Best chemical engineering books according to redditors

We found 358 Reddit comments discussing the best chemical engineering books. We ranked the 166 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Subcategories:

Plant design books
Unit operations & transport books
Fluid dynamics books
Coatings, ceramics & glass books
Plastic processing books
Cosmetic manufacturing books

Top Reddit comments about Chemical Engineering:

u/njraymondi · 668 pointsr/pics

Here are all 4 books for less than $170 total

u/ninjafizzy · 239 pointsr/funny

All of the books I can see from top to bottom on Amazon:

  1. http://www.amazon.com/Elements-Chemical-Reaction-Engineering-Edition/dp/0130473944 -- used price: $90.98.
  2. http://www.amazon.com/Molecular-Thermodynamics-Donald-McQuarrie/dp/189138905X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407531821&sr=1-1&keywords=molecular+thermodynamics -- used price: $70.00 (paperback is $29.99)
  3. http://www.amazon.com/Physical-Chemistry-Molecular-Donald-McQuarrie/dp/0935702997/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407531925&sr=1-1&keywords=physical+chemistry+a+molecular+approach -- used price: $72.44 (paperback is $42.65)
  4. http://www.amazon.com/Quantum-Physics-Molecules-Solids-Particles/dp/047187373X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407532022&sr=1-1&keywords=quantum+physics+of+atoms+molecules+solids+nuclei+and+particles -- used price: $52.66
  5. http://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Chemical-Engineering-Thermodynamics-Mcgraw-Hill/dp/0073104450/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407532094&sr=1-1&keywords=introduction+to+chemical+engineering+thermodynamics -- used price: $129.96 (paperback is $84.38)
  6. http://www.amazon.com/Organic-Chemistry-8th-Eighth-BYMcMurry/dp/B004TSKJVE/ref=sr_1_5?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407532227&sr=1-5&keywords=organic+chemistry+mcmurry+8th+edition -- used price: $169.33 (paperback is $79.86)
  7. http://www.amazon.com/Elementary-Differential-Equations-William-Boyce/dp/047003940X/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1407532549&sr=8-7&keywords=Elementary+Differential+Equations+and+Boundary+Value+Problems%2C+9th+Edition+solutions -- used price: $8.00
  8. http://www.amazon.com/Numerical-Methods-Engineers-Sixth-Edition/dp/0073401064/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1407532859&sr=8-1&keywords=numerical+methods+for+engineers+6th+edition -- used price: $47.99 (paperback is $22.48)
  9. http://www.amazon.com/Applied-Partial-Differential-Equations-Mathematics/dp/0486419762/ref=sr_1_5?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407532927&sr=1-5&keywords=applied+partial+differential+equations -- used price: $8.32 (paperback is $1.96)
  10. http://www.amazon.com/Transport-Phenomena-2nd-Byron-Bird/dp/0471410772/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407533036&sr=1-1&keywords=transport+phenomena+bird+stewart+lightfoot+2nd+edition -- used price: $28.00
  11. http://www.amazon.com/Basic-Engineering-Data-Collection-Analysis/dp/053436957X/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407533106&sr=1-2&keywords=data+collection+and+analysis -- used price: $80.00
  12. http://www.amazon.com/Calculus-9th-Dale-Varberg/dp/0131429248/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407533219&sr=1-1&keywords=calculus+varberg+purcell+rigdon+9th+edition+pearson -- used price: $11.97 (paperback is $2.94)
  13. http://www.amazon.com/Elementary-Principles-Chemical-Processes-Integrated/dp/0471720631/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407533286&sr=1-1&keywords=elementary+principles+of+chemical+processes -- used price: $161.72
  14. http://www.amazon.com/Inorganic-Chemistry-4th-Gary-Miessler/dp/0136128661/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407533412&sr=1-1&keywords=inorganic+chemistry+messler -- used price: $75.00
  15. http://www.amazon.com/Fundamentals-Heat-Transfer-Theodore-Bergman/dp/0470501979/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407533484&sr=1-1&keywords=fundamental+of+heat+and+mass+transfer -- used price: $154.99 (loose leaf is $118.23)
  16. http://www.amazon.com/Biochemistry-Course-John-L-Tymoczko/dp/1429283602/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407533588&sr=1-1&keywords=biochemistry+a+short+course -- used price: $139.00 (loose leaf is $115)
  17. http://www.amazon.com/Separation-Process-Principles-Biochemical-Operations/dp/0470481838 -- used price: $93.50 (international edition is $49.80)
  18. http://www.amazon.com/University-Physics-Modern-13th/dp/0321696867/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1407545099&sr=1-1&keywords=university+physics+young+and+freedman -- used price: $83.00

    Books & Speakers | Price (New)
    ---|---
    Elements of Chemical Reaction Engineering (4th Edition) | $122.84
    Molecular Thermodynamics | $80.17
    Physical Chemistry: A Molecular Approach | $89.59
    Quantum Physics of Atoms, Molecules, Solids, Nuclei, and Particles | $128.32
    Introduction to Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics (The Mcgraw-Hill Chemical Engineering Series) | $226.58
    Organic Chemistry 8th Edition | $186.00
    Elementary Differential Equations | $217.67
    Numerical Methods for Engineers, Sixth Edition | $200.67
    Applied Partial Differential Equations | $20.46
    Transport Phenomena, 2nd Edition | $85.00
    Basic Engineering Data Collection and Analysis | $239.49
    Calculus (9th Edition) | $146.36
    Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes, 3rd Edition | $206.11
    Inorganic Chemistry (4th Edition) | $100.00
    Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer | $197.11
    Biochemistry: A Short Course, 2nd Edition | $161.45
    Separation Process Principles: Chemical and Biochemical Operations | $156.71
    University Physics with Modern Physics (13th Edition) | $217.58
    Speakers | $50.00

    Most you can get is $1476.86 (selling all of the books (used and hard cover) in person), and if you sell it on Amazon, they take around 15% in fees, so you'll still get $1255.33. But wait...if you sell it to your university's book store, best they can do is $.01.

