Title: CHEE 221 Chemical Processes and Systems
1CHEE 221Chemical Processes and Systems
- Fall 2007
- Instructor Robin Hutchinson
- Dupuis 426
- robin.hutchinson_at_chee.queensu.ca
Website http//www.chemeng.queensu.ca/courses/CH
EE221/
2Information session for New CHEE and ENCH
students Wednesday 12Sept at 430 Dupuis
Auditorium Important stuff about our
department Refreshments will be Provided
3CHEE 260 Engineering Communications A new
course! Delivered in conjunction with core
CHEE courses, includingCHEE 221 Lecturer Mark
Siemonsen, P.Eng., MBA, B.Ed.
4CHEE 221 Chemical Processes and Systems
- CHEE 221 is an introductory course that prepares
students to formulate and solve material and
energy balances on chemical process systems at
steady-state (i.e. no change with time), and is
the foundation for future courses in - thermodynamics (CHEE 210, CHEE 311)
- kinetics and reactor design (CHEE 321)
- unit operations and transport phenomena (CHEE
412) - process dynamics and control (CHEE 319, CHEE 434)
- The follow-up course, CHEE 222 Process Dynamics
and Numerical Methods, builds on the material
learned in CHEE 221, and introduces - transient (time-varying) behaviour
- larger scale problems ? systems of equations
5Motivation for CHEE 221
- No universally accepted definition of chemical
engineering exists. Today, almost every type of
skilled work you can think of employs someone who
was educated as a chemical engineer. Examples
are - Traditional chemical engineering mining, pulp
paper, oil refining, materials (rubber, plastics,
etc.), environmental - Non-traditional chemical engineering
microelectronics (semiconductor manufacturing),
biotechnology (pharmaceutical production
processes, genetic engineering etc.) - Other medicine, law, business
- A similarity in all the chemical engineering
systems is that the systems involve processes
designed to transform raw materials into desired
products. A typical problem in the design of a
new or existing process is - Given the amounts and properties of the raw
materials, calculate amounts and properties of
the products, or vice versa (use material and
energy balances to solve)
6More motivation
- Chemical Engineering involves making stuff
(reactions) and purifying stuff (separations) - Examples
- Mining, pulppaper, oil refining, polymers,
food, - Power generation (and removal of waste gases)
- Your kidneys (lungs, heart, etc)
- You need to
- Minimize production of unwanted byproducts
- Separate the good (product) from the bad
(byproducts) - Recover the unused reactants
- Maximize profit, minimize energy consumption,
minimize impact on the environment
7A typical (simplified) manufacturing process
8Significance of ME Balances
- ME balances provide a basis for modeling on
paper (or by computer) systems that would be
difficult and/or expensive to study in the lab - ME balances assist in the synthesis of chemical
processes, and evaluation of design alternatives - ME balances guide in the analysis of physical
systems - ME balances provide a basis for estimating the
economic costs and benefits of a project - ME balances play an important role in assessing
the environmental impact of processes/products in
our world
9Material and Energy Balances
Accumulation In Out (Generation
Consumption)
- The toolkit for analyzing processes and material
development required for - process design, process analysis, process
control, - large industrial systems and small biological
systems - The concepts are easy, but you need lots of
practice in order to execute the calculations
well - A basic skill that you will use in most of your
other CHEE courses
10CHEE 221 Objectives
- Given a process description, you will be able to
- draw and fully label a flowchart
- choose a convenient basis of calculation
- identify the subsystems for which balances might
be written (for a multiple unit process) - perform a degree-of-freedom analysis for the
overall system and each possible subsystem - formulate and simplify the appropriate material
and energy balance equations and perform the
necessary calculations - You should be proficient at performing these
analyses for single-unit and multiple-unit
processes, for processes involving recycle,
bypass or purge streams, and for systems
involving reactions.
11CHEE 221 Objectives
- Understand and apply the first law of
thermodynamics (conservation of energy),
calculate energy and enthalpy changes using
tabulated data and heat capacities, and construct
energy balances on closed and open systems. - Be familiar with basic process terminology
(batch, semibatch, continuous purge and recycle
), standard operations (reaction, distillation,
absorption, extraction, ), and green engineering
concepts (life-cycle analysis, design for waste
minimization, ). - Have a sense of why these basic skills are
required and important for all chemical
engineers, independent of their final career
choice. -
12Buy the textbook ASAP!!
Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes
(3rd edition) Richard Felder and Ronald Rousseau
- Mandatory!!! Needed for assignments and followed
fairly closely in class - Useful data tables and conversion factors (inside
covers Appendix B) - All required concepts covered in text will be
supplemented by examples from other sources - Test yourself sections are useful to ensure
basic knowledge has been assimilated - CD with book is also useful additional info on
process equipment, tutorials, data tables,
equation solver, - Student workbook contains detailed outlines of
solutions to selected chapter-end problems
13CHEE 221 (fall 07) Lectures
- Dupuis Auditorium Mon 1230, Wed 1130, Thu 130
- Course concepts, Problem solving procedures,
Worked examples - Most lectures will involve problems developed and
solved on the blackboard (with your
participation) - Core material is found in FR you will be
directed to appropriate sections - Lecture slides (when used) will be posted on the
class web-site
14CHEE 221 (fall 07) Tutorials
- Fri at 930, Dupuis 215 and 217
- Dup 215 example problem worked by TA
- posted on website a couple of days before
tutorial - Dup 217 chance to ask questions regarding
material and/or assignments - Dont worry about A and B section assignments
- Always bring your textbook and calculator
- Office hours will be set-up according to
assignment due dates and test dates for help
outside office hours, best to send an email to
set up a time - Course TAs
- Di Jia (di.jia_at_chee.queensu.ca)
- Rajesh Parmar (rajesh.parmar_at_chee.queensu.ca)
- Denver Surrao (denver.surrao_at_chee.queensu.ca)
15CHEE221 (fall 07) Evaluation
- Assignments 20
- 6-8 problem sets, only 3-4 will be handed in for
marking - Small group assignment (at end of course)
- Okay to work together ? hand in separately and
mark down your assignment partner(s) name(s) - Quizzes and Test 40
- In class or tutorial (maximum 50 min), closed
book - Week 4 quiz (10) Thursday, 04 Oct
- Week 7 midterm on material balances (20)
Friday, 26 Oct - Week 10 quiz (10)
- Final exam 40 (Exam period 05-20 Dec)
- Comprehensive closed book, no notes (3 hours)
Dont make holiday plans until the schedule is
finalized. You must write the exam on the
scheduled day, unless there is a conflict
recognized by the Exams Office (two exams in the
same slot, etc)