, these types of programs
are almost never profitable enough for commercial software houses to develop
and maintain. Those programs that do generate data are almost always consortia-
funded, but it is very difficult to arrange for long-term stewardship of these
programs. When funding is obtained, duplication of efforts is often a problem,
and projects that integrate data and methodologies are exceedingly rare.

      Left to its own, the commercial software industry will continue to focus on
advances in numerical methods, user interfaces, computing power, and
communications and networking - despite the fact that information management
acquisition and retrieval is the area  that  offers the greatest potential for
meaningful advances in this field.  The single biggest obstacle to improved
information management is in developing protocols for effective information
transfer from one unit operation to the next or even from one step to the next
within a single unit operation. The  only such  program he is aware of aware of,
Mr. Radecki  said, is an effort by the Process Data Exchange Institute of AIChE,
which is supported at a level of about $100,000 per year. For comparison, Mr.
Radecki noted he has been told that Japanese spending in this area is currently
about $5 million per year.  Advocating a long-term federal commitment to
environmental information acquisition and management, the current model of
support through short-term projects will not be adequate to maintain the edge the
U.S. has historically held in information management systems.  Information
management strategies would benefit from a more object-oriented approach that
would allow parallel rather than stepwise development of the range of
components needed to address a given technologic problem (see Figure 51).
                                     76

-------
            Q
            D
            CQ
            CO
            <
            LU
            UL
                   CO
                   DC
                   UJ
o
I
z
o
(A
                                                      Validation JW Generalization)
                                                           Cluster n
                                                          Cluster 2
validation     Generalization
                                                          Cluster 1
                                                 H  Validation ) -/Generalization
                                                              TIME
         Figure 51.  Object-Oriented Programming and Concurrent Software Development

       In the search to identify and fill critical R&D needs, the focus should be
on the industrial designer, who is in a far better position than government
regulators or academic scientists to know what type of information would be of
greatest practical benefit.  At the same time, greenness should be measured on a
broad spectrum, so that movement in the right direction is valued over advances
that echo the "bean-counting" approach of monitoring and compliance.

      A summary list of elements that should guide research and development in
the area of green process design follows:
                                      77

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Facilitate the convergence of process design and environmental
understanding within the corporate structure

Make it easy to learn about the green synthesis and process design
options that are already available

Target those information needs not likely to be filled by the market

Emphasize long-term stewardship over short-duration projects

Promote the development of common R&D goals of multiple
organizations
                            78

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                         III. BREAKOUT SESSIONS
       During the morning and early afternoon of the second day of the
 workshop, participants met in four smaller breakout groups to discuss and make
 recommendations regarding research needs in the four general areas addressed by
 the plenary speakers:

       • Benign Organic Synthesis
       • Benign Biosynthesis
       • Benign Engineering Approaches
       • Computer-Based Methods

 In addition to workshop attendees who had preregistered to participate, each
 breakout group included a facilitator responsible for guiding the discussion and
 making sure all participants got a chance to express their views, a chart writer
 responsible for capturing the main points of discussion on a flip chart, and an
 EPA writer responsible for taking detailed  notes of the breakout group
 proceedings.  Minutes of the proceedings for each breakout group are contained
 in Appendix C of this document.

      In making recommendations about needed research and development
within their assigned area, breakout group members were asked to address four
main questions:
         Whether the priority assigned to each area of recommended research
         was high, medium, or low
                                    79

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         Whether the recommended research could be expected to produce an
         impact within a long (>10 years), medium (5-10 years), or short (0-5
         years) timeframe

         Whether the research would most appropriately be undertaken by
         industry (I), government (G), academia (A), or some combination of the
         three

         Whether and why government funding is or is not needed to support the
         recommended research
In addition, workgroups were asked to using a voting procedure to assign relative

priority scores to each area of recommended research.
                                   80

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            IV.  PRESENTATIONS - CLOSING PLENARY SESSION
       Following the completion of individual breakout sessions, the workshop
 reconvened as a whole. During this closing plenary session, representatives from
 each of the workgroups made presentations summarizing the discussions that took
 place and the recommendations reached in their respective groups.
 Workgroup on Engineering Approaches
       Facilitator: A. Ford, Lamar University

       The recommendations of the workgroup are summarized in Table 1. Due
 to its large size, this workgroup was divided into several smaller groups to address
 the various areas of research initially identified by the workgroup. Summaries of
 discussion and findings of each of these groups were presented by members of the
 smaller workgroups.

       P. Biswas presented recommendations regarding research needed in the
 area of high temperature processes.  Examples  of synthetic routes that might be
 good candidates for further investigation are fume silica and titanium pigments
 (both involving gas phase/aerosol synthesis). The rationale for the group's
 recommendation for fundamental study of high-temperature chemistry was the
 need for a better understanding of the mechanisms of both product and pollutant
 formation, which may permit better control of pollutants, despite the instance
 where formation of these by-products cannot be totally avoided.  Finally, an
 emphasis on both research and development was deemed important to permit
control of processes within narrow operating windows and to trigger a shut-down
if the process falls outside the prescribed operating constraints.
                                    81

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        C. Sciance identified "front-end" issues that they considered important:


        •  Define benign technologies and "greenness" to help all parties develop
          and enunciate a "green vision"

        •  Develop tools and technology to facilitate selection of environmental
          alternatives (e.g., life cycle analysis, risk/benefit analysis, environmental
          full-cost accounting, databases and heuristics, methods of quantifying
          "greenness")

        •  Promote progress toward benign processing (e.g., programs addressing
          the unique needs of small companies, programs addressing the common
          needs of related industries, programs identifying suppliers of needed
          equipment,  services, and so on)

        •  Develop innovative ways to promote more  effective cooperation, and
          identify and prioritize research needs to serve  industry; seek
          complimentary roles and responsibilities and work with government to
          secure funding

        • Promote professional and public education and continuing workplace
         training on values, ethics, and sustainability as well as benign
         technologies
       C. Nassaralla presented findings related to waste issues.  By-products were

 selected to mean solid wastes such as incinerator ash, tar, dust, biosolids, and any
 other solid wastes produced during a synthetic process.  The goals of the

 recommended research were to avoid the formation of solid waste or to transform

 the wastes into useful products.  Recognizing that it is currently not economical to
 recycle much of this material, the group felt that diminishing landfill space and

 increasing government regulation were likely to change this situation.


       E. Nauman presented the workgroup's findings related to containment
issues, noting that there was not universal agreement on this point, but a general

opinion among workgroup members that  greenness ought to be judged on the

basis of what goes into and comes out of a plant, not on the basis of what might
                                     87

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 be within the boundaries of the plant itself. Research into ways of "keeping the
 nasties locked up" should be part of an overall program that has zero- or near-
 zero emissions as its goal.

       T. Foust presented the recommendations in the area of catalysis. The
 catalysis group believed work on separations and developing non-toxic catalysts
 was rated as relatively high-risk, while research into methods of achieving higher
 product concentrations and reducing catalyst attrition were rated as lower-risk
 undertakings.

       W. Schmeal presented the recommendations regarding research needs in
 the area of process synthesis.  Creative thinking about process synthesis using a
 rationale for classifying these efforts as long-term should be promoted.
 Attempting to apply pinch computational technologies to the issue of mass
 transfer may be significantly more difficult than applying them to energy
 conservation - which itself was not an easy or  quick process.  Instead of a single
 commodity (energy), an environmentally-based pinch technology approach would
 have to take  substances of many different chemical compositions into account.

