Sustainable materials with both eyes open

Julian M. Allwood

Book - 2012

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

720.47/Allwood
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 720.47/Allwood Checked In
Subjects
Published
England : UIT Cambridge Ltd 2012.
Language
English
Main Author
Julian M. Allwood (-)
Other Authors
Jonathan M. Cullen (-), Mark A. Carruth
Physical Description
373 p. : col. ill. ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 357-365) and index.
ISBN
9781906860059
  • Part I. The world of materials
  • 1. Material wealth and health
  • 2. Scale, uncertainty and estimation
  • 3. Our uses of steel and aluminium
  • 4. Metal journeys
  • 5. Energy and emissions
  • 6. Where does the money go?
  • Part II. With one eye open
  • 7. Energy efficiency
  • 8. Opportunities for capturing heat
  • 9. Novel process routes
  • 10. Carbon sequestration
  • 11. Future energy use and emissions
  • Part III. With both eyes open
  • 12. Using less metal by design
  • 13. Reducing yield losses
  • 14. Diverting manufacturing scrap
  • 15. Re-using metal components
  • 16. Longer life products
  • 17. Reducing final demand
  • 18. Options for change
  • 19. Future energy use and emissions
  • Part IV. Other materials
  • 20. Cement
  • 21. Plastic
  • 22. Paper
  • Part V. Creating a sustainable material future
  • 23. Business activity evaluation
  • 24. The influence of policy
  • 25. The actions of individuals
  • References
  • Index
  • Acknowledgements
  • About the authors
Review by Choice Review

This book makes exhilarating, fascinating, and forward-looking reading for everyone interested in sustainability. Allwood and Cullen (both, Cambridge, UK), following many ideas put forward by Mike Ashby (Cambridge), address sustainability (mostly in terms of CO^D[2 production) for material production/use of five of the commonest engineered materials: steel, aluminum, cement, plastic, and paper. They emphasize the first two since they are the most widely used materials sustaining the world's material culture, and introduce two points of view. The "one-eye-open" approach emphasizes efficiency/optimization in material production; they show that this is a limiting view as most production routes are more/less optimized. The "both-eyes-open" approach, besides optimized production, seeks alternative routes to sustainability: optimizing design, reducing yield losses, using scrap "losses" in other applications, reusing components, and designing products for longer usable lifetimes. The conclusion offers directions for a sustainable future in terms of business, policy, and individual approaches. The layperson's introduction to the required materials science and the one-page preface are gems. A discussion of other energy-hogging CO^D[2-producing materials might have been useful, but for the five materials addressed, the authors convincingly make the case that sustainability must focus on both optimized material production and optimal design/use. Summing Up: Essential. All students, engineers, managers, policy makers, and general readers interested in sustainability. J. Lambropoulos University of Rochester

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.