RM

Ruben Morales-Menendez

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2 records found

Journal article (2020) - David Fernandez Rivas, Daria C. Boffito, Jean Marc Commenge, Jean Luc Dubois, Federico Galli, Jean Paul Gueneau de Mussy, Jan Harmsen, Siddharth Kalra, Frerich J. Keil, Ruben Morales-Menendez, Francisco J. Navarro-Brull, Timothy Noël, Jimmy Faria-Albanese, Kim Ogden, Gregory S. Patience, David Reay, Rafael M. Santos, Ashley Smith-Schoettker, Andrzej I. Stankiewicz, Henk van den Berg, Tom van Gerven, Jeroen van Gestel, Michiel van der Stelt, Jarka Glassey, Mark van de Ven, R. S. Weber, Nona Afraz, Henk Akse, Kamelia V.K. Boodhoo, Rene Bos, Judith Cantin, Yi Wai (Emily) Chiang
Achieving the United Nations sustainable development goals requires industry and society to develop tools and processes that work at all scales, enabling goods delivery, services, and technology to large conglomerates and remote regions. Process Intensification (PI) is a technological advance that promises to deliver means to reach these goals, but higher education has yet to totally embrace the program. Here, we present practical examples on how to better teach the principles of PI in the context of the Bloom’s taxonomy and summarise the current industrial use and the future demands for PI, as a continuation of the topics discussed in Part 1. In the appendices, we provide details on the existing PI courses around the world, as well as teaching activities that are showcased during these courses to aid students’ lifelong learning. The increasing number of successful commercial cases of PI highlight the importance of PI education for both students in academia and industrial staff. ...
Review (2020) - David Fernandez Rivas, Daria C. Boffito, Jean Marc Commenge, Jean Luc Dubois, Federico Galli, Jean Paul Gueneau de Mussy, Jan Harmsen, Siddharth Kalra, Frerich J. Keil, Ruben Morales-Menendez, Francisco J. Navarro-Brull, Timothy Noël, Jimmy Faria-Albanese, Kim Ogden, Gregory S. Patience, David Reay, Rafael M. Santos, Ashley Smith-Schoettker, Andrzej I. Stankiewicz, Henk van den Berg, Tom van Gerven, Jeroen van Gestel, Michiel van der Stelt, Jarka Glassey, Mark van de Ven, R. S. Weber, Nona Afraz, Henk Akse, Kamelia V.K. Boodhoo, Rene Bos, Judith Cantin, Yi Wai (Emily) Chiang
In 2015 all the United Nations (UN) member states adopted 17 sustainable development goals (UN-SDG) as part of the 2030 Agenda, which is a 15-year plan to meet ambitious targets to eradicate poverty, protect the environment, and improve the quality of life around the world. Although the global community has progressed, the pace of implementation must accelerate to reach the UN-SDG time-line. For this to happen, professionals, institutions, companies, governments and the general public must become cognizant of the challenges that our world faces and the potential technological solutions at hand, including those provided by chemical engineering. Process intensification (PI) is a recent engineering approach with demonstrated potential to significantly improve process efficiency and safety while reducing cost. It offers opportunities for attaining the UN-SDG goals in a cost-effective and timely manner. However, the pedagogical tools to educate undergraduate, graduate students, and professionals active in the field of PI lack clarity and focus. This paper sets out the state-of-the-art, main discussion points and guidelines for enhanced PI teaching, deliberated by experts in PI with either an academic or industrial background, as well as representatives from government and specialists in pedagogy gathered at the Lorentz Center (Leiden, The Netherlands) in June 2019 with the aim of uniting the efforts on education in PI and produce guidelines. In this Part 1, we discuss the societal and industrial needs for an educational strategy in the framework of PI. The terminology and background information on PI, related to educational implementation in industry and academia, are provided as a preamble to Part 2, which presents practical examples that will help educating on Process Intensification. ...