ChE 10
  
  Introduction to Chemical Engineering
    3 units (2-0-1)
      | 
    second term
  
  
  
    A series of weekly seminars given by chemical engineering faculty or an outside speaker, on a topic of current research. Topics will be presented at an informal, introductory level. Graded pass/fail.
  
  
    ChE 63 ab
  
  Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics
    9 units  (3-0-6)
      | 
    second, third terms
  
  
  
    A comprehensive treatment of classical thermodynamics with engineering and chemical applications and an introduction to statistical thermodynamics. First and second laws. Applications to closed and open systems. Equations of state. Thermochemical calculations. Properties of real fluids. Power generation and refrigeration cycles. Multicomponent systems, excess properties, fugacities, activity coefficients, and models of nonideal solutions. Chemical potential. Phase and chemical reaction equilibria. Introductory statistical thermodynamics.
  
  
    
      Instructors:
      Tirrell, Flagan
    
  
    ChE 64
  
  Principles of Chemical Engineering
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    first term
  
  
  
    Systems approach to conservation of mass and energy. Equilibrium staged separations.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Seinfeld
    
  
    ChE 80
  
  Undergraduate Research
    Units by arrangement
    
    
  
  
  
    Research in chemical engineering offered as an elective in any term other than in the senior year. Graded pass/fail.
  
  
    ChE 90 ab
  
  Senior Thesis
    9 units (0-4-5)
      | 
    first, second, third terms
  
  
  
    A research project carried out under the direction of a chemical engineering faculty member. The project must contain a significant design component. Students must submit a proposal by the beginning of the first term of the thesis for review and approval. A grade will not be assigned prior to completion of the thesis, which normally takes two terms. A P grade will be given for the first term and then changed to the appropriate letter grade at the end of the course.
  
  
    Ch/ChE 91
  
  Scientific Writing
    3 units (2-0-1)
      | 
    third term
  
  
  
    Training in the writing of scientific research papers for chemists and chemical engineers. Fulfills the Institute scientific writing requirement.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Labinger
    
  
    ChE 101
  
  Chemical Reaction Engineering
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    second term
  
  
    Prerequisites: ChE 63 ab and ChE 64.
  
  
    Elements of chemical kinetics and chemically reacting systems. Homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis. Chemical reactor analysis.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Arnold
    
  
    ChE 103 abc
  
  Transport Phenomena
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    first, second, third terms
  
  
    Prerequisites: ACM 95/100 abc or concurrent registration.
  
  
    A rigorous development of the basic differential equations of conservation of momentum, energy, and mass in fluid systems. Solution of problems involving fluid flow, heat transfer, and mass transfer.
  
  
    
      Instructors:
      Kornfield, Davis
    
  
    ChE 105
  
  Dynamics and Control of Chemical Systems
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    third term
  
  
    Prerequisites: ChE 101 or equivalent, ACM 95 abc or concurrent registration.
  
  
    Analysis and design of dynamic chemical systems, spanning biomolecular networks to chemical processing. Topics include control strategies for regulating dynamic performance, formulation of mechanistic and empirical models, linear analysis of feedback systems, introduction to multivariate control.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Asthagiri
    
  
    ChE 110 ab
  
  Optimal Design of Chemical Systems
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    second, third terms
  
  
    Prerequisites: ChE 63, ChE 101, ChE 103, or equivalents.
  
  
    Introduction to process design; flow sheets for chemical processes; synthesis of multicomponent separation sequences and reaction paths; synthesis of heat exchange networks; optimization; process economics; simulation of chemical processes; design of a major process.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Vicic
    
  
    ChE 115
  
  Electronic Materials Processing
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    third term
  
  
    Prerequisites: ChE 63 and ChE 103 or equivalent; ChE 101 or equivalent.
  
  
    After a brief introduction to solid-state concepts, materials, and devices relevant to electronic applications, the course will cover the prevalent growth and etching techniques used in processing of electronic materials. Emphasis is on the underlying physical and chemical principles. Crystal and thin film growth techniques to be covered include physical and chemical vapor deposition, liquid-phase epitaxy, molecular beam epitaxy, and plasma-assisted deposition. Property altering processes such as diffusion, oxidation, and doping are also included. Plasma etching is introduced with emphasis on determining key parameters that control the ion energy and flux to the wafer surface. Key techniques for thin film analysis and characterization are briefly discussed.  Given in alternate years; not offered 2009-10.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Giapis
    
  
    ChE 126
  
  Chemical Engineering Laboratory
    9 units (1-6-2)
      | 
    first term
  
  
    Prerequisites: ChE 63 ab, ChE 101, ChE 103, ChE 105, or equivalents.
  