    Total cost: $2832.11 (including speakers)

    Net loss: -$1355.25 (books only). If sold on Amazon, net loss: -$1576.78 (books only). Speakers look nice; I wouldn't sell them.

    Edit: Added the two books and the table. /u/The_King_of_Pants gave the price of speakers. ¡Muchas gracias para el oro! Reminder: Never buy your books at the bookstore.

    Edit 2: Here are most of the books on Library Genesis
    Thanks to /u/WhereToGoTomorrow
u/jrm119 · 85 pointsr/explainlikeimfive

Material science and textiles, while extremely related are quite different in the classroom. I had MSE classes and my intro textbook was the one below. It mainly dealt with materials on a molecular level, while the textile courses consisted of the processes involved with creating the fabrics.

https://www.amazon.com/Materials-Science-Engineering-Introduction-8th/dp/0470419970

u/ChEJobSearch · 18 pointsr/ChemicalEngineering

this book covers the bread and butter of what CHE is. Which is mass/energy balances (basically, what goes in equals what comes out.)

you can start with that and later move onto the more "advanced" topics such as transport, thermo, fluids, etc etc

u/S1lv3r_Flame · 16 pointsr/ChemicalEngineering

There might be better books out there, but I would recommend Introduction to Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics by SVA for those starting off. It does a good job of explaining the basics. However, it doesn't go far beyond the basic principles.

My favourite YT resource for intro videos would (obviously) be LearnChemE. They have many videos that can introduce the topics in simple terms.

Also keep in mind that Thermodynamics can be very complex in certain areas, especially Solution Thermodynamics. I would strongly recommend making an effort to understand the derivations used in that section. Understanding them, instead of just memorizing them, goes a long way to help you tackle difficult problems in that section.

u/SLBhopefull · 16 pointsr/ChemicalEngineering
u/barbadosslim · 16 pointsr/chemistry

Yeah, you want Fogler. It covers what you want and it's pretty much the easiest to follow of the chemical engineering textbooks. Lucky you.

http://www.amazon.com/Elements-Chemical-Reaction-Engineering-4th/dp/0130473944/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1293652180&sr=8-1

u/Maleficent_Cap · 15 pointsr/gunpolitics

Hey you wanted an answer now you dont like it cuz "muh gun companies EVUL!"

Guess I'll go back to making improvised explosives and my own guns now. That help you feel safer since gun companies arent making profits?

https://www.armchairpatriot.com/Home%20Defense/Homemade%20Guns/Home%20Expedient%20Firearms%20-%209mm%20SMG.pdf

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1684112737/ref=ox_sc_act_title_6?smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&psc=1

>U.S. Army Improvised Munitions Handbook by Army

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1724856685/ref=ox_sc_saved_title_1?smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&psc=1

>Build Your Own Semi-Auto Handgun: A Step-by-Step Guide to Assembling an "Off-the-Books" GLOCK-Style P80 Pistol

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/162914438X/ref=ox_sc_saved_title_10?smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&psc=1

>Advanced Gunsmithing: A Manual of Instruction in the Manufacture, Alteration, and Repair of Firearms (75th Anniversary Edition)

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0913022004/ref=ox_sc_saved_title_1?smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&psc=1

>The Chemistry of Powder and Explosives

u/BMKR · 13 pointsr/materials

The obvious choice is the introductory holy bible of MSE. If you already know the basics of how materials are categorized and behave, that book /u/Tartarus116 posted looks pretty good.

u/steve_3113 · 11 pointsr/ChemicalEngineering

Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes was the book used in my first ChemE major class. It discusses a lot of the big ideas in chem e without getting too specific. You can find the international edition for around 10 dollars online.

Amazon Link

u/NeoOzymandias · 10 pointsr/nuclear

Wait, do you want an overview of the state of the industry, its history, or technical information?

Because of you want to learn about reactors in general, there's always...
L A M A R S H

Introduction to Nuclear Engineering (3rd Edition)

u/J-Brosky · 9 pointsr/Homebrewing

Brewing by Lewis and Young. Good read and a lot of information about all aspects of the brewing process. A bit on the expensive side but worth it. A while back there was an offer for the kindle version for ~$16, maybe it will show up again.

u/norsoulnet · 9 pointsr/askscience

Coming from a GeoSci background, you may have already used Callister, but if not, it is my most highly recommended textbook. Of all the textbooks. It is simply amazing. If you are beyond that already, the deeper book I would recommend is Meyers and Chawla which is also an amazing book, but much more difficult to get a handle on. Meyers and Chawla is what I learned from at the graduate level in Materials Engineering, and indeed it is quite heavy on the details and equations. That being said, when responding to almost all questions with regards to materials, the first place I look is Callister. The last time I used Meyers and Chawla was looking into the specific mechanisms and modeling methods for creep. If you get and understand M&C you will probably know more theory than anybody else at your knew job.

u/Adam2uBer · 9 pointsr/TheBrewery

Brewing by Lewis and Young.

