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anna_ivanova
New Contributor III

Re: Ask the Innovators: Spotlight on Berkeley's Greener Solutions Program

Feel free to join in to ask, answer, or discuss questions even if you're not an official panelist! We welcome the entire green chemistry community.

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megans
New Contributor II

Re: Ask the Innovators: Spotlight on Berkeley's Greener Solutions Program

We select the challenges specifically to serve our goal: teaching students about technical considerations of material selection within an interdisciplinary setting. So, we don't take on broader questions of sustainability. We find a chemical function in a material, product, or manufacturing process that is currently being served by a hazardous chemical and walk students through the process of identifying potentially safer alternatives. They have to evaluate technical feasibility and relative hazard of both the existing chemical and potential substitutes. And we teach them to look broadly, beyond drop-in chemical substitution to process redesign.

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Not applicable

Re: Ask the Innovators: Spotlight on Berkeley's Greener Solutions Program

The challenges to us have been mostly about intellectual property and the mission of the university versus the goals of a particular client. This usually involves a case-by-case review of the different needs of the parties and how we can limit our work to provide sector-wide solutions to the client, without compromising their proprietary property. Sometimes the fit is not there and we have to not take on an opportunity.

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megans
New Contributor II

Re: Ask the Innovators: Spotlight on Berkeley's Greener Solutions Program

Hi Joel,

The magic (and also the curse) is that we're operating in this interdisciplinary space. So, while the course is listed in the School of Public Health, students enlist from many other schools and departments. The challenge is that no one division sees it as "their" course, and we have to fund it through grants (EPA's Pollution Prevention program most recently), and also through small contributions from participating companies. But we're clear that the products of the course are all open access, we don't sign NDAs, and we're working on problems that are relevant to a whole industry sector, rather than being the profit engine for a particular company.

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Not applicable

Re: Ask the Innovators: Spotlight on Berkeley's Greener Solutions Program

The Greener Solutions course is by design interdisciplinary and project driven, so it is difficult to require base courses of the students and get the talent mix that we want: public health, toxicology, engineering, chemistry. That said, we do offer courses as part of Berkeley Center for Green Chemistry that are required for our SAGE IGERT fellows (two year funding). The Greener Solutions course, and introduction to Green Chemistry and energy, and opportunities to pursue independent study courses related to projects that were started in the regular classes.

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CBriddell
Contributor III

Re: Ask the Innovators: Spotlight on Berkeley's Greener Solutions Program

That is good feedback. From an industry standpoint, Kaj, do you seek employees with an understanding of green chemistry/sustainability all else being equal?

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Constable01
New Contributor III

Re: Ask the Innovators: Spotlight on Berkeley's Greener Solutions Program

Hi Ernesto!  Thanks for a few excellent questions.  Let me try to answer them from my perspective.

  • GMO's have been used in a variety of semi-synthetic processes in Pharma for many years now.  So, for example, for antibiotics like penecillins and cephalosporins the beta-lactam ring portion of the molecule is produced using GMO's.  The basic building block for the anti-cancer compound Taxol, originally produced from a Pacific Yew tree extract, was produced in the 3rd generation process from a GMO building block.  More recently, companies like Solazyme, who make tailored oils (e.g., chemical equivalent of palm, corn, soybean, etc.) and Amyris who make chemicals like farnesane (a drop in diesel replacement) and squalene (used in cosmetic formulations) are developing markets for their products.  Companies like Myriant, BioAmber, and BASF are using GMO's to produce bio-based succinic acid as a route to butane dixoide and other specialty chemicals/polymers.  In each of these cases, there are a variety of issues related to the carbon source (e.g., sugar or starch/sugar), water, micro-nutrients required for growth, etc. that need to be managed in addition to water.  In general, it is my opinion that you will see a greater use of synthetic biology in the future because it will give greater access to molecular diversity not easily obtained from petrochemical building blocks, but this will take some time because chemists like to use the same building blocks.
  • I personally don't think that food wastes should be used for commodity chemical production but for specialty chemical production.  Make use of the chemical diversity that exists in protein, or in lignin rather than burning it or sending it to waste treatment.  In general, production needs to be distributed so it is in the area in which the waste is produced.  This would reduce transportation-related impacts.  Also, we need to move towards the concept of a bio-refinery in a manner that is similar to a modern petrochemical plant, where mass and energy efficiency has been highly optimized.  For commodity chemicals and/or polymers, I think we would be better served by GMO's fermenting sugar or algae/cyanobacteria producing the large scale quantities.
  • Yes, too many chemists are focused on replicating existing building blocks rather than thinking about designing a molecule that is better for a particular synthetic target.  In general, I think we need to transition chemistry education to have chemists more aware of different approaches to how to make new molecules.

DJCC

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Not applicable

Re: Ask the Innovators: Spotlight on Berkeley's Greener Solutions Program

You raise an interesting and timely question about GMO and of course this is being developed as a foundational business model by several companies, such as Amyris, so this is a reality from the science and technology standpoint. What society probably needs more of is  experts to guide us in the wise use of such technologies, and the methods to assess impact. In my opinion, these should be reviewed on a case-by-case basis on their relative merits and impacts.

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Previous Community Member
Not applicable

Re: Ask the Innovators: Spotlight on Berkeley's Greener Solutions Program

I agree with Tom, and it might be helpful if I shared my experiences from participating in the course last year.

Here are several ways in which the course helped me professionally. (1) The course instructors did a fantastic job teaching these concepts and providing a framework to evaluate safety aspects of chemicals, thereby teaching an important and valued skill in industry. (2) The course also centers around collaboration between industry partners and students, which allowed our student group to learn about green chemistry challenges faced by industry and build relationships with representatives from industry. (3) During the course, your student team develops a proposal for addressing a green chemistry challenge, which provides an opportunity for you to contribute a unique perspective to this problem which you can build upon.

All of the points above were important complements to my graduate studies. In collaboration with Method and the USDA, our proposal also served as a starting point for ongoing laboratory work.

The problems a student might work on in their undergraduate or graduate courses may not seem to have much in common with problems faced in industry. However, in my experience, seemingly unrelated studies during my graduate and undergraduate courses and research have been enormously helpful as we continue laboratory testing of the ideas proposed in this course.

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megans
New Contributor II

Re: Ask the Innovators: Spotlight on Berkeley's Greener Solutions Program

In response to your third question, there's tremendous potential for creativity in looking beyond drop-in replacements to existing chemistry.

In the Greener Solutions course we have the freedom to think very creatively, and so we work with our students to reduce the challenge to a chemical function, say, cross-linking (in a challenge to replace formaldehyde in permanent press fabrics), or UV-activated phase-change (in a challenge to improve the resins used in 3D printing).

The students then take that chemical function and query the biological literature, looking for where in nature there is cross-linking or coordinated phase-change. This approach takes them far beyond the quick drop-in chemical replacements based on existing chemistry.

Other programs --such as the EPA's DfE program-- have different constraints, and they're limited to considering existing alternatives, and that's inherently more limited.

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