Fifty Years Young
Chemical engineering is that discipline centrally concerned with the economic, safe, environmentally acceptable manufacture of materials of all types - solid, liquid, or gas. These can be made by chemical or biochemical means. Stemming from the oil and gas indusries, we now have a discipline with methods of broad applicability. Why has chemical engineering come to restrict itself to the design and operation of processes?
This book, based on Professor Bridgwater's inaugural lecture, is concerned with the future shape of chemical engineering and how teaching, research and practice should be linked. It is, thus, of most interest to those concerned with the future shape of the chemical and processing industries or with the development of new processes and products in academia, government or industry.
- In future chemical engineers must be concerned with methods AND the end product and its impact on the environment
- This approach holds the key to improving environmental quality
- Is current teaching correct for this vision?
- For lecturers and professionals concerned with future teaching, research and practice in chemical engineering
Product details
March 1996Paperback
9780521567794
33 pages
188 × 126 × 3 mm
0.039kg
Unavailable - out of print
Table of Contents
- Founding of the department
- The early years
- What next?
- Changes in the profession
- Linked products and processes - the future shape
- Levels of activity
- Forms of knowledge
- The industrial revolutions
- Teaching
- Chemical engineering - its future.