It's a good book on all the scientific aspects of beer. From malting to fermentation. This was the book I was assigned in my Brewing Science course.

u/sillycyco · 8 pointsr/firewater

> Methanol does not form an azeotrope with either ethanol or water.

The only azeotrope I mention is the one formed between ethanol and water.

>What this post says is definitely not true, and is contradictory to real chemistry. If acetone and other volatile compounds (like methanol) are distilled in the foreshots.

No it is not, it is perfectly in line with real chemistry. It is not in line with the simplified version we explain to lay people on how distillation works. Boiling point is not the only factor involved. Of course this post is also an over simplification, and is targeted at a particular audience, readers of this sub using small scale distillation equipment.

Here is an example run analysis of a sugar wash. Can you explain why isoamyl-acetate presents such a large fraction in the foreshots, when its boiling point is 142C? Or even the slightly elevated presence of furfurol, which has a boiling point of 162C?

>"Methanol removal is treated separately and requires its own process to concentrate and extract using specialized equipment."

I touched on this, it is separated using large plated columns whose sole purpose is to isolate and remove methanol. An azeotropic mixture of water/ethanol containing other components (methanol in this case) is fed above the middle of a 70+ plate column at near boiling. Steam injection at the bottom performs the distillation, while hot water is added to the top of the column and moves a methanol enriched cut to the top of the column, while the cleaned product is removed at the bottom plate as a lower proof spirit, to be run through another rectification stage to return to azeotrope. This is performed on 96% input feed which has already been through a rectifying column with the heads and tails removed. Due to the low water content of the input feed and greatly reduced heads/tails load, this column can more properly do boiling point separation combined with the water feed and using the particular properties of methanol and water. If you'd like a more technical overview of the process, I'd suggest reading "Unit Operations of Chemical Engineering".

Other methods can be employed, such as pressure swing distillation, azeotropic distillation and similarly extractive distillation, using other solvents.

Pot stills and small reflux columns cannot do any of this. There will be methanol in your foreshots, certainly. As well as being in your hearts, tails and in the backset. These are trace levels and distillation is never carried out on azeotrope boiler volumes.

Did you read the study I linked, where the recycling of tails was the primary factor in elevated methanol levels in fruit brandy?

u/BAHHROO · 8 pointsr/metallurgy

Here’s a pdf of Fundamentals of Metallurgy by Sheshardi Seetharamen. Helped me a lot while I was in school, especially for chemistry.

The go to book for metallurgy / engineering (and the most recommended here) is Materials Science and Engineering: An Introduction by Callister

u/justin6543 · 7 pointsr/ChemicalEngineering

I think I had this for a sophomore class and found it too basic to be of value. Maybe unit ops

https://www.amazon.com/Unit-Operations-Chemical-Engineering-McGraw/dp/0072848235

Transport and thermo and some applications

u/borkborkborko · 7 pointsr/worldnews

>Name one and I'll check if it's in print

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Anarchist_Cookbook

https://www.amazon.com/Improvised-Explosives-How-Make-Your/dp/0873643208

https://www.amazon.com/Preparatory-Manual-Explosives-Jared-Ledgard/dp/0615142907/ref=pd_sim_14_22?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=0615142907&pd_rd_r=YE3XPR6BNAJ7QPPPB79C&pd_rd_w=MaMUe&pd_rd_wg=WsPD2&psc=1&refRID=YE3XPR6BNAJ7QPPPB79C

https://www.amazon.com/Anarchist-Arsenal-Improvised-Incendiary-Explosives/dp/0873645804/ref=pd_sim_14_3?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=0873645804&pd_rd_r=7HQK9RPTCDPQC7F4Y9NZ&pd_rd_w=aSsXT&pd_rd_wg=b5kBM&psc=1&refRID=7HQK9RPTCDPQC7F4Y9NZ


https://www.amazon.com/Special-Forces-Guide-Unconventional-Warfare/dp/1616080094/ref=pd_sim_14_2?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=1616080094&pd_rd_r=7HQK9RPTCDPQC7F4Y9NZ&pd_rd_w=aSsXT&pd_rd_wg=b5kBM&psc=1&refRID=7HQK9RPTCDPQC7F4Y9NZ

https://www.amazon.com/Improvised-Land-Mines-Destructive-Capabilities/dp/0873646568/ref=pd_sim_14_4?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=0873646568&pd_rd_r=Q31YF3KDKYYMJMYQA0X7&pd_rd_w=3UFeF&pd_rd_wg=uLQkh&psc=1&refRID=Q31YF3KDKYYMJMYQA0X7

https://www.amazon.com/Do-Yourself-Gunpowder-Cookbook/dp/0873646754/ref=pd_sim_14_5?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=0873646754&pd_rd_r=Q31YF3KDKYYMJMYQA0X7&pd_rd_w=3UFeF&pd_rd_wg=uLQkh&psc=1&refRID=Q31YF3KDKYYMJMYQA0X7

https://www.amazon.com/Chemistry-Powder-Explosives-Tenney-Davis/dp/0913022004/ref=pd_sim_14_6?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=0913022004&pd_rd_r=Q31YF3KDKYYMJMYQA0X7&pd_rd_w=3UFeF&pd_rd_wg=uLQkh&psc=1&refRID=Q31YF3KDKYYMJMYQA0X7

https://www.amazon.com/Ragnars-Homemade-Detonators-Salvage-Detonate/dp/0873647378/ref=pd_sim_14_4?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=0873647378&pd_rd_r=7HQK9RPTCDPQC7F4Y9NZ&pd_rd_w=aSsXT&pd_rd_wg=b5kBM&psc=1&refRID=7HQK9RPTCDPQC7F4Y9NZ

https://www.amazon.com/Improvised-Munitions-Handbook-US-Army/dp/1492144878/ref=pd_sim_14_5?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=1492144878&pd_rd_r=7HQK9RPTCDPQC7F4Y9NZ&pd_rd_w=aSsXT&pd_rd_wg=b5kBM&psc=1&refRID=7HQK9RPTCDPQC7F4Y9NZ


