The Engineering of Chemical Reactions
Lanny D. Schmidt(Author)
Oxford University Press Inc
Published on 4. December 1997
Book
Hardback
552 pages
978-0-19-510588-9 (ISBN)
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Description
Employment opportunities for chemical engineers are moving away from petroleum and petrochemicals toward new applications such as materials processing, pharmaceuticals, and foods. Chemical reactors remain at the center of any chemical process; they are essential to improving existing processes and to designing new ones. Today and in the future chemical engineers must be able to use their knowledge of reactors in combination with other skills in order to think creatively and strategically about new processes and growing applications. The Engineering of Chemical Reactions addresses these issues by focusing on the analysis of chemical reactors while simultaneously providing a description of industrial chemical processes and the strategies by which they operate. Ideal for upper-level undergraduate courses in chemical reactor engineering and kinetics, this text provides a concise, up-to-date alternative to similar texts. In addition to the analysis of simple chemical reactors, it considers more complex situations such as multistage reactors and reactor-separation systems. Energy management and the role of mass transfer in chemical reactors are also integrated into the text.
The evolution of chemical engineering from petroleum refining, through petrochemicals and polymers, to new applications is described so that students can see the relationships between past, present, and future technologies. Applications such as catalytic processes, environmental modeling, biological reactions, reactions involving solids, oxidation, combustion and safety, polymerization, and multiphase reactors are also described. The text uses a notation of reaction stoichiometry and reactor mass balances which is kept simple so that students can see the principles of reactor design without becoming lost in complex special cases. Numerical methods are used throughout to consider more complex problems. Worked examples are given throughout the text, and over 300 homework problems are included. Both the examples and problems cover real-world chemistry and kinetics.
The evolution of chemical engineering from petroleum refining, through petrochemicals and polymers, to new applications is described so that students can see the relationships between past, present, and future technologies. Applications such as catalytic processes, environmental modeling, biological reactions, reactions involving solids, oxidation, combustion and safety, polymerization, and multiphase reactors are also described. The text uses a notation of reaction stoichiometry and reactor mass balances which is kept simple so that students can see the principles of reactor design without becoming lost in complex special cases. Numerical methods are used throughout to consider more complex problems. Worked examples are given throughout the text, and over 300 homework problems are included. Both the examples and problems cover real-world chemistry and kinetics.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Illustrations
numerous line figures
ISBN-13
978-0-19-510588-9 (9780195105889)
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Schweitzer Classification
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08/2004
2nd Edition
Oxford University Press Inc
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Content
Preface; PART I. FUNDAMENTALS; 1. Chemical Reactors; 2. Reaction Rates, the Batch Reactor, and the Real World; 3. Single Reactions in Continuous Isothermal Reactors; 4. Multiple Reactions in Continuous Reactors; 5. Nonisothermal Reactors; 6. Multiple Steady States and Transients; 7. Catalytic Reactors and Mass Transfer; PART II. APPLICATIONS; 8. Nonideal Reactors, Bioreactors, and Environmental Modeling; 9. Reactions of Solids; 10. Chain Reactions, Combustion Reactors, and Safety; 11. Polymerization Reactions and Reactors; 12. Multiphase Reactors; APPENDIX A. INTEGRATING DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS; APPENDIX B. NOTATION; APPENDIX C. CONVERSION FACTORS