       J. Watson presented the workgroup's recommendations in the area of unit
 operations.  Low-energy separations are particularly important in the context of
 biotechnology products, which tend to be made in very dilute solutions.  Examples
 of the  types of physical separations the group thought particularly worthy of
 consideration were (1) removing toxic materials from wastes, (2) removing
 impurities from feedstocks, and (3) various  types of de-misting processes. The
 objective of hybrid unit operations research should be to come up with novel
combinations of unit operations that lower operating costs, reduce energy
consumption, reduce capital requirements, and/or minimize product degradation.
                                     88

-------
       Following the presentations, one workshop participant (Bashkin) expressed
 some confusion about the relationship between fundamental studies of high
 temperature chemistry and benign processing. It was concluded that the products
 of high-temperature chemistry often have very narrow or controlled properties, so
 that even a slight change in processing conditions can significantly affect the
 extent to which solid wastes or toxic emissions are created. A better
 understanding of the chemistry would make it possible to minimize the formation
 of these undesirable products.
 Workgroup on Biosynthesis
       Facilitators:  J. Frost, Michigan State University and
                    P. Elankovan, Michigan Biotechnology Institute

       The recommendations of the Workgroup on Benign Biosynthesis are
 summarized in Table 2.  The workgroup's findings were presented by D.
 Cameron, who noted that there was a fair amount of overlap between the
 recommendations  of this and the Engineering Approaches workgroup. Cameron
 said that this was encouraging, since it probably meant that there really is some
 consensus about the types of projects that should be funded.

       Regarding the group's recommendation that renewable feedstocks be
 investigated, some of the examples discussed were carbohydrates, carbon dioxide,
 methane, mixed organic wastes, and lipids.  Already some companies have begun
 efforts to design specialized starches and lipids for use as chemical feedstocks.  In
 addition, the group felt that more attention should be given to non-carbon-based
 activities of biological systems. Nitrogen fixation, conversion of minerals into
unique materials like  ceramics, and water-splitting reactions represent examples of
biological processes that might be relevant to feedstock selection.
                                     89

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       As discussed by the Biosynthesis group, pathway engineering was defined
 as taking advantage of advances in molecular biology to modify the metabolism of
 organisms, making them better producers of chemicals they already produce or
 causing them to produce chemicals that they otherwise would not. The types of
 work that need to be done in this area, the group felt, have to  do with improving
 the yield, selectivity, tolerance, productivity, titer, and robustness of these
 biologically-based systems. Among tools that would help advance pathway
 engineering, the group discussed  databases providing information on enzymatic
 activity and genes; models capable of integrating thermodynamics, kinetics, and
 stoichiometry; and databases containing information about the thermodynamics of
 various materials within the aqueous cellular environment.

       In contrast with pathway engineering,  which the group had defined to
 include large, integrated systems  of reactions, reaction engineering was defined as
 having to do with modifying and improving single reaction sequences or enzymatic
 reactions.  Regarding the identified need for work on alternative methods of
 electron transfer, the group thought that, in addition to  cofactor regeneration,
 research should focus on ways of coupling electron transfers with electrochemical
 or photochemical reactions. Among the methods discussed to improve the
 productivity and selectivity of biocatalytic conversions, the Biosynthesis group
 listed phase transfer catalysis; use of non-aqueous media, including specialized
 media such as supercritical fluids; catalyst immobilization; post-translational
 modification, and substrate and product transport through the catalytic system.

      The greatest area of overlap with the Engineering group was in the
 Biosynthesis group's consideration of issues related to processing.  Noting that
 large databases are available only for the physical and chemical properties of
 chemicals in organic systems,  the  group felt that  comparable databases should be
 developed for the behavior of chemicals in aqueous or mixed aqueous/organic
systems and for process alternatives in aqueous systems. In the area of
                                     93

-------
 monitoring, the group was particularly interested in methods of monitoring
 substrate concentrations, product concentrations, and biomass or catalyst
 concentration and activity on line.  Regarding new methods of integrating
 biosynthetic and traditional synthetic processes, the group was particularly
 interested in comparative analyses of immobilized systems versus suspension
 biocatalysts and of batch versus continuous processing.  The group also felt that
 integrations of organic and biological synthesis offer many unique opportunities in
 process development.  Examples of integrated reactions included the fermentative
 production of lactic acid followed by chemical formation of an ester and chemical
 hydrolysis of feedstocks and sugars followed by fermentation processes.

       Following Cameron's presentation, a workshop participant (Bashkin) asked
 about the group's inclusion of nitrogen fixation as a non-carbon-based reaction
 that might be exploited biosynthetically.  From the questioner's perspective,
 biological nitrogen fixation is a poor competitor for standard chemical processes
 of nitrogen fixation, since biological  fixation consumes large amounts of ATP and
 large numbers of protons and is associated with uncontrolled hydrogen
 production. The only  advantage of biological nitrogen fixation, this participant
 suggested, is that it works at atmospheric pressure and room temperature.
 Cameron indicated that the group had wanted to  make sure that they did not
 neglect non-carbon-based chemistry in their consideration of biosynthetic
 processes, and that some members of the group thought that there might be some
 interesting nitrogen-based chemistry  that could be done with microorganisms.
 While agreeing that nitrogen fixation might not be the best example of  such a
 process, large-scale nitrogen fixation by plants is, in fact, a pretty benign form of
 chemical processing.

       Another participant (Sciance) asked whether the group had discussed
sulfur, noting that a number of people in refining are interested in bioprocessing
as a way  to remove sulfur from feedstocks. Cameron emphasized that the group

                                     94

-------
had focused mainly on synthetic processes, but he agreed that biological
desulfurization of oil and coal is a very promising area. The questioner pointed
out that sulfate esters are an example of a biosynthetic process involving sulfur.
Another member of the workgroup (Bradford) noted that the group had talked
about both sulfur and phosphorus in  terms of esterification reactions that could
be of value in organic synthesis.  As an example, he said that it might be possible
to oxidize elemental sulfur or some other substrate in situ to generate a sulfate
ester, and then to use this ester in the manufacture of surfactin or other sulfur-
con taming compounds.

      Another workshop participant (Lee) expressed interest in the group's call
for the development of new  databases and asked what types of thermodynamic
information are needed. Cameron responded that the group had discussed two
different types of needs. First, there  is a need for information about the nature
of thermodynamic equilibrium in a cellular environment, the concentration of
reaction intermediates  within cells, and other types of similarly rudimentary
baseline information.  Second, the group felt there to be a great need for more
information about the thermodynamic properties of various compounds in an
aqueous environment.  Examples offered included octanol/water partition
coefficients and vapor pressure and equilibrium constants for organic acids in
water or in ionic media that more closely resemble the solutions found in living
systems.

      The question was also posed (Radecki) whether the group had discussed
the use of organisms for extracting toxic materials out of various types of streams;
this questioner noted that bioaccumulation might be a very energy-efficient way to
detoxify various types of materials.  Cameron related that the group had agreed
that microorganisms represent an important resource for clean-up and
remediation, but that they had decided to focus strictly on issues related to
biosynthesis.

                                     95

-------
  Workgroup on Chemical Synthesis
        Facilitator: P. Anastas, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

        The technical recommendations of the Workgroup on Chemical Synthesis
  are summarized in Table 3. The workgroup's findings were presented by T.
  Collins, who noted that the group had decided to rename itself the Workgroup on
  Environmentally Benign Synthesis, since there was general agreement that much
  of the research needed in this area would also apply to inorganic syntheses.

       Regarding the group's recommendation that robust and selective
 homogeneous oxidants be developed, Collins noted that many of the species
 currently used in oxidation  reactions are metals that have the potential to
 generate toxic by-products.  Because of this, the group felt that high priority
 should be placed on developing recyclable alternatives, especially for catalytic
 purposes.  The group's recommendation regarding the development of new
 solvents and/or solventless systems reflected a consensus regarding the need to
 find alternatives to chlorinated solvents and other solvents that represent health
 hazards.