>Edit: also it would be gross negligence if the UK government still had these bomb making manuals in publicly funded libraries!?

Why?

Here is how to make napalm: Buy gasoline. Melt Styrofoam in it.

u/BadDadWhy · 7 pointsr/AskEngineers

Bird Stewat Lightfoot there are sample problems.

u/edheler · 7 pointsr/preppers
  • The first four books of the Foxfire book series are good for many interesting bits of old-time know-how that have disappeared.
  • The books Where There Is No Doctor and Where There Is No Dentist are available as downloads from Hesperian. Personally I like printed versions and ordered them off of Amazon.
  • The Chemistry of Powder and Explosives covers some very important ground if you're concerned about generational collapse and self-defense.
  • It's always good to have a version of the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics and the CRC Standard Mathematical Tables and Formulae.
  • If you want to learn basic electronics get your ham license. The study books are relatively good guides to the basics.

    I don't have any good book recommendations for mechanical skills. I have a number of specialized ones but nothing really generic that I would recommend.
u/rcko · 6 pointsr/ChemicalEngineering

Transport Processes and Separation Process Principles
Christie John Geankoplis

Favorite author is Felder. His entry level book contains violations of the 2nd law of thermodynamics though, so it can't be my favorite book. You SHOULD read some of his writing though! Very passionate instructor!

>"I don't belong here...I'm clever and hard-working
enough to have faked them out all these years and
they all think I'm great but I know better...and one
of these days they're going to catch on...they'll ask
the right question and find out that I really don't
understand...and then...and then.... "

u/jh828 · 6 pointsr/AskEngineers

MechE and ChemEs both take Thermo, fluids, heat/mass transfer, process controls, and a lot of the same pre-reqs. What's different is the chemistry courses (so take orgo chem, Physical chemistry especially if you're still at uni), chemical kinetics, Material and energy balances, separations. Kinetics and separations, you should wait until you've got the chem courses done. Material and energy balances...get a copy of Felder and Rousseau (http://www.amazon.com/Elementary-Principles-Chemical-Processes-Richard/dp/047168757X)

u/jcr216 · 5 pointsr/Homebrewing

Brewing by Tom Young

I believe this is used as a textbook for professional brewing programs.

u/sircoolguy · 5 pointsr/chemistry

Strategic applications of named reactions is a great book. Lots of pictures, reference, and mechanism.

https://www.amazon.com/Strategic-Applications-Reactions-Organic-Synthesis/dp/0124297854

Also Greene protecting groups is a good reference

u/[deleted] · 5 pointsr/Lehigh

The professor asked us for feedback on that test and someone wrote "This exam was designed to break my spirit." The professor then told the class that the exam was in fact not designed to do such things.

Here is the amazon link for the text book: http://www.amazon.com/Elementary-Principles-Chemical-Processes-Richard/dp/047168757X

This is going to be a a butchered and very simplified version of the first question on our first exam. http://imgur.com/ydXpt

Thats the drawing you would be given on an exam. Then you would be given a few constraints like how much oil is an a certain stream (and some others) and then from a few points of information you have to solve for the percentages of the components in all the others, find the total mass of lets say soybeans in the recycle stream, how much water is boiled off. You can come up with your own starting constraints and then try to solve all the others. Just note this is a butchered drawing of a process and is simplified form the exam question. They add a lot more parts to the process in the actual question. Hope this helps!

u/1namu · 5 pointsr/FluidMechanics

Fluid Mechanics 4th Edition by Kundu (A good graduate level text. The practice problems are really great and challenging. The 5th edition has better practice problems, but the layout and content of the 4th is better IMO.)

Elementary Fluid Dynamics by Achenson (Good graduate level text with mathematical rigor.)

Fluid Mechanics by Granger (A good undergraduate level text.)

An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics by Batchelor (This one is much more advanced than the rest.)

u/fugacities · 5 pointsr/EngineeringStudents

Definitely downloadand review the ~200 page FE Reference Handbook. It contains all the equations, tables, and unit conversations that are provided on the exam. The handbook also lists (by percentage) the topics that will be covered in the general morning session and each discipline-specific afternoon session. I had a general idea of where to find each equation, and this saved me a lot of time on the exam.

I purchased a FE Review Manual and the discipline-specific review manual for my major. I studied these for two weeks before the exam, averaging about 2 hours of studying a day. I tried to use the FE Reference Handbook to answer all the questions in the Review Manual, and I found that this helped me get familiarized with all the equations. The Review Handbook (especially the discipline specific handbook) more than adequately prepared me for the exam. The questions in the review manuals often required derivation and extensive algerba or calculus. The problems on the test were almost all "plug and chug."

