Waste Treatment in the Process Industries.
by: Lawrence K. Wang, Yung-Tse Hung, Howard H. Lo, Constantine Yapijakis
Publisher: CRC Press | 1 edition (31 Oct 2005) | ISBN: 084937233X | Pages: 648 | PDF | 8.9 MB
# Supplies a concise, sharply focused, and economical reference for waste management personnel concentrated in the process industries
# Details the latest developments, technologies, practices, and solutions for hazardous waste treatment and disposal
# Includes chapters on bioassay, implementing industrial ecology, and applications of biotechnology to waste treatment
# Features coverage of the major industrial process plants or installations that have significant effects on the environment
Increasing demand on industrial capacity has, as an unintended consequence, produced an accompanying increase in harmful and hazardous wastes. Derived from the second edition of the popular Handbook of Industrial and Hazardous Wastes Treatment, Waste Treatment in the Process Industries outlines the fundamentals and latest developments in waste treatment in various process industries, such as pharmaceuticals, textiles, petroleum, soap, detergent, phosphate, paper, pulp, pesticides, rubber, and power. Comprehensive in scope, it provides information that is directly applicable to daily waste management problems throughout the industry.
The book contains in-depth discussions of environmental pollution sources, waste characteristics, control technologies, management strategies, facility innovations, process alternatives, costs, case histories, effluent standards, and future trends for the process industry. It includes extensive bibliographies for each type of industrial process waste treatment or practice, invaluable information to anyone who needs to trace, follow, duplicate, or improve on a specific process waste treatment practice.
A quick scan of the chapters and contributors reveals the depth and breadth of the book's coverage. It provides technical and economical information on how to develop the most feasible total environmental control program that can benefit both process industry and local municipalities.
Table of Contents
IMPLEMENTATION OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY FOR INDUSTRIAL HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT, L.K. Wang and Donald B. A
BIOASSAY OF INDUSTRIAL AND HAZARDOUS WASTE POLLUTANTS, S.Y. Selivanovskaya, V.Z. Latypova, N.Y. Stepanova, and Y.-T.
IN-PLANT MANAGEMENT AND DISPOSAL OF INDUSTRIAL HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES, L.K. Wang
APPLICATION OF BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR INDUSTRIAL WASTE TREATMENT, J.-H. Tay, S.T.-L. Tay, V. Ivanov, and Y.-T. Hung
TREATMENT OF PHARMACEUTICAL WASTES, S.K. Gupta, S.K. Gupta, and Y.-T. Hung
TREATMENT OF OILFIELD AND REFINERY WASTES, J.M. Wong and Y.-T. Hung
TREATMENT OF SOAP AND DETERGENT INDUSTRY WASTES, C. Yapijakis and L.K. Wang
TREATMENT OF TEXTILE WASTES, T. Bechtold and Y.T. Hung
TREATMENT OF PHOSPHATE INDUSTRY WASTES, C. Yapijakis and L.K. Wang
TREATMENT OF PULP AND PAPER MILL WASTES, S. Sumathi and Y.-T. Hung
TREATMENT OF PESTICIDE INDUSTRY WASTES, J.M. Wong
TREATMENT OF RUBBER INDUSTRY WASTES, J.R. Taricska, L.K. Wang, Y.-T. Hung, J.-H. Tay, and K.H. Li
TREATMENT OF POWER INDUSTRY WASTES, L.K. Wang.
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