Chris Hendrickson spends much of his time researching Life-cycle assessment, Environmental engineering, Environmental economics, Waste management and Process. His Life-cycle assessment research is multidisciplinary, relying on both Marketing, Business model, Spillover effect and Energy management. His study in Environmental engineering is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Supply chain and Natural gas.
His Environmental economics study frequently links to related topics such as Certification. His Waste management study combines topics in areas such as Truck, Electricity and Engineering design process. In the field of Process, his study on Process modeling overlaps with subjects such as Strengths and weaknesses.
Chris Hendrickson focuses on Transport engineering, Environmental economics, Engineering management, Life-cycle assessment and Systems engineering. He combines subjects such as Automation, Mathematical model and Truck with his study of Transport engineering. His research is interdisciplinary, bridging the disciplines of Sustainable engineering and Engineering management.
Systems engineering connects with themes related to Expert system in his study. His work on Expert system is being expanded to include thematically relevant topics such as Construction engineering.
His primary areas of study are Transport engineering, Environmental economics, Electricity, Agricultural economics and Natural resource economics. His Transport engineering study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Automation and Software deployment. Chris Hendrickson focuses mostly in the field of Environmental economics, narrowing it down to matters related to Externality and, in some cases, Alternative fuels and Commerce.
His Electricity research incorporates themes from Robustness and Econometrics. The various areas that Chris Hendrickson examines in his Natural resource economics study include Civil engineering and Scope. His biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Redevelopment, Greenfield project and Life-cycle assessment.
His main research concerns Transport engineering, Electricity, Agricultural economics, Environmental economics and Environmental engineering. His studies in Transport engineering integrate themes in fields like Battery pack, Drop and Agent-based model. The concepts of his Electricity study are interwoven with issues in Robustness, Econometrics and Environmental resource management.
His Agricultural economics research integrates issues from Battery electric vehicle and Gasoline. Chris Hendrickson conducts interdisciplinary study in the fields of Environmental economics and Criteria air contaminants through his works. His Environmental engineering study frequently links to other fields, such as Food Consumption Patterns.
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Project Management for Construction: Fundamental Concepts for Owners, Engineers, Architects, and Builders
Chris Hendrickson;Tung Au.
(1989)
Environmental Life Cycle Assessment of Goods and Services: An Input-Output Approach
Chris T. Hendrickson;Chris T. Hendrickson.
(2006)
Economic Input–Output Models for Environmental Life-Cycle Assessment
Chris Hendrickson;Arpad Horvath;Satish Joshi;Lester B Lave.
(1998)
The Importance of Carbon Footprint Estimation Boundaries
H. Scott Matthews;Chris T. Hendrickson;Christopher L. Weber.
(2008)
Using input-output analysis to estimate economy-wide discharges
Lester B. Lave;Elisa Cobas-Flores;Chris T. Hendrickson;Francis C. McMichael.
(1995)
Schedule Delay and Departure Time Decisions in a Deterministic Model
Chris Hendrickson;George Kocur.
(1981)
Estimating Potential Increases in Travel with Autonomous Vehicles for the Non-Driving, Elderly and People with Travel-Restrictive Medical Conditions
Corey D. Harper;Chris T. Hendrickson;Sonia Mangones;Sonia Mangones;Constantine Samaras.
(2016)
Life cycle greenhouse gas emissions of Marcellus shale gas
Mohan Jiang;W Michael Griffin;Chris Hendrickson;Paulina Jaramillo.
(2011)
Reverse-Logistics Strategy for Product Take-Back
Markus Klausner;Chris T. Hendrickson.
(2000)
The flexibility of departure times for work trips
Chris Hendrickson;Edward Plank.
(1984)
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