I probably could have gotten away with just reviewing the Reference Handbook, but I'm easily overwhelmed by nerves and needed that extra "safety blanket" of review problems.

u/etranger508 · 5 pointsr/ChemicalEngineering

I got my PE last April. I recommend you get a study manual with practice problems from amazon and work your way through it chapter by chapter. Then, a month before the exam start the NCEES practice exam questions over and over again until you understand how to do each question. The NCEES questions are really close to those on the exam with a few twists and a few new ones thrown in. You should be spending 10 hrs each week for 4 month preparing for it. I recommend this series of review manuals: Chemical Engineering Reference Manual for the PE Exam, 6th ed. also Unit Operations of Chemical Engineering and Levenspiel's Reaction Engineering. Also, get yourself a copy of Crane TP410.

Edited to correct links.

u/Soranic · 4 pointsr/nuclear
u/billy_joule · 4 pointsr/AskEngineers

I recommend all books by Cengel including Heat and Mass Transfer: Fundamentals and Applications

This review from amazon is apt:

>Be very competent with differential equations, basic thermodynamics, and fluid mechanics, because winter is coming.

If you don't want to do the math then you either hope someone on reddit does it for free, or pay someone to do it, or forget the math and do some testing.


u/CuppaJoe12 · 4 pointsr/metallurgy

The concepts of nucleation and growth are covered in most introductory materials science textbooks. Callister covers this topic at an introductory level in chapter 10 of his book.

If you want to delve deeper, you should look for books on solid-solid or liquid-solid phase transformations and/or kinetics. I can give recommendations if you are interested.

Hardenability is also an important concept to understand for anyone working in the steel industry or designing things made out of steel. I would expect most companies in this field to have some sort of on the job training, or at least the contact info for someone at their heat treatment supplier who knows what they are talking about.

u/energy_engineer · 4 pointsr/engineering

For plastic injection molding, this book was a good start for me. The issue is, you can take a feature (e.g. snaps) and write volumes on design and application - don't take one book/source to be the only reference.

The various resin suppliers also publish DFM literature that can be useful and worth reading.

Dupont Assembly Techniques -- more articles here

BASF on snaps -- more from BASF

And, as silly as it is... Occasionally protomold will publish a useful nugget of practical information.

u/FuSoYa69 · 3 pointsr/explainlikeimfive

"Energy" from nuclear fission takes several forms. Furthermore, those various forms react in different ways with the surrounding nuclei and electrons.

First, a summary of the energy released by fission is given below (from here):

| MeV
:--------|:--------
Kinetic energy of fission fragments | 165 +/- 5
Instantaneous gamma rays | 7 +/- 1
Kinetic energy of neutrons | 5 +/- 0.5
Beta particles from product decay | 7 +/- 1
Gamma rays from product decay | 6 +/- 1
Neutrinos from product decay | 10
Total | 200 +/- 6

So, we have about 200 MeV (or million electron-volts where an electron volt is the energy required to move an electron across a potential difference of one volt which is approximately equal to 1.6×10^−19 joule) released per fission in the various forms listed.

Regarding how those forms interact, there are myriad ways. The fission fragments will collide with other nuclei, transferring some energy in the collisions. Gamma rays will typically interact in one of three ways:

  1. Photoelectric Effect
  2. Compton Scattering
  3. Pair Production

    For the sake of space, I would recommend consulting another resource to learn more about each of these interactions (e.g., Wikipedia).

    Beta particles and electrons produced by gamma rays can undergo annihilation when a negatively- and positively-charged particle come together releasing at least two 511 keV (thousand electron-volts) gamma rays. In addition, as these charged particles decelerate, they release Bremsstrahlung (German for braking, neat factoid) gamma rays.

    Neutrinos are slippery beasts that do not interact to a significant degree.

    If you're truly interested in diving deeper, I highly recommend the Introduction to Nuclear Engineering by Lamarsh & Baratta. In addition to a discussion of these and other details regarding nuclear interactions, it will introduce the idea of the "cross-section" which is the probabilities of these various events taking place.

    Source(s): As cited and compiled by a practicing nuclear engineer.

    Edit: Incremental to get formatting just right.
u/fnumb · 3 pointsr/chemistry

I really like Strategic Applications of Named Reactions in Organic Synthesis. It's easy to follow and has a great variety of reactions. There's a brief history of the reaction, then a generic form of the reaction with a mechanism (color coded for greater ease), then it gives several literature examples of the reaction. It's also well-indexed, one of the most polished books I've used.

u/danny31292 · 3 pointsr/materials

http://www.amazon.com/Materials-Science-Engineering-An-Introduction/dp/0470419970

If you pm me I can give you a pdf copy of the older version.

u/protogea · 3 pointsr/engineering

I work in process design and reference these daily:

u/Daroou · 3 pointsr/engineering

My Intro to Fluids class in undergrad used this textbook by White and I remember thinking at the time that it was a decent introduction to things.

By the way, here is your first lesson: mechanics (solid or fluid) consists of statics (no motion) and dynamics (motion). So it is redundant to say you want to learn fluid mechanics and fluid dynamics. Most fluid mechanics books cover statics in the first chapter since the problem is trivial, and quite a few fluids books are just titled fluid dynamics because fluid statics is so simple.

