Journal of energy, environment & carbon credits (vol4, issue3)

Page 1

eISSN: 2249 - 8621

ISO: 9001Certified

Journal of Energy, Environment & Carbon Credits

STM Journals Empowering knowledge

Free Online Registration

(JoEECC)

22

/

Ch

Energy /

/

/ Instrumentation /Science

GLOBAL READERSHIP STATISTICS

conducted

Over 500 Indian and International Subscribers. 30,000 Top Researchers, Scientists, Authors and Editors All Over the World Associated. Editorial/ Reviewer Board Members : 1000+. 1,00,000+ Visitors to STM Website From 140+ Countries Quarterly. 10,000 + Downloads from STM Website.

STM Journals invites the papers from the National Conferences, International Conferences, Seminars conducted by Colleges, Universities, Research Organizations etc. for Conference Proceedings and Special Issue.

September - December 2014

타Special Issues come in Online and Print versions. 타STM Journals offers schemes to publish such issues on payment and gratis (online) basis as well.

To g e t m o r e i n f o r m a t i o n : stmconferences.com

STM JOURNALS Scientific

Technical

Medical

www.stmjournals.com


STM Publication(s) STM Publication, a strong initiative by Consortium E-Learning Network Private ltd.(Estd. 2006) was launched in the year 2010 under the support and guidance by our esteemed Editorial and Advisory board members from renowned institutes. Objectives of STM Publication(s): ? Scientific, Technical and Medical research promotions. ? Publication of genuine Research/Review, Short Articles and Case Studies through proper review

process. ? Publishing Special Issues on Conferences. ? Preparing online platform for other print Journals. ? Empowering the libraries with online and print Journals in Scientific, Technical and Medical

domains. ? Publishing and distribution of books on various subjects which mainly falls in the category of

Nanotechnology, Scientific and technical writing & Environment, Health and Safety. Salient Features: ? A bouquet of 100+ Journals that fall under Science, Technical & Medical domains. ? Employs Open Journals System (OJS) A Journal Management & Publishing System. ? The first and one of the fastest growing publication website in India as well as in abroad for its quality

and coverage. ? Rapid online submission and publication of papers, soon after their formal acceptance/ finalization. ? Facilitates linking with the other authors or professionals. ? Worldwide circulation and visibility.

Journal of Energy, Environment & Carbon Credits (ISSN: 2249-8621) Focus and Scope Covers ? Energy Issues ? Energy planning and Energy policy ? Energy Management ? Environmental Engineering ? Greenhouse Gases ? Emission trading

? Pollution control & Management of Natural Resource Journal of Energy, Environment & Carbon Credits is published (frequency: three times a year) in India by STM Journals (division of Consortium e-Learning Network Private Ltd. Pvt.) The views expressed in the articles do not necessarily reflect of the Publisher. The publisher does not endorse the quality or value of the advertised/sponsored products described therein. Please consult full prescribing information before issuing a prescription for any products mentioned in this publication. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in retrieval system or transmitted in any from without written permission of the publisher. To cite any of the material contained in this Journal, in English or translation, please use the full English reference at the beginning of each article. To reuse any of the material, please contact STM Journals (info@stmjournals.com)


STM Journals (division of Consortium e-Learning Network Private Ltd. ) having its Marketing office located at Office No. 4, First Floor, CSC pocket E Market, Mayur Vihar Phase II, New Delhi-110091, India is the Publisher of Journal. Statements and opinions expressed in the Journal reflect the views of the author(s) and are not the opinion of STM Journals unless so stated. Subscription Information and Order: Cost of Journal: ? National Subscription: Rs. 3750/- per Journal (includes 3 print issues), Single Issue copy purchase Rs.1500/copy ? International Subscription: ? Online Only- $99, Print Only-$149 (includes 3 print issues) ? Online + Print-$199 (includes 3 print issues + online access of published back volumes )

