RASĀYAN 2010 - Hard Bound Special Issue HEAVY METALS AND ORGANIC POLLUTANTS Green Remediation Processes
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Category RASĀYAN 2010
Deadline: August 30, 2010 | Date: December 30, 2010
Venue/Country: CALL FOR PAPERS, Afghanistan
Updated: 2010-08-17 16:43:55 (GMT+9)
Call For Papers - CFP
Hard Bound Special IssueHEAVY METALS AND ORGANIC POLLUTANTSGreen Remediation ProcessesTo be published in RASĀYAN Journal of Chemistry in December 2010Editors LEAD EDITORProf.(Dr.)Sanjay K. SharmaEditor-in-Chief, RASĀYAN Journal of Chemistry,Jaipur, Indiadrsanjay1973
gmail.com ASSOCIATE EDITORSAckmez MudhooDepartment of Chemical and Environmental EngineeringFaculty of EngineeringUniversity of Mauritius, Reduit, Mauritiusackmezchem
yahoo.co.uk Dr Sandhya BabelAssociate ProfessorSchool of Biochemical Engineering and TechnologySirindhorn International Institute of TechnologyThammasat UniversityPO Box 22, Pathumthani 12121, Thailandsandhya
siit.tu.ac.thSpecial Issue ThemeProgress throughout the world indisputably relies on many industrial, agricultural and manufacturing processes. These processes are however also the main generators of various types of wastes, process biological residues and wastewaters that are normally discharged as undesired materials. The presentation and discussion of original research information, critical reviews and case studies on the generation, characterization, monitoring and more importantly novel environmental friendly treatment technologies and processes of contaminated media are more than ever justified in order to design and implement proactive methodologies which foster sustainable development and environmental stewardship.Rapid industrialization and urbanization have resulted in elevated emission of toxic heavy metals and organic pollutants (herein collectively referred to as “contaminants”) entering the biosphere. Various anthropogenic activities such as mining and agriculture have polluted extensive areas throughout the world. The release of such contaminants in biologically available forms may damage or alter both natural and man?made ecosystems. Wastewaters from various industries, such as metal finishing, electroplating, plastics, pigments and mining, contain several contaminants of health and environmental concern, such as cadmium, copper, chromium, zinc and nickel. Conventional methods for the removal of the contaminants from wastewaters and other contaminated media (soil, sludge and air) include chemical precipitation, electroflotation, ion exchange, reverse osmosis and adsorption onto activated carbon. But due to operational demerits and poor environmental sustainability, high cost of the treatment and the generation of toxic chemical sludges, some new technologies have been tried for a long time. The emerging concept of Green Chemistry has led to the identification of a number of microbial biomass types that are extremely effective in concentrating such contaminants. Green Chemistry (environmentally benign chemistry) is the utilization of set of principles that reduces or eliminates the use or generation of hazardous substances in the design, manufacture and application of chemical products. In practice, green chemistry is taken to cover a much broader range of issues than the definition suggests but may be lumped under the 12 principles which are related to prevention, atom economy, less hazardous chemical syntheses, designing safer chemicals, safer solvents and auxiliaries, design for energy efficiency, use of renewable feedstocks, reduce derivatives, catalysis, design for degradation, real?time analysis for pollution prevention and inherently safer chemistry for accident prevention.The specific aim of this Special Issue of RJC is to present a rich mix of the original research work, case studies and critical reviews that best serve to help understand and keep pace with the issues related to and technical and research progress achieved in heavy metals and organic pollutants remediation/removal using techniques which fit under the concept of Green Chemistry and respond to at least one of the 12 principles.DEADLINE FOR PAPER SUBMISSION: 30TH AUGUST 2010 Instructions for submissions The complete details of how to prepare the manuscript exactly as per the available sample paper are ALL available for consultation at http://rasayanjournal.com/Authors-Guidelines/Instruction-to-Authors.html
For this Special Issue, ALL Manuscripts and required completed forms (Transfer of Copyright Agreement form) with proper signatures by the Corresponding Author of a manuscript need to be submitted to the Lead Editor, Prof Sanjay K Sharma, on drsanjay1973
gmail.com. Please include in your submission subject line in the email message the title of the Special Issue as RJC Hm-2010. All manuscripts shall undergo a peer review for at least two positive reports for acceptance. In the event you plan to submit a manuscript, please confirm your title and authors list on ackmezchem
yahoo.co.uk with CC on drsanjay1973
gmail.com and sandhya
siit.tu.ac.thWe thank you warmly for you much esteemed consideration and likely contribution.For Preparation of Manuscript please follow the Authors Guidelines, refer the following link for the same-http://rasayanjournal.com/index.php/Authors-Guidelines/Instruction-to-Authors.html
Sincerely your's RASĀYAN www.rasayanjournal.com
Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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