Speaking of such books, this is Batchelor's classic fluid dynamics book which I really like but which may be at a more advanced level. I don't have my copy in front of me but I recall that the first chapter or two are worth reading even for an introductory student. His discussion on things like density, pressure, and the continuum hypothesis is excellent.

u/sourkatt231 · 3 pointsr/chemistry

Haha. Yes, I have been doing some of that. Athough most papers seem so daunting at first the retro always kind of makes me 'ahh I see.' But knowing all the reactions is a different story.

By Laszlo & Kirti are you refering to a book? If so what is the title? Is it this
https://www.amazon.com/Strategic-Applications-Reactions-Organic-Synthesis/dp/0124297854

u/RoneBone · 3 pointsr/chemistry

Find a used copy of this book
http://www.amazon.ca/Strategic-Applications-Reactions-Organic-Synthesis/dp/0124297854
Nice descriptions of some really common, powerful reactions, along with (brief) mechanisms. Also gives a bit more experimental detail than most textbooks (solvents, catalysts, etc).

u/amidamaru989 · 3 pointsr/ChemicalEngineering

The FE review might not be a bad place to hit everything.

Chemical Discipline-Specific Review for the FE/EIT Exam, 2nd Ed
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1591260671/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fhOozb4CKG20Q

FE Review Manual: Rapid Preparation for the Fundamentals of Engineering Exam, 3rd Ed
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1591263336/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_GhOozbR5VP0K0

u/dontlikebeinganeng · 3 pointsr/ChemicalEngineering

There are ChemEs who work in beautiful locations (LA, SF, etc.) and there are ChemEs who work in bad locations (Midland, Maxbass, etc.)

 

I don't agree that ChemE is a dying degree nor are you limited to working in dirty industries in remote location (I have experienced both sides).

 

To the OP: Take an introductory chemical engineering class to get a feel for it.

 

Most introductory classes use this textbook.

 

https://www.amazon.com/Elementary-Principles-Chemical-Processes-Richard/dp/047168757X

u/elkroppo · 3 pointsr/DrugNerds

Check out Perry's Chemical Engineers Handbook. It has a ton of easy to follow descriptions, but also has in-depth mathematical and chemical models. Buy a used copy, though. It covers simple stills, distillation, hplc, recrystallization, sparging, stripping, solid and liquid phase extraction, and many more.

u/InternalEnergy · 3 pointsr/ChemicalEngineering

The book I'd recommend is the textbook that most intro ChemE courses use: Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes, by Felder.

It's not too heavy on prerequisites (mostly just algebra, general chemistry). The problems you'll solve in the text are good examples of the type of thinking that ChEs use, and the author does a good job of explaining things. Also, some anecdotes from time to time.

Not sure if that's what you're looking for, but I can't really think of many non-textbook type examples for the same reason chemical engineers don't show up in films: it's not "Hollywood sexy."

u/un_internaute · 3 pointsr/Cooking

> filling the water with thirty seconds worth of water and let that defrost the meat.

But that's not what you said. You said...

>Add a bit more water every five/ten minutes to keep the temperature safe

The issue of continual water use is literally the same in both of these scenarios because the temperature of the meat is directly related to the temperature of the water. Basically the thaw time will equal the amount water used.

I may even be wrong and your method may take longer, and use more water, because, if you're not careful, the temperature of the water and the meat will equalize too much and slow the thawing process. As the rate of thawing is faster the more dissimilar the temperature of the meat is from the temperature of the water.

http://www.amazon.com/Science-Cooking-Peter-Barham/dp/3540674667/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1422315510&sr=8-4&keywords=science+of+cooking

u/chase2g · 3 pointsr/engineering

Although it's not a course but I recommend picking up this book, Plastics Part Design for Injection Molding by Robert A. Malloy. Professor Malloy recently retired but he was the head of the Plastics Engineering at University of Massachusetts Lowell. The book is really great for design engineers like yourself. Buy it and you will not regret it.

https://www.amazon.com/Plastic-Part-Design-Injection-Molding/dp/1569904367/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8

u/nurburg · 3 pointsr/physicsbooks

I can't speak from personal experience since I haven't started working on the book yet but this is a question I've asked before too and from googling I saw many recommendations for G.K. Batchelor: http://rads.stackoverflow.com/amzn/click/0521663962

"An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics" by G. K. Batchelor is a classic and is considered as the Bhagavad Gita of fluid dynamics. I have read this book as an undergrad and hence the knowledge required is just high school mathematics and physics.

u/bloody_yanks · 2 pointsr/metallurgy

A physics degree is more than adequate for this kind of work. Your day to day would likely consist of properties testing (mechanical properties like tensile strength and hardness most likely, but also perhaps corrosion, chemistry, creep, etc, depending on industry), microstructural analysis, and failure analysis. With a degree in physics you should be able to pick up an undergrad material science text like Callister and fill in the more applied science gaps in your education.

u/Star_Munchkin · 2 pointsr/Gamecocks

They may have changed now, but chemcical process principles probably still uses http://www.amazon.com/Elementary-Principles-Chemical-Processes-Richard/dp/047168757X

the thermo book is very professor dependent.

this was another one, but I think it was mass transfer http://www.amazon.com/Transport-Processes-Separation-Principles-Operations/dp/013101367X/ref=sr_1_45?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1398311420&sr=1-45&keywords=chemical+engineering+fluid+mechanics

the first book I linked will definitely give you the best head start, spending any time with any others would probably be a waste of time. I can find my fluid dynamics book at work tomorrow, but I wouldnt get too worried about it, to be honest.

u/daffyflyer · 2 pointsr/engineering

The New Science of Strong Materials or Why You Don't Fall through the Floor
http://www.amazon.com/Science-Materials-through-Princeton-Library/dp/0691125481

Structures: Or Why Things Don't Fall Down

http://www.amazon.com/Structures-Things-Dont-Fall-Down/dp/0306812835/ref=pd_bxgy_b_text_y

Great real world overview of lots of mechanical engineering concepts like stress/strain, how I beams work, how cracks form etc.
Not too theory/equation heavy, very well written. 1960s Era but still pretty relevant.

u/tchufnagel · 2 pointsr/AskEngineers

There are a variety of introductory materials science books. The one by Callister is probably the most widely used, at least in the U.S., but personally I prefer Ashby and Jones.

