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Analysis of Transport Phenomena (Topics in Chemical Engineering)

Analysis of Transport Phenomena (Topics in Chemical Engineering)
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Analysis of Transport Phenomena (Topics in Chemical Engineering)

 
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An ideal text for graduate level courses in transport phenomena for chemical engineers, Analysis of Transport Phenomena provides a unified treatment of momentum, heat, and mass transfer, emphasizing the concepts and analytical techniques that apply to all of these transport processes.
The first few chapters establish the tools needed for later analyses while also covering heat and mass transfer in stationary media. The similarities among the molecular or diffusive transport mechanisms--heat conduction, diffusion of chemical species, and viscous transfer of momentum--are highlighted. Conservation equations for scalar quantites are derived first in general form, and then used to obtain the governing equations for total mass, energy, and chemical species. The scaling and order-of-magnitude concepts which are crucial in modeling are also introduced. Certain key methods for solving the differential equations in transport problems, including similarity, perturbation, and finite Fourier transform techniques, are described using conduction and diffusion problems as examples.
Following chapters are devoted to fluid mechanics, beginning with fundamental equations for momentum transfer and then discussing unidirectional flow, nearly unidirectional (lubrication) flow, creeping flow, and laminar boundary layer flow. Forced-convection heat and mass transfer in laminar flow, multicomponent energy and mass transfer, free convection, and turbulence are also covered. The appendix summarizes vector and tensor operations and relations involving various coordinate systems.
Based on twenty years of teaching and extensive class testing, Analysis of Transport Phenomena offers students both extensive coverage of the topic and inclusion of modern examples from bioengineering, membrane science, and materials processing. It is mathematically self-contained and is also unique in its treatment of scaling and approximation techniques and its presentation of the finite Fourier transform method for solving partial differential equations.

 
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Product Details
Author:William M. Deen
Hardcover:597 pages
Publisher:Oxford University Press, USA
Publication Date:March 12, 1998
Language:English
ISBN:0195084942
Package Length:9.3 inches
Package Width:6.5 inches
Package Height:1.3 inches
Package Weight:2.35 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 16 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:3.5 ( 16 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

18 of 20 found the following review helpful:


3Review from one of Deen's students  Dec 17, 1999
Either you will love this book or absolutely despise it. The material in this book is well-suited for use in a graduate chemical engineering curriculum and requires a high level of mathematical ability. The material covered in the text is an excellent example of what should be covered in an integrated transport text; however, I found the methodology often difficult to follow. Most of the explanations of theory derive from illustrative examples rather than general approaches, and solution strategies derive from the general conservation equation approach rather than a shell balance approach. The text only begins to make sense on your second or third reading of the material, and one stands no chance of understanding this book without previous exposure to transport phenomena. End of chapter problems can be a nightmare.

14 of 19 found the following review helpful:


5The best graduate level book on the subject to date.  Jun 01, 1998
Finally, a worthy successor to the classic "Transport Phenomena" by Bird, etc. (1960). This book combines advanced mathematical techniques with practical insight, a fine balance needed to analyze any real world problems. The forte of a good engineer is to simply a complicated problem without losing its essence. Math has always but the means to an end, yet too many advanced books on transport phenomena have nothing but math. This book has plenty of equations, yet the reader will learn more about why use these methods, not just how. Also, if one thinks the exercises in Bird's book are difficult, try the ones here.

2 of 2 found the following review helpful:


5how is this getting a three star average?  Feb 01, 2009 By John Edmiston
This is easily the best book Ive ever had on transport and fluid mechanics. It smokes everything else. The scaling logic is top notch and so clear. Everything is methodically presented, which I enjoy.

I'd say the weakest point is the finite Fourier transform method for solving linear PDEs, I couldn't pick up the method from the text and had to be taught it from another source. Separation of variables tricks work for most of the the problems in the text anyway. But afterwards it is a great reference for getting the proper basis functions for different situations.

Great introductory stuff on regular and singular perturbation analysis/boundary layers. I was shocked to see it having an average of three stars, are you kidding me? I know it is in use by most professors at both UW Madison and UC Berkeley's transport classes, two of the top ranking research places for chemical engineering to my knowledge. I use it referring to fluid mechanics topics more often than any other book. Just fantastic.

2 of 2 found the following review helpful:


5Good grad level text  Apr 29, 2007 By B. L. Riehl "blr"
Very good graduate level text. Not an introductory text. Like some of the other reviews say, the author does not spend much time with the basics, however if that is what you are after, look at B-S-L Transport Phenomena.

2 of 2 found the following review helpful:


5Briliant!!  Feb 08, 2004 By Donald L Miller
This book is well organized, well detailed, and well articulated. The lessons are useful and the text approachable for an academic work. I've read / had to use many other textbooks in my pursuit of a chemical engineering education and this is the best. I give it a whole-hearted recommendation for any serious student.

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