       The group's recommendation regarding long-term research on oxide-based
 catalysts for NOX abatement had to do with finding an alternative to the "lose-
 lose" situation faced with existing internal combustion  engines. If a rich mixture
 is run  through these engines, the exhaust contains an excessive amount of
 hydrocarbon  by-products. With the use of a lean mixture, production of nitrogen
 oxides increases.  Because of this dilemma, there is currently a great deal of
 interest in the automobile industry in developing a solid  catalyst for NO
 abatement.

       Some detail was presented about the group's recommendation related to
the development of functional models of enzymes. Enzymes are currently

                                    96

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                              98

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receiving a great deal of attention from many different perspectives.  Of particular
interest to the workgroup was the fact that in addition to optimizing reaction
rates, we are getting closer and closer to developing "smart" molecules - that is,
multifunctional molecules that are capable of carrying out a transformation
involving more than one reaction at more  than one reaction site.  The workgroup
felt that support of these types of efforts has a very great potential for advances
in our ability to make synthetic reactions more benign.

       In addition  to its technical recommendations, the workgroup offered a
number of broader suggestions for promoting the development of environmentally
benign syntheses.  In the area of education and  training, for example, the
workgroup identified a number  of efforts that it felt had significant potential for
short-term impacts.  These efforts included:

       •  Developing a list of 250 of the top processes that provide opportunities
         for pollution prevention, so that academic chemists will better
         understand which alternative pathways offer the greatest potential
         benefit
       •  Including benign chemistry as a core tenet of the chemistry curriculum,
         and teaching young chemists that responsible chemistry and creative
         chemistry are not two  different things
       •  Developing educational approaches to familiarize chemists with
         separations and processes (physical/chemical  isolation)
       •  Developing a database and/or information network on benign synthesis
       •  Promoting special issues of journals to disseminate information on
         benign synthesis to scientists in many different disciplines
       •  Disseminating information on benign synthesis to the public and
         promoting chemistry as a  source of solutions  to environmental problems
       •  Gaining a better understanding of industrial processes that could benefit
         from environmentally benign synthesis
                                     99

-------
        The workgroup had also considered issues related to the implementation of
  environmentally benign synthetic pathways, and it was here that the workgroup
  felt that the government must play a major role. Elements of this effort might
  include any or all of the following:

        • Promoting the implementation of benign methods in industry
        • Identifying barriers to the implementation of benign methods
        • Clearly stating a  stable commitment to long-term research in synthetic
          chemistry
        • Developing evaluative tools to assess the environmental  and economic
          impact of synthetic methods at both the bench and process scales
        • Developing means of funding interdisciplinary teams of scientists who
          can collaborate to address key problems in research and education

 Like its recommendations related to education and training, the workgroup felt
 that efforts in this area have a great deal of potential to impact the development
 of benign synthesis over the short term.  Particularly important in  this regard is
 the commitment to long-term  research.  The group felt strongly that moving in
 and trying to find short-term projects to fund  would retard rather than advance
 progress in this area.  They agreed that long-term funding, particularly in the
 academic sector, is essential to building a solid research base for benign synthesis.

       The workgroup had  two general recommendations that it felt likely to
 promote the development of many different types of benign products. First, they
 suggested that a goal of benign synthesis should be to design target molecules that
 preserve the desired function and then to mitigate the toxicity of these
 compounds by modifying their  physical and  chemical properties. Second, the
group thought that it would be useful to  develop a functional group
understanding of health and environmental hazards, since chemists are most
adept at learning and comprehending chemistry through a functional group
                                    100

-------
 approach.  The working group felt that both of these general principles would
 help pull together broad areas of knowledge and would give people a much-
 needed intellectual framework for thinking about environmental problems.
 Workgroup on Computer-Based Methods
       Facilitator: C. Brunner, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

       The recommendations of the Workgroup on Computer-Based Methods are
 summarized in Table 4. The workgroup's findings were presented by P. Radecki,
 who began by noting that the group had a general concern about the
 compartmentalization of knowledge related  to environmentally benign syntheses.
 People who understand process and synthesis design either do not have a good
 grasp of environmental issues or they are unable to obtain the data they need to
 implement that understanding in a quantifiable way.  By addressing this problem
 from a number of different perspectives, the group felt that all of the research
 they recommended has the potential for significant impact at the application
 stage over the next 5 years.

       In assigning the various research tasks to industry, government, or
 academia, the group had used fairly broad definitions of these terms.  In addition
 to universities, for example, the group included "think tanks" and various other
 types of research  institutions that may or may not be located at universities in its
 assignment of specific tasks to academia. Similarly, the group had considered
 industrial consortia to be the most appropriate sponsors for some of the tasks
 assigned to industry.

       Regarding  the category of integrating activities, the sense  of the group was
that there are some types of information needs that are not tied to a specific
model. Rather, these are areas in which it will  be  necessary to develop some sort
                                     101

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-------
 of consensus regarding the best way to get information out to the people who
 need it. Particularly important in this regard, the group thought, were efforts to
 coordinate software packages and to provide long-term maintenance of databases
 once they are developed.

       In the area of decision-making tools,  the workgroup had focused on
 programs that would facilitate the process of comparing one process design with
 another.  Especially important in this regard is the development of tools that are
 useful in the retrofitting approach that characterizes most process design in this
 country. Unfortunately,  many of the currently available programs assume that
 process design is starting from scratch, when in fact most efforts have
 considerably fewer degrees of freedom than  these packages assume.

       In its discussion of expanded process  simulation, the group was concerned
 about what they referred to as "small-customer modules." The group was
 interested in promoting green processes in areas where financial backing for
 research and development is not readily available.  As a leading example,
 membrane systems development was cited as almost exclusively the domain of
 very small  and highly specialized firms.  Because  of this, major process simulation
 houses are unlikely to consider it  cost-effective to build a generic membrane
 module and include it in a larger  process simulation package.  The  group felt that
 federal funding in this area should be  a very high priority, since it would go a long
 way toward providing engineers with ways of looking at alternative processes.
 Without small-customer modules,  a  process engineer has no way to  evaluate the
 membrane system in comparison with a distillation column, for example.

      Similarly,  the group had felt it important to promote the development of
 dynamic process simulations to complement existing packages that focus on
steady-state conditions. Often a company's biggest pollution problems are
                                    107

-------
associated with start-ups and shutdowns rather than steady-state operation of the
facility.

      The workgroup spent a great deal of time discussing computer-based tools
for decision support, and a broad range of needs were identified. In particular,
the group's recommendation regarding the need to investigate ways of
incorporating life cycle assessment into process design was described.  This is an
especially important area since legislative initiatives are increasingly including
language requiring life cycle assessments, yet there are very few tools that allow
these assessments to be done on any kind of consistent or large scale.  In
addition, there is a fairly strong likelihood that the next round of amendments to
the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs (GATT) will include language
similar to that which has begun to appear in domestic initiatives.

      Regarding the need for tools that could be used in total cost assessment,
the group had been concerned about the tendency of existing packages to include
the costs of environmental compliance in the general category of overhead.  More
useful, it was concluded, would  be tools that enable managers to look at
environment-related expenses on a unit-by-unit or process-by-process  basis, as
well  as tools that would associate the costs of waste management with specific
streams instead of the facility as a whole.  Using such tools, managers could then
make decisions about process improvements from the perspective of knowing
what cost savings could be expected from the  adoption of specific benign
processes.