  
    Short-term projects that require students to work in teams to design systems or system components. Projects typically include unit operations and instruments for chemical detection. Each team must identify specific project requirements, including performance specifications, costs, and failure modes. Students use chemical engineering principles to design, implement, and optimize a system (or component) that fulfills these requirements, while addressing issues and constraints related to environmental impact, safety, and ethics. Students also learn professional ethics through the analysis of case studies.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Vicic
    
  
    ChE 128
  
  Chemical Engineering Design Laboratory
    9 units  (1-6-2)
      | 
    second term
  
  
    Prerequisites: ChE 63 ab, ChE 101, ChE 103, or equivalents.
  
  
    Short-term, open-ended research projects targeting chemical processes in microreactors. Projects include synthesis of chemical products or materials, detection and destruction of environmental pollutants, and other gas phase conversions. Each student is required to construct and troubleshoot his/her own microreactor, then experimentally evaluate and optimize independently the research project using chemical engineering principles. Where possible, cost analysis of the optimized process is performed.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Vicic
    
  
    ChE 130
  
  Biomolecular Engineering Laboratory
    9 units (1-5-3)
      | 
    third term
  
  
    Prerequisites: ChE 63 ab, ChE 101 (concurrently) or instructor's permission.
  
  
    Design, construction, and characterization of engineered biological systems that will be implemented in bacteria, yeast, and cell-free systems. Research problems will fall into the general areas of biomolecular engineering and synthetic biology. Emphasis will be on projects that apply rational and evolutionary design strategies toward engineering biological systems that exhibit dynamic, logical, or programmed behaviors.
  
  
    
      Instructors:
      Tirrell, Vicic
    
  
    Ch/ChE 140 ab
  
  Principles and Applications of Semiconductor Photoelectrochemistry
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    second, third terms
  
  
    Prerequisites: APh/EE 9 or instructor's permission.
  
  
    The properties and photoelectrochemistry of semiconductors and semiconductor/liquid junction solar cells will be discussed. Topics include optical and electronic properties of semiconductors; electronic properties of semiconductor junctions with metals, liquids, and other semiconductors, in the dark and under illumination, with emphasis on semiconductor/liquid junctions in aqueous and nonaqueous media. Problems currently facing semiconductor/liquid junctions and practical applications of these systems will be highlighted.  Not offered 2009-10.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Lewis
    
  
    Ch/ChE 147
  
  Polymer Chemistry
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    second term
  
  
    Prerequisites: Ch 41 abc.
  
  
    An introduction to the chemistry of polymers, including synthetic methods, mechanisms and kinetics of macromolecule formation, and characterization techniques.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Grubbs
    
  
    ChE/Ch 148
  
  Polymer Physics
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    third term
  
  
    Prerequisites: Ch/ChE 147 or instructor's permission.
  
  
    An introduction to the physics that govern polymer structure and dynamics in liquid and solid states, and to the physical basis of characterization methods used in polymer science. The course emphasizes the scaling aspects of the various physical properties. Topics include conformation of a single polymer chain under different solvent conditions; dilute and semi-dilute solutions; thermodynamics of polymer blends and block copolymers; rubber elasticity; polymer gels; linear viscoelasticity of polymer solutions and melts; glass transition and crystallization.  Given in alternate years; not offered 2009-10.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Wang
    
  
    ChE 151 ab
  
  Physical and Chemical Rate Processes
    12 units  (3-0-9)
      | 
    first, second terms
  
  
  
    The foundations of heat, mass, and momentum transfer for single and multiphase fluids will be developed. Governing differential equations; laminar flow of incompressible fluids at low and high Reynolds numbers; forced and free convective heat and mass transfer, diffusion, and dispersion. Emphasis will be placed on physical understanding, scaling, and formulation and solution of boundary-value problems. Applied mathematical techniques will be developed and used throughout the course.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Brady
    
  
    ChE 152
  
  Heterogeneous Kinetics and Reaction Engineering
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    first term
  
  
    Prerequisites: ChE 101 or equivalent.
  
