Archive for 'Chemical engineering'
Basic Principles and Calculations in Chemical Engineering (7th Edition)
Posted on 13. Aug, 2010 by vladowsky.
Basic Principles and Calculations in Chemical Engineering (7th Edition) This book is intended to serve as an introduction to the principles and techniques used in the field of chemical, petroleum, and environmental engineering. Although the range of subjects deemed to be in the province of chemical engineering has broadened over the last decade, the basic principles [...]
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University of Toronto: Professor Molly Shoichet, Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry
Posted on 28. Jul, 2010 by vladowsky.
Related Reading: University Physics with Modern Physics with MasteringPhysics (12th Edition) Refining the most widely adopted and enduring physics text available, University Physics with Modern Physics, Twelfth Edition ... Read More > Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes, 3rd Edition 2005 Edition Integrated Media and Study Tools, with Student Workbook Electrical Engineering: Principles and Applications (5th Edition)For undergraduate introductory [...]
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Sir Frederick Warner
Posted on 27. Jul, 2010 by Science news, comment and analysis | guardian.co.uk.
Engineer and leading authority on nuclear and chemical safetyThe chemical engineer Sir Frederick Warner, who has died aged 100, was internationally renowned for his pioneering work in building chemical plants and improving the health and safety conditi...
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Australia, The Land Of Opportunity For Engineers
Posted on 27. Jul, 2010 by vladowsky.
Australia isn’t a country you would typically associate with leading edge engineering skills and technical innovation. Australia, however, is full of surprises and in fact boasts many firsts. These include the mechanical refrigerator, the black-box-flight recorder, the bionic ear (cochlear implant), the pace maker, the electric drill, and the combine harvester. In fact Australia’s output [...]
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A Brief History of Engineering
Posted on 27. Jul, 2010 by vladowsky.
In ye olde days, 1325 AD to be more precise, an engineer was defined as “a constructor of military engines”. Back then engineering was divided into two categories: Military Engineering and Civil Engineering. The former involved the construction of fortifications and military engines, the latter concerned non-military projects, for example bridge building. This definition [...]

















