scholarly journals The Future of Chemical Engineering: Did You Say The Triplet 'Processus-Product-Process' Engineering?

2002 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 119-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Claude Charpentier
2006 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 87-115
Author(s):  
Jean-Claude Charpentier

In today's economy, chemical engineering must respond to the changing needs of the chemical process industry in order to meet market demands. The evolution of chemical engineering is necessary to remain competitive in global trade. The ability of chemical engineering to cope with managing complex systems met in scientific and technological problems is addressed in this paper. Chemical Engineering is vital for sustainability: to satisfy both the market requirements for specific end-use properties of products and the social and environmental constraints of industrial-scale processes. An integrated system approach of complex multidisciplinary, non-linear non-equilibrium processes and phenomena occurring on different length and time scales is required. This will be obtained due to breakthroughs in molecular modeling, scientific instrumentation and related signal processing and powerful computational tools. The future of chemical engineering can be summarized by four main objectives: (1) Increase productivity and selectivity through intensification of intelligent operations and a multiscale approach to processes control; (2) Design novel equipment based on scientific principles and new production methods: process intensification using multifunctional reactors and microengineering and microtechnology (3) Extend chemical engineering methodology to product design and engineering using the "triplet 3PE molecular Processes-Product-Process Engineering" approach; (4) Implement multiscale application of computational chemical engineering modeling and simulation to real-life situations from the molecular scale to the production scale.


2019 ◽  
pp. 33-41
Author(s):  
William J. Nuttall ◽  
Adetokunboh T. Bakenne

Author(s):  
M. Cagna ◽  
M. Boehle

Filters are playing an important role in process engineering, chemical engineering as well as in many machineries like gas turbines, air conditioners or cars. At present it is possible to calculate the flow through a filter and predict the average pressure loss of the flow for the initial state of the filter medium. In the present paper a pragmatic procedure is introduced, which makes it possible to consider the deposition of dust onto the filter and the influence on the flow implied with it. For the application of the method the commercial CFD-Code FLUENT is used. The reasonability of the concept is shown by regarding the characteristic time scales of the flow and the dust deposition. The method is used to simulate the flow through a filter within a quadratic tube in dependence of the operating time.


2017 ◽  
Vol 33 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Ge ◽  
Limin Wang ◽  
Ji Xu ◽  
Feiguo Chen ◽  
Guangzheng Zhou ◽  
...  

AbstractMultiphase chemical reactors with characteristic multiscale structures are intrinsically discrete at the elemental scale. However, due to the lack of multiscale models and the limitation of computational capability, such reactors are traditionally treated as continua through straightforward averaging in engineering simulations or as completely discrete systems in theoretical studies. The continuum approach is advantageous in terms of the scale and speed of computation but does not always give good predictions, which is, in many cases, the strength of the discrete approach. On the other hand, however, the discrete approach is too computationally expensive for engineering applications. Developments in computing science and technologies and encouraging progress in multiscale modeling have enabled discrete simulations to be extended to engineering systems and represent a promising approach to virtual process engineering (VPE, or virtual reality in process engineering). In this review, we analyze this emerging trend and emphasize that multiscale discrete simulations (MSDS), that is, considering multiscale structures in discrete simulation through rational coarse-graining and coupling between discrete and continuum methods with the effect of mesoscale structures accounted in both cases, is an effective way forward, which can be complementary to the continuum approach that is being improved by multiscale modeling also. For this purpose, our review is not meant to be a complete summary to the literature on discrete simulation, but rather a demonstration of its feasibility for engineering applications. We therefore discuss the enabling methods and technologies for MSDS, taking granular and particle-fluid flows as typical examples in chemical engineering. We cover the spectrum of modeling, numerical methods, algorithms, software implementation and even hardware-software codesign. The structural consistency among these aspects is shown to be the pivot for the success of MSDS. We conclude that with these developments, MSDS could soon become, among others, a mainstream simulation approach in chemical engineering which enables VPE.


Author(s):  
Francis B. Lavoie ◽  
Pierre Proulx

Computer science is now considered as the basis of the future economy. It is then important to adapt courses given to future engineers to this reality. All Canadian engineers now require a solid basis in computer science and, especially, they need to be aware of and able to use computer tools specific to their domain. Consequently, the Department of Chemical Engineering of the Université de Sherbrooke switched from Matlab teaching to Python with the Spyder programming interface in 2016. This latter high-level programming language is indeed free and open-source and, particularly, its use is constantly increasing in both research and industrial fields.


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