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Professors Anklam, Artigue, Carlson, Coronell, Hariri,
McClellan, Miller, Sauer and Serbezov
CHE 110 Programming and Computation for Chemical Engineers 2R-0L-2C S Pre: None
An introduction to problem solving and programming using spreadsheets and Visual Basic for Applications (VBA).
Spreadsheet applications include graphical analysis, curve-fitting, parameter estimation, numerical differentiation
and integration, solution of systems of algebraic (linear and nonlinear) equations and ordinary differential equations.
VBA programming topics include structured and object-oriented programming concepts as well as applications involving the
creation of customized worksheet functions.
CHE 200 Career Preparation I 0L-0C F Pre: sophomore standing
in Chemical Engineering
Career choices in chemical engineering, internship, coop,
chemical industry working environment. 2-5 contact hours per
quarter.
CHE 201 Conservation Principles and Balances 4R-0L-4C F Pre: CHEM 113, MA 113 and PH 111
An introduction to engineering calculations, the use of common process variables, and conservation and accounting
of extensive properties - mass, energy, charge, linear momentum - as a common framework for engineering analysis
and modeling. Applications of conservation of mass and energy in analysis of chemical engineering processes will
be addressed including recycle, bypass and multi-stream processes. There will be an introduction to equipment,
flowcharts, techniques and methodologies used by practicing chemical engineers. The use of computer software,
especially spreadsheets, will be integrated into the course.
CHE 202 Basic Chemical Process Calculations 4R-0L-4C W Pre: CHE 201
Applications of the principles of conservation of mass and energy to reactive, multiphase, and transient systems.
The course continues to develop concepts from CHE 201 and provides a more extensive treatment of energy balances.
CHE 300 Career Preparation II 0L-0C W Pre: Junior standing in
Chemical Engineering
Career choices; preparation of resume; preparation for summer
positions; preparation for graduate programs. 2-5 contact
hours per quarter.
CHE 301 Fluid Mechanics 4R-0L-4C F,S Pre: CHE 201
Physical properties, fluid statics, laminar and turbulent flow
of real fluids, boundary layer concept, interaction between fluid
flow and contacting surfaces. Use of energy balances in design
of pipe networks and pumps. Emphasis is placed on general
methods of analysis applicable to any fluid. Solution of
problems by computer will be stressed.
CHE 303 Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics 4R-0L-4C F,S Pre: CHE 201, MA221
First and second laws of thermodynamics and their application including thermodynamic cycles, closed and open systems.
Thermodynamic properties of pure components. Phase equilibria of pure components. Equations of state, state diagrams.
Thermodynamic analysis of processes.
CHE 304 Multi-Component Thermodynamics 4R-0L-4C F, W Pre: CHE 303, MA222
Properties of mixtures. Phase equilibria for mixtures. Equations of state and activity coefficient models.
Chemical reaction thermodynamics. Thermodynamic analysis of processes. Project based study of phase equilibria
involving the use of a process simulator.
CHE 314 Heat Transfer 4R-0L-4C F, W, Pre: CHE 202, CHE 301, MA221
Discussion of fundamental heat transfer processes: conduction, forced and free convection, boiling and
condensation, and radiation heat transfer. Mathematical analysis and computation of heat transfer and
temperature profiles in solids with simple geometry. Estimation of local and overall heat transfer coefficients.
Use, design, and selection of heat exchangers and heat exchange systems for various applications in the chemical process industries.
CHE315 Materials Science and Engineering 4R-0L-4C F Pre: CHEM 113
Introduction to the properties and processing of metals, ceramics, polymers, and semiconductors.
The influences of crystal structure, interatomic bonding, and electronic structure on physical, mechanical,
and electrical properties are emphasized. Causes and mitigation of various types of corrosion are explored.
Properties and design of composite materials are introduced.
