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Disclaimer: The course information below is current as of Mar 07, 2005, is intended for informational purposes only, and does not constitute a legal contract between the University of Utah and any person or entity.
This Web document is updated twice a year, on or about the first day of registration for Fall and Spring semesters.
1001 Alternative Energy: Sunshine, Bikes, and Nukes
(3)
Fulfills Applied Science.
Energy is an important resource at all levels of social development. Course examines the dependency of societies on energy resources and the interaction between social goals, technology, economics, environmental concerns, and energy resources. Fossil fuels, nuclear energy, and renewable energy resources are discussed. Natural laws, the scientific method, and the application of technology are presented in the context of energy production and efficiency of utilization. Environmental pollution and energy conservation are stressed. Importance of energy resources in sustaining the world population, improving the quality of life, and assisting developing countries is also discussed.
1703 Introduction to Engineering Computing
(2)
Co-requisite: MATH 1210 and CHEM 1210.
An introduction to the solution of engineering problems using Excel spreadsheets and MATLAB. Excel topics include basic spreadsheet use, plotting, solvers, macros, and introduction to VBA programming. MATLAB topics include basic usage, vector and matrix operations, user-defined functions, and structured programming.
2300 Thermodynamics I
(2)
Prerequisite: PHYS 2210 and MATH 1220.
Meets with ME EN 2300. Thermodynamic properties, open and closed systems, equations of state, heat and work, first law of thermodynamics, second law of thermodynamics, Carnot cycle, introduction to power and refrigeration cycles.
2703 Numerical Methods Applications in Chemical Engineering
(2)
Prerequisite: MATH 2250. Recommended Prerequisite: CH EN 1703.
Applications of numerical methods to interpolation, differentiation, integration, and the solution of systems of linear, nonlinear, and differential equations in chemical engineering.
2800 Fundamentals of Process Engineering
(3)
Prerequisite: CHEM 1220 and CH EN 2300.
Material and energy balances, process engineering applications, degrees of freedom, fundamentals of multi-component phase equilibria, numerical and graphical calculations, and the use of modern computing tools in process -engineering calculations.
3353 Fluid Mechanics
(3)
Prerequisite: MATH 2250, PHYS 2220, CH EN 2300 and major standing. Recommended Prerequisite: ME EN 1300.
Fluid statics; application of conservation of mass, energy, and momentum to basic fluid mechanics problems; introduction to compressible flow, potential flow, boundary layer and dimensional analysis.
3453 Heat Transfer
(3)
Prerequisite: MATH 2250 and CH EN 2703 and 2300 and major standing. Co-requisite: CH EN 3353.
Basic mechanisms of heat transfer, conduction, radiation, convection; design of heat exchangers. Introduction to complex problems involving all three modes of heat transfer (conduction, convection, and radiation).
3553 Chemical Reaction Engineering
(3)
Prerequisite: CH EN 2703 and 3853 and major standing. Co-requisite: CHEM 3070. Fulfills Quantitative Intensive BS.
Reaction-rate equations, adiabatic reactions, back-mixed and plug-flow reactors, heterogeneous reactions, heterogeneous catalysis, reactor design.
3603 Mass Transfer and Separations
(5)
Prerequisite: CH EN 3353 and 3453 and 3853 and CHEM 3060 and major standing. Fulfills Quantitative Intensive BS Course. Co-requisite: CHEM 3070. Fulfills Quantitative Intensive BS.
Molecular and turbulent diffusion; conservation, phase equilibria and rate-processes concepts in diffusional operations design, including simultaneous heat and mass transfer. Gas absorption, distillation, extraction, membranes, adsorption, and drying.
3853 Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics
(3)
Prerequisite: CH EN 2300 and 2800 and major standing. Co-requisite: CHEM 3070. Fulfills Quantitative Intensive BS Course. Fulfills Quantitative Intensive BS.
Principles of physical and chemical equilibria with illustrative applications in chemical process industries.
4203 Process Dynamics and Control
(3)
Prerequisite: CH EN 3553 and 3603, Major standing.
Introduction to practical and theoretical aspects of process control, process dynamics, empirical model identification and feedback control of single-input, single-output processes; PID algorithm, tuning of the PID controller, stability analysis, time and frequency domain design methods, digital implementation of process control, control system performance and limitations, and trade-offs in controller design. Enhancements to single-loop PID control; cascade control, feed-forward control, level and inventory control, and model predictive control.
4253 Process Design
(3)
Prerequisite: CH EN 3553 and 3603, Major standing.
Process design and engineering; process synthesis, mathematical modeling of process equipment units, system calculational strategy, economic evaluation and optimization, process simulation.