To purchase print compilation of back issues please send your query at info@stmjournals.com Subscription must be prepaid. Rates outside the India includes speed delivery charges. Prices subject to change without notice. Mode of Payment: At par cheque, Demand draft, and RTGS (payment to be made in favor of Consortium E-Learning Network. Pvt. ltd., payable at Delhi/New Delhi. Online Access Policy A). For Authors: In order to provide maximum citation and wide publicity to the authors work, STM Journals also have Open Access Policy, authors who would like to get their work open access can opt for Optional Open Access publication at nominal cost as follows India, SAARC and African Countries: INR 2500 or 100 USD including single hard copy of Author's Journal. Other Countries: USD 200 including single hard copy of Author's Journal. B). For Subscribers: ? Online access will be activated within 72 hours of receipt of the payment (working days), subject to receipt of

correct information on user details/Static IP address of the subscriber. ? The access will be blocked: ? If the user requests for the same and furnishes valid reasons for blocking. ? Due to technical issue. ? Misuse of the access rights as per the access policy.

Advertising and Commercial Reprint Inquiries: STM Journals with wide circulation and visibility offer an excellent media for showcasing/promotion of your products/services and the events-namely, Conferences, Symposia/Seminars etc. These journals have very high potential to deliver the message across the targeted audience regularly with each published issue. The advertisements on bulk subscriptions, gift subscriptions or reprint purchases for distribution etc. are also very welcome. Lost Issue Claims: Please note the following when applying for lost or missing issues: ? Claims for print copies lost will be honored only after 45 days of the dispatch date and before publication of the

next issue as per the frequency. ? Tracking id for the speed post will be provided to all our subscribers and the claims for the missing Journals will

be entertained only with the proofs which will be verified at both the ends. ? Claims filed due to insufficient (or no notice) of change of address will not be honored. ? Change of Address of Dispatch should be intimated to STM Journals at least 2 months prior to the dispatch

schedule as per the frequency by mentioning subscriber id and the subscription id. ? Refund requests will not be entertained.

Legal Disputes All the legal disputes are subjected to Delhi Jurisdiction only. If you have any questions, please contact the Publication Management Team: info@stmjournals.com; Tel : +91 0120-4781211.


Publication Management Team Chairman Mr. Puneet Mehrotra Managing Director STM Journals, Consortium eLearning Network Pvt. Ltd.(CELNET) Noida ,India

Group Managing Editor Dr. Archana Mehrotra Director CELNET, Delhi, India

Internal Members Puneet Pandeya Manager

Monika Malhotra Assistant Manager

Associate Editors Gargi Asha Jha Nupur Anand Shikha Suman

Assistant Editors Priyanka Aswal Aditya Sanyal Deepika Bhadauria Sona Chahal Himani Pandey

External Members

Dr. Bimlesh Lochab Industrial Tribology Machine Dynamics & Maintenance Engineering Centre (ITMMEC) Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, India.

Dr. Rajiv Prakash School of Materials Science and Technology, Institute of Technology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, India.

Prof. S. Ramaprabhu Alternative Energy Technology Laboratory, Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Technology, Chennai, India.

Dr. Rakesh Kumar Assistant Professor, Department of Applied Chemistry, BIT Mesra, Patna, India.


STM Journal (s) Advisory Board

Dr. Baldev Raj Chairman, National Institute of Technology Puducherry, India. Former Director, Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research, India.

Prof. Bankim Chandra Ray Professor and Head, Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering National Institute of Technology, Rourkela, India.

Dr. Hardev Singh Virk Professor Emeritus, Eternal University, Baru Sahib, India.

Dr. Baskar Kaliyamoorthy Associate Professor, Department of Civil Engineering National Institute of Technology Trichy, India.

Prof. D. N. Rao Professor, Department of Biochemistry, AIIMS, New Delhi, India.

Prof. Jugal Kishore Professor, Department of Community Medicine, Maulana Azad Medical College, New Delhi, India.

Dr. Ashish Runthala

Dr. Pankaj Poddar

Lecturer, Biological Sciences Group, Birla Institute of Technology & Science, Pilani Rajasthan, India.

Scientist, Physical & Materials Chemistry Division, National Chemical Laboratory, Pune, India.

Dr. Nandini Chatterjee Singh Associate Professor, National Brain Research Centre, Manesar, India.


STM Journal (s) Advisory Board & Editorial Board

Dr. Priyavrat Thareja

Dr. Rakesh Kumar

Head, Materials and Metallurgical Engineering department, PEC University of Technology, Chandigarh, India.