      Most of the workgroup's recommendations related to reaction  engineering,
and therefore  echoed the needs expressed by other breakout workgroups. One
exception was  the Computer-Based Methods group's focus on solvent substitution
within the reaction system rather than at the end-product production  stage.  By
exploring ways of modifying the reaction system itself, it might be possible to
                                    108

-------
identify more benign or less energy-intensive alternatives earlier in the synthetic
pathway.

       One workshop participant (Sciance) commented that in developing new
computer-based tools it will be important to assure that the packages developed
are not user-hostile programs that can be run on only one type of equipment.
While agreeing that computer-based tools are important and valuable, this
participant urged that the programmers keep the end user in mind throughout
their development efforts and that they define the universe of potential users as
broadly as possible.
                                   109

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                         V.  CLOSING REMARKS
      At the conclusion of the workgroup presentations, Dr. Sikdar asked
Dr. Robert Wellek of the National Science Foundation to speak briefly about his
impressions of the workshop and the extent to which it had achieved the
organizers' goals.

      Dr. Wellek began by noting that, like most of those present,  he had
participated in quite a large number of workshops during his career. This
workshop, he said, was certainly among  the most important, in that  it represented
an attempt to actually build some of the partnerships among government,
industry, and academia that people so often talk about but so seldom actually
achieve.

      Dr. Wellek commended workshop participants for the seriousness with
which they had addressed the issues before them, and he noted that the
Proceedings of the workshop would be very valuable to him and others at NSF.
He described the current environment for research as the best and worst of times
- the best of times in the sense that the Administration is focusing more on
civilian technologies, but the worst of times in the sense that limited resources
demand difficult tradeoffs among competing research needs.  Dr. Wellek said that
the justifications for federal funding provided by this workshop would give NSF
and others important leads in preparing environmental research budgets  for 1996
and 1997. He noted that the workshop  had also provided him with  contacts that
would be useful farther down the line, as some  of the suggested programs began
to reach fruition.

      Dr. Sikdar thanked Dr. Wellek for his Agency's support of the workshop
and said that he, too, had been very impressed by the seriousness with which

                                     110

-------
participants had approached the task at hand. He noted that the Proceedings
would also be useful to EPA as the Agency begins to move more fully into the
area of environmental R&D in support of benign syntheses and manufacturing.
Following a few announcements regarding the review process for the Proceedings
document, the workshop was adjourned.
                                  Ill

-------

-------
                APPENDIX A—LIST OF WORKSHOP PARTICIPANTS
 &EPA
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and
    The National Science Foundation
 Workshop on Green Syntheses and Processing in
 Chemical Manufacturing

 Omni Netherland Plaza
 Cincinnati, OH
 July 12-13, 1994

 Final Participant List
 Madhu Anand
 Air Products & Chemicals, Inc.
 7201 Hamilton Boulevard (R4201)
 Allentown, PA 18195
 610-481-6561
 Fax: 610-481-7923

 Paul Anastas*
 Office of Environmental
 Engineering & Technology
 Office of Pollution Prevention & Toxics
 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
 401 M Street, SW (TS-779)
 Washington, DC  20460
 202-260-2257
 Fax: 202-260-1661

 April Applegate
 Environmental Writer
 Eastern Research Group, Inc.
 110 Hartwell Avenue
 Lexington, MA 02173-3198
 617-674-7200
 Fax: 617-674-2851

 Stanley Barnett
 Chair/Professor
 Chemical Engineering Department
 University of Rhode Island
 Crawford Hall
Kingston, RI 02881
401-792-2443
Fax: 401-782-1180

*Hosts
                    James Bashkin
                    Assistant Professor
                    Department of Chemistry
                    Washington University
                    One Brookings Drive
                    P.O. Box 1134
                    St. Louis, MO 63130
                    314-935-4801
                    Fax: 314-935-4481

                    Dolloff Bishop*
                    Chief, Biosystems Branch
                    Water & Hazardous Waste
                    Treatment Research Division
                    Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
                    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
                    26 West Martin Luther King Drive
                    Cincinnati, OH 45268
                    513-569-7629
                    Fax: 513-569-7501

                    Pratim Biswas
                    Professor
                    Department of Environmental Engineering
                    University of Cincinnati
                    (ML-71)
                    Cincinnati, OH 45221-0071
                    513-556-3697
                    Fax: 513-556-2599
             A-l

-------
Joe Bordogna
National Science Foundation
4201 Wilson Boulevard - Suite 505
Arlington, VA 22230
703-306-1300
Fax: 703-306-0289

Harry Bostian
Chemical Engineer
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
26 West Martin Luther King Drive
Cincinnati, OH 45268
513-569-7619
Fax: 513-569-7677

Marion Bradford
Research &  Development Department
AE Staley Manufacturing Company
2200 East  Eldorado Street
Decatur, IL  62525
217-421-3334
Fax: 217-421-2936

Richard Brenner*
Chief, Biosystems Engineering Section
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
26 West Martin Luther King Drive
(MS-420)
Cincinnati, OH 45268
513-569-7657
Fax: 513-569-7105

Gary Brown
Associate Director
Process Engineering Technology
Union Carbide
Technical  Center - P.O. Box 8361
South Charleston, WV 25303
304-747-5473

Carl Brunner*
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
26 West Martin Luther King Drive
Cincinnati, OH 45268
513-569-7655
Fax: 513-569-7787
Carol Burns
Inorganic & Structural Chemistry Group
Chemical Science & Technology Division
Los Alamos National Laboratory
(MS-C346) (Group CST-3)
Los Alamos, NM 87545
505-665-1765
Fax: 505-665-3688

Douglas Cameron
Department of Chemical Engineering
University of Wisconsin at Madison
1415 Johnson Drive
Madison, WI  53706-1691
608-262-8931
Fax: 608-262-5434

Margaret Chu
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
401 M Street, SW
Washington, DC 20460
202-260-5740
Fax: 202-260-3861

Terrance Collins
Department of Chemistry
Carnegie Mellon University
4400 Fifth Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA  15213
412-268-6335
Fax: 412-268-6897

Stephen DeVito*
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
401 M Street, SW (MC-7406)
Washington, DC 20460
202-260-1748
Fax: 202-260-1661

Richard Dobbs*
Chief, Biosystems Development Section
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
26 West Martin Luther King Drive
Cincinnati, OH  45268
513-569-7649
Fax: 513-569-7501
                                        A-2
*Hosts

-------
Ponnan Elankovan
Michigan Biotechnology Institute
P.O. Box 27609
Lansing, MI 48909-7609
517-336-4654
Fax: 517-337-2122

Thomas Evans
Research Associate
External Research  & Development
The Dow Chemical Company
1776 Building
Midland, MI 48642
517-636-1547
Fax: 517-636-1705

Rod Fisher
Cargill, Inc.
P.O. Box 5698
Minneapolis, MN 55440
612-742-6470
Fax: 612-742-4707

Allan Ford
Director
Gulf Coast Hazardous
Substances Research Center
Lamar University
886 Georgia Avenue
Beaumont, TX  77705
409-880-8707
Fax: 409-880-2397

Sue Ford*
Office of Pollution  Prevention & Toxics
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
401 M Street, SW (MC-7406)
Washington, DC 20460
202-260-4153
Fax: 202-260-1661

Thomas Foust
U.S. Department of Energy
1000 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, DC 20585
202-586-0198
Fax: 202-586-3237
John Frost
Professor
Department of Chemistry
Michigan State University
East Lansing, MI 48824-1322
517-355-9715 Extension: 115
Fax: 517-432-3873

