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| Director: Prof. Andreas A. Linninger |
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| Che 341 |
Spring 1999 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Chemical Process Control Most of your other chemical engineering courses are concerned with analyzing
the steady-state behavior of chemical processes. In actual practice, chemical
processes are dynamic (unsteady-state) - process feed compositions vary,
ambient conditions change, pipe leaks may develop, steam pressures may
vary. These disturbances cause the process to deviate from its desired
steady-state. Such deviations may cause a severe loss of product quality,
or even lead to catastrophic failure of equipment resulting in release
of toxics to the environment and/or loss of life. To prevent this, process
control devices are installed that detect deviations from the desired steady-state
and attempt to correct for these deviations. In this course you will be
introduced to the analysis of chemical process dynamics, and to the design
and analysis of process control systems.
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Grading:
Textbook/Notes:
"Process Dynamics, Modeling, and Control", B. Ogunnaike and W. Ray, Oxford University Press, 1994. "Chemical Process Control – An Introduction into Theory and Practice", G. Stephanopoulos, Prentice Hall, 1984. "Process Dynamics and Control", D. Seborg, T. Edgar, D. Mellichamp, J. Wiley and Sons, 1989. |
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