Assistant Professor, Department of Applied Chemistry, BIT Mesra, Patna, India

Dr. Shankargouda Patil

Dr. Shrikant Balkisan Dhoot

Asst. Prof., Department of Oral Pathology, KLE Society's Institute of Dental Sciences, Bangalore, India.

Head Research & Development, Nurture Earth R&D Pvt Ltd MIT Campus, Beed bypass road, Aurangabad, India.

Prof. Subash Chandra Mishra

Prof. Sundara Ramaprabhu

Professor, Metallurgical & Materials Engineering Department, NIT, Rourkela, India.

Professor, Department of Physics Indian Institute of Technology Madras, India.

Prof. Yuwaraj Marotrao Ghugal

Dr. Kakoli Banerjee

Professor and Head Department, Govt. College of Engineering Station Road, Osmanpura, Aurangabad, India.

Assistant Professor School of Biodiversity & Conservation of Natural Resources Central University of Orissa


Editorial Board

Swaminathan GS Divisional Manager, QHSE Brakes India Limited, Foundry Sholinghur631102 Vellore , India.

Adel Mellit Jijel University, Algeria.

Professor Nour T Abdel-Ghani Chemistry Department, Faculty of Science, Cairo University,Giza, Egypt.

Dr. Claudia Sheinbaum Instituto de Ingeniería Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.

Prof Victor Aleksander Mazur Odessa State Academy of Refrigeration, Ukraine.

Dr. Lakhwinder S. Hundal CPSS Sr. Environmental Soil Scientist Associate Editor Journal of Environmental Quality Research and Development Dept. Metropolitan Water Reclamation Chicago USA.

Prof.(Dr.) Jugal Kishore Professor Community Medicine, Maulana Azad Medical College, India.

Rakesh Bhutiani Gurukula Kangri University, India.

Dr. Abhijit Mitra Department of Marine Science University of Calcutta India.

Dr. A. Jagadeesh Director, Nayudamma Centre for Development Alternatives Nellore Andhra Pradesh India.

Dr. Umesh Chandra Kulshrestha Professor, School of Environmental Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi India.

Ala'a H. Al-Muhtaseb Associate Professor Department of Petroleum and Chemical Engineering Faculty of Engineering Sultan Qaboos University Oman.


Director's Desk

STM JOURNALS

I take the privilege to present the hard copy compilation for the [Volume 4 Issue (3)] of Journal of Energy, Environment & Carbon Credits (JoEECC). The intension of JoEECC is to create an atmosphere that stimulates creativeness, research and growth in the area of Energy, Environment & Carbon Credits. The development and growth of the mankind is the consequence of brilliant Research done by eminent Scientists and Engineers in every field. JoEECC provides an outlet for Research findings and reviews in areas Energy, Environment & Carbon Credits found to be relevant for National and International recent developments & research initiative. The aim and scope of the Journal is to provide an academic medium and an important reference for the advancement and dissemination of Research results that support high level learning, teaching and research in the domain of Energy, Environment & Carbon Credits. Finally, I express my sincere gratitude and thanks to our Editorial/ Reviewer board and Authors for their continued support and invaluable contributions and suggestions in the form of authoring writeups/ reviewing and providing constructive comments for the advancement of the journals. With regards to their due continuous support and co-operation, we have been able to publish quality Research/Reviews findings for our customers base. I hope you will enjoy reading this issue and we welcome your feedback on any aspect of the Journal.

Dr. Archana Mehrotra Director STM Journals


Journal of Energy, Environment & Carbon Credits

Contents

1. Bioaccumulation Pattern of Heavy Metals in Saltmarsh Grass (Porteresia coarctata) of Indian Sundarbans Kakoli Banerjee, Gahul Amin, Shankhadeep Chakraborty, Prosenjt Pramanick, Rajrupa Ghosh, Pardis Fazli, Sufia Zaman, Pavel Biswas, Nabonita Pal, Abhijit Mitra

1

2. Rebonding Forest Fiber to Sustainable Deployment Priyavrat Thareja, Honey Garg

11

3. Trend Analysis of Research on Arsenic Pollution in West Bengal, India Sangeeta Dhar, Debal Ray, Neera Sen Sarkar

25

4. Signatures of Increasing Energy Demand of Past Two Decades as Captured in Rain Water Composition and Airmass Trajectory Analysis at Delhi (India) Sudha Singh, Bablu Kumar, Gyan Prakash Gupta, U.C. Kulshrestha 43