John Glaser*
Team Leader for Soil Bioremediation
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
26 West Martin Luther King Drive
(MS-420)
Cincinnati, OH 45268
513-569-7568
Fax: 513-569-7105

Teresa Harten*
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
26 West Martin Luther King Drive
Cincinnati, OH 45268
513-569-7565
Fax: 513-569-7787

Trisha Hasch
Vice President/Manager
Conference Services
Eastern Research Group, Inc.
110 Hartwell Avenue
Lexington, MA 02173-3198
617-674-7384
Fax: 617-674-2906

Jon Herrmann*
Water &  Hazardous Waste
Treatment Research Division
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
26 West Martin Luther King Drive
Cincinnati,  OH 45268
513-569-7839
Fax: 513-569-7787
                                        A-3
"Hosts

-------
S. Garry Howell*
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
26 West Martin Luther King Drive
Cincinnati, OH 45268
513-569-7756
Fax: 513-569-7111

David Huestis
Associate Director
Molecular Physics Laboratory
SRI International
333 Ravenswood Avenue
Menlo Park, CA 94025
415-859-3464
Fax: 415-859-6169

John Hunt
Acting Director,  Chemistry Division
National Science Foundation
4201 Wilson Boulevard
Arlington, VA 22230
703-306-1857
Fax: 800-338-3128

Krishnendu Kar*
Fellow, American Association for
the Advancement of Science
Office of Pollution Prevention & Toxics
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
401 M Street, SW (MC-7406)
Washington, DC  20460
202-260-7367
Fax: 202-260-1661

Prashant Kokitkar
Research Associate
Department of Chemistry
Michigan State University
East Lansing, MI 48824
517-355-9715
Fax: 517-353-1793

Dhinakar Kompala
Department of Chemical Engineering
University of Colorado at Boulder
Boulder, CO 80309-0424
303-492-6350
Fax: 303-492-4341

*Hosts
      George Kraus
      Chemistry Department
      Iowa State University
      Ames, IA 50011
      515-294-7794
      Fax: 515-294-0105

      Albert Lee
      Chemical Science &
      Technology Laboratory
      National Institute of
      Standards & Technology
      Building 221 - Room B312
      Gaithersburg,  MD  20899
      301-975-5190
      Fax: 301-869-5924

      Marilyn Lehmkuhl*
      Water & Hazardous Waste
      Treatment Research Division
      Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
      U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
      26 West Martin Luther King Drive
      Cincinnati, OH 45268
      513-569-7428
      Fax: 513-569-7787

      Terry Leib
      Manager, Environmental
      Technology Program
      General Electric Research & Development
      P.O. Box 8
      Building K-l - Room 3B35
      Schenectady, NY  12301
      518-387-5563
      Fax: 518-387-5604

      Robert Mather
      Hoechst Celanese Corporation
      2300 Archdale Drive
      Charlotte, NC 28210-6500
      706-554-3191
      Fax:  706-554-3533
A-4

-------
 Henry McGee
 Associate Provost for Engineering
 Virginia Commonwealth University
 827 West Franklin Street
 P.O. Box 842041
 Richmond, VA 23284-2041
 804-828-3636
 Fax: 804-828-8172

 Don Meyer
 Vice President, Process & Technology
 Center for Waste
 Reduction Technologies
 The C.W. Nofsinger Company
 4700 East 63rd Street
 P.O. Box 419173
 Kansas City, MO  64130-6173
 816-822-3255
 Fax: 816-822-3416

 Claudia Nassaralla
 Department of Metallurgical &
 Materials Engineering
 Michigan Technological University
 1400 Townsend Drive
 Houghton, MI 49931
 906-487-3348
 Fax: 906-487-2934

 E. Bruce Nauman
 Professor
 Chemical Engineering Department
 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
 Troy, NY 12180
 518-276-6726
 Fax: 518-276-4030

 Carl Potter*
 Toxicologjst
 Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
26 West Martin Luther King Drive
 Cincinnati, OH  45268
513-569-7231
Fax: 513-569-7105
 Thomas Powers*
 Water & Hazardous Waste
 Treatment Research Division
 Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
 26 West Martin Luther King Drive
 Cincinnati, OH  45268
 513-569-7550
 Fax: 513-569-7787

 Peter Radecki
 Program Manager
 Center for Clean Industrial &
 Treatment Technologies
 Michigan Technological University
 1400 Townsend Drive
 Houghton, MI  49931
 906-487-3143
 Fax: 906-487-3292

 Paul Randall*
 Chemical Engineer
 Pollution Prevention Research Branch
 Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
 26 West Martin Luther King Drive
 Cincinnati, OH 45268
 513-569-7673
 Fax: 513-569-7111

 Gregory Rosasco
 Chief, Process Measurements Division
 National Institute of
 Standards & Technology
 Building 221 - Room B312
 Gaithersburg, MD 20899
 301-975-2609
 Fax: 301-869-5924

 W. Richard Schmeal
 Manager
 Chemicals & Petroleum Office
 Electric Power Research Institute
 1775 St. James Place - Suite 105
 Houston, TX 77056
713-963-9307
Fax: 713-963-8341
'Hosts
                                        A-5

-------
 Jerome Schultz
 Center for Biotechnology & Bioengineering
 University of Pittsburgh
 300 Technology Drive
 Pittsburgh, PA 15219
 412-383-9700
 Fax: 412-383-9710

 Kathleen Schulz
 Program Area Manager
 Environmentally Conscious
 Manufacturing Program Office
 Sandia National Laboratories
 P.O. Box 5800
 Albuquerque, MM 87185-0738
 505-845-9879
 Fax: 505-844-8719

 Tom Sciance
 DuPont Experimental Station
 P.O. Box 80304
 Wilmington, DE  19880-0304
 302-695-9486
 Fax: 302-695-2214

 Michael Seibert
 Manager, Photoconversion Branch
 National Renewable Energy Laboratory
 1617 Cole Boulevard
 Golden, CO 80401
 303-384-6279
 Fax: 303-384-6150

 Subhas Sikdar*
 Director
 Water  & Hazardous Waste
 Treatment Research Division
 Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
 26 West Martin Luther King Drive
 Cincinnati, OH 45268
 513-569-7528
Fax: 513-569-7787
 Milagros Simmons*
 Fellow, American Association for the
 Advancement of Science
 Office of Pollution Prevention & Toxics
 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
 401 M Street, SW (MC-7406)
 Washington, DC 20460
 202-260-0957
 Fax: 202-260-1661

 Jordan Spooner*
 Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
 26 West Martin Luther King Drive
 Cincinnati, OH 45268
 513-569-7422
 Fax: 513-569-7111

 Usha Srinivasan
 Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
 26 West Martin Luther King Drive
 Cincinnati, OH 45268
 513-569-7618
 Fax: 513-569-7105

 F. Dee Stevenson
 Program Manager
 Division of Chemical Sciences
 Office of Basic Energy Sciences
 U.S. Department of Energy
 1000 Independence Avenue, SW
 Washington, DC 20585
 301-903-5802
 Fax: 301-904-4110

 Dennis Timberlake*
 U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency
 26 West Martin Luther King Drive
 Cincinnati, OH  45268
513-569-7547
Fax: 513-569-7787
                                        A-6
*Hosts

-------
Ronald Turner*
Chemical Engineer
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
26 West Martin Luther King Drive
Cincinnati, OH 45268
513-569-7775
Fax: 513-569-7677

Jim Tzeng
Research Fellow
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
26 West Martin Luther King Drive
Cincinnati, OH 45268
513-569-7618
Fax: 513-569-7105

