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 Undergraduate Course: Chemical Engineering Design 2 (CHEE08022)
Course Outline
| School | School of Engineering | College | College of Science and Engineering |  
| Credit level (Normal year taken) | SCQF Level 8 (Year 2 Undergraduate) | Availability | Available to all students |  
| SCQF Credits | 20 | ECTS Credits | 10 |  
 
| Summary | The aims of this course are: 
 - To teach basic principles of chemical engineering design, namely knowledge of the fundamentals of: diagrammatic representations of chemical processes; mass and energy balances; reactor selection and design, and developing the soft skills needed to use this knowledge as part of open-ended design;
 
 - To give students an awareness of the wider context of chemical engineering design: embedding ethics; environmental and sustainability considerations; and process safety;
 
 - To further train and develop students in the fundamentals of chemical engineering practice and to develop their autonomy through: group work; communication by various means; open-ended problem solving; putting theory into practice; familiarity with basic principles of design software.
 
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| Course description | Taught fundamental knowledge and skills: 
 Semester 1:
 
 - Basics of drawing block and process flow diagrams to represent processes, including familiarity with basic symbols e.g. for pumps, and introducing the idea of standard ways of doing things;
 
 - Understanding the purpose of, and calculation of, stream tables;
 
 - Steady-state mass and energy balances with and without reactions, making use of the concept of 'extent of reaction'; familiarity with handling mass and molar quantities; using separations as illustrative examples but treating the separator as a 'black box'; inclusion of recycle and purge streams in mass balances.
 
 - Basic description of fundamental reactor types and the principles of reactor selection, design and sizing for batch and continuous (CSTR, plug flow) processing;
 
 - Applying knowledge of mass/energy balances and rate equations to reactor design, limited to systems undergoing one reaction with basic 1st order kinetics. Leading to determining the reactor size and conditions required to achieve a certain extent of reaction for a given reaction kinetics.
 
 Semester 2:
 
 - Awareness of process safety; definitions of risks and hazards and construction of risk matrices; identifying hazards; principles of loss prevention, inherently safe design, qualitative risk assessment; and the study of a historical chemical engineering accident (reflecting on factors including human error).
 
 - Basic use of commercial software for solving chemical engineering problems, e.g. (i) verifying that a given simple UniSim model satisfies mass and energy balances; (ii) manipulating pre-made UniSim models to identify bottlenecks.
 
 Wider principles to be embedded throughout:
 - Development of professional skills:
 Identifying design objectives;
 Open-ended problem solving;
 Working with constraints and justifying decisions;
 Evaluation of outcomes of the design;
 Group work and time management;
 Communicating by various means;
 
 - Process safety, ethics, principles of sustainability;
 
 - Systems thinking - understanding the interdependence of elements of complex systems;
 
 - Works visits.
 
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Entry Requirements (not applicable to Visiting Students)
| Pre-requisites |  | Co-requisites |  |  
| Prohibited Combinations |  | Other requirements | None |  
Information for Visiting Students 
| Pre-requisites | None |  
Course Delivery Information
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| Academic year 2025/26, Available to all students (SV1) | Quota:  None |  | Course Start | Full Year |  Timetable | Timetable | 
| Learning and Teaching activities (Further Info) | Total Hours:
200
(
 Lecture Hours 16,
 Seminar/Tutorial Hours 16,
 Supervised Practical/Workshop/Studio Hours 6,
 External Visit Hours 10,
 Feedback/Feedforward Hours 18,
 Formative Assessment Hours 1,
 Programme Level Learning and Teaching Hours 4,
Directed Learning and Independent Learning Hours
129 ) |  
| Assessment (Further Info) | Written Exam
0 %,
Coursework
100 %,
Practical Exam
0 % |  
 
| Additional Information (Assessment) | Coursework %: 100 |  
| Feedback | There are regularly scheduled feedback sessions aligned with each of the assignments, see delivery plan. |  
| No Exam Information |  
Learning Outcomes 
| On completion of this course, the student will be able to: 
        Communicate the outcomes of a design using block and basic process flow diagrams, and using stream tables;Perform steady-state mass and energy balances with and without reaction, utilising the concept of extent of reaction, and incorporating recycle and purge streams;Describe the basic reactor types (CSTR, plug flow and batch) and be able to determine reactor size and conditions to achieve a certain extent of reaction for a given simple kinetics;Assess issues of process safety, ethics, sustainability and environmental considerations as part of the design process;Complete open-ended design problems individually and as part of a team, evaluate the outcomes, and communicate your results by a variety of means (verbally, written, diagrammatically); |  
Reading List 
| -	Felder & Rousseau, Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes -	Coulson and Richardson, Volume 6, Chemical Engineering Design
 -	Ian S. Metcalfe, Chemical Reaction Engineering
 -	H. Scott Fogler, Elements of Chemical Reaction Engineering
 -	Octave Levenspiel, Chemical Reaction Engineering
 
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Additional Information
| Graduate Attributes and Skills | Not entered |  
| Keywords | Chemical,Engineering,Design |  
Contacts 
| Course organiser | Dr Chris Ness Tel:
 Email:
 | Course secretary | Mr Mark Owenson Tel: (0131 6)50 5533
 Email:
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