Details for this torrent 

Kaliaguine S., Dubois J. Industrial Green Chemistry 2021
Type:
Other > E-books
Files:
1
Size:
6.25 MiB (6551269 Bytes)
Uploaded:
2024-01-25 17:50 GMT
By:
andryold1
Seeders:
25
Leechers:
5

Info Hash:
A0A4E6F1444E4E00D12B738BF618F0AE3EC9FC87




Textbook in PDF format

The editors and authors, with backgrounds in academia and industry, tie together recent and established technologies for the upcoming change to sustainable industrial chemistry. The extensive worldwide activities towards that goal are exemplified with a series of green processes. Some of these processes are already commercially applied (squalene to squalane, hydraulic fluids from vegetable oils, biosourced polycarbonates), others are ready for a large scale implementation (glycerol to acrylic acid, biosourced acrylonitrile and levulinic acid, polyamides from fatty nitriles-esters hydrogenation, butadiene from bioethanol) or are being developed (cyclic carbonates from epoxides, selective pyrolysis of biomass). This book is an indispensable source for the researchers and professionals who work for a greener chemical industry. The chapters have been arranged to guide students through the design of new processes for more sustainable chemistry, using case studies as examples.
• A description of sustainable catalytic processes applied in industry
• Modern methods and technologies to make catalytic processes more efficient, resource-saving and environmentally friendly
Conversion of glycerol to acrylic acid
Alternative routes to more sustainable acrylonitrile: biosourced
Biobased levulinic acid production
Fatty nitrile esters hydrogenation for biosourced polyamide polymers
Ni-free hydrogenation of natural products for the personal care industry: case study, squalene hydrogenation
High-performance hydraulic fluids from vegetable oils
Biomass valorization: bioethanol upgrading to butadiene
Biosourced polycarbonates
Organic cyclic carbonates synthesis under mild conditions
Biomass selective pyrolysis, bio-oil separation and products development: challenges and opportunities for green chemistry