Vincent Vilker
National Institute of
Standards & Technology
Gaithersburg, MD 20899
301-975-5066
Fax: 301-330-3447

Jack Watson
Deputy Coordinator
Chemical Technology Division
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
P.O. Box 2008
Oak Ridge, TN 32831-6227
615-574-6795
Fax: 615-576-7468
Leland Webster*
Fellow, American Association for the
Advancement of Science
Office of Pollution Prevention & Toxics
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
401 M Street, SW (MC-7406)
Washington, DC 20460
202-260-5372
Fax: 202-260-1661

Steven Weiner
Battelle Pacific Northwest Laboratories
901 D Street, SW - Suite 900
Washington, DC 20024-2115
202-646-7870
Fax: 202-646-5020

Robert Wellek
Deputy Director
Chemical & Transport Systems
National Science Foundation
4201 Wilson Boulevard
Arlington, VA 22230
703-306-1370
Fax: 703-306-0319
                                         A-7
'Hosts

-------

-------
xvEPA
                    APPENDIX B—WORKSHOP AGENDA
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and
    The National Science Foundation
Workshop on Green Syntheses and Processing in
Chemical Manufacturing
Omni Netherland Plaza
Cincinnati, OH
July 12-13, 1994
Agenda
    TUESDAY   JULY 12

   12:00 Noon   Registration

      1:OOPM   Welcome	Dr. Subhas Sikdar
                                                                    U.S. EPA

      1:15PM   Advanced Manufacturing	Dr. Joe Bordogna
                                                     National Science Foundation

      1:30PM   Benign Organic Synthesis	Dr. James Bashkin
                                                           Washington University

      2:15PM   Benign Biosynthesis	Dr. Jerome Schultz
                                                          University  of Pittsburgh

      3:OOPM   BREAK

      3:15PM   Benign Engineering Approaches	Dr. Tom Sciance
                                                                     DuPont

      4:OOPM   Computer-Based Methods  	  Dr. Peter Radecki
                                                 Michigan Technological University

      4:45PM   Guidance on Workgroups	  Ms. Trisha Hasch
                                                     Eastern Research Group, Inc.

      5:OOPM   ADJOURN
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WEDNESDAY




      8:OOAM




     10:00 AM




     10:15AM




     11:45AM




      1:OOPM




      2:30PM




      2:45PM




      4:30PM
JULY 13




Concurrent Breakout Sessions




BREAK




Concurrent Breakout Sessions (continued)




LUNCH




Concurrent Breakout Sessions (continued)




BREAK




Review and Wrap-up Session




ADJOURN
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                            APPENDIX C

            MINUTES OF INDIVIDUAL BREAKOUT GROUPS
Minutes of the Workgroup on Benign Organic Synthesis
Minutes of the Workgroup on Benign Biosynthesis
Minutes of the Workgroup on Benign Engineering Approaches
Minutes of the Workgroup on Computer-Based Methods
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                            MINUTES OF THE
            WORKGROUP ON BENIGN ORGANIC SYNTHESIS
      The Workgroup on Benign Organic Synthesis was facilitated by
P. Anastas of the U.S. EPA.  T. Hasch of Eastern Research Group served as
Chart Writer for the workgroup, while J. Glaser served as EPA Writer.  Other
members of the workgroup were:

J. Bashkin                               D. Huestis
Washington University                    SRI International
C. Burns                                G. Kraus
Los Alamos National Laboratory           Iowa State University
M. Chu                                 M. Simmons
U.S. EPA                               U.S. EPA
T. Collins                               F. Stevenson
Carnegie Mellon University               U.S. Department of Energy
S. DeVito
U.S. EPA

      To begin the session, the group agreed on a general process for identifying
areas in which research to promote green synthesis is needed. During the first
stage of discussion, it was agreed that participants would raise as many issues as
occurred to them,  including both very broad and very narrow topics.  To promote
consideration of research in both organic and inorganic processes,  the workgroup
elected to change  its name to the Workgroup on Environmentally Benign
Synthesis. Following a brainstorming  session during which individual group
members offered their suggestions for needed research, the group  agreed to the
following master list of recommendations:
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•  Provide academic scientists with a list of 250 chemical processes for
   which alternatives are needed from the perspective of pollution
   prevention and encourage academic scientists to identify additional
   opportunities for pollution prevention

•  Expose students to the ideas that chemistry is not only a source of
   pollution but a source of pollution prevention and that responsible
   chemistry is creative chemistry; incorporate benign chemistry as a core
   tenet of academic curricula

•  Develop robust homogeneous transition metal oxidants

•  Clearly state a stable commitment to long-term research in synthetic
   chemistry

•  Develop safer solvents to replace those currently used, or develop
   solventless systems

•  Encourage selective clean oxidation based on molecular oxygen in
   bond-making processes in order to reduce the use of substitution
   reactions

•  Investigate novel media and/or  reaction  systems to enhance the
   selectivity of chemical reactions

•  Develop and promote solid-acid catalysts (heterogenizing processes)

•  Develop new separation techniques aimed toward enhanced recovery of
   products

•  Develop educational approaches to  familiarize chemists  with
   separations and processes of physical/chemical isolation

•  Develop evaluative tools to assess the environmental/economic impact
   of synthetic methods at the bench and process scale

•  Develop a means of long-term funding for programs in which scientists
   from different disciplines can collaborate to address key issues in
   research and education

•  Develop databases or an information network on benign synthesis and
   develop indexing techniques that are user-friendly
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•  Conduct research on the synthesis of oxide-based catalysts for lean burn
   processes (automotive emissions)

•  Promote special issues of journals to disseminate information about
   benign synthesis; promote the use of benign synthesis as a key word,
   and work with editorial boards to promote publication in this area

•  Promote research on small-molecule biomimetic catalysts

•  Provide a venue that fosters communication among scientists from
   different disciplines (e.g., societies, research-oriented workshops,
   sessions at  ACS meetings, etc.)

•  Develop catalysts capable  of carrying out difficult reactions by
   employing multiple steps at a single site

•  Develop functional models of enzymes

•  Investigate methods of improving enantioselective synthetic methods,
   especially in the area of catalysis

•  Investigate biocatalysis, including the mechanisms  of enzymatic and
   microbiological transformations

•  Promote the use of photochemistry and electrochemistry for benign
   synthesis

•  Investigate the use of supercritical fluids for chemical and biocatalytic
   transformations

•  Promote efforts in molecular design for advanced separation systems

•  Design target molecules to preserve desired functions while mitigating
   toxicity through structural  modifications or modification of
   physical/chemical  properties

•  Develop a functional-group understanding of health and environmental
   hazards

•  Develop in situ or more benign analytic sensors/monitors
•  Promote the implementation of benign methods in industry

•  Educate the general public about environmentally benign chemistry
   and the importance of chemistry in solving environmental problems
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      •  Promote benign reactor designs
      •  Promote environmentally benign synthesis
      •  Learn more about industrial synthetic processes
      •  Gain a better understanding of industrial processes that could benefit
         from environmentally benign alternatives
      •  Develop generic reagent-based benign strategies
      •  Use renewable feedstocks in place of non-renewable feedstocks
      •  Identify barriers to implementing environmentally benign processes

      Once the master list of topics had been generated, workgroup members
were asked to vote for the topics they thought should be given highest priority.
Each workgroup member was given a total of 10 votes to spread among the
nominated research topics as he or she saw fit.  The  group  was not satisfied with
the voting procedure,  noting that some categories overlapped with one another
and others could easily be broken into two or more subcategories.  One
workgroup member abstained from the voting process entirely, indicating that he
thought these issues deserved more thoughtful deliberation than such a voting
process could possibly allow.

