Sam Mannan and his scientific publications

A life in process safety research

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

Jie Li (Shanghai Maritime University, Beijing Institute of Technology)

Floris Goerlandt (Dalhousie University)

Genserik Reniers (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Universiteit Antwerpen, TU Delft - Safety and Security Science)

Bin Zhang (Nanjing Tech University)

Research Group
Safety and Security Science
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jlp.2020.104140
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Research Group
Safety and Security Science
Journal title
Journal of Loss Prevention in the Process Industries
Volume number
66
Article number
104140
Downloads counter
146

Abstract

Dr. M. Sam Mannan is one of the true pioneers in the process safety area, spending almost his entire lifetime in process safety and risk research. He was dedicated to ‘make safety second nature’ and published an impressive body of work. An overview of his research helps understanding the process safety area and provides insight in the legacy of this process safety pioneer. In this paper, 327 publications authored by Dr. Mannan from 1999 to 2019 in Web of Science core collection were downloaded and visually analyzed from four perspectives: his publication outputs, collaboration networks, topic areas, and highly cited papers and cited references. The results show a rapidly increasing trend in his research activity, mostly through journal publications. He published in 53 different outlets, with Journal of Loss Prevention in the Process Industries being most frequently selected. Dr. Mannan had a very active and diverse worldwide network, and collaborated with 18 different countries/regions, nearly 90 different institutions and 387 authors. His publications addressed process safety-related topics widely, including safety related to liquefied natural gas, explosions, runaway reactions, inherent safety, flammability and aerosol, and more recently resilience. Dr. Mannan's most cited paper focused on ‘fuzzy risk matrix’, whereas the most frequently cited reference in his work is ‘thermal hazard evaluation by an accelerating rate calorimeter’ by Townsend DI in 1980. Based on his most recent research activity, promising future directions for process safety research include resilience linked to risk assessment and management, for instance through the ‘safety triad’ concept he promoted shortly before passing away.

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