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Green Chemistry is a Transformative Journal, and Plan S compliant
Impact factor: 9.3*
Time to first decision (all decisions): 13.0 days**
Time to first decision (peer reviewed only): 35.0 days***
Chair: Javier Pérez-Ramírez
Indexed in Web of Science
Open access publishing options available
Journal scope
Green Chemistry provides a unique forum for the publication of innovative research on the development of alternative green and sustainable technologies.
The scope of Green Chemistry is based on, but not limited to, the definition proposed by Anastas and Warner (Green Chemistry: Theory and Practice, P T Anastas and J C Warner, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1998). Green chemistry is the utilisation of a set of principles that reduces or eliminates the use or generation of hazardous substances in the design, manufacture and application of chemical products.
Green Chemistry is at the frontiers of this continuously-evolving interdisciplinary science and publishes research that attempts to reduce the environmental impact of the chemical enterprise by developing a technology base that is inherently non-toxic to living things and the environment. Submissions on all aspects of research relating to the endeavour are welcome.
The journal publishes original and significant cutting-edge research that is likely to be of wide general appeal. To be published, work must present a significant advance in green chemistry. Papers must contain a comparison with existing methods and demonstrate advantages over those methods before publication can be considered. For more information please .
Coverage includes the following, but is not limited to:
- Design (e.g. biomimicry, design for degradation/recycling/reduced toxicity…)
- Reagents & Feedstocks (e.g. renewables, CO2, solvents, auxiliary agents, waste utilization…)
- Synthesis (e.g. organic, inorganic, synthetic biology…)
- Catalysis (e.g. homogeneous, heterogeneous, enzyme, whole cell…)
- Process (e.g. process design, intensification, separations, recycling, efficiency…)
- Energy (e.g. renewable energy, fuels, photovoltaics, fuel cells, energy storage, energy carriers…)
- Applications (e.g. electronics, dyes, consumer products, coatings, pharmaceuticals, preservatives, building materials, chemicals for industry/agriculture/mining…)
- Impact (e.g. safety, metrics, LCA, sustainability, (eco)toxicology…)
Green chemistry is, by definition, a continuously-evolving frontier. Therefore, the inclusion of a particular material or technology does not, of itself, guarantee that a paper is suitable for the journal. To be suitable, the novel advance should have the potential for reduced environmental impact relative to the state of the art. Green Chemistry does not normally deal with research associated with 'end-of-pipe' or remediation issues.
Occasionally the Editors may decide to publish something outside the defined scope of the journal if the work would be of interest to the green chemistry community and/or have the potential to shape the field.
Green Chemistry: What is the green advance?
One of the main requirements for papers to be published in Green Chemistry is to clearly demonstrate a green advance over the incumbent technology or approach. Past Editorial Board Chair, (Queen's University, Canada), has put together two short videos to explain what this concept really means and how to incorporate it into your own work.
Additionally, the RSC has put together showcasing selected examples aiming to quantify the benefits and trade-offs of green chemistry by providing assessment methods, models, indicators, and metrics. The collection is intended as a guide and accessible resource for the whole chemical community while helping authors to measure, compare, and describe the advantages and disadvantages of introducing green chemistry principles and approaches in their work.
See who's on the team
Meet our Chair and all other board members for the Green Chemistry journal.
