LE 1 - Birth of Chemical Engineering Flashcards

1
Q

It is a relatively young profession, less than 100 years old.

A

Chemical Engineering Profession

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2
Q

In the early days before the formal chemical engineer was born, ___________________ with a good knowledge of industrial chemistry were responsible for the operation of chemical plants

A

mechanical engineers

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3
Q

mechanical engineers with a good knowledge of___________________ were responsible for the operation of chemical plants.

A

industrial chemistry

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4
Q

mechanical engineers with a good knowledge of industrial chemistry were responsible for the operation of __________________.

A

chemical plants

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5
Q

emerged with the development of large-scale, chemical-manufacturing operations in the second half of the 19th century.

A

modern chemical engineering

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6
Q

It was through its role in the development of the __________________ that chemical engineering became firmly established as a unique discipline

A

petroleum industry

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7
Q

Modern chemical engineering emerged with the development of large-scale, chemical-manufacturing operations in the

A

second half of the 19th century

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8
Q

The term chemical engineer was in general use by about

A

1900

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9
Q

The term ________________ was in general use by about 1900

A

chemical engineer

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10
Q

The focus in the early days was on ______________________ and not on unification of principles

A

individual technologies

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10
Q

The focus in the early days was on individual technologies and not on ___________________

A

unification of principles

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11
Q

A __________________ has a good fundamental understanding of the various processes occurring in a plant

A

chemical engineer

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12
Q

He is considered the father of chemical engineering.

A

George E. Davis

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13
Q

He studied at the Slough Mechanics Institute and the Royal School of Mines in London (now a part of Imperial College, London).

A

George E. Davis

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14
Q

George E. Davis studied at?

A

Slough Mechanics Institute and the Royal School of Mines in London (now a part of Imperial College, London)

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14
Q

He worked in chemical industries around _________________

A

Manchester

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15
Q

Davis held various positions?

A

as an inspector for the Alkali Act of 1863

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16
Q

He worked as an inspector for the Alkali Act of 1863 before he embarked on a career as a?

A

consultant

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17
Q

This was a very early piece of environmental legislation that required soda manufacturers to reduce the amount of hydrochloric acid gas vented into the atmosphere from their factories.

A

Alkali Act of 1863

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18
Q

This was a very early piece of environmental legislation that required soda manufacturers to reduce the amount of ________________ vented into the atmosphere from their factories.

A

hydrochloric acid gas

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19
Q

His job profile was such that he had to visit various chemical plants and inspect their operations

A

George E. Davis

19
Q

He made a _____________________ of the different processes in these plants and highlighted the fundamental principles on which these processes were based.

A

comprehensive study

20
Q

He is a British chemical consultant

A

George E. Davis

21
Q

Where did Davis gave a series of 12 lectures?

A

Manchester School of Technology

21
Q

During this year, Davis gave a series of 12 lectures at the Manchester School of Technology

A

1887

21
Q

How many lectures di Davis gave at the Manchester School of Technology

A

12 lectures

22
Q

George’s lectures formed the?

A

basis of the Handbook of Chemical Engineering

23
Q

At that time there were already several industrial chemistry books written for each chemical industry—for example

A

alkali manufacturing
acid production
brewing
dyeing

23
Q

Davis’s contribution was that he organized his text by the basic operations common to many industries

A

transporting solids liquids, and gases distillation
crystallization
evaporation

23
Q

His lectures were criticized as being common place know-how since these were designed around operating practices used by

A

British chemical industries

24
Q

A landmark in the development of chemical engineering was the publication in

A

1901

25
Q

the first textbook on the subject by George E. Davis was published in

A

1901

26
Q

The notion of a processing plant encompassing a number of operations, such as

A

mixing
evaporation
filtration

27
Q

The notion of a processing plant encompassing a number of operations, such as mixing, evaporation, and filtration, and of these operations being essentially similar, whatever the product, led to the concept of

A

unit operations

28
Q

This was first enunciated by the American chemical engineer Arthur D. Little in 1915

A

Unit Operations

28
Q

What year was unit operations first enunciated?

A

1915

29
Q

Unit operations was first enunciated by the

A

American chemical engineer Arthur D. Little

30
Q

He is a n American chemical engineer

A

Arthur D. Little

30
Q

He formed the basis for a classification of chemical engineering that dominated the subject for the next 40 years

A

Arthur D. Little

31
Q

the building blocks of a chemical plant

A

unit operations

32
Q

The observation of the fundamental similarity in the different processes in the various plants led to the introduction of the concept of

A

unit operations

32
Q

it is not large

A

unit operations

33
Q

This concept provides a scientific basis and a unified approach for understanding the behavior of processes in the various units; reactors, separators, etc. in apparently different chemical plants.

A

unit operations

33
Q

This approach helps us in providing a unified framework for understanding and describing processes operating on similar principles.

A

unit operations

33
Q

Adopting this approach in the curriculum helped develop confidence and versatility in the students to work in different chemical plants.

A

unit operations

34
Q

This shifted the emphasis from a ________________________ to a ________________________.

A

technology-based approach, scientific-based approach

35
Q

chemical reactions involved in the process industries can be classified into certain groups, or

A

chemical processes

36
Q

unit processes examples

A

polymerizations
esterifications
nitrations

37
Q

This classification into unit processes brought rationalization to the study of

A

process engineering

38
Q

Since this happened, closer examination of the fundamental phenomena involved in the various unit operations has shown these to depend on the basic laws of mass transfer, heat transfer, and fluid flow.

A

World War II

39
Q

closer examination of the fundamental phenomena involved in the various unit operations has shown these to depend on the

A

basic laws of mass transfer, heat transfer, and fluid flow

39
Q

different parameters

A

energy source used
plant layout
environmental factors