Synthetic Greenhouse Gases

A special issue of ChemEngineering (ISSN 2305-7084).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2019) | Viewed by 253

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
Discipline of Chemical Engineering, School of Engineering, The Priority Research Centre (PRC) for Frontier Energy Technologies & Utilisation, University of Newcastle, 1 University Drive, Callaghan, NSW, 2308, Australia
Interests: treatment of ODS and sGHGs, mineral carbonation of CO2, natural gas conversion, thermal decomposition of PFAS

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Guest Editor
Institute of Industrial catalysis, Zhejiang University of Technology, Chaowang road 18, Hangzhou 310014, China
Interests: Conversion of fluorinated greenhouse gases, Catalysis, ammonia synthesis, metal fluorides

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Guest Editor
Chemical Engineering, School of Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment, The University of Newcastle /University Drive, Callaghan NSW 2308, Australia
Interests: Catalysis, in situ spectroscopy, zeolites, porous materials, EXAFS, XANES, XPS, IR spectroscopy

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Synthetic greenhouse gases, of which fluorine-containing gases dominate in terms of their widespread use throughout the world, find use in a wide variety of applications. The widespread use of these gases however, has had a direct and measurable effect on the earth’s atmosphere, and consequently their manufacture, use, management and disposal is closely scrutinized and monitored. There is significant effort in private industries, government bodies, research institutes and universities to develop regulations, protocol, incentives and end of life treatment technologies, aimed at reducing the emission of these compounds into the receiving environment. Based on these ideas, we are inviting authors to present papers and short reviews in a broad range of topics for this Special Issue on “Synthetic Greenhouse Gases”.

Prof. Dr. Eric Kennedy
Prof. Dr. Wenfeng Han
Prof. Dr. Michael Stockenhuber
Guest Editors

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Keywords

  • F-gas
  • HFC
  • HCFC
  • PFC

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Published Papers

There is no accepted submissions to this special issue at this moment.
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