The April issue of CJCE includes a new addition to the CJCE Perspective Article Special Series. This special series features “short articles, written as opinion pieces, discussing topics of pressing interest in several fields of chemical engineering”, as noted by CJCE Editor-in-Chief João B. P. Soares in the special series preface published in the August 2022 issue along with the first article in the series by Athanasios Kritharis, I. Melih Tamer, and Vikramaditya G. Yadav titled “Vaccine production and supply need a paradigm change”.
The next two articles in this series were “A comprehensive review on the flow behaviour in shale gas reservoirs: Multi-scale, multi-phase, and multi-physics” featured in the November 2022 issue and “Is it time to change how we write scientific articles?” featured in the December 2022 issue. The latest article in this series is an open access article, and the Editor’s Choice article for this issue, by Thomas A. Adams II titled “How Canada can supply Europe with critical energy by creating a Trans-Atlantic energy bridge”.
Be sure to read these special series articles (and be on the look out for more from this series!) for insight into what these authors believe are highly relevant topics at the moment and to learn their expert perspectives on these topics.
Access April’s Issue Highlights articles: “Niobium and tantalum recovery from the primary source and from tin slag, an industrial challenge: A review”, a review article by researchers from Brazil; “Performance of a novel, eco-friendly, cellulose-based superabsorbent polymer (Cellulo-SAP): Absorbency, stability, reusability, and biodegradability” by researchers from University of Western Ontario; and an open access article titled “Kinetic and mechanistic aspects of furfural degradation in biorefineries” by researchers from Austria.
Also, browse CJCE’s first virtual issue of the year: 2022 in Review: Top-Downloaded Articles. This virtual issue comprises the 15 top-downloaded articles published in CJCE in 2022 by authors from over 10 countries across the world. Read more about this virtual issue here. This issue will be free-to-read until the end of June, so be sure to explore each of the articles while you can!