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Dr. John M.AndrésenUniversity of Nottingham Chemical and Environmental EngineeringUniversity Park NG7 2RD, NottinghamUnited Kingdom
Phone: 0115 951 4640Fax: 0115 951 4115E-mail: [email protected]
EUROPE
A.M. MastralDepartment of Energy and EnvironmentInstituto de Carboquimica,CSIC, Maria de Luna 12,50015 - Zaragoza,Spain
Fax: 00 34 976 733318Email: [email protected]
FAR EAST
Zhenyu LiuInstitute of Coal ChemistryChinese Academy of SciencesPO Box 165Taiyuan, ShanxiPeople’s Republic of China
Fax: 00 86 351 405 0320Email: [email protected]
SOUTHERN ASIA ANDTHE PACIFIC
Chun-Zhu Li Fuels and Energy Technology Institute Curtin University of TechnologyGPO Box U1987, Perth,WA 6845Australia
E-mail: [email protected]: +61 8 9266 1138
X. Bao, China University of Petroleum, Beijing, ChinaS.A. Benson, Grand Forks, ND, USAA.L. Boehman, University Park, PA, USAE. Ekinci, Istanbul, TurkeyJ.L. Figueiredo, Porto, PortugalJ.J. Helble, Hanover, NH, USAA. Herring, Colorado School of Mines, USAH. Hu, Dalian, P.R. ChinaF. Huggins, Lexington, KY, USAW.R. Jackson, Clayton, Vic., AustraliaJ.-P. Joly, Villeurbanne, FranceZ. Luo, Zhejiang University, ChinaM.M. Maroto-Valer, Nottingham, UKB. Meyer, Freiberg, Germany
R. Murillo, Zaragoza, SpainM. Nomura, Osaka, JapanP. Rahimi, Alberta, CanadaC.B. Roberts, Auburn, AL, USAP. Salatino, Naples, ItalyH.H. Schobert, University Park, PA, USAM. Stefanova, Sofia, BulgariaK. Sugawara, Akita-shi, JapanA. Tomita, Sendai, JapanX. Verykios, Patras, GreeceH. Vuthaluru, Curtin University, Australial. Wender, Pittsburgh, PA, USAJ. Williamson, London, UKJ. Zondlo, Morgantown, WV, USA
An international journal devoted to all aspects of processing and utilization of coal, petroleum, natural gas, oil shale, tar sands and peat
Scope
Fuel Processing Technology deals with the scientific and technological aspects of processing fuels to other fuels, chemicals and by-products. Processing is considered in the sense of chemical conversions such as hydrogenation, gasification, pyrolysis and upgrading as well as physical processing by beneficiation, cleaning and removal of inorganic matter as well as sizing, crushing or screening. Coal, petroleum, oil shale, tar sands and peat are emphasized. All technological aspects of processing are included such as optimization, catalysis, feeding, product separation, catalyst recovery, economics, pollution control, etc., concerned with liquefaction, gasification, com bustion, solvent extraction (or solvent refining), co-processing of coal and oil, and upgrading (such as O, N, or S removal) processes.Contributions are appropriate on the chemistry and science of fuels and their products as these relate to processing of fuels, the products of processing or experience in bench scale, process development units or commercial process development.
FUELPROCESSINGTECHNOLOGY
EDITOR REGIONAL EDITORS
EDITORIAL BOARD
HONORARY EDITOR: Larry L. Anderson, 2163 North Anasazi Trail, St. George, UT 84770, USA
Publication information: Fuel Processing Technology (ISSN 0378-3820). For 2013, volumes 106–117 (12 issues) are scheduled for publication. Subscription prices are available upon request from the Publisher or from the Elsevier Customer Service Department nearest you or from this journal’s website (http://www.elsevier.com/locate/fuproc). Further information is available on this journal and other Elsevier products through Elsevier’s website (http://www.elsevier.com). Subscriptions are accepted on a prepaid basis only and are entered on a calendar year basis. Issues are sent by standard mail (surface within Europe, air delivery outside Europe). Priority rates are available upon request. Claims for missing issues should be made within six months of the date of dispatch.
The paper used in this publication meets the requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (Permanence of paper)
Printed in The Netherlands