Green chemistry in drug discovery emphasizes the design of synthetic routes that are safer, more sustainable, and environmentally responsible — without compromising efficiency or innovation. It’s about rethinking how we build molecules to reduce waste, energy use, and toxic byproducts.
1. Atom Economy & Step Economy
Favor reactions where most atoms from starting materials end up in the final product.
Minimize the number of synthetic steps to reduce waste, cost, and energy consumption.
2. Renewable Feedstocks
Use bio-based starting materials (e.g., sugars, terpenes, amino acids) instead of petroleum-derived reagents.
Explore biocatalysis and fermentation as greener routes to complex intermediates.
3. Catalysis Over Stoichiometric Reagents
Prioritize catalytic reactions (metal, organocatalysts, enzymes) to reduce reagent excess
Emphasize recyclable catalysts and low-toxicity metals (e.g., iron, copper over palladium or platinum).
4. Safer Solvents and Solvent-Free Reactions
Replace hazardous solvents (e.g., dichloromethane, DMF) with greener alternatives like ethanol, ethyl acetate, water, or supercritical CO₂.
Highlight solvent-free or microwave-assisted reactions that reduce environmental footprint.
5. Energy Efficiency
Favor reactions that proceed at ambient temperature and pressure
Use microwave, photochemical, or electrochemical methods to reduce energy input.
6. Waste Minimization and Process Intensification
Design reactions with minimal purification steps (e.g., telescoping reactions).
Use flow chemistry to improve scalability, safety, and reduce solvent use
7. Lifecycle Thinking
Consider the entire lifecycle of a synthetic route — from raw materials to end-of-life disposal.
Incorporate Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) tools to evaluate environmental impact.