David T. Allen, Reese Professor of Chemical Engineering and the Director of the Center for Energy and Environmental
Resources at the University of Texas at Austin, was the 2000 recipient of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers
Lawrence K. Cecil Award in Environmental Chemical Engineering for his contributions to air quality and pollution
prevention engineering and environmental engineering education.
Shonnard, David R. : Michigan Technological University
David R. Shonnard, Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering at Michigan Technological University, is a 1998
recipient of the NSF/Lucent Technologies Foundation Industrial Ecology Research Fellowship for research that integrates
environmental impact assessment with process design. Other related awards include an NSF-funded repository for
pollution prevention curriculum development materials.
With contributions by authors from US EPA and Industry.
Preface
Preface
Chemical processes provide a diverse array of valuable products and materials used in applications ranging from
health care to transportation and food processing. Yet these same chemical processes that provide products and
materials essential to modern economies also generate substantial quantities of wastes and emissions. Managing
these wastes costs tens of billions of dollars each year, and as emission and treatment standards continue to become
more stringent, these costs will continue to escalate. In the face of rising costs and increasingly stringent performance
standards, traditional end-of-pipe approaches to waste management have become less attractive and a strategy variously
known as environmentally conscious manufacturing, eco-efficient production, or pollution prevention has been gaining
prominence. The basic premise of this strategy is that avoiding the generation of wastes or pollutants can often
be more cost effective and better for the environment than controlling or disposing of pollutants once they are
formed.
The intent of this textbook is to describe environmentally preferable or "green" approaches to the
design and development of processes and products. The idea of writing this textbook was conceived in 1997 by the
staff of the Chemical Engineering Branch (CEB), Economics, Exposure and Technology Division (EETD), Office of Pollution
Prevention and Toxics (OPPT) of the US EPA. In 1997, OPPT staff found that, although there was a growing technical
literature describing "green" approaches to chemical product and process design, and a growing number
of university courses on the subject, there was no standard textbook on the subject area of green engineering.
So, in early 1998, OPPT initiated the Green Engineering Project with the initial goal of producing a text describing
"green" design methods suitable for inclusion in the chemical engineering curriculum.
Years of work, involving extensive interaction between chemical engineering educators and EPA staff, have resulted
in this text. The text presents the "green" engineering tools that have been developed for chemical processes
and is intended for senior-level chemical engineering students. The text begins (Chapters 1-4) with a basic introduction
to environmental issues, risk concepts, and environmental regulations. This background material identifies the
types of wastes, emissions, material use, and energy use to determine the environmental performance of chemical
processes and products. Once the environmental performance targets have been defined, the design of processes with
superior environmental performance can begin. Chapters 5-12 describe tools for assessing and improving the environmental
performance of chemical processes. The structure of the chapters revolves around a hierarchy of design, beginning
with tools for evaluating environmental hazards of chemicals, continuing through unit operation and flowsheet analysis,
and concluding with the economics of environmental improvement projects. The final section of the text (Chapters
13 and 14) describes tools for improving product stewardship and improving the level of integration between chemical
processes and other material processing operations.
It is our hope that this text will contribute to the evolving process of environmentally conscious design.
Draft manuscripts of this text have been used in senior-level engineering elective and required courses at the
University of Texas at Austin, Michigan Technological University, the University of South Carolina, and West Virginia
University. It is suggested, in a typical semester, all of the material in the text is presented. Portions of the
textbook have been and can be used in a number of other chemical engineering courses as well as other engineering
or environmental policy courses.
Dr. David T. Allen, University of Texas, Austin
Dr. David R. Shonnard, Michigan Technological University, Houghton
Nhan T. Nguyen, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington D.C.
Summary
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
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.
Table of Contents
Preface.
About the Authors.
Acknowledgments.
I. A CHEMICAL ENGINEER'S GUIDE TO ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES AND REGULATIONS. 1. An Introduction To Environmental Issues. Introduction. The Role of Chemical Processes and Chemical Products. An Overview of Major Environmental Issues.
