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Preface

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Fluid Mechanics for Chemical Engineers
Author: Wilkes, James O.
Cover: Hard cover
Pages: 599
List Price: $89.00
Published by Prentice Hall
Date Published: 07/1998
ISBN: 0137398972
Preface
This text has evolved from a need for a single volume that embraces a wide
range of topics in fluid mechanics. The material consists of two parts
-- four chapters on macroscopic or relatively large-scale phenomena,
followed by eight chapters on microscopic or relatively small-scale
phenomena.
Throughout, we have tried to keep in mind topics of industrial
importance to the chemical engineer.
Part I--Macroscopic fluid mechanics. Chapter 1 is concerned with
basic fluid concepts and definitions, and also a discussion of
hydrostatics. Chapter 2 covers the three basic rate laws, in the form of
mass, energy, and momentum balances. Chapters 3 and 4 deal with fluid flow
through pipes and other types of chemical engineering equipment,
respectively.
Part II--Microscopic fluid mechanics. Chapter 5 is concerned with
the fundamental operations of vector analysis and the development of the
basic differential equations that govern fluid flow in general. Chapter 6
presents several examples that show how these basic equations can be solved
to give solutions to representative problems in which viscosity is
important, including polymer-processing, in rectangular, cylindrical, and
spherical coordinates. Chapter 7 treats the broad class of inviscid flow
problems known as irrotational flows; the theory also applies to flow in
porous media, of importance in petroleum production and the underground
storage of natural gas. Chapter 8 analyzes two-dimensional flows in which
there is a preferred orientation to the velocity, which occurs in
situations such as boundary layers, lubrication, calendering, and thin
films. Turbulence and analogies between momentum and energy transport are
treated in Chapter 9. Bubble motion, two-phase flow in horizontal and
vertical pipes, and fluidization -- including the motion of bubbles in
fluidized beds -- are discussed in Chapter 10. Chapter 11 introduces the
concept of non-Newtonian fluids. Finally, Chapter 12 discusses the Matlab
PDE Toolbox as an instrument for the numerical solution of problems in
fluid mechanics.
In our experience, an undergraduate fluid mechanics course can be based on
Part I plus selected parts of Part II. And a graduate course can be based
on essentially the whole of Part II, supplemented perhaps by additional
material on topics such as approximate methods, stability, and
computational fluid mechanics.
There is an average of about five completely worked examples in each
chapter. The numerous end-of-chapter problems have been classified roughly
as easy (E), moderate (M), or difficult (D). Also, the University of
Cambridge has very kindly given permission -- graciously endorsed by
Prof. J.F. Davidson, F.R.S. -- for several of their chemical engineering
examination problems to be reproduced in original or modified form, and
these have been given the additional designation of "(C)."
The website http://www.engin.umich.edu/~fmche is maintained as a "
bulletin board" for giving additional information about
Fluid Mechanics for Chemical Engineers -- hints for problem solutions,
errata, how to contact the authors, etc. -- as proves desirable.
I gratefully acknowledge the contributions of my colleague Stacy Bike, who
has not only made many constructive suggestions for improvements, but has
also written the chapter on non-Newtonian fluids. I very much appreciate
the assistance of several other friends and colleagues, including Nitin
Anturkar, Brice Carnahan, Kevin Ellwood, Scott Fogler, Lisa Keyser, Kartic
Khilar, Ronald Larson, Donald Nicklin, Margaret Sansom, Michael Solomon,
Sandra Swisher, Rasin Tek, and my wife Mary Ann Gibson Wilkes. Also very
helpful were Joanne Anzalone, Barbara Cotton, Bernard Goodwin, Robert
Weisman and the staff at Prentice Hall, and the many students who have
taken my courses. Others are acknowledged in specific literature
citations.
The text was composed on a Power Macintosh 8600/200 computer using the
TeXtures "typesetting" program. Eleven-point type was used for
the majority of the text. Most of the figures were constructed using the
MacDraw Pro, Claris-CAD, Excel, and Kaleidagraph applications.
Professor Fox, to whom this book is dedicated, was a Cambridge engineering
graduate who worked from 1933--1937 at Imperial Chemical Industries
Ltd., Billingham, Yorkshire. Returning to Cambridge, he taught engineering
from 1937--1946 before being selected to lead the Department of Chemical
Engineering at the University of Cambridge during its formative years
after the end of World War II. As a scholar and a gentleman, Fox was a shy
but exceptionally brilliant person who had great insight into what was
important and who quickly brought the department to a preeminent position.
He succeeded in combining an industrial perspective with intellectual
rigor. Fox relinquished the leadership of the department in 1959, after he
had secured a permanent new building for it (carefully designed in part by
himself) before his untimely death in 1964.
Fox was instrumental in bringing Kenneth Denbigh, John Davidson, Peter
Danckwerts and others into the department. Danckwerts subsequently wrote
an appreciation (P.V. Danckwerts, "Chemical Engineering Comes to
Cambridge," The Cambridge Review, pp. 53--55, 28 February 1983) of
Fox's talents, saying, with almost complete accuracy: "Fox instigated
no research and published nothing." How times have changed -- today,
unless he were known personally, his resume would probably be cast aside
and he would stand little chance of being hired, let alone of receiving
tenure! However, his lectures, meticulously written handouts, enthusiasm,
genius, and friendship were a great inspiration to me, and I have much
pleasure in acknowledging his impact on my career.
James O. Wilkes
1 August 1998
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