scholarly journals The Virtual Chemical Engineering Unit Operations Laboratory

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Lan ◽  
Karlene Hoo ◽  
Jason Williams ◽  
Harry Parker ◽  
Charles Smith ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. e67963449
Author(s):  
Bianca Guimarães ◽  
Jéssica Terra Teodoro Silva ◽  
Kássia Graciele Santos ◽  
José Luiz Vieira Neto

The most used biomass are wood, sugar cane, paper, rice husk, and peanut. Based on the concept of sustainability and waste reduction, the full utilization of biomass is an alternative capable of providing people with a better nutritional intake, improving the economy related to biomass and the ecological relationship between man and the environment. So, the aim of this work was the sustainable use the biomass, the peanut, through multiple unit operations. Thus, the material went through several processes as the grinding process, where it was possible to obtain immediate analysis data (moisture content, ash content, volatile content and fixed carbon) and particle size. Then, drying was performed employing solar energy and the drying efficiency was obtained. Infrared and greenhouse tests were performed in the laboratory to determine the drying and humidity curves. After drying, it was also carried out the oil extraction using ethanol as solvent heated by solar energy. After that, the residual cake was used as the adsorbent material in the dye removal by adsorption in a fixed bed. So, the dye-impregnated adsorbent has undergone a process of pyrolysis in order to form fine coal, bio-oil, and gases. With products and by-products of each process, it was possible to generate the infrared spectrum of each. Therefore, it is shown how the integral use of peanut as biomass is possible, using chemical engineering sustainable processes, and how it may contribute to the reduction of the pollution and to the reduction of waste production.


2007 ◽  
Vol 7 (1 & 2) ◽  
pp. 8
Author(s):  
Reza Barzin ◽  
Syamsul Rizal Abd Shukor ◽  
Abdul Latif Ahmad

Process intensification (PI) is currently one of the most significant trends in chemical engineering and process technology. PI is a strategy of making dramatic reductions in the size of unit operations within chemical plants, in order to achieve production objectives. PI technology is able to change dramatically the whole chemical engineering industry pathway to a faster, cleaner and safer industry. Nonetheless, PI technology will be handicapped if such system is not properly controlled. There are some foreseeable problems in order to control such processes for instance, dynamic interaction between components that make up a control loop, response time of the instrumentations, availability of proper sensor and etc. This paper offers an overview and discussion on identifying potential problems of controlling intensified systems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas M. Groseclose ◽  
Ronald E. Rondon ◽  
Ashley N. Hersey ◽  
Prasaad T. Milner ◽  
Dowan Kim ◽  
...  

Allosteric function is a critical component of many of the parts used to construct gene networks throughout synthetic biology. In this review, we discuss an emerging field of research and education, biomolecular systems engineering, that expands on the synthetic biology edifice—integrating workflows and strategies from protein engineering, chemical engineering, electrical engineering, and computer science principles. We focus on the role of engineered allosteric communication as it relates to transcriptional gene regulators—i.e., transcription factors and corresponding unit operations. In this review, we ( a) explore allosteric communication in the lactose repressor LacI topology, ( b) demonstrate how to leverage this understanding of allostery in the LacI system to engineer non-natural BUFFER and NOT logical operations, ( c) illustrate how engineering workflows can be used to confer alternate allosteric functions in disparate systems that share the LacI topology, and ( d) demonstrate how fundamental unit operations can be directed to form combinational logical operations. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Biophysics, Volume 50 is May 2021. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenji Katayama ◽  
Risa Ichinohe ◽  
Yuki Konno ◽  
Woon Yong Sohn ◽  
Shota Kuwahara ◽  
...  

A series of small-scale/micro-scale experiments used for the education of undergraduate students in chemical engineering courses have been developed. Based on the “small-scale/micro-scale” concept, the experiments were developed to provide an intuitive understanding of chemical processes, both by increasing the visibility of these chemical processes and by making the apparatus compact (desktop size). Nine experiments were developed that are relevant to the fields of thermal engineering, fluid engineering, unit operations, and reaction engineering. These experiments were introduced during the educational experiment course for undergraduates in the chemical engineering program.


Author(s):  
Konstantinos Apostolou ◽  
Ishwar Singh

Chemical engineering unit operation labsdo an excellent job of integrating the whole curriculumand exposing students to pilot-scale systems. Where theyare often lacking, though, is the exposure to and use ofreal-life industrial automation by the future graduates. Aunit operation lab that has been automated usingindustrial level paradigms and equipment is the focus ofthis paper. A partnership with a global automationmanufacturer (Emerson) was established and the lab wasretrofitted using industrial sensors and actuators, aDistributed Control System (DeltaV DCS), industrialnetworks (FOUNDATION Fieldbus and AS-i), HumanMachine Interface (HMI) screens, and systemredundancy. The details of the automation along with itsuse through the lab curriculum will be discussed. Thiscross-curricular approach benefits students as, throughthe regular unit operation labs, they become familiar withkey elements of an automated set-up, understand the needfor it and its limitations, see control loops in action,communicate to the units through the HMI, and use theHMI to recover historical data on the processes. The labis a meso-scale of a processing facility and preparesstudents for field work after graduation. At the sametime, the traditional exposure to “manually operated”sensors and final elements is maintained as some of theunits have not been converted to fully automated systems


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