      Following this discussion, the group decided to divide its recommendations
into several general categories. All recommendations regarding specific reaction
steps or process improvements were grouped under the  general category of
Benign Reaction Design. Two other general categories  were established for
topics related to Education and Implementation.  Two items that didn't seem to
fit into any of these categories were given a category of  their own (Benign
Products).
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      A voting procedure was used to develop priority rankings for the topics in
each of these four categories. For topics in the Benign Reaction Design category,
workgroup members also discussed the timeframe for the proposed research, who
should conduct the research, and whether federal funding is needed in each area.
The group felt that all of the recommendations regarding Education and
Implementation had significant potential for short-term returns.  The two items in
the Benign Products category were designated as medium-term undertakings.

      At the conclusion of their deliberations, the group selected T. Collins of
Carnegie Mellon University to present their findings to the  workshop as a whole.
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                            MINUTES OF THE
                WORKGROUP ON BENIGN BIOSYNTHESIS
      The Workgroup on Benign Biosynthesis was co-facilitated by J. Frost of
Michigan State University and P. Elankovan of the Michigan Biotechnology
Institute.  R. Brenner of the U.S. EPA served as Chart Writer for the workgroup,
while C. Potter served as EPA Writer. Other members of the workgroup were:
                                        T. Leib
                                        General Electric Research and
                                          Development

                                        J. Schultz
                                        University of Pittsburgh

                                        M. Seibert
                                        National Renewable Energy Laboratory

                                        V. Vilker
                                        National Institute of Standards and
                                          Technology

                                        L. Webster
                                        U.S. EPA
S. Barnett
University of Rhode Island

D. Bishop
U.S. EPA

M. Bradford
AE Staley Manufacturing
  Company

D. Cameron
University of Wisconsin at
  Madison

R. Dobbs
U.S. EPA

D. Kompala
University of Colorado at Boulder
      To begin the workgroup meeting, each member of the group introduced
him- or herself and offered a brief description the area of his or her primary
interest.  Following a brainstorming session during which individual group

members expressed their general views regarding areas of needed research, the
group agreed to focus on research needs in four major areas:


      •  Feedstocks

      •  Pathway Engineering
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       •   Reaction Engineering

       •   Processing


       As the group discussed each of these areas, there was a great deal of

attention to semantics; in general, group members wanted to identify as many

options as possible without giving the impression that their list of topics was an

exhaustive one.  In addition, the group thought it important to provide specific

examples for each general research need they had identified.


       Under the general category of Feedstocks, the group developed the

following recommendations:
       •   Research is needed on the use of renewable feedstocks for the
          production of chemicals. Feedstocks that might be explored in this
          regard include carbon dioxide and methane, lignin, carbohydrates,
          mixed organic wastes, industrial and municipal sludge,  and lipids.

       •   Research is needed on customizing feedstocks to produce chemicals. In
          this context, customization includes genetic as well as chemical/physical
          manipulation of feedstock-producing lifeforms.

       •   Research is needed to explore the use of non-carbon-based feedstocks
          in biosynthesis.  Non-carbon-based feedstocks might include nitrogen-
          based compounds (fertilizer, nitrogen-containing chemicals), minerals
          (ceramics, metals), non-metals (sulfur- and phosphorus-containing
          chemicals), and water (hydrogen and oxygen).


       Under the general category of Pathway Engineering, the group developed
the following recommendations:
         Research is needed in the genetic modification of lifeforms to produce
         chemicals. Attributes that might be candidates for such modification
         include selectivity, yield, tolerance, productivity, titer, and robustness.
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         Research is needed to expand and utilize biocatalyst diversity. Among
         the different types of biocatalysts that could be investigated are
         organisms, enzymes, catalytic antibodies, genes, and ribozymes.

         Research is needed to develop tools for pathway engineering.
         Examples of needed tools include pathway modeling programs,
         databases (gene pool, sequence, thermodynamics), and tools that allow
         an integration of thermodynamic, kinetic, stoichiometric, and molecular
         biological information.
      Under the general category of Reaction Engineering, the group developed

the following recommendations:
          Research is needed in stabilization of enzymes.  In this context, factors
          that contribute to enzyme stability are temperature, solvents, pH,
          pressure, and electrolytes.

          Research is needed in electron transfer methods.  Examples of such
          methods include cofactor regeneration, photochemistry, and
          electrochemistry.

          Research is needed in improving the productivity and selectivity of
          biocatalytic conversions. Approaches that might prove to be of benefit
          in this regard include phase-transfer catalysis, non-aqueous media,
          supercritical fluids, biocatalyst immobilization, post-translational
          biocatalyst modification, and substrate/product transport.
       Under the general category of Processing, the group developed the

following recommendations:
          Databases need to be established.  Examples include databases dealing
          with the physical/chemical properties of aqueous and aqueous/ organic
          systems and databases dealing with process alternatives.

          Research is needed on methods of improved separation and purification
          of chemicals from biosynthetic processes. Problems that need to be
          addressed in this area include dilute solutions, aqueous solutions, trace
          contaminants, multi-phase systems, and waste (salts, solvents,
          adsorbants).

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       •  Research is needed on reactor design and modelling. Examples of
          needed work in this area include process synthesis/integration, process
          design and modelling, integration of biocatalytic and abiotic catalytic
          methodologies, databases for process alternatives, and sensors/controls.

       When the group completed its recommendations in each of these four
areas, there was not time for discussion of the relative priority, timerrame,
research sponsor, or need for federal funding for individual research initiatives.
The group agreed to complete this portion  of its work by fax polling after the
workshop was over. The group selected D. Cameron of the University of
Wisconsin at Madison to present their findings to  the workshop as a whole.
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                           MINUTES OF THE
        WORKGROUP ON BENIGN ENGINEERING APPROACHES
      The Workgroup on Benign Engineering Approaches was facilitated by A.
Ford of Lamar University. Ford had to leave the meeting for approximately an

hour, during which time C. Sciance of the DuPont Experimental Station served as
facilitator. J. Hermann of EPA served as Chart Writer for the workgroup, while

T. Harten served as EPA Writer. Other  members of the workgroup were:
M. Anand
Air Products & Chemicals, Inc.

P. Biswas
University of Cincinnati

G. Brown
Union Carbide

T. Evans
The Dow Chemical Company

R. Fisher
Cargill, Inc.

T. Foust
U.S. Department of Energy

G. Howell
U.S. EPA

J. Hunt
National Science Foundation

K. Kar
U.S. EPA

P. Kokitkar
Michigan State University
A. Lee
Naional Institute of Standards
  and Technology

R. Mather
Hoechst Celanese Corporation

H. McGee
Virginia Commonwealth
  University

C. Nassaralla
Michigan Technological
  University

E. Nauman
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

W. Schmeal
Electric Power Research Institute

K. Schultz
Sandia National Laboratories

J. Watson
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

R. Wellek
National Science Foundation
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      To begin the session, Ford suggested that the group go once around the

table, allowing each workgroup member to propose a  research topic.  Because of

the large size of the group, it was agreed that going once around the table would

be all that time allowed. Following discussion of each issue as it was raised, the

group agreed to the following distillation of the topics that had been discussed:


      •   Enzymatic catalysts (including the use of catalysts to obtain higher
          product concentrations, issues related to catalyst attrition, the use of
          catalysts in separation processes, and the development of non-toxic
          catalysts)

      •   Freezing processes and melt crystallizations, particularly as they relate
          to organic separations