The University of Cambridge also has a nice set of tutorials online, here.

u/derioderio · 2 pointsr/AskEngineers

Thermodynamics is usually covered separately from fluid mechanics. At least in chemical engineering, fluid mechanics is usually covered together with heat transfer and mass transfer, since they are all mathematically very similar, and can be grouped together as 'transport phenomena'. Fluid mechanics = transport of momentum, Heat transfer = transport of heat, mass transfer = transport of mass.

Anyway, if you are only interested in fluid mechanics, my favorite textbook is Middleman. For an entry-level textbook that covers all three, I like the W^3 textbook.

For more advanced transport phenomena, the de-facto standard is Bird, Stewart, and Lightfoot. A lot of schools actually use this for their undergraduate course, but I frankly think it's too difficult for an introductory text. For students that already know the fundamentals though, it's an excellent reference book.

For real graduate-level analysis, I really like Deen's book.

Caveat: all these textbooks are pretty expensive, and can run you close to $100 even used. There might be much less expensive alternatives that still teach the material well.

u/psyroptus · 2 pointsr/EngineeringStudents
u/gepat · 2 pointsr/brewing

I just bought this one. I'll read it and report back.
http://www.amazon.com/Brewing-Michael-J-Lewis/dp/0306472740?ie=UTF8&psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o01_s00
I have a pretty big library, and I really don't think any are perfect for what I want. My shelf needs more books, so why not.

u/eaterofworld · 2 pointsr/Wetshaving

Analysis, Synthesis and Design of Chemical Processes (co-authored by one of my professors)

Separation Process Engineering

Elements of Chemical Reaction Engineering



Transport Processes and Separation Process Principles

Introductory Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics

Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes (newest edition)

There were all of my texts from most recent to oldest that should have pertinent information to what all you're covering. I don't know where they would be covering parts 9-11 but I imagine that could be part of Separations.

u/lechatcestmoi · 2 pointsr/Cooking

Well check this book out, by a guy at my uni. It helps you understand the basis for a lot of processes that we just sort of inherit from our parents without knowing why.

u/filiusb · 2 pointsr/chemistry

or the Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry if you want a free one.

Plus if you want a book of reactions with names, I'd recommend this one http://www.amazon.co.uk/Strategic-Applications-Reactions-Organic-Synthesis/dp/0124297854

u/BeerSensor · 2 pointsr/Homebrewing

>the only book that surpasses How to Brew as far as details are concerned

Kunze is good, but it's not the only book like that. Brewing by Tom Young and Michael Lewis was the other textbook our brewing classes used. We used Kunze the year I took the class, and Young/Lewis the year I TA'd the class.

I've also heard good things about Volumes 1 and 2 of Malting and Brewing Science, by Hough, Briggs, Stevens, and Young, but I haven't done more than thumb through those books.

u/Phredex · 2 pointsr/pyro

Energetic Materials are a real science unto themselves. Most of them are "tried and True" and the chemistry is well know.

Start with Tenny Davis, and go from there.

https://www.amazon.com/Chemistry-Powder-Explosives-Tenney-Davis/dp/0913022004

u/ohNole · 2 pointsr/engineering

Stuff Matters is a easy read without all of the calculations, so it's a really go way to learn theory without getting bogged down with math - it's also on Bill Gates book list. Also, this is the only textbook I've ever read cover to cover - my professor was a nut, but we learned a shitload. Good luck, OP!

u/mantrap2 · 2 pointsr/ECE

The reality is the differences in sensor data will NOT be that great unless you have a massive heat source and massive heat sink that are near each other and their temperatures differ a lot. Heat transfer resulting in temperature variation proportional to the thermal gradient.

Multiple sensors are only to get a single more accurate value or to do wet bulb/dry bulb data.

The averages are to remove the small variances you might still get.

Sometimes averaging is to remove sensor variances rather than actual air temperature variances because it can be cheaper to do "calibrate" that way than to add more circuitry to calibrate.

Or averaging is used to drop the noise floor of a cheap-ass sensor chosen for economic reasons that otherwise would not be accurate enough.

For meteorological measurements resulting in wide temperature variation between sensors are seldom the case.

You can see fronts move though a location because that can sometimes result in 10ºF-20ºF change within a 30-90 seconds window but otherwise temperature within a local area usually a very uniform thing. Temperature variations usually occur in the 10-90 minute range of times.

Temperature measurements for meteorology are explicitly defined to be in shade and not direct sun ever exactly for this reason. That's why most "professional" meteorological stations have the instruments in those little white boxes with the slats: they provide shade and still air. Both are required for accurate dry bulb and wet bulb temperature using old-timey meteorological instruments (web bulb is literally wet with water so air blowing over it screws up the data aka "convective heat transfer plus latent heat extraction").

