Monday, September 21, 2009

X-fi Mb siriaru

A green process: Ibuprofen

not always meet the twelve principles in most real world applications, but provide a laudable goal to try to get it to stop and can make chemists think more carefully about the environmental implications of their work. Success stories already taking place and more are in progress. Now there are about 7 million pounds per year of ibuprofen (6 billion tablets!) Through a process "GREEN" which produces about 99% less waste than the process it replaces. Only requires three steps, the solvent anhydrous HF used in the first step, is recovered and reused, and the second and third steps are catalytic:


GREEN PROCESS FOR IBUPROFEN





Thanks for your feedback, good to your order, try on ibuprofen:

Ibuprofen is an anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) commonly used for symptomatic relief of headache (migraine), toothache (dental pain), muscle pain (myalgia), upset menstruation (dysmenorrhea), mild neurological pain, fever and pain after surgery (postoperative). It is also used to treat inflammatory conditions, such as those presented in arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and gouty arthritis. Usually the recommended adult daily dose is about 1,200 mg per day, depending on the severity of the disorder and discomfort of the patient, but should not exceed 2,400 mg daily.
Ibuprofen, like other derivatives of 2-arilpropionato (including ketoprofen, flurbiprofen, naproxen, etc.) contains a chiral carbon in α position of the propionate:

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