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Faisal Khan

Researcher at Memorial University of Newfoundland

Publications -  785
Citations -  28657

Faisal Khan is an academic researcher from Memorial University of Newfoundland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Risk assessment & Risk analysis. The author has an hindex of 70, co-authored 705 publications receiving 21281 citations. Previous affiliations of Faisal Khan include Royal Hobart Hospital & Australian Maritime College.

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Risk-based safety measure allocation to prevent and mitigate storage fire hazards

TL;DR: The generic framework established in the present study can be tailored to various storage fire accidents with limited manipulation; and also, allocation and implementation of pertinent safety measures can reduce storage fires risk significantly.
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Fault detection and diagnosis in process system using artificial intelligence-based cognitive technique

TL;DR: The proposed framework is applied to the well-known Tennessee Eastman process and achieved significantly better results compared to results reported by earlier studies, confirming the proposed framework as an effective way to detect and classify known and unknown faults in process operations.
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Dispersion modelling and analysis of hydrogen fuel gas released in an enclosed area: A CFD-based approach

TL;DR: In this article, a Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) based approach is proposed to evaluate the dispersion behavior of hydrogen gas after a release from a hydrogen fuel cell car in an enclosed area.
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Why major accidents are still occurring

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the occurrence of major process accidents and offer suggestions for their prevention according to seven core concepts drawn from an analysis of the 1984 Bhopal tragedy: (i) the creation of paradigm-enhancing organizations, (ii) inherently safer design, (iii) awareness of the total cost of major accidents, (iv) process safety culture, (vi), process safety competency, and (vii) dynamic operational risk management.
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Modeling of BP Texas City refinery incident

TL;DR: In this paper, three different approaches and explosion modeling tools were used to study the BP Texas City refinery incident, and the results predicted by all three approaches are similar and all approaches identified a hazard potential comparable to what was witnessed on March 23, 2005.