Aims and Scope

Aims and Scope

CHE focuses on three areas of chemical engineering: chemical reaction engineering, chemical engineering, and materials and processes. CHE is a global research book and invites subscriptions from the original and new search engines. The authors hope to provide world-class research, explanation and discussion of new developments in the field of pharmaceutical engineering. Articles describing the new system and its implementation, as well as articles covering the creation of a system from other disciplines, are welcome. Close attention is also encouraged in research articles. The general statement is that the first and most important results are of general importance.

In CHE, the Environmental Chemical Engineering section contains articles on emerging topics in environmental chemistry and process engineering, including pollution control, segregation processes, advanced oxidation processes, pollutant adsorption, resource recovery, wastewater, nanotechnology environmental and bioprocessing, agricultural technology, CO2 capture and recovery and detection and recovery of micro-plastics (nano) CO2. Within the CHE, the Chemical Reaction Engineering section presents papers on a wide range of topics including reaction kinetics, simulation and optimization of different types of reactors, unsteady-state reactors, multiphase reactors, and process intensification including fundamental investigations of the processes of heat, mass and momentum transfer that take place along with chemical reactions.
Innovative research works addressing critical areas of reactor engineering (eg novel reactor designs and materials, reactor safety and environmental issues), and emerging reactor technologies (eg membrane reactors, chromatographic reactors, unconventional fluidized bed reactors, electrochemical reactors, micro-reactors, photo reactors , fuel-cells, enzymatic reactors, etc.) are particularly welcome. These assumptions are based entirely on, for example, the quantitative and commercial principles of the CFD without any prior support a new visual sensor without any technology acceptance; mathematical concepts; burns to the point of intense energy; or easy-to-use bioreactors (bacteria or animal cells) that are very difficult because they now look like other books.

Within the CHE, the Materials for New Energies and Advanced Applications section contains articles that explore various aspects of the preparation and characterization of advanced materials designed for specific applications. This section illustrates the evolution of the highly successful synthesis and processing part of materials, the purpose of which has been revised to emphasize the design and application of materials in various fields, energy plays a significant role (collection, storage, use), but not exclusively; manuscripts showing the use of new materials in various fields are welcome. Manuscripts describing new methods of synthesis, as well as the processes used to obtain materials with different morphologies and / or changes in the surface and structural properties of these materials, will be considered if the manuscript is written in chemical engineering. Manuscripts on micro- and nanostructured materials and / or on the preparation of composite and hybrid materials with improved properties are especially welcome. Given the applied nature of CHE, we will consider manuscripts that demonstrate specific applications of synthesized materials.