Chair
Javier Pérez-Ramírez, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Associate editors
Aiwen Lei, College of Chemistry and Molecular Sciences, The Institute for Advanced Studies, Wuhan University, P. R. China
Keiichi Tomishige, Tohoku University, Japan
Luigi Vaccaro, University of Perugia, Italy
Editorial board members
André Bardow, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
Jing He, Beijing University of Chemical Technology, China
Jean-Paul Lange, University of Twente and Shell Projects & Technology, The Netherlands
Serenella Sala, European Commission - Joint Research Centre, Italy
Laurel Schafer, The University of British Columbia, Canada
Charlotte Williams, University of Oxford, UK
Paul Anastas, Yale University, USA
Isabel Arends, TU Delft, Netherlands
Katalin Barta, University of Graz, Austria
Gregg Beckham, NREL, USA
Asim Bhaumik, Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science, India
Sophie Carenco, Sorbonne Université, France
Fabrizio Cavani, University of Bologna, Italy
Céline Chizallet, IFP Energies nouvelles, France
James Clark, University of York, UK
Avelino Corma, UPV-CSIC, Spain
Robert H Crabtree, Yale University, USA
Paul Dauenhauer, University of Minnesota, USA
James Dumesic, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
Martin Eastgate, Bristol Myers Squibb, USA
Karen Goldberg, University of Washington, USA
Buxing Han, Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Steve Howdle, Nottingham University, UK
Andrew J. Hunt, Khon Kaen University, Thailand
Graham Hutchings, Cardiff University, UK
Francois Jérôme, University of Poitiers, France
Philip Jessop, Queen's University, Canada
C Oliver Kappe, University of Graz, Austria
Shu Kobayashi, University of Tokyo,Japan
Burkhard Koenig, University of Regensburg, Germany
Michael Kopach, Lilly, USA
Walter Leitner, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
Chao-Jun Li, McGill University, Canada
Bruce Lipshutz, University of California, USA
Doug MacFarlane, Monash University, Australia
Tomoo Mizugaki, Osaka University, Japan
Regina Palkovits, RWTH Aachen, Germany
Alvise Perosa, Universita Ca Foscari, Italy
Martina Peters, Bayer AG, Germany
Martyn Poliakoff, University of Nottingham, UK
Elsje Alessandra Quadrelli, CNRS and ESCPE Lyon, France
Colin Raston, Flinders University, Australia
Roberto Rinaldi, Imperial College London, UK
Robin D Rogers, McGill University, Canada
Susannah Scott, University of California, USA
Roger Sheldon, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
Helen Sneddon, University of York, UK
Christian Stevens, Ghent University, Belgium
Natalia Tarasova, Mendeleev University of Chemical Technology, Russia
Magdalena Titirici, Imperial College London, UK
Rajender Varma, US Environmental Protection Agency, USA
Tom Welton, Imperial College, UK
Kevin C. W. Wu, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
G D Yadav, Institute of Chemical Technology Mumbai, India
Hisao Yoshida, Kyoto University, Japan
Suojiang Zhang, Institute of Process Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Tao Zhang, Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Julie Beth Zimmerman, Yale School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, USA
Vânia Zuin Zeidler, Institute of Sustainable Chemistry Faculty/School of Sustainability, Leuphana University, Germany
Michael A. Rowan, Executive Editor
Edward Gardner, Deputy Editor
Bee Hockin, Development Editor
Andrea Carolina Ojeda-Porras, Development Editor
Gisela Scott, Editorial Manager
Chris Goodall, Associate Editorial Manager
Sam Keltie, Publisher, ORCID
Catherine Au, Publishing Editor
Isobel Darlington, Publishing Editor
Konoya Das, Publishing Editor
Alexandre Dumon, Publishing Editor
Charley James, Publishing Editor
Amy Lucas, Publishing Editor
Kieran Nicholson, Publishing Editor
Rini Prakash, Publishing Editor
Daphne Houston, Editorial Assistant
Robert Griffiths, Publishing Assistant
Open access publishing options
Green Chemistry is a hybrid (transformative) journal and gives authors the choice of publishing their research either via the traditional subscription-based model or instead by choosing our gold open access option. Find out more about our Transformative Journals. which are Plan S compliant.
Gold open access
For authors who want to publish their article gold open access, Green Chemistry charges an article processing charge (APC) of £3,000 (+ any applicable tax). Our APC is all-inclusive and makes your article freely available online immediately, permanently, and includes your choice of Creative Commons licence (CC BY or CC BY-NC) at no extra cost. It is not a submission charge, so you only pay if your article is accepted for publication.
Learn more about publishing open access.
Read & Publish
If your institution has a Read & Publish agreement in place with the ÂÜÀòÉç, APCs for gold open access publishing in Green Chemistry may already be covered.
Use our to check if your institution has an open access agreement with us.
Please use your official institutional email address to submit your manuscript and check you are assigned as the corresponding author; this helps us to identify if you are eligible for Read & Publish or other APC discounts.
Traditional subscription model
Authors can also publish in Green Chemistry via the traditional subscription model without needing to pay an APC. Articles published via this route are available to institutions and individuals who subscribe to the journal. Our standard licence allows you to make the accepted manuscript of your article freely available after a 12-month embargo period. This is known as the green route to open access.
Readership information
The journal appeals to a broad international readership spanning many communities, including all academic and industrial scientists interested in the development of alternative sustainable technologies.
Subscription information
Green Chemistry is part of the RSC Gold subscription package.
Online only 2025: ISSN 1463-9270, £2,937 / $5,177
*2023 Journal Citation Reports (Clarivate Analytics, 2024)
**The median time from submission to first decision including manuscripts rejected without peer review from the previous calendar year
***The median time from submission to first decision for peer-reviewed manuscripts from the previous calendar year
Green Chemistry
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