附註:Includes bibliographical references.
Title from PDF title page (viewed May 17, 2012).
""FrontMatter""; ""Preface""; ""Acknowledgment of Reviewers""; ""Contents""; ""Introduction and Summary""; ""Context and Overview""; ""1 Meeting the Global Water Challenge""; ""2 Green Chemistry: The Impact on Water Quality and Supplies""; ""3 Methylmercury Contamination of Aquatic Ecosystems: A Widespread Problem with Many Challenges for the Chemical Sciences""; ""Water Quality and Supply: Analysis and Treatment""; ""4 Desalination: Limitations and Challenges""; ""5 Organic Contaminants in the Environment: Challenges for the Water/Environmental Engineering Community""
""6 AquaSentinelSM: Biosensors for Rapid Monitoring of Primary-Source Drinking Water""""Business Opportunities and Responsibilities""; ""7 Some New Approaches at the Orange County Water District""; ""8 A Perspective from a Water Company""; ""9 Sustainable Development: Role of Industrial Water Management""; ""10 Water Solutions and Strategies in the Chemical Industry""; ""11 Classifying Drinking Water Contamination for Regulatory Consideration""; ""Appendixes""; ""Appendix A Workshop Participants""; ""Appendix B Biographical Sketches of Workshop Speakers""
摘要:A workshop was organized by the Chemical Sciences Roundtable of BCST (Board on Chemical Sciences and Technology) on the topic Water and Sustainable Development: Opportunities for the Chemical Sciences. The workshop brought together top experts in the area of water science and technology and leaders in chemistry and chemical engineering from government, industry, and academia. This interaction was intended to enhance the synergy between these two communities and help engage a broader cross section of the chemical sciences community in this important arena of science and technology. The workshop sessions provided technical background and explored enhanced roles that the chemical sciences R & D community might play in identifying and addressing the issues that make water a critical limiting factor in human economic development and sustainability. The goal of the workshop was to inform the Chemical Sciences Roundtable. In that process, it may also engage the broad chemical sciences community in addressing the question of how to ensure the adequate supply of water that is required for public health, sustainable agriculture and food security, energy generation, and economic growth.