Global Environmental Issues. Air Quality Issues. Water Quality Issues. Ecology. Natural Resources. Waste Flows
in the United States. Summary. References. Problems.
2. Risk Concepts. Introduction. Description of Risk. Value of Risk Assessment in the Engineering Profession. Risk-Based Environmental
Law. General Overview of Risk Assessment Concepts. Hazard Assessment. Dose-Response. Exposure Assessment. Risk
Characterization. Summary. References. Problems.
3. Environmental Law and Regulations: From End-of-Pipe to Pollution Prevention. Introduction. Nine Prominent Federal Environmental Statutes. Evolution of Regulatory and Voluntary Programs:
From End-of-Pipe to Pollution Prevention. Pollution Prevention Concepts and Terminology. References. Problems.
4. The Roles and Responsibilities of Chemical Engineers. Introduction. Responsibilities for Chemical Process Safety. Responsibilities for Environmental Protection.
Further Reading in Engineering Ethics. References. Problems.
II. EVALUATING AND IMPROVING ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE OF CHEMICAL PROCESSES.
5. Evaluating Environmental Fate: Approaches based on chemical structure.
Introduction. Chemical and Physical Property Estimation. Estimating Environmental Persistence. Estimating Ecosystem
Risks. Using Property Estimates to Estimate Environmental Fate and Exposure. Classifying Environmental Risks Based
on Chemical Structure. References. Problems.
6. Evaluating Exposures. Introduction. Occupational Exposures: Recognition, Evaluation, and Control. Exposure Assessment for Chemicals
in the Ambient Environment. Designing Safer Chemicals. References. Problems.
7. Green Chemistry. Green Chemistry. Green Chemistry Methodologies. Quantitative/Optimization-Based Frameworks for the Design of
Green Chemical Synthesis Pathways. Green Chemistry Expert System Case Studies. Questions for Discussion. References.
Problems.
9. Unit Operations and Pollution Prevention. Introduction. Pollution Prevention in Material Selection for Unit Operations. Pollution Prevention for Chemical
Reactors. Pollution Prevention for Separation Devices. Pollution Prevention Applications for Separative Reactors.
Pollution Prevention in Storage Tanks and Fugitive Sources. Pollution Prevention Assessment Integrated with HAZ-OP
Analysis. Integrating Risk Assessment with Process Design�A Case Study. Questions for Discussion. References. Problems.
10. Flowsheet Analysis for Pollution Prevention. Introduction. Process Energy Integration. Process Mass Integration. Case Study of a Process Flowsheet. Summary.
References. Problems.
11. Evaluating the Environmental Performance of a Flowsheet. Introduction. Estimation of Environmental Fates of Emissions and Wastes. Tier 3 Metrics for Environmental Risk
Evaluation of Process Designs. Summary. References. Problems.
12. Environmental Cost Accounting. Introduction. Definitions. Magnitudes of Environmental Costs. A Framework for Evaluating Environmental Costs.
Hidden Environmental Costs. Liability Costs. Internal Intangible Costs. External Intangible Costs. References.
Problems.
III. MOVING BEYOND THE PLANT BOUNDARY.
13. Life-Cycle Concepts, Product Stewardship, and Green Engineering. Introduction to Product Life Cycle Concepts. Life-Cycle Assessment. Life-Cycle Impact Assessments. Streamlined
Life-Cycle Assessments. Uses of Life-Cycle Studies. Summary. Questions for Discussion. References. Problems.
14. Industrial Ecology. Introduction. Material Flows in Chemical Manufacturing. Eco-Industrial Parks. Assessing Opportunities for Waste
Exchanges and Byproduct Synergies. Summary. References. Problems.
IV. APPENDICES. A. Details Of The Nine Prominent Federal Environmental Statutes.
B. Molecular Connectivity.
C. Estimating Emissions From Storage Tanks.
D. Tables of Environmental Impact Potentials�Tables D-1 to D-.
E. Procedures for Estimating Hidden (Tier II) Costs�Tables E-1 to E-5.
F. Additional Resources�Web Resources/Online Databases/Software.
Index.