Domino Effect: Its Prediction and Prevention, Volume Five in the
Methods in Chemical Process Safety series, focuses on the process of learning from experience, including elements of process safety management, human factors in the chemical process industries, and the regulation of chemical process safety, including current approaches. Users will find this book to be an informative tool and user manual for process safety for a variety of professionals. This new release focuses on Domino effect Case histories and accident statistics, the state-of-the-art in domino effect modeling, Fire Driven Domino Effect, Mitigation of Domino Effect, and much more.
- Acquaints readers/researchers with the fundamentals of process safety
- Provides the most recent advancements and contributions from a practical point-of-view
- Gives readers the views/opinions of experts on each topic
1. Domino effect: Its prediction and preventionAn overview
Faisal Khan, Md Tanjin Amin, Valerio Cozzani, and Genserik Reniers
2. State of the art in domino effect modeling
Giordano Emrys Scarponi and Valerio Cozzani
3. Fire driven domino effect
Federica Ricci, Giordano Emrys Scarponi, Gabriele Landucci, and Valerio
Cozzani
4. Explosion (overpressure) driven domino effect
Ernesto Salzano
5. Projectile (missile) driven domino effect 000
Giordano Emrys Scarponi, Alessandro Tugnoli, and Valerio Cozzani
6. Natural events driven domino effect
Alessio Misuri and Valerio Cozzani
7. Mitigation of domino effect
Alessio Misuri, Gabriele Landucci, and Valerio Cozzani
8. Advanced methods for risk assessment and management of domino effect
Long Ding and Jie Ji
9. Domino effect security risk assessment
Chao Chen, Genserik Reniers, Ming Yang, and Shuaiqi Yuan
10. Bayesian methods in domino effect analysis
Nima Khakzad
11. Uncertainty in domino effects analysis
Depeng Kong
12. Approaches to domino effects evolution and risk assessment
Til Baalisampang, Rouzbeh Abbassi, and Vikram Garaniya
13. Domino effect risk management: Decision making methods
Mohammad Yazdi, Arman Nedjati, Esmaeil Zarei, Sidum Adumene, Rouzbeh Abbassi,
and Faisal Khan
14. Methods for domino effect risk management decision-making
Shuaiqi Yuan, Chao Chen, Ming Yang, and Genserik Reniers
15. Domino effect assessment in the framework of industry 4.0
Faisal Khan, Md Tanjin Amin, Valerio Cozzani, and Genserik Reniers
Dr. Faisal Khan is a Mike OConnor Chair II and the Head of Texas A&M Universitys Artie McFerrin Department of Chemical Engineering. He is also the Director of the Mary Kay OConnor Process Safety Center and the Ocean Energy Safety Institute. He was a Tier I Canada Research Chair in Offshore Safety and Risk Engineering. He has over three decades of research experience in process safety, risk modeling, and green energy system resilience. His works have greatly benefited the petrochemical and offshore industries. He has made a significant contribution to hydrogen systems and battery technologies, as well. With over 800 peer-reviewed publications and multiple books authored and edited, Dr. Khan is widely recognized as the global leader in safety and risk engineering. He is Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Engineering; Engineering Institution of Canada; AIChE and CSChE.
Genserik Reniers works at the Universita di Bologna, DICAM in the Laboratory for Industrial Safety and Environmental Sustainability, Bologna in Italy. Valerio Cozzani (1968) received his Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from the University of Pisa (Italy) in 1996. During the Ph.D. he spent an year at the Industrial Hazard Unit (IPSC) of the Ispra European Community Joint Research Centre. After the Ph.D. he joined the National Research Group on Chemical and Environmental Risk of the Italian National Council of Research. Formerly lecturer at the University of Pisa, he is now professor at the Department of Civil, Chemical, Environmental and Materials Engineering of Bologna University, where he leads the Laboratory on Industrial Safety and Environmental Sustainability. He is Director of the academic graduate and undergraduate programs in Chemical Engineering an lectures on unit operations, design, loss prevention and risk assessment. He coordinated several joint university-industry training projects. His main research experience is in the field of safety of chemical processes and of environmental and energy technologies. The specific subjects afforded in his research activity are, among others, the development of innovative methodologies and models for hazard and risk analysis, the development of models for equipment damage and the implementation of procedures for the quantitative assessment of accidental scenarios triggered by external hazard factors. He has a wide experience in leading national and international research projects funded either by public organizations or by private companies. He coordinates the Italian working party on safety in the chemical and process industry (CISAP) and is Member of the Working Party of Loss Prevention (EFCE). He received the Trevor Kletz Merit Award 2015 for outstanding contributions to the field of Process Safety. He serves as Associate Editor of Safety Science and is a member of the Editorial Boards of the Journal of Hazardous Materials and of the Journal of Loss Prevention in the Process Industry.