Product Description
A chemical engineer’s guide to managing and minimizing environmental impact.
Chemical processes are invaluable to modern society, yet they generate substantial quantities of wastes and emissions, and safely managing these wastes costs tens of millions of dollars annually. Green Engineering is a complete professional’s guide to the cost-effective design, commercialization, and use of chemical processes in ways that minimize pollution at the source, and reduce impact on health and the environment. This book also offers powerful new insights into environmental risk-based considerations in design of processes and products.
First conceived by the staff of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Green Engineering draws on contributions from many leaders in the field and introduces advanced risk-based techniques including some currently in use at the EPA. Coverage includes:
- Engineering chemical processes, products, and systems to reduce environmental impacts
- Approaches for evaluating emissions and hazards of chemicals and processes
- Defining effective environmental performance targets
- Advanced approaches and tools for evaluating environmental fate
- Early-stage design and development techniques that minimize costs and environmental impacts
- In-depth coverage of unit operation and flowsheet analysis
- The economics of environmental improvement projects
- Integration of chemical processes with other material processing operations
- Lifecycle assessments: beyond the boundaries of the plant
Increasingly, chemical engineers are faced with the challenge of integrating environmental objectives into design decisions. Green Engineering gives them the technical tools they need to do so.
Green Engineering: Environmentally Conscious Design of Chemical Processes












I used this book for a graduate level course, “Advances in Pollution Prevention”. This book is not the best book I’ve ever read. The end-of chapter problems are mediocre, and often insult the reader’s ability, particularly as a graduate level chemical engineering student. One example that comes to mind is where the problem requests the student to “write a 2 page essay” on some topic or another. It could use a lot more “meat” – stronger use of reaction kinetics, thermodynamics, and transport phenomena. The writing is difficult to follow, and sounds like a government report (not surprising, as the authors work for the EPA).
Rating: 3 / 5
This is a good book. If you need to know where environmental protection fits into engineering studies and design, then this book is for you.
Rating: 5 / 5