Journal of Energy, Environment & Carbon Credits ISSN: 2249-8621 (online) Volume 4, Issue 3 www.stmjournals.com

Bioaccumulation Pattern of Heavy Metals in Saltmarsh Grass (Porteresia coarctata) of Indian Sundarbans Kakoli Banerjee1*, Gahul Amin2, Shankhadeep Chakraborty3, Prosenjt Pramanick3, Rajrupa Ghosh4, Pardis Fazli5, Sufia Zaman6, Pavel Biswas7, Nabonita Pal7, Abhijit Mitra6 1

Centre of Biodiversity and Conservation of Natural Resources, Central University of Orissa, Koraput, India 2 Department of Physics, Chanchal College, Malda-732123, India 3 Department of Oceanography, Techno India University, Salt Lake Campus, Kolkata 700091, India 4 Department of Zoology, University of Calcutta, 35 B.C. Road, Kolkata-700019, West Bengal, India 5 Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, University Putra, Selangor, Malaysia 6 Department of Marine Science, University of Calcutta, 35 B.C. Road, Kolkata-700019, West Bengal, India; Also attached to Techno India University, Salt Lake Campus, Kolkata-700091, India 7 Department of Biotechnology, Techno India University, Salt Lake Campus, Kolkata 700091, India

Abstract Heavy metals (Zn, Cu and Pb) in saltmarsh grass tissue inhabiting Indian Sundarbans were studied during 2011–12. The selected heavy metals in the present study area originate from municipal and industrial sources. Samples from three different sites of deltaic Sundarbans were analyzed for selected heavy metals by AAS (atomic absorption spectrophotometer). The mean values of heavy metal concentrations were highest in Zn (68.17 ± 12.11 to 112.67 ± 30.17 in 2011; 74.72 ± 11.92 to 118.46 ± 30.22 in 2012) followed by Cu (27.53 ± 4.36 to 42.47 ± 9.96 in 2011; 30.81 ± 4.40 to 45.66 ± 9.87 in 2012) and Pb (5.49 ± 1.91 to 13.23 ± 3.00 in 2011; 7.10 ± 1.95 to 15.04 ± 3.31 in 2012) in all the selected stations. Significant positive correlations were observed between tissue metals and dissolved metals, whereas significant negative correlations were observed between tissue metals and biologically available heavy metal in sediment irrespective of all stations. ANOVA results exhibit significant spatial variations in tissue metal concentrations.

Keywords: Porteresia coarctata, Indian Sundarbans, Zinc, Copper, Lead

JoEECC (2014) © STM Journals 2014. All Rights Reserved


Journal of Energy, Environment & Carbon Credits ISSN: 2249-8621 (online) Volume 4, Issue 3 www.stmjournals.com

Rebonding Forest Fiber to Sustainable Deployment Priyavrat Thareja1, Honey Garg2* 1

Rayat & Bahra Inst. of Engg. & Info Tech, SBS Nagar, India 2 PEC Univ. of Tech, Chandigarh-160012, India

Abstract The significance of wood in artistic manipulations is unraveled to any other material used in engineering, commercial or in infrastructural uses. All this is at the cost of ecosustainability, not directly because manufacturing remains ecofriendly, but indirectly; because forests are expended in realization of this raw material. The author pre-supposes that with the mere thought of cutting a tree, environmental degradation has already begun [1]. As a preventive measure, least draw from the environment should be solicited and/or engineered. This work attempts to sketch the misdemeanor of focusing on the wood rather than the trees. Such a focus has helped society deforest the natural green cover while perfecting wood engineering. Through this work the authors’ paradigm to continue their endeavor to enrich the “wood engineering” but at no further expense to the forest cover. This will be affected by a reengineering of the attitude of “wood engineering,” which holistically seeks the deployment of trees together with the various product options ranging from the root of trees, bark, fibers extracted from the plants and byproducts of consumed or non-consumable wooden products. The product reengineering must seek a change depending upon the different types of by-products or waste produced in the primary unit of manufacturing the wooden product. The desired emphasis is not to opt for trees as a direct use in its product or fuel, but through a component-wise selection-attitudinally.