CHE 325 Mass Transfer 4R-0L-4C W, S Pre: CHE 202, CHE 314, CHE
304
Principles of diffusion. Study of gas-liquid operations
including gas absorption and distillation in equilibrium stage
tray columns as well as packed columns. Quantitative treatment
of mass transfer based on material and energy balances, phase
equilibrium and rates of heat and mass transfer.
CHE 385 Quality Methods 4R-0L-4C S Pre: MA 223 or MA 381 and
consent of instructor (See MA 385.)
Introduction to various aspects of statistical quality control
and statistical process control to include the following
topics: importance of variance reduction and probability
concepts influencing product quality and reliability;
development and application of control charts (P-charts,
NP-chart, C-charts, U-charts, Individuals Charts, moving range
charts, X-bar and R as well as X-bar and S charts); process
capability indices (their use and misuse); introduction to
acceptance sampling. Other topics to be included as time
allows: 6 sigma thinking, gauge reproducibility and
repeatability, and total quality management with the
philosophies of Deming, Juran, and Crosby. Review of
fundamental prerequisite statistics will be included as
necessary.
CHE 404 Kinetics and Reactor Design 4R-0L-4C F,S Pre: CHEM 360
and CHE 304
Homogeneous kinetics, differential and integral data analysis,
batch, mixed, and plug flow reactors, systems with multiple
reactions and reactors, temperature and pressure effects.
CHE 405 Introduction to MEMS: Fabrication and Applications
3R-3L-4C S Pre: JR or SR Standing (See PH 410/510.)
Properties of silicon wafers, wafer-level processes, surface
and bulk micromachining, thin-film deposition, dry and wet
etching, photolithography, process integration, simple
actuators. Introduction to microfluidic systems. MEMS
applications: capacitive accelerometer, cantilever and
pressure sensor. Students enrolled in CHE 405/505 must do
project work on a topic selected by the instructor.
CHE 409 Professional Practice 1R-0L-1C F
Topics on professional practice, project management,
contemporary and global issues in the profession are discussed
by students, staff and outside speakers.
CHE 410 Data Collection, Analysis and Interpretation 2R-0L-2C
S and/or F Pre: CHE 202, MA 223, RH 330
An introduction to laboratory concepts in data collection,
record keeping, interpretation and analysis, and
instrumentation. Topics include experimental error analysis,
regression, model formulation, experimental design, and
instrumentation. In addition, students will be formally
instructed on written and oral communication and teaming.
CHE 411 Chemical Engineering Laboratory I 0R-3L-1C S Pre: CHE
202, CHE 314, MA223
Principles underlying momentum, mass and energy transfer and
the applications of equipment used to accomplish such
transfer. Written and oral reports are required.
CHE 412 Chemical Engineering Laboratory II 0R- 6L-2C F Pre:
CHE 325, CHE 410, CHE 411 or consent of instructor
Continuation of CHE 411.
CHE 413 Chemical Engineering Laboratory III 0R- 6L-2C W Pre:
CHE 412
Continuation of CHE 412 with emphasis on process control and
kinetics.
CHE 416 Design I: Process Economics and Equipment Design 4R-0L-4C F Pre: CHE 325, CHE 404 or concurrent registration
Introduction to the design process; simulation to assist in process creation & analysis; synthesis of
separation trains; design of separation towers, heat exchangers, pumps, compressors, expanders and other
process equipment; cost accounting & capital cost estimation, trade-offs between capital and operating costs;
design of reactor-separator-recycle networks.
CHE 417 Design II: Process Synthesis and Analysis 4R-0L-4C W Pre: CHE 416, CHE 404
Annual costs, earnings & profitability; process creation, optimization of process flowsheets; molecular
structure design; heat & power integration; mass integration; optimal design & scheduling of batch processes.
The course includes an open-ended process improvement project.
CHE 418 Design III: Capstone Design Project 0R-6L-2C S Pre: CHE 417
Completion of an open-ended design project which will include written and oral communication of intermediate
status and the final design specifications.
CHE 419 Advanced MEMS: Modeling and Packaging 3R-3L-4C F Pre:
PH410 or equivalent (See PH 411/511.)
