Chemical Plant Is Required Carry Out Transformation Chemical Engineering
1. Chemical Engineering deals with the design and operation of industrial chemical plants that transform raw materials into desired products efficiently, economically and safely through chemical processes.
2. A chemical process typically involves physical and chemical unit operations and unit processes to prepare, react, separate and purify raw materials into final products.
3. Unit operations are the physical steps in a chemical process, such as size reduction, filtration, heating and cooling, that involve physical changes to the materials through forces like pressure, temperature or concentration differences.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes)
35 views
Chemical Plant Is Required Carry Out Transformation Chemical Engineering
1. Chemical Engineering deals with the design and operation of industrial chemical plants that transform raw materials into desired products efficiently, economically and safely through chemical processes.
2. A chemical process typically involves physical and chemical unit operations and unit processes to prepare, react, separate and purify raw materials into final products.
3. Unit operations are the physical steps in a chemical process, such as size reduction, filtration, heating and cooling, that involve physical changes to the materials through forces like pressure, temperature or concentration differences.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 6
INTRODUCTION
Chemical Engineering is the branch of engineering
which is concerned with the design and operation of industrial chemical plants. A chemical plant is required to carry out transformation of raw materials into desired products efficiently, economically and safely. Chemical Engineering is that branch of engineering which deals with the production of bulk materials from basic raw materials in a most economical and safe way by chemical means. The profession of chemical engineering deals with the industrial processes in which raw materials are converted or separated into useful products. The treatment of raw materials, chemical transformation of the raw materials and separation of the desired product from a product mixture are the usual stages of any chemical manufacturing activity. A chemical engineer converts raw materials into useful finished products of a greater value in an optimal way through processes involving physical and/or chemical (or biochemical) changes. A chemical engineer is the one who is skilled in development, design, construction, operation and control of industrial plants in which matter undergoes a change. He must choose proper raw materials and must see that the products manufactured by him meet the specifications set by the customers. Chemical engineers work in four main segments of the chemical process industries: research and development, design, manufacturing/production and sales. The traditional roles of chemical engineers include teaching, research and development, design, production, plant maintenance and trouble shooting, plant management, marketing, entrepreneurship, and consultancy. Chemical engineers play a vital role in the development and production of various essential needs of mankind like food, clothing, housing, health, communication, energy, utilisation of natural resources, and protection of the environment. Chemical engineers are engaged in the production of fertilizers, insecticides, pesticides, food products, drugs and pharmaceuticals, plastics, synthetic fibers, dyes and dye intermediates, paints and lacquers, synthetic fuels, paper, nuclear energy, synthetic rubber, etc.
Chemical process: Every industrial chemical process is
designed to produce economically a desired product from given raw materials through a series of steps involving physical or chemical change in the material under consideration. The steps involving certain physical changes are known as the unit operations; whereas the step(s) involving chemical changes in the material under consideration (i.e., chemical reactions) are known as the unit process(es). Fig. 1.1 shows a typical chemical process. The raw materials undergo physical treatment steps so as to put them in the form in which they can be very easily reacted. Then, they pass through the reactor in which chemical transformation of some or all of the raw materials takes place by one or more chemical reactions. The product mixture comprising of the products produced and unreacted raw materials undergo further physical treatments - separation, purification to obtain the desired product. So, any chemical process carried out on a commercial scale, can be thought of as a series of the unit operations and unit process(es) performed on the raw materials in a correct sequence from the feed to the product end.
UNIT OPERATIONS The concept of unit operations was
introduced by A.D. Little in 1905. The operations carried out in the process industries involving physical changes in the system under consideration are regarded as the unit operations.
Features:
1. These are physical in nature, i.e., changes involved in
them are primarily physical. 2. These are common to all types of diverse industries.
3. Individual operations have common techniques and
are based on the same scientific principles regardless of the material being processed.
4. They are independent of industries in which they are
carried out.
5. Practical methods of carrying them out may be more
or less different in different industries.
Hence, the concentration of solutions by evaporation is
a unit operation (involving a change in the concentration of the solution) that can be carried out in all types of diverse industries. This operation is basically similar in the handling of sugar or salt, or fruit juices with some differences in the most suitable arrangements.
They are basically used to conduct the physical steps of
preparing the reactants, separating and purifying the products, recycling the unconverted reactants and controlling the energy transfer in and out of the chemical reactor.
A physical change resulting in a change in any property
of matter occurs by the action of some sort of driving force. The normal driving force in heat transfer is a temperature difference. Broadly, unit operations are Mechanical Operations, e.g., size reduction (crushing and grinding), filtration, size separation, etc. Fluid Flow Operations in which the pressure difference acts as a driving force, Heat Transfer (Operations) in which the temperature difference acts as a driving force and Mass Transfer Operations in which the concentration difference/ gradient acts as a driving force, e.g., distillation, gas absorption, drying, etc.
The theory of unit operations is based on the
fundamental laws of physical sciences such as law of conservation of mass, law of conservation of energy, Newton's laws of motion, Ideal gas law, Dalton's law of partial pressure, Newton's law of cooling, Raoult's law, etc.
CLASSIFICATION OF UNIT OPERATIONS
1. Fluid flow: It is concerned with the principles that
determine the flow or transportation of any fluid from one location to another.
2. Mechanical operations: These involve size reduction
of solids by crushing, grinding and pulverising, mixing, conveying and mechanical separations such as decantation, filtration, settling and sedimentation, screening, flotation, etc. 3. Heat transfer: It deals with a study of the rate of heat energy transfer from one place to another owing to the existence of a temperature difference. It deals with the determination of rates of heat transfer. Heat transfer occurs in heating, cooling, phase change, evaporation, drying, distillation, etc. The modes/mechanisms by which heat transfer may occur are conduction, convection and radiation.
4. Mass transfer: It is concerned with the transfer of
mass from one phase to another distinct phase. Mass transfer operations depend on molecules diffusing or vaporising from one distinct phase to another and are based on (or they utilise) differences in vapour pressure, solubility, or diffusivity. Molecular diffusion and turbulent/eddy diffusion are the mechanisms of mass transfer. Mass transfer operations include separation techniques like distillation, gas absorption, drying, extraction, crystallisation, etc.
This text covers heat and mass transfer operations - a
part portion of the unit operations of chemical engineering.
The Mechanics of Inhaled Pharmaceutical Aerosols An Introduction 1st Edition Warren H. Finlay - The complete ebook is available for download with one click