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Models of Good Behaviour?

IN 1976, George Box opined: “All models are wrong, some are useful.” How do we assure that a model is not sufficiently wrong that it is useful? A useful model is one that adequately predicts the results under the conditions and scale required for design or a process simulation. Most models of course are not derived at design scale. We are inevitably working outside the envelope of model derivation. So how do we build confidence that the extrapolation is adequately correct that the results may be trusted?

Type: Feature

Buncefield: A Decade On

Lessons learned and risk management implications

Type: Feature

Ban the Steam Engine and Build Ten Hinkleys

As products improve and prices fall, the take-up of petrol-electric hybrids and 'pure' electric vehicles (EVs) might come much sooner. Today’s ‘conventionals’ will become obsolete long before they’re banned.

Type: Feature

Visual Hazop

HAZARD and operability (HAZOP) is a well understood, respected and employed technique in the process (and other) industries. It offers systematic rigour in challenging the design and operating intent of a new, modified, or established facility and provides a foundation for further analysis and risk assessment.

Type: Feature

Dudley Maurice Newitt – Chemical engineering meets James Bond

Claudia Flavell-While goes on the trail of Dudley Maurice Newitt – a developer of spy gadgetry and the real-life inspiration for James Bond's Q

Type: Feature

A Battery Olympics

Getting around the limitations of battery devices with clever ways of teaming different technologies together. Hugh Sutherland, Head of Development at ZapGo speaks to Neil Clark

Type: Feature

Lord Cullen: Piper Alpha Investigator

Lord Cullen of Whitekirk gave this speech at the opening of Oil & Gas UK’s Safety 30 Conference in Aberdeen on 5 June. The conference marked the anniversary of the Piper Alpha disaster, which Lord Cullen investigated on behalf of the government. The 106 recommendations made in his landmark 1990 report reshaped offshore safety culture

Type: Feature

Terry Cooper: Preventer of Major Accidents

Terry Cooper is a chemical engineer by training. This article is an adapted version of a speech he delivered at Oil & Gas UK’s Safety 30 Conference in Aberdeen on 6 June. The conference marked the 30th anniversary of the Piper Alpha disaster.

Type: Feature

Sadara: Lessons Learned

How to stay on budget with large, complex projects

Type: Feature

Carbon Capture and Storage: Are We There Yet?

Amanda Doyle travels to Norway on a CCS safari

Type: Feature

Switching off

Why operators turn advanced controls off (and how to prevent them from doing so)

Type: Feature

Little Wonder

Adam Duckett speaks to chemical engineer Bill Grieco, CEO of the RAPID Manufacturing Institute, about its efforts to accelerate process intensification

Type: Feature

Why Hydrogen?

THE cheap, abundant and seemingly limitless energy supply of the 20th Century driven by fossil fuel consumption led to unprecedented economic growth and improvements in quality of life. But much like financial debt, the long-term cost will ultimately be higher than the short-term gain. Society has reaped the short-term benefits of fossil fuel consumption and the environmental bailiffs are now at the door.

Type: Feature

Mercury Falling

Teaching artisanal gold miners to go mercury-free using a century-old technique.

Type: Feature

No More Lost Light Gases

Jason Ornstein, Ray Ozdemir & Anne Boehme on adapting failed automotive capture technology for the oil and gas industry

Type: Feature

What to do About Waste?

Conclusions from the Royal Society of Chemistry’s summit on future waste science policy.

Type: Feature

Reflections on Banqiao

On the anniversary of the Banqiao Dam disaster of 1975, Fiona Macleod reflects on a visit to the area where an estimated 230,000 people drowned

Type: Feature

The Pharmaceutical Industry: Engineering Frustrations

Hedley Rees and Keith Plumb discuss how current methods of drug development are impeding engineers, and suggest a new model to provide patients greater access to medicines

Type: Feature

Catapulting the Hydrogen Economy: Catalytic Membrane Reactors

Humbul Suleman and colleagues explain how refinements to a decades-old technology can provide clean, cheap hydrogen

Type: Feature

Small but Mighty

Noor Al-Rifai and Rene Holm look at the use of nanosuspensions as long-acting injectables

Type: Feature