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CHEE 221 Chemical Processes and Systems Fall 2006

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Title: CHEE 221 Chemical Processes and Systems Fall 2006


1
CHEE 221Chemical Processes and Systems- Fall
2006 -
2
Information Session for New CHEE/ENCH Students
Tuesday September 12 430 530 Dupuis
Auditorium
  • Learn important information about our department,
    and meet the staff and faculty.
  • Pizza will be served!

3
CHEE 221 Chemical Processes and Systems
  • CHEE 221 is an introductory stoichiometry 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 (CHEM 244, 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

4
Motivation 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)

5
Material and Energy Balances
  • Material and energy balances are simply the
    application of the laws of conservation of mass
    and energy, respectively, which relate the inputs
    and outputs of manufacturing systems, power
    plants and the human body.
  • Law of Conservation of Mass states that matter
    can neither be created or destroyed
  • Law of Conservation of Energy states that energy
    can neither be created or destroyed (1st Law of
    Thermodynamics)
  • A balance on a conserved quantity (i.e. mass or
    energy) in a system may be written in the
    following general way

Accumulation (In Out) (Generation
Consumption)
6
Significance of Material and Energy Balances
  • The significance of material and energy balances
    are they
  • Provide a basis for modeling on paper (or by
    computer) systems that would be difficult and/or
    expensive to study in the lab
  • Assist in the synthesis of chemical processes,
    and evaluation of design processes
  • Guide the analysis physical systems
  • Provide a basis for estimating the economic costs
    and benefits of a project

7
Textbook Problems Versus Real Life Problems
  • Textbook Problems
  • are clearly defined
  • have only one correct answer
  • have exactly the right amount of data needed to
    solve the problem
  • are designed to stress concepts and execution
    (this course)
  • Real Life Problems
  • may have difficulty defining what the real
    problem is
  • may not have all the data required to solve the
    problem, requires use of approximate correlations
    or assumptions based on common sense or
    experience
  • have more than one correct answer, each with
    their advantages and disadvantages

8
CHEE 221 Textbook
  • Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes 3rd
    Edition, 2005 by Richard Felder and Ronald
    Rousseau
  • Mandatory!! Needed for assignments and contains
    all the concepts covered in class
  • Contains useful data tables and conversion
    factors (Appendix B and inside the front and back
    covers)
  • Test Yourself questions (with answers!) located
    throughout the text help ensure you understand
    the required concepts
  • CD that accompanies the text contains interactive
    tutorials, a physical property database and a
    visual encyclopedia of chemical engineering
    equipment
  • Student workbook contains detailed outlines of
    solutions to selected chapter-end problems

9
CHEE 221 Objectives
  • At the completion of this course, you should be
    able to
  • Given a process description,
  • draw and fully label a flowchart
  • choose a convenient basis of calculation
  • for multiple unit processes, identify subsystems
    for which balances might be written
  • 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.

10
CHEE 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 processing terminology
    (batch, semi-batch, continuous purge and
    recycle) and standard operations (reaction,
    distillation, absorption, extraction,).
  • Have a sense why these basic skills are required
    and important for all chemical engineers,
    independent of their final career choice.

11
CHEE 221 Assessment
  • Assignments 30
  • Approximately 7 9 problem sets consisting of 4
    6 questions of which only 2 3 questions are
    marked
  • Students may work together on assignments but
    everyone must submit a copy for grading, and the
    name(s) of your partner(s) must be written on
    your assignment
  • Submit assignments to CHEE 221 drop box (outside
    Dupuis 215) by noon on their due date
  • Midterm Exam 25
  • Closed book exam based on material balances
    (Chapter 4 of Felder and Rousseau)
  • Date, 90 minutes in length
  • Final Exam 45
  • Closed book exam based on the entire terms work
  • Date TBA, 3 hours in length

12
Lectures
Humphrey Hall 102
Lecture notes in the form of PowerPoint slides as
well as assignments, solutions, old exams, and
any announcements pertaining to the course will
be posted on the course website
http//www.chemeng.queensu.ca/courses/CHEE221/
Lectures will address the main course concepts
and the problem solving procedures to be used in
CHEE 221. The concepts will be demonstrated and
reinforced by working through examples on the
blackboard (with your participation!). Please
bring copies of the lecture notes with you to
each class.
13
Tutorials
  • Fridays 930 1020 in Dupuis Auditorium
  • TA led sessions in which practice problems will
    be worked through and questions regarding the
    assignments will be answered
  • Always bring a calculator and your textbook
  • Course TAs
  • Patrick Egbunonu (patrick.egbunonu_at_chee.queensu.c
    a)
  • Ula El-Jaby (ula.el-jaby_at_chee.queensu.ca)
  • Matt McMahon (matt.mcmahon_at_chee.queensu.ca)

14
CHEE 221 Course Outline
The concepts of this course are relatively easy,
but you need lots of practice in order to execute
the calculations well. Practice, practice,
practice!!
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