A. Akgerman, R. G. Anthony, A. J. Appleby,
J. T. Baldwin, M. A. Bevan, D. B. Bukur, R. R.Davison, M. M.
El-Halwagi*, P. T. Eubank, D. M. Ford, C. J.Glover, T. A. Good,
K. R. Hall (Head), J. C. Holste, M. T. Holtzapple, S. S. Koseoglu,
Y. Kuo, M. S. Mannan, E. M. Sevick-Muraca, D. F. Shantz, J. C.
Slattery, V. M. Ugaz
* Graduate Advisor
The Department of Chemical Engineering
offers three graduate degrees: Master of Science, Master of
Engineering (non-research) and Doctor of Philosophy. Also,
the department offers courses and faculty supervision for students
pursuing the Doctor of Engineering degree. A special program
leading to our regular graduate program is available for BS
degree holders in science or other engineering disciplines.
The graduate program in chemical
engineering includes education in research. Information about
specific departmental requirements for course work and examinations
is available upon request from the graduate advisor.
Some of the research areas available
within the department include: advanced materials, applied
fluid mechanics and transport phenomena, biochemical engineering,
catalysis, environmental process engineering, kinetics and
reaction engineering, microelectronics and plasma processing,
membrane separations, natural gas conversion, polymers, process
control, process safety and design, system identification,
thermodynamics and molecular simulation. Modern equipment is
available in numerous laboratories to perform research in these
and other areas.
Additional details about the programs,
faculty, facilities and financial assistance are available
from the graduate advisor in the department and on the website
at www-chen.tamu.edu.
(CHEN)
601. Chemical Engineering
Laboratory Safety and Health. (1-0). Credit 1.
Control of hazards associated
with chemical engineering research laboratories and the chemical
process industry; causes and prevention of accidents, emergency
procedures, safety codes, health effects of toxic substances
and experimental design for safety. Prerequisite: Graduate
classification.
604. Chemical Engineering
Process Analysis I. (3-0). Credit 3.
Development and analysis of
chemical process models that involve systems of algebraic
equations, ordinary differential equations and partial differential
equations. Prerequisite: MATH 308 or approval of instructor.
605. Chemical Engineering
Process Analysis II. (3-0). Credit 3.
Formulation of mathematical
models and solution of resulting mass and energy balance
equations by modern computational techniques, applications
to separation processes, chemical kinetics, reaction engineering,
heat and mass transfer. Prerequisite: CHEN 320 or approval
of instructor.
614. Advanced Transport
Phenomena I. (3-0). Credit 3.
First part of a two-semester
sequence covering advanced transport phenomena; emphasis
is placed on momentum transfer or fluid mechanics applied
to chemical engineering problems. Prerequisite: Approval
of instructor.
615. Advanced Transport
Phenomena II. (3-0). Credit 3.
Advanced energy and mass transfer
in chemical engineering processes. Prerequisite: Approval
of instructor.
623. Applications of Thermodynamics
to Chemical Engineering. (3-0). Credit 3.
Application
of thermodynamics to chemical engineering operations and
processes. Prerequisite: CHEN 354 or approval of instructor.
624. Chemical Engineering
Kinetics I. (3-0). Credit 3.
Rates and mechanisms of chemical
reactions. Thermal and catalytic reactions both homogeneous
and heterogeneous. Prerequisite: CHEN 464 or approval of
instructor.
629. Transport Phenomena.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Principles of transfer of momentum,
energy and mass studied by application to advanced chemical
engineering problems. Theoretical analogy of these three
modes of transfer. Prerequisite: CHEN 424 or approval of
instructor.
631. Process Dynamics I.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Dynamics, simulation and control
of linear models of fluid, thermal and mass transfer processes
for chemical industries by means of transient and frequency
response analysis and design methods. Prerequisite: CHEN
461 or approval of instructor.
633. Theory of Mixtures.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Basic relations of statistical
thermodynamics, intermolecular forces, liquid state, theory
of mixtures, critical state, theory of conformal solutions,
orientational effects, theorem of corresponding states and
applications to distillation and extraction. Prerequisite:
CHEN 623 or approval of instructor.
634. Multiphase Reactors.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Laboratory reactors; mixing
phenomena in multiphase reactors; tracer techniques in chemical
reactor characterization; trickle bed reactors; two phase
and three phase fluidized bed reactors; bubble columns; slurry
reactors. Prerequisite: CHEN 624 or approval of instructor.
640. Rheology. (3-0). Credit
3.
Principles of stress, deformation
and flow; vector and tensor equations of fluid mechanics.
Behavior of Newtonian, non-Newtonian and viscoelastic fluids.
Prerequisite: MATH 601 or approval of instructor.
641. Polymer Engineering.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Principles and practice of polymer
structure, synthesis, reaction mechanisms and kinetics; polymer
characterization, chemical and physical properties degradation
and recycling, melt and solid mechanical and rheological
properties. Technology of production and processing operations.
Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
643. Applied Statistical
Mechanics of Fluids. (3-0). Credit 3.
Application of molecular theories
and computer simulation techniques to describe the thermodynamics
and transport properties of fluids and fluid mixtures. Prerequisite:
CHEN 623 or approval of instructor.
651. Biochemical Engineering.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Integration of principles of
engineering, biochemistry and microbiology; application to
the design, development and improvement of industrial processes
that employ biological materials. Engineering discipline
directed toward creative application of interdisciplinary
information to the economic processing of biological and
related materials. Prerequisite: Approval of instructor.
655. Process Safety Engineering.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Applications of engineering
principles to process hazards analysis including source and
dispersion modeling, emergency relief systems, fire and explosion
prevention and mitigation, hazard identification, risk assessment,
process safety management, etc. Prerequisite: Approval of
instructor. Cross-listed with SENG 655.
658. Fundamentals of Environmental
Remediation Processes. (3-0). Credit 3.
Fundamental approach to various
remediation technologies, topics in environmental thermodynamics
and mass transfer, adsorption, desorption, ion exchange,
air stripping, extraction, chemical oxidation, biodegration.
Prerequisite: Graduate classification in engineering.
661. Optimization of Chemical
Engineering Processes. (3-0). Credit 3.
Methods of optimization applied
for the design and control of chemical engineering processes.
Prerequisite: Approval of instructor.
675. Microelectronics Process
Engineering. (3-0). Credit 3.
State-of-art
process engineering principles on microelectronics, especially
for the fabrication of very large scale integrated circuits
(VLSICs); fundamental unit processes, such as thin film
deposition, thermal growth, lithography, etching and doping,
material structures and properties, and basic device operation
principles. Prerequisites: CHEN 623 and 624 or approval
of instructor.
681. Seminar. (1-0). Credit
1.
Graduate students will be required
to attend discussions covering problems of current importance
in chemical engineering research.
684. Professional Internship.
Credit 1 to 4 each semester.
Engineering research or design
experience in industrial setting away from Texas A&M
campus; projects supervised jointly by faculty and industrial
representative. Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
685. Directed Studies. Credit
1 to 12.
One or more of numerous problems
in chemical engineering processes and operations. Prerequisite:
Approval of department head.
689. Special Topics in...
Credit 1 to 4.
Selected topics in particular
areas of chemical engineering. May be repeated for credit.
Prerequisites: Approval of department head and instructor.
691. Research. Credit 1
or more each semester.
Problems of unit operations
and unit processes. For maximum credit, comprehensive thesis
must be prepared of sufficiently high calibre to permit publication
in scientific and technical journals. Prerequisite: Approval
of department head.