About this Research Topic
Led by Field Chief Editor, Prof. Bing-Jie Ni, Frontiers in Environmental Engineering is a gold open access journal serving the environmental engineering community, that aims to disseminate high-quality research covering the latest and most influential advancements related to environmental engineering. Frontiers in Environmental Engineering aims to share research that improves and maintains natural ecosystems with scientific principles and engineering tools.
The journal has 4 specialty sections - sub-disciplines of the journal with a specialty chief editor and expert editorial boards, to support publications across these important areas and communities:
· Air Pollution Management
· Environmental Catalysis
· Environmental Impact Assessment
· Water, Waste, and Wastewater Engineering
The goal of this Research Topic is to showcase cutting-edge advancements, new insights, reflections on the current state of the field, and outlook on the future of the field, with contributions from each of our chief editors in Frontiers in Environmental Engineering. Therefore, this collection is by invitation only, limited to the chief editors of Frontiers in Environmental Engineering.
Each Specialty Chief Editor will contribute a Review or Original Research article relative to their specialty section and area of research, or refer a colleague, alongside a contribution from the Field Chief Editor. We hope this collection will present some exciting concepts and insight into the future of the environmental engineering research field, as well as show the interests and support of our chief editors. We aim for this to inspire further research in the field and discussion in the community, that is welcome to be published in our journal in the future.
Keywords: environmental engineering, air pollution, environmental catalysis, impact assessment, EIA, water engineering, wastewater engineering
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.