Hydraulic fracturing (additionally called fracking, fracing, hydrofracking, fraccing, frac'ing, and hydrofracturing) is a well incitement strategy including the cracking of bedrock developments by a pressurized fluid. The procedure includes the high-pressure infusion of 'fracking liquid' (fundamentally water, containing sand or different proppants suspended with the guide of thickening specialists) into a wellbore to make splits in the profound stone arrangements through which flammable gas, oil, and saline solution will stream all the more uninhibitedly. At the point when the water driven weight is expelled from the well, little grains of pressure driven breaking proppants (either sand or aluminum oxide) hold the cracks open
Review Article: Journal of Environmental Hazards
Review Article: Journal of Environmental Hazards
Research Article: Journal of Environmental Hazards
Research Article: Journal of Environmental Hazards
Research Article: Journal of Environmental Hazards
Research Article: Journal of Environmental Hazards
Commentary: Journal of Environmental Hazards
Commentary: Journal of Environmental Hazards
Review Article: Journal of Environmental Hazards
Review Article: Journal of Environmental Hazards
Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Journal of Biometrics & Biostatistics
Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Journal of Biometrics & Biostatistics
Scientific Tracks Abstracts: Journal of Biometrics & Biostatistics
Scientific Tracks Abstracts: Journal of Biometrics & Biostatistics
Accepted Abstracts: Journal of Biometrics & Biostatistics
Accepted Abstracts: Journal of Biometrics & Biostatistics
Accepted Abstracts: Journal of Biometrics & Biostatistics
Accepted Abstracts: Journal of Biometrics & Biostatistics
Scientific Tracks Abstracts: Journal of Biometrics & Biostatistics
Scientific Tracks Abstracts: Journal of Biometrics & Biostatistics
Journal of Environmental Hazards received 40 citations as per Google Scholar report