Design process, modeling; analytical and numerical. Actuators;
dynamics and thermal issues. Use of software for layout and
simulation. Characterization and reliability of MEMS devices.
Electrical interfacing and packaging of MEMS. Microsensors,
microfluidic systems, applications in engineering, biology, and
physics. Students enrolled in CHE 419/519, must do project
work on a topic selected by the instructor.
CHE 420 Consulting Engineering Seminar 2R-0L-2C Pre: Junior
class standing
Discusses problems in the field of consulting engineering.
Seminars presented by practicing consulting engineers.
CHE 440 Process Control 4R-0L-4C W Pre: CHE 202, MA222
The mathematics of process dynamics, control system design,
Laplace transforms, feedback control theory, characteristics
of control elements, stability criteria, and frequency
response. The course at times uses a personalized system of
instruction format.
CHE 441 Polymer Engineering 4R-0L-4C F Pre: CHE 404 or concurrent registration in CHE 404 or consent of instructor
Interrelation of polymer structure, properties and processing. Polymerization kinetics. Methods for molecular
weight determination. Fabrication and processing of thermoplastic and thermosetting materials. Student projects.
CHE 450 Air Pollution Control 4R-0L-4C F or W Pre: Junior or
Senior standing
An introduction to air pollution and its control with special
emphasis on the engineering aspects. Discussions of
meteorology, health effects, sources and types of pollution,
industrial control technology. Student projects.
CHE 461 Unit Operations in Environmental Engineering 4R-0L-4C
F or W Pre: EM 301 or CHE 301
Physical-chemical unit operations pertinent to wastewater
treatment such as membrane separations, filtration,
coagulation, flocculation, ion exchange, carbon adsorption.
Applications for unit operations from the chemical process
industries are also covered.
CHE 470 Safety, Health, and Loss Prevention 4R-0L-4C S Pre:
Junior or Senior standing
Fundamentals of chemical process safety including toxicology,
industrial hygiene, toxic release and dispersion models, fires
and explosions, HAZOP analysis. Design of equipment to prevent
fires and explosions. Risk assessment, including event and
fault trees.
CHE 490 Special Topics in Chemical Engineering 4R-0L-4C F, W,
S
Topics of current interest in chemical engineering.
CHE 499 Directed Research F, W, S Pre: Permission of
instructor
A special project is assigned to or selected by the student.
The publication of research is encouraged. Variable credit.
May be repeated up to a maximum of eight credits.
UNDERGRADUATE-GRADUATE COURSES
CHE 502 Transport Phenomena I 4R-0L-4C Pre: CHE 325 or consent of instructor
Solution of the equations of change for momentum, energy, and mass transport. Mathematical determination
of velocity profiles and momentum flux for isothermal flows inside ducts and over objects in both steady
and unsteady systems. Turbulent flow theories. Mathematical determination of temperature profiles and heat
flux, and concentration profiles and mass flux, in solids and laminar flows including boundary layers.
Theoretical bases for friction factors, convective heat transfer, and convective mass transfer coefficients. Dimensional analysis.
CHE 503 Transport Phenomena II 4R-0L-4C
Energy Transport: multidimensional systems; macroscopic
balances for nonisothermal systems. Mass Transport:
fundamentals of ordinary diffusion, multicomponent diffusion,
pressure and thermal diffusion, coupled heat and mass
transfer, boundary layer analysis, turbulent transport, mass
transfer coefficients, macroscopic balances.
CHE 504 Advanced Reactor Design 4R-0L-4C W Pre: CHE 404
Strategies for modeling the effects of real reactor systems, including non-ideal flow and multiple phases.
Applications in catalysis, combustion, biotechnology, polymerization, and materials processing. Computer methods
and software for reactor engineering.