  
    Survey of heterogeneous reactions and reaction mechanisms on metal and oxide catalysts. Characterization of porous catalysts. Reaction, diffusion, and heat transfer in heterogeneous catalytic systems.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Giapis
    
  
    ChE/Ch 155
  
  Chemistry of Catalysis
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    third term
  
  
  
    Discussion of homogeneous and heterogeneous catalytic reactions, with emphasis on the relationships between the two areas and their role in energy problems. Topics include catalysis by metals, metal oxides, zeolites, and soluble metal complexes; utilization of hydrocarbon resources; and catalytic applications in alternative energy approaches.  Given in alternate years; offered 2009-10.
  
  
    
      Instructors:
      Davis, Labinger
    
  
    ChE/ESE 158
  
  Aerosol Physics and Chemistry
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    second term
  
  
    Prerequisites: Open to graduate students and seniors with instructor's permission.
  
  
    Fundamentals of aerosol physics and chemistry; aerodynamics and diffusion of aerosol particles; condensation and evaporation; thermodynamics of particulate systems; nucleation; coagulation; particle size distributions; optics of small particles.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Seinfeld
    
  
    ChE/BE 163
  
  Introduction to Biomolecular Engineering
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    third term
  
  
    Prerequisites: Bi/Ch 110 or instructor's permission.
  
  
    The course introduces rational design and evolutionary methods for engineering functional protein and nucleic acid systems. Rational design topics include molecular modeling, positive and negative design paradigms, simulation and optimization of equilibrium and kinetic properties, design of catalysts, sensors, motors, and circuits. Evolutionary design topics include evolutionary mechanisms and tradeoffs, fitness landscapes, directed evolution of proteins, and metabolic pathways. Some assignments require programming (MATLAB or Python).
  
  
    
      Instructors:
      Arnold, Pierce
    
  
    ChE/Ch 164
  
  Introduction to Statistical Thermodynamics
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    second term
  
  
    Prerequisites: Ch 21 abc or equivalent.
  
  
    An introduction to the fundamentals and simple applications of statistical thermodynamics. Foundation of statistical mechanics; partition functions for various ensembles and their connection to thermodynamics; fluctuations; noninteracting quantum and classical gases; heat capacity of solids; adsorption; phase transitions and order parameters; linear response theory; structure of classical fluids; computer simulation methods.
  
  
    
      Instructors:
      Wang, Miller
    
  
    ChE/Ch 165
  
  Chemical Thermodynamics
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    first term
  
  
    Prerequisites: ChE 63 ab or equivalent.
  
  
    An advanced course emphasizing the conceptual structure of modern thermodynamics and its applications. Review of the laws of thermodynamics; thermodynamic potentials and Legendre transform; equilibrium and stability conditions; metastability and phase separation kinetics; thermodynamics of single-component fluid and binary mixtures; models for solutions; phase and chemical equilibria; surface and interface thermodynamics; electrolytes and polymeric liquids.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Wang
    
  
    ChE/BE 169
  
  Biomolecular Cell Engineering
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    first term
  
  
    Prerequisites: ChE 101 or Ch 24 ab or equivalent, ACM 95 b or concurrent registration.
  
  
    Quantitative analysis of molecular mechanisms governing mammalian cell behavior. Topics include topology and dynamics of signaling and genetic regulatory networks, receptor-ligand trafficking, and biophysical models for cell adhesion and migration.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Asthagiri
    
  
    ChE 174
  
  Special Topics in Transport Phenomena
    9 units (3-0-6)
      | 
    third term
  
  
    Prerequisites: ACM 95/100, ChE 151 ab. May be repeated for credit.
  
  
    Advanced problems in heat, mass, and momentum transfer. Introduction to mechanics of complex fluids; physicochemical hydrodynamics; microstructured fluids; colloidal dispersions; microfluidics; selected topics in hydrodynamic stability theory; transport phenomena in materials processing. Other topics may be discussed depending on class needs and interests.
  
  
    
      Instructor:
      Brady
    
  
    ChE 280
  
  Chemical Engineering Research
    Offered to Ph
      | 
    D
  
  
  
    Main lines of research now in progress are covered in detail in section two.
  
  
  Published Date:
  
  
    July 28, 2022
  
  