      •   Separation processes that avoid phase changes

      •   Reaction design to minimize the need for separations

      •   Microwave- or radiation-enhanced reactions

      •   Confinement techniques

      •   Control of abnormal processes

      •   Redesign of valves and fittings

      •   Remote sensors (especially as related to reducing the cost of
         monitoring critical emissions and to increasing the use of area-wide
         monitoring strategies)

      •  Unit operations  (including physical separations, better modeling of unit
         operations, and methods for separating materials of value from wastes)

      •  Methods of water removal (especially as they relate to the dilute
         systems characteristic  of biotechnologic processes)

      •  Membrane technology (including the development of new polymers)

      •  Hybrid unit operations
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       •  Application of pinch technology to environmental aspects of process
          development and evaluation
       •  Gas phase/aerosol processing
       •  Disposal of bioprocess wastes (including both genetic and non-genetic
          techniques)
       •  Fluidized bed combustors
       •  Better understanding of emissions
       •  High-temperature combustion chemistry
       •  Adding value to solid wastes (i.e., fruitful use versus disposal)
       •  Non-chemical sources for electron exchange
       •  Supercritical fluids as solvents
       •  Renewable feedstocks (including methane coupling)
       •  Partial oxidation of wastes to syngas
       •  New technology approaches that start from the ground up

       Just before the lunch break, workgroup members were asked to vote for
those topics they considered of highest priority.  Each workgroup member was
given a total of five votes to spread among the nominated research topics as he or
she saw fit.

       After the lunch break, one person suggested that, in addition to the
technology issues the group had identified, it might be good to try to capture the
part of the morning discussion that had had to do with what he described as
"front-end" issues cutting across all of the various technology areas. As examples
of such issues, he listed the following:
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       •  Defining exactly what is meant by benign technology
       •  Developing life cycle tools that could be used in making and defending
         process decisions
       •  Expanding efforts in benign synthesis to involve additional players, such
         as small companies, companies with related processes, and suppliers
       •  Promoting effective cooperative efforts
       •  Promoting the concept of benign chemistry as part of the professional
         education of chemists and chemical engineers
Other group members agreed that these issues were important and should be part
of the workgroup's recommendations.

      Following the voting on individual research topics, some members of the
workgroup expressed concern about the extent to which overlaps among the
topics might obfuscate  the results of the voting process.  To organize the topics
in a more manageable form, the workgroup developed seven general categories,
as follows:

      •  Unit Operations
      •  Sensors
      •  Containment
      •  Catalysis
      •  Process Synthesis
      •  Combustion
      •  By-Products
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      To develop proactive statements about the research recommended in each
of these general areas, the workgroup broke into smaller teams, one addressing
each of these seven areas and one to formulate the group's recommendations
regarding front-end issues. One member from each team was selected to present
that team's findings to the workshop as a whole.
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                            MINUTES OF THE
            WORKGROUP ON COMPUTER-BASED METHODS
      The Workgroup on Computer-Based Methods was facilitated by
C. Brunner of the U.S. EPA. D. Timberlake of EPA served as Chart Writer for
the workgroup, while J. Spooner served as EPA Writer.  Other members of the
workgroup were:
                                        P. Radecki
H. Bostian                              Michigan Technological University
U.S.  EPA
                                        G. Rosasco
S. Ford                                 National Institute of Standards
U.S.  EPA                                 and Technology
D. Meyer
The C.W. Nofsinger Company

      To set a framework for the group's discussion, Bostian described several
past efforts related to process simulation that had been jointly sponsored by EPA
and other federal agencies.  Workgroup participants were given copies of the
report of a December, 1992, Workshop on Environmental Considerations in
Process Design and Simulation, as well as the minutes of meetings of a Process
Simulation Workgroup that had grown out of that workshop. To the extent
possible,  it would be good to avoid duplicating these earlier efforts.

      Brunner presented a brief outline of the procedure that would be followed
by the workgroup.  He indicated that he would go around the table twice,
soliciting ideas from workgroup members, after which the floor would be opened
for additional discussion or recommendations.  Regarding the issue of whether to
focus on  broader or more specific recommendations for research, the group
decided that it would probably be best to keep  their recommendations relatively
broad.
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       During the first round of suggestions, the following issues were raised for

 consideration:


       •  Maintenance of software and databases

       •  Integration of energy and mass transfer networks

       •  Process design, especially from the perspective of retrofitting

       •  Methods for addressing environmental concerns at the design concept
          stage

       •  Artificial intelligence for  process simulation

       •  Methods for overcoming  obstacles to information transfer and assuring
          that the information engineers need for process design is available to
          them

       •  Guidelines for making process design decisions


       During the second round, the following issues were raised:


       •  Methods for performing environmental impact evaluation

       •  Development of dynamic  process simulators to deal with start-ups,
          shutdowns, upsets, etc.

       •   Regulatory forecasting

       •   Small-customer modules



       Brunner noted that a number of issues had been suggested on the cards

submitted by workshop participants  serving  on  other workgroups.  Among these,

he listed the following:


       •   Reaction path synthesis

       •   Surrogate selection

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      •  Total cost assessment

      •  The tendency for new development to focus on user interface features
         rather than more robust modelling

      •  Improved optimization

      •  The observation that simulators tend to be good accounting devices but
         not good predictors, and that the better reactor models are proprietary
         systems not included in commercially available simulators

      •  Methods to address the formidable chemical engineering problems that
         often occur during process scale-up

      •  Methods of predicting the formation of trace contaminants

      •  Expert guidance/heuristics for pollution prevention design

      •  Catalyst design

      •  Aqueous systems/electrolytes


      Following the morning break, workgroup members offered additional

topics for research:


      •  Uncertainty analysis guidance similar to expert guidance in flowsheet
         building

      •  Stochastic modeling

      •  Data acquisition/predictions in a laboratory setting

      •  Data retrieval from proprietary sources (e.g., vendors, operating
         companies)

      •  Chemical structure-based data prediction

      •  Incorporation of life cycle assessment (which may be a long-term need)

      •  Toxicity data retrieval and prediction
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          Integration of product-based methods (e.g., solvent substitution,
          materials selection)
          Application of industrial ecology analysis
       To facilitate consideration of this broad range of topics, the workgroup
attempted to devise categories that would subsume multiple research topics.
Although there was some difficulty in coming up with names for these categories,
the group eventually settled on the following six categories:

       •  Integrating Activities
       •  Decision-Making Tools
       •  Expanded  Process Simulation
       •  Decision Support
       •  Reaction Engineering
       •  Data and Characterization

       Regarding the timeframe within which a significant impact of the
recommended research could be expected, the group agreed that all of the items
they had discussed were ones that had the potential to produce such an impact in
the short-term (i.e., within 5 years).  There was a reluctance among some group
members to place a specific timeframe on  each item, since there was some fear
that items identified  as longer-term needs might be put off.

       The group also had some  difficulty in assigning the various tasks to
industry, government, and/or academia.  In general, however, they felt that
industry and academia should be involved in all of these efforts, while government
should only be involved in some. Government participation was considered
especially important for topics like regulatory forecasting, which involve issues

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where the government clearly plays an important if not determinative role.
Bostian made a plea that the group not suggest that government funding is
needed for all of its recommendations, and Brunner suggested that government
funding be requested only where it is definitely needed.

      Following the lunch break, a voting procedure was used to rank the topics
in each category in terms of their relative priority.  In this procedure, each
workgroup member was allotted  10 votes per category, no more than 6 of which
could be allocated to a single research topic. One workgroup member abstained
from the voting due to a lack of adequate background in computer-based
methods.

      When the voting was complete, P. Radecki was selected to present the
workgroup's recommendations to the workshop as a whole.
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                                         *L'.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1 9 94-5 5 0-00 1 ' 00 1 7 3

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