Loading...

Engineering Solutions for CO2 Conversion

Description

A comprehensive guide that offers a review of the current technologies that tackle CO2 emissions

The race to reduce CO2 emissions continues to be an urgent global challenge. Engineering Solutions for CO2 Conversion offers a thorough guide to the most current technologies designed to mitigate CO2 emissions ranging from CO2 capture to CO2 utilization approaches. With contributions from an international panel representing a wide range of expertise, this book contains a multidisciplinary toolkit that covers the myriad aspects of CO2 conversion strategies. Comprehensive in scope, it explores the chemical, physical, engineering and economical facets of CO2 conversion.

Engineering Solutions for CO2 Conversion explores a broad range of topics including linking CFD and process simulations, membranes technologies for efficient CO2 capture-conversion, biogas sweetening technologies, plasma-assisted conversion of CO2, and much more. This important resource:

  • Addresses a pressing concern of global environmental damage, caused by the greenhouse gases emissions from fossil fuels
  • Contains a review of the most current developments on the various aspects of CO2 capture and utilization strategies
  • Includes information on chemical, physical, engineering and economical facets of CO2 capture and utilization
  • Offers in-depth insight into materials design, processing characterization, and computer modeling with respect to CO2 capture and conversion

Written for catalytic chemists, electrochemists, process engineers, chemical engineers, industrialists, photochemists, environmental engineers, theoretical chemists, environmental officers, Engineering Solutions for CO2 Conversion provides the most current and expert information on the many aspects and challenges of CO2 conversion.

About the Author

Tomas R. Reina, PhD, is a Senior Lecturer in Chemical Engineering and Head of the Catalysis Unit at the University of Surrey, UK.

José A. Odriozola, PhD, is Chair of Inorganic Chemistry of the University of Sevilla, Spain.

Harvey Arellano-Garcia, PhD, is Director of Research and Professor of Energy and Chemical Engineering at the Department of Process and Plant Technology at BTU-Cottbus, Germany and Chair of Process and Systems Engineering at the Brandenburg University of Technology in Germany.