Chinese international process safety research

Collaborations, research trends, and intellectual basis

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

Jie Li (Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing Institute of Technology)

Floris Goerlandt (TU Delft - Ship Design, Production and Operations, Dalhousie University)

G.L.L.M.E. Reniers (Universiteit Antwerpen, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, TU Delft - Safety and Security Science)

Changgen Feng (Beijing Institute of Technology)

Yi Liu (China University of Petroleum (East China))

Safety and Security Science
Copyright
© 2022 Jie Li, F.M.B. Goerlandt, G.L.L.M.E. Reniers, Changgen Feng, Yi Liu
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jlp.2021.104657
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 Jie Li, F.M.B. Goerlandt, G.L.L.M.E. Reniers, Changgen Feng, Yi Liu
Safety and Security Science
Volume number
74
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Abstract

This article presents a bibliometric analysis and mapping of the Chinese process safety research, focusing on the contributions made in core process safety journals and on the influences of international collaborations and knowledge sources on the developments of this research domain. Collaboration networks, term co-occurrence networks, and co-citation network were analyzed to identify trends, patterns, and the knowledge distribution of the Chinese research on process safety. Work to data has been clustered mainly on safety of chemical processes, fire and explosion, and risk management and accidents. Chinese research contributions are concentrated in only few journals, while the corresponding intellectual base draws on the wider literature focused on understanding and modeling phenomena, and on the broader risk research literature, although to a lesser extent. While various foreign authors are highly cited by Chinese authors, only very few direct collaborations with international scholars are identified. The results are used as a basis for a discussion on future research directions and developments for the community. Increased focus on uncertainty treatment and handling of black swan events, risk evaluation and economic aspects of safety decisions, interorganizational risk management, road and maritime transport of hazardous substances, risk perception and communication, and integrated safety and security assessment, are highlighted as fruitful directions for future scholarship. It is hoped that the insights obtained from this work can facilitate new and consolidated collaborations, as well as further invigorate the Chinese process safety domain, ultimately contributing to improved safety performance of process industries in China and elsewhere.