Author: Dr. Kiran Dayaram Ladwani & Dr. Krishna D. Ladwani
DOI Link: https://doi.org/10.70798/Bijmrd/04021025
Abstract:
Right now, people talk a lot about clean energy, yet few dig into how chemistry fits in. Noticing patterns begins with questioning assumptions like whether chemistry matters in green tech at all. Another assumption tested: progress in chemicals doesn’t boost performance or eco-friendliness of renewables. A look at responses from 96 individuals reveals most already know something about renewable power. More than nine out of ten recognise it exists and is in use somewhere on the planet. When asked to rate ideas on a five-point scale, scores stayed near the top across the board. Protecting nature through renewables scored almost at maximum strength. Chemistry linked to batteries pulled strong agreement from respondents too. So did concepts tied to sustainable lab practices and materials design. Solar systems backed by molecular science drew solid approval ratings. Belief in future chemical solutions held steady among participants surveyed. Biofuels connected to synthetic pathways rated slightly lower but still clear support. Cutting down reliance on oil got the strongest nod of any idea presented here. Among fields of chemistry, organic took the lead based on participant picks. After that came physical chemistry holding second place clearly. Environmental chemistry landed third, showing notable presence in minds of those answering.
Not a single hypothesis holds up here average scores climb far past neutral points, clear in basic statistical checks. What powers new tech such as high-output solar materials, ways to speed up green fuel creation, or next-gen battery designs? Chemistry does. That fits right into three goals: showing why it matters at the core level, looking closely at how it helps generate clean power, then guessing where it might lead in cutting ties to oil and coal. Work ahead may need harder data instead of surveys, since today’s findings rely on what people say they observe. Still, one thing stands out – the role chemistry plays could reshape how we shift toward lasting energy sources. Education that crosses fields, along with stronger backing for science rules, seems worth pursuing.
Keywords: Renewable Energy, Chemistry, Sustainability, Green Technology.
Page No: 134-140
