GREEN CHEMISTRY AND ITS IMPLEMENTATION IN PHARMACEUTICAL ANALYSIS

  • Unique Paper ID: 170807
  • PageNo: 1719-1728
  • Abstract:
  • As stated in this abstract, the objective of green chemistry is to reduce the amount of chemical pollutants discharged into the environment. Green chemistry's potential to produce safer specialized chemicals and improved chemical industry procedures are also covered. Green chemistry (GC), which was founded on 12 concepts in 1998, seeks to minimize the use of dangerous substances in chemical reactions and products. With an emphasis on direct analytical techniques that involve little or no sample preparation—"the most polluting" step—and research that either minimized the use of hazardous solvents or substituted them with safer, more environmentally friendly solvents, this review outlines the application of GAC principles in pharmaceutical analysis. High-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) generates enormous amounts of dangerous organic waste. It is necessary to optimize analytical methods for speed, accuracy, sensitivity, reproducibility, and versatility

Copyright & License

Copyright © 2026 Authors retain the copyright of this article. This article is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

BibTeX

@article{170807,
        author = {Ms Manda Sangeetha and Ms Marredi Prasanna Lakshmi and Ms Aduri.B.T.Maha Lakshmi and Ms Aduri Divya and Mr Arugollu Durga Prasad and Mrs Tadikonda Yamini Kumari and Dr V Bhaskara Raju},
        title = {GREEN CHEMISTRY AND ITS IMPLEMENTATION IN PHARMACEUTICAL ANALYSIS},
        journal = {International Journal of Innovative Research in Technology},
        year = {2024},
        volume = {11},
        number = {7},
        pages = {1719-1728},
        issn = {2349-6002},
        url = {https://ijirt.org/article?manuscript=170807},
        abstract = {As stated in this abstract, the objective of green chemistry is to reduce the amount of chemical pollutants discharged into the environment. Green chemistry's potential to produce safer specialized chemicals and improved chemical industry procedures are also covered. Green chemistry (GC), which was founded on 12 concepts in 1998, seeks to minimize the use of dangerous substances in chemical reactions and products. With an emphasis on direct analytical techniques that involve little or no sample preparation—"the most polluting" step—and research that either minimized the use of hazardous solvents or substituted them with safer, more environmentally friendly solvents, this review outlines the application of GAC principles in pharmaceutical analysis. High-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) generates enormous amounts of dangerous organic waste. It is necessary to optimize analytical methods for speed, accuracy, sensitivity, reproducibility, and versatility},
        keywords = {Chemicals, Green Chemistry, HPLC, Pharmaceutical analysis},
        month = {December},
        }

Cite This Article

Sangeetha, M. M., & Lakshmi, M. M. P., & Lakshmi, M. A., & Divya, M. A., & Prasad, M. A. D., & Kumari, M. T. Y., & Raju, D. V. B. (2024). GREEN CHEMISTRY AND ITS IMPLEMENTATION IN PHARMACEUTICAL ANALYSIS. International Journal of Innovative Research in Technology (IJIRT), 11(7), 1719–1728.

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