4753 Undergraduate Seminar
(0.5)
Graded CR/NC principally on attendance. Four semesters minimum required for graduation. Topics in the arts, humanities, and social sciences. Field trips to industrial facilities. Serves as forum for activities of University student chapter of American Institute of Chemical Engineers.
4755 Undergraduate Seminar
(0.5)
Graded CR/NC principally on attendance. Four semesters minimum required for graduation. Topics in engineering, science, the arts, humanities, and social sciences. Field trips to industrial facilities. Serves as forum for activities of University student chapter of American Institute of Chemical Engineers.
4903 Projects Laboratory I
(2)
Prerequisite: CH EN 3553 and 3603, Major standing. Co-requisite: CH EN 4203. Fulfills Upper Division Communication/Writing.
Priority is given to chemical-engineering majors according to a GPA ranking in required chemical engineering classes. Experimental and theoretical solution of realistic problems in heat transfer, fluid flow, mass transfer, chemical-reaction kinetics, and process control by use of semi-industrial-scale and bench-scale equipment.
4905 Projects Laboratory II
(3)
Prerequisite: CH EN 4903. Fulfills Upper Division Communication/Writing.
Continuation of CH EN 4903.
4973 Undergraduate Thesis
(1 to 3)
Completed thesis may comprise from two to three credit hours work. Original research or design in a selected field of chemical engineering.
4975 Chemical Engineering Clinic
(1 to 3)
Original engineering project selected with approval of external sponsor and instructor.
4977 Cooperative Education Work Period
(1 to 3)
Students register for this course each semester in which they officially participate in a full-time cooperative work experience.
4999 Honors Thesis/Project
(3)
Restricted to students in the Honors Program working on an honors degree.
5103 Biochemical Engineering
(3)
Prerequisite: for CH EN students - CH EN 3553 and 3603; for CVEEN students - CVEEN 3610. Recommended Prerequisite or Co-Requisite: BIOL 2020 and CH EN 5104 or CVEEN 5604.
Meets with CVEEN 6603/CH EN 6103. Introductory course in biochemical engineering and bioprocessing. Cell biology, enzyme kinetics, bioreactors, bioseparations and bioprocessing in relation to the medical, pharmaceutical, environmental, and biochemical industries.
5104 Biochemical Engineering Laboratory
(1)
Co-requisite: CH EN 5103 or CVEEN 5603.
Meets with CVEEN 6604/CH EN 6104. Laboratory course demonstrating the principles of fermentation, filtration, centrifugation, chromatography, and other biochemical principles.
5153 Fundamentals of Combustion
(3)
Prerequisite: Instructor's consent.
Meets with CH EN 6153. A broad introduction to combustion including stoichiometry, equilibrium, mixing, heat transfer, kinetics, heterogeneous combustion, flames, confined flames, and practical applications. Extensive use is made of computer programs for calculation of equilibrium, kinetics, and confined flames. Factors affecting pollutant formation and control are emphasized.
5203 State Space Methods
(3) Cross listed as ME EN 5210.
Prerequisite: CH EN 4203 or ME EN 3210 or equivalent.
Introduction to modeling of multivariable systems in state space form. System analysis including stability, observability and controllability. Control system design using pole placement, and linear quadratic regulator theory. Observer design. Meets with ME EN 6210 and
CH EN 6203.
5253 Process Design II
(3)
Prerequisite: CH EN 4253 and 4903, Major standing.
Computer-aided process design and simulation; solution of complex recycle processes and modeling of process equipment. Comprehensive design project leading to preparation of process design and economic evaluation report.
5303 Environmental Applications of Chemical Engineering
(3)
Prerequisite: Instructor's consent.
Meets with CH EN 6303. The nature of pollutants, their sources, and existing and evolving strategies for their abatement and control. Environmental considerations in the production, transportation, and processing aspects of coal and petroleum. Topics include air pollution, surface water pollution and subsurface pollution analysis. Public-domain software will be used to study realistic environmental problems.
5305 Air Pollution Control Engineering
(3)
Prerequisite: Major Status in an Engineering discipline or Senior standing in science.
Meets with CH EN 6305. Air-pollution emission sources, behavior of pollutants in the atmosphere, theory and practice of control of particulate and gaseous air pollutants at their sources.
5353 Computational Fluid Dynamics
(3) Cross listed as ME EN 5720.
Prerequisite: (ME EN 2040 and 3700) or (CH EN 2703 and 3353) and ME EN/CH EN status or junior standing.