Keywords: Wood, Deforestation, Value of a tree, Return to environment, Eco-future

JoEECC (2014)© STM Journals 2014. All Rights Reserved


Journal of Energy, Environment & Carbon Credits ISSN: 2249-8621 (online) Volume 4, Issue 3 www.stmjournals.com

Trend Analysis of Research on Arsenic Pollution in West Bengal, India Sangeeta Dhar1, Debal Ray2, Neera Sen Sarkar3* 1

West Bengal Biodiversity Board (Department of Environment, Government of West Bengal), Poura Bhavan, 4th Floor, FD-415A, Sector-III, Salt Lake, Kolkata-700106, West Bengal, India 2 Chief Conservator of Forests, Aranya Bhavan, Block LA-10A, Sector III, Salt Lake, Kolkata- 700068, West Bengal, India 3 Phycology Section, Department of Botany, University of Kalyani, Kalyani-741235, District-Nadia, West Bengal, India

Abstract West Bengal is one of the worst affected states in India in terms of arsenic pollution. Nine out of its nineteen administrative units are severely affected, five moderately affected and a population of over 28 million suffers from the maladies of arsenic pollution. The problem, reported initially in 1978, was clinically detected for the first time in 1983. It gained importance as an issue of concern in the late 80s and became a matter of serious scientific attention in the mid-90s. A clear understanding of the issue is justifiably important for dealing with this grave environmental and health hazard. An evaluation of topics and the scientific outputs of research conducted on arsenic pollution in West Bengal was undertaken to understand how research has progressed in dealing with this serious pollutant. The study aimed to analyze trends in arsenic pollution research patterns, drives, methods and recommendations, relevant in the context of West Bengal, India but with wider geographical applicability. A dataset of 316 publications was qualitatively categorized into five broad groups (Categories 1–5), that are described here. Publications made during 1983–2012 were divided into six equal phases at an interval of 5 years each and a last phase of 2013 was separately considered. The variations in number of publications in each of the five categories implied different trends which were individually analyzed and tested for best-fit models. All the categories were supported by quadratic trend models. The significance of such findings has been discussed in the present paper.

Keywords: Arsenic, pollution, remediation, bibliometric analysis, quadratic trend

JoEECC (2014) © STM Journals 2014. All Rights Reserved


Journal of Energy, Environment & Carbon Credits ISSN: 2249-8621 (online) Volume 4, Issue 3 www.stmjournals.com

Signatures of Increasing Energy Demand of Past Two Decades as Captured in Rain Water Composition and Airmass Trajectory Analysis at Delhi (India) Sudha Singh, Bablu Kumar, Gyan Prakash Gupta, U.C. Kulshrestha* School of Environmental Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India Abstract This study reports chemical characteristics of rain water in Delhi during monsoon (2010–11) with a comparison to earlier reported values of 1994. The results showed that non-marine sources had significant influence on rain water composition. The pH of the samples varied from 5.24 to 7.48 with an average value of 6.52 showing an alkaline nature of rain water. However, the dominance of NO3− over SO42− indicated higher influence of vehicular emissions over industrial sources at this urban site. Air mass trajectory analysis revealed that the easterly air masses were the most polluted which carried highest amount of NO3− and SO42−. The study highlighted that the difference in ion balance may be minimized by including measured HCO3− concentrations especially in Indian perspective where interference of soil-derived CaCO3 is reported very high. A comparison of this study with that of 1994 values reported earlier indicated a remarkable increase in the concentrations of various chemical components of rain water which might be due to the impact of industrial and urban expansion of the city since 1994. The maximum increase (~12 times) was noticed for NO3− concentrations, clearly reflecting the signatures of increased emissions of NOx from various anthropogenic sources, especially, vehicular emissions which are drastically increased during past two decades. In spite of introduction of CNG vehicles, Bharat stage I–IV emission norms and metro rail etc., increase of NOx suggests an immediate need of further stringent regulations.

Keywords: Vehicular emissions, energy demand, rain chemistry, NOx, airmass trajectory

JoEECC (2014)© STM Journals 2014. All Rights Reserved


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.