CHE 505 Introduction to MEMS: Fabrication and Applications
3R-3L-4C S Pre: JR or SR standing
Properties of silicon wafers; wafer-level processes, surface
and bulk micromachining, thin-film deposition, dry and wet
etching, photolithography, process integration, simple
actuators. Introduction to microfluidic systems. MEMS
applications: capacitive accelerometer, cantilever and
pressure sensor.
Students enrolled in PH510, ME516, ECE516, CHE505, BE516 must
do project work on a topic selected by the instructor.
CHE 512 Petrochemical Processes 4R-0L-4C F or W Pre: CHE 325
or consent of instructor
Multicomponent separation of petroleum by flash vaporization
and by distillation. Catalytic processes for production of
light petroleum products from heavier derivatives. Production
of petrochemicals such as ethylene, methanol, and ammonia from
natural gas. Group projects on refinery and petrochemical
processes. Material balances and economic evaluations.
Application of computer design packages and spreadsheets.
CHE 513 Advanced Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics 4R-0L-4C Pre: CHE 304
Review of thermodynamic principles including fundamental equations and the laws of thermodynamics.
Thermodynamics of mixtures, phase equilibria, and thermodynamic analysis of processes. Project based
in-depth study of phase equilibria, equations of state, and activity coefficient models. Use of process simulator
for phase equilibria calculations. Introduction to statistical thermodynamics.
CHE 519 Advanced MEMS: Modeling and Packaging 3R-3L-4C F Pre:
PH410 or equivalent course
Design process, modeling; analytical and numerical. Actuators;
dynamics and thermal issues. Use of software for layout and
simulation. Characterization and reliability of MEMS devices.
Electrical interfacing and packaging of MEMS. Microsensors,
microfluidic systems, applications in engineering, biology,
chemistry, and physics.
Students enrolled in PH511, ME519, ECE519, CHE519, BE519 must
do project work on a topic selected by the instructor.
CHE 521 Advanced Chemical Engineering Computation 4R-0L-4C
The application of advanced mathematics to chemical engineering problems. The topics include: the
formulation of the partial differential equations of kinetics and heat, mass and momentum transfer problems;
series solution techniques; transform solution techniques; vector formulation; numerical methods for systems
of differential equations; optimization, including linear programming, combinatorial optimization,
and stochastic optimization techniques.
CHE 540 Advanced Process Control 4R-0L-4C Pre: CHE 440 and
consent of instructor
Control topics beyond those covered in CHE 440. Topics will be
selected from among the following: optimization, nonlinear
control, adaptive control, multivariable systems, process
dynamics, digital systems, system design.
CHE 545 Introduction to Biochemical Engineering 4R-0L-4C Pre:
CHE 404 or AB421 or consent of instructor
Survey course introducing biochemical terminology and
processes. Review of microbiology and biochemistry. Enzyme
kinetics, cellular genetics, biochemical transport phenomena,
and design and operation of biochemical reactors. Emphasis on
applying engineering principles to biochemical situations.
CHE 546 Bioseparations 4R-0L-4C, Pre: CHE 325 or consent of instructor
An introduction to biochemistry and microbiology will be followed by analysis of bioseparation processes.
Filtration, centrifugation, adsorption, electrophoresis, and chromatography are the primary topics of the course.
Applications are emphasized.
CHE 590 Special Topics in Chemical Engineering 4R-0L-4C F, W,
S
Topics of current interest in chemical engineering. May be
repeated.
CHE 597 Special Projects in Chemical Engineering F, W, S Pre:
Permission of instructor
A special project, or series of problems, or research problem
is assigned to or selected by the student. A comprehensive
report must be submitted at the conclusion of the project. Not
to be used as a substitute for CHE 599, Thesis Research.
Variable credit. May be repeated up to a maximum of eight
credits.
CHE 598 Graduate Seminar 1R-0L-0C F, W, S
Selected topics in chemical engineering are discussed by
graduate students, faculty, and guest speakers.
CHE 599 Thesis Research F, W, S
Graduate students only. Credits as assigned; however, not more
than 12 credits will be applied toward the requirements of the
M.S. degree.
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