Survey of approaches including time accurate and steady-state methods, explicit and implicit techniques. Eulerian and Lagrangian methods, laminar and turbulent flow, compressible and incompressible approaches, projection methods, stability considerations, etc. Application of CFD to mixing, heat transfer and reaction. Meets with CH EN 6355 & ME EN 6720.
5503 Instrumental Analysis of Process Products
(2)
Recommended Prerequisite: CHEM 3070, Major standing.
Meets with CH EN 6503. Sampling, identification, and analysis of process related materials using quantitative instrumental and laboratory techniques. Includes historical and current methods with an emphasis on adaptability to on-line process monitoring. Method development, data analysis, and standard laboratory practices are also inc
5553 Introduction to Catalysis
(3)
Prerequisite: CHEM 3070.
Meets with CH EN 6555. Basic principles, adsorption, isotherms, catalyst geometry, surface reactions, kinetics and mechanisms, selective and polyfunctional catalysts, geometric and electronic theories, examples of industrial applications.
5555 Environmental Engineering Seminar
(0.5) Cross listed as GEO 5555, CVEEN 5555, MET E 5555, MG EN 5555.
Provides students the opportunity to meet with and learn from environmental engineering practitioners and researchers during a series of informal lectures and discussions. Meets with GEO 6555,
CH EN 6557, CVEEN 6555, MET E 6555, MG EN 6555.
5655 Silicon-Chip Processing
(3)
Prerequisite: CH EN 3553 and 3603 as pre- or co-requisites.
Meets with CH EN 6655. This course introduces chemical engineers to (1) semiconductor materials and their properties, (2) device physics, structure and electrical properties, (3) the vocabulary of the industry, and (4) applications of the fundamentals of chemical engineering (mass transfer, heat transfer, and reaction kinetics) to problems in semiconductor processing. The silicon-chip processing steps to be emphasized include crystal growth, diffusion, implantation, photolithography (with emphasis on light induced reactions in photo-resists), deposition methodologies (with emphasis on chemical vapor deposition of various materials) and polishing. In addition to teaching quantitative ways of analyzing these processes, this course will focus on how to minimize defects.
5657 Nuclear Engineering I with Laboratory
(4) Cross listed as CVEEN 5700.
Prerequisite: MATH 2250 and PHYS 2210.
Meets with CVEEN 6700/CH EN 6657. Fundamentals of nuclear engineering and science; nuclear reactions, radioactive decay, neutron diffusion, kinetics, energy removal, shielding, health physics, and system design. Includes Laboratory.
5659 Microsystems Design and Characterization
(3) Cross listed as MET E 5055, ME EN 5055, MSE 5055, ECE 5225.
Prerequisite: Senior status; SemiCon Dev Phys./Micromanufacturing
Third in a 3-course series on Microsystems Engineering. This course generalizes microsystems design considerations with practical emphasis on MEMS and IC characterization/physical analysis. Two lectures, one lab per week, plus 1/2 hour lab lecture. Must also register for ME EN 6056 (0-credit lab with fees). Meets with ME EN 6055, BIOEN 6421, ECE 6960, MET E 6055, MSE 6055,
CH EN 6659.
5950 Independent Study
(1 to 5)
Prerequisite: Instructor's consent.
Independent-study projects such as participation in organized student paper competition.
5960 Special Topics
(1 to 5)
Prerequisite: Instructor's consent.
Application of engineering to societal problems. Tutorial courses. Offered as opportunities arise.
6103 Biochemical Engineering
(3) Cross listed as CVEEN 6603.
Prerequisite: CH EN 3553 and 3603. Recommended Prerequisite or Co-requisite: BIOL 2001 and
CH EN 5104.
Meets with CVEEN 5603/CH EN 5103. Introductory course to biochemical engineering and bioprocessing. Cell biology, enzyme kinetics, bioreactors, bioseparations and bioprocessing in relation to the medical, pharmaceutical, environmental, and biochemical industries.
6104 Biochemical Engineering Laboratory
(1) Cross listed as CVEEN 6604.
Co-requisite: CVEEN 6603 or CH EN 6103.
Meets with CVEEN 5604/CH EN 5104. Laboratory course demonstrating the principles of membrane systems, fermentation, tissue culture, biological waste treatment, biosorption, and other biochemical principles.
6153 Fundamentals of Combustion
(3)
Prerequisite: Instructor's consent.
Meets with CH EN 5153. A broad introduction to combustion including stoichiometry, equilibrium, mixing, heat transfer, kinetics, heterogeneous combustion, flames, confined flames, and practical applications. Extensive use is made of computer programs for calculation of equilibrium, kinetics, and confined flames. Factors affecting pollutant formation and control are emphasized.
6203 State Space Methods
(3) Cross listed as ME EN 6210.
Prerequisite: CH EN 4203 or ME EN 3210 or equivalent.
Introduction to modeling of multivariable systems in state space form. System analysis including stability, observability and controllability. Control system design using pole placement, and linear quadratic regulator theory. Observer design. Meets with ME EN 5210 and
CH EN 5203.
6205 Adaptive Control
(3) Cross listed as ECE 6570.
Prerequisite: ECE 3510 or CH EN 4203 or equivalent. Recommended prerequisites: CH EN 5203/6203 ME EN 5210 or equivalent.
Identification using gradient and least-squares algorithms. Indirect adaptive control: pole placement control, model reference control, predictive control, and problems with singularity regions. Direct adaptive control: strictly positive real transfer functions, Kalman-Yacubovitch-Popov lemma, passivity theory, and stability of pseudo-gradient adaptive algorithms. Persistency of excitation and sufficient richness conditions for parameter convergence. Averaging methods and robustness issues. Disturbance rejection.
6253 Advanced Design
(1 to 5)
Offered by arrangement with a professor. Complex chemical-process problems of interest to students; analysis, synthesis, and optimization.
6303 Environmental Applications of Chemical Engineering
(3)
Prerequisite: Instructor's consent.
Meets with CH EN 5303. The nature of pollutants, their sources, and existing and evolving strategies for their abatement and control. Environmental considerations in the production, transportation, and processing aspects of coal and petroleum. Topics include air pollution, surface water pollution and subsurface pollution analysis. Public-domain software will be used to study realistic environmental problems.
6305 Air Pollution Control Engineering
(3)
Prerequisite: Graduate standing or Instructor's consent.
Meets with CH EN 5305. Air-pollution emission sources, behavior of pollutants in the atmosphere, theory and practice of control of particulate and gaseous air pollutants at their sources.
6353 Fluid Mechanics
(3)
Prerequisite: CH EN 3353 or equivalent.
Introduction to tensor analysis and derivation of governing partial differential equations. Solution of problems in Newtonian, laminar, incompressible flow. Introduction to potential flow, turbulence, non-Newtonian flow, and compressible flow.
6355 Computational Fluid Dynamics
(3) Cross listed as ME EN 6720.
Prerequisite: (ME EN 2450 and 3700) or (CH EN 2703 and 3353) and graduate status or instructor consent.
Survey of approaches including time accurate and steady-state methods, explicit and implicit techniques. Eulerian and Lagrangian methods, laminar and turbulent flow, compressible and incompressible approaches, projection methods, stability considerations, etc. Application of CFD to mixing, heat transfer and reaction. Meets with CH EN 5353 & ME EN 5720.
6453 Heat Transfer
(3)
Prerequisite: CH EN 3453 or equivalent.
Review of governing equations for conduction with solutions by separation of variables, Laplace and Fourier transform and numerical techniques. Review of governing equations for convection with applications to fully developed duct flow, parallel flow, and phase change heat transfer. Introduction to radiation including exchange between surfaces, directional and spectral characteristics of surfaces, participating gases, and models of furnaces.
6503 Instrumental Analysis of Process Products
(2)
Prerequisite: Graduate standing required.
Meets with CH EN 5503. Sampling, identification, and analysis of process related materials using quantitative instrumental and laboratory techniques. Includes historical and current methods with an emphasis on adaptability to on-line process monitoring. Method development, data analysis, and standard laboratory practices are also included.
6553 Chemical Reaction Engineering
(3)
Prerequisite: (CH EN 2703 and CH EN 3553) or equivalent.
Development of rate equations and evaluation of parameters from data for homogeneous and heterogeneous reacting systems including catalytic reactions. Global rate equations with simultaneous heat/mass transfer with reaction. Use of transition state theory to understand and estimate rate parameters. Reactor design including changes in pressure through a reactor, non-isothermal effects, multiple reactions/reversible reactions, non-ideal flow regimes (one-dimensional models), reactor stability, and parameter sensitivity analysis.
6555 Introduction to Catalysis
(3)
Prerequisite: CHEM 3070.
Meets with CH EN 5553. Basic principles, adsorption, isotherms, catalyst geometry, surface reactions, kinetics and mechanisms, selective and polyfunctional catalysts, geometric and electronic theories, examples of industrial applications.
6557 Environmental Engineering Seminar
(0.5) Cross listed as GEO 6555, MET E 6555, CVEEN 6555, MG EN 6555.
Meets with GEO 5555, CH EN 5555, CVEEN 5555, MET E 5555, MG EN 5555. Provides students the opportunity to meet with and learn from environmental engineering practitioners and researchers during a series of informal lectures and discussions.
6603 Multicomponent Mass Transfer
(3)
Prerequisite: Instructor's consent.
Diffusion in multicomponent systems, Maxwell-Stefan relations, generalized Fick's law for multicomponent systems, linearized theory, applicability of pseudo-binary approximations. Multicomponent mass transfer coefficients, effects of mass transfer on energy transfer, mass and energy transfer models.
6655 Silicon-Chip Processing
(3)
Prerequisite: Graduate standing or Instructor's consent.
Meets with CH EN 5655. This course introduces chemical engineers to (1) semiconductor materials and their properties, (2) device physics, structure and electrical properties, (3) the vocabulary of the industry, and (4) applications of the fundamentals of chemical engineering (mass transfer, heat transfer, and reaction kinetics) to problems in semiconductor processing. The silicon-chip processing steps to be emphasized include crystal growth, diffusion, implantation, photolithography (with emphasis on light induced reactions in photo-resists), deposition methodologies (with emphasis on chemical vapor deposition of various materials) and polishing. In addition to teaching quantitative ways of analyzing these processes, this course will focus on how to minimize defects.
6657 Nuclear Engineering II with Laboratory
(4) Cross listed as CVEEN 6700.
Prerequisite: MATH 2250 and PHYS 2210.
Meets with CVEEN 5700/CH EN 5657. Fundamentals of nuclear engineering and science; nuclear reactions, radioactive decay, neutron diffusion, kinetics, energy removal, shielding, health physics, and system design. Physical and mathematical description of production, utilization, and loss of neutrons in nuclear reactors and other systems. Includes laboratory.
6659 Microsystems Design and Characterization
(4) Cross listed as MET E 6055, BIOEN 6423, MSE 6055, ECE 6225, ME EN 6055.
Prerequisite: Graduate status (or instructor approval); Microsystems or semiconductor fab.
Third in a 3-course series on Microsystems Engineering. This course generalizes microsystems design considerations with practical emphasis on MEMS and IC characterization/physical analysis. Two lectures, one lab per week, plus 1/2 hour lab lecture. Must also register for ME EN 6056 (0-credit lab with fees). Meets with ME EN 5055, ECE 5960, MET E 5055, MSE 5055, CH EN 5659.
6703 Applied Numerical Methods
(3)
Prerequisite: CH EN 2703 or equivalent.
Matrix methods, linear and nonlinear equations, eigen systems, numerical integration, interpolation, estimation of parameters, ordinary differentia equations, finite difference formulations, partial differential equations, finite element methods, parallel computing.
6853 Thermodynamics
(3)
Prerequisite: CH EN 3853 or equivalent.
Second law and availability balance. Minimization of free energy. Equation-of-state and activity-coefficient models. Mixing rules. Derived thermodynamic properties. Computational methods for simultaneous physical and chemical equilibrium in multi-phase, multi-reaction systems. Polymer, electrolyte, and supercritical systems. Continuous thermodynamic models.
6973 Thesis Research: Master's
(1 to 12)
Master's degree thesis research.
6983 Faculty Consultation
(2)
Allows master's degree students to continue using University facilities while completing their degrees. To be used only if not otherwise enrolled.
7203 Robust Multivariable Control
(3) Cross listed as ECE 6561.
Prerequisite: CH EN 5203/6203 or ME EN 5210 or equivalent
Analysis and control of uncertain systems. Representation of uncertain systems and their performance requirements using linear fractional transformation (generalized plant framework). Design of robust controllers, including frequency-weighted linear quadratic regulators, minimax, H-infinity and H-2 synthesis methods. Meets with
CH EN 7203
7753 Graduate Seminar
(1)
Seminars on advanced topics in chemical engineering.
7755 Graduate Seminar
(1)
Seminars on advanced topics in chemical engineering.
7960 Special Topics
(1 to 5)
One or more courses offered every year on recent developments in specialized areas of chemical engineering. Possible topics include, but are not limited to, catalysis, properties and reactions of fossil fuels, synthetic fuels, high viscosity fuels, coal conversion, multiphase flow in porous media, combustion, computational reacting turbulent transport, and research seminars in areas of faculty specialization.
7973 Thesis Research: Ph.D.
(1 to 12)
Doctoral degree thesis research.
7983 Faculty Consultation
(2)
Allows doctoral students to continue using University facilities while completing their degrees. To be used only if not otherwise enrolled.
7990 Continuing Registration: Ph.D.
(0)
Allows doctoral students to maintain minimum registration if candidates are not using faculty time or University faciltites except the library.
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