These days we have ICs that can directly measure relative humidity though not as accurately as dry/wet bulb measurements.

On the other hand, cheapo weather stations will have more problems with this but averaging will NOT generally fix the problem of cheap sensor or not positioning the sensors in shade and still air.

If/when there is an issue of sensors not agreeing, YOU the engineer have to consider heat transfer theory/practice because that's how and why temperature can vary and give varying data on "otherwise identical" sensors. If there is a problem, that's how you know.

[Lienhard's Heat Transfer (pdf)](
http://www.engineering108.com/Data/Engineering/Mechanical/HMT/heat_transfer_John_H_Lienhard.pdf)

I also like Cengal:

[Heat and Mass Transfer: Fundamentals and Applications](
https://www.amazon.com/Heat-Mass-Transfer-Fundamentals-Applications/dp/0073398187/)

Heat transfer IMO is pretty fun but of course my father was an ME specializing in HVAC so a lot of his love and skills for it rubbed off on me.

If you do projects like this, it's useful to understand the basics of heat transfer. The key ways heat is moved from point A to point B are:

  • Conductive Transfer
  • Radiative Transfer
  • Convective Transfer

    Different processes have different characteristics and are dominant if different situations. E.g. with temperature differences over 100-200C involving air, radiative transfer is far stronger than conductive transfer and even convective transfer (e.g. a wood stove transfers more watts of heat by radiation than by other means). Other situations are different.
u/Shitty__Math · 2 pointsr/ChemicalEngineering

That job sounds about right for an analytical chemist tbh. You asked for Books and I will give you books.

The all-around grand champion book for chemical engineers to have is Perry’s handbook.

In chemistry you did remedial thermodynamics in comparison to what chemical engineers are given, so I suggest this book as a primer in chemical thermodynamics. It covers phase equilibria, basic thermodynamics, and non-ideal behavior at a depth not seen in chemistry programs.

For heat and mass transfer I used this book in my undergrad. This is something that was almost certainly left untouched in your chemistry program.

For reaction engineering, I used [Folger’s book] (https://www.amazon.com/Elements-Chemical-Reaction-Engineering-4th/dp/0130473944/). You might recognize some of the constituent pieces, but this will bring it all together to solve for definite times and conversions.

More applicable to your direct job is process control. [Bequette's book] (https://www.amazon.com/Process-Control-Modeling-Design-Simulation/dp/0133536408/) will probably be one of the most directly important books on this list for you as far as process monitoring goes. And [this book] (https://www.amazon.com/Analysis-Synthesis-Processes-International-Engineering/dp/0132618125/) will give your insight into why processes are made the way they are.

The most important book in the list is [Process Safety] (https://www.amazon.com/Chemical-Process-Safety-Fundamentals-International/dp/0131382268/). It is important that you understand what is and is not dangerous, along with what it and is not safe. You can skip the blast calcs, but do look at the TLV data, because that will come up for emissions.

This list is overbuilt and if you only have time for 3 pick the last 3 I listed and pick up a cheap Perry’s handbook for reference.

u/wll48079 · 2 pointsr/engineering

If you're in the aerospace industry, Spacecraft Thermal Control Handbook is a fantastic resource. Another text we use often in our thermal group is Handbook of Applied Thermal Design. These two in combination with a general university level heat transfer textbook (I use Heat and Mass Transfer just because I have it from undergrad) should cover what you need for the thermal side.

u/unearth1y · 2 pointsr/ChemicalEngineering

Make sure you have a good foundation in mathematics. If you want to get started for Cheme - definitely get yourself a book on material and energy balances. This is widely heralded as the "bible" and will give you good introductino to many cheme concepts.

​

https://www.amazon.com/Elementary-Principles-Chemical-Processes-Richard/dp/047168757X/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1541440878&sr=8-2&keywords=elementary+principles+of+chemical+processes

​

​

u/groundedhorse · 2 pointsr/EngineeringStudents

What are you interested in learning about? You could learn about:

  • Computational fluid mechanics
  • Fluids dynamics pertinent to aerospace
  • Fluids as they relate to combustion
  • Fluids appearing in biological systems
  • Theoretical/mathematical foundations

    Each topic is broad and, likely, have their own texts. Another consideration is what your background is. I assume that you have had coursework in vector analysis and differential equations. With this in mind I offer the following classic/affordable texts:

  • Batchelor's An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics
  • Lamb's Hydrodynamics

    Perhaps a more structured beginning would be MIT Course 16.01-16.04.
u/reichenbachfall · 2 pointsr/AskEngineers

Great place to start -- the Chem Eng bible -- Perry's Handbook:
http://www.amazon.ca/Perrys-Chemical-Engineers-Handbook-Edition/dp/0071422943

u/TaciturnType · 2 pointsr/UIUC

ChBE 321 will almost certainly use Smith Van Ness. It's a McGraw Hill book so it's expensive, but I'd say it's worth picking up. It's a good book (as far as engineering textbooks go) and one I and my classmates actually used sometimes after finishing the class. Also thermo is one of the more conceptually difficult classes you'll take in undergrad, so it's worth having an additional reference.

You can find it used versions, older editions, and international/SI editions for cheaper, especially if you look off amazon like at abebooks or similar.

u/GlorifiedPlumber · 2 pointsr/EngineeringStudents

More chemical engineering related, but illustrates what I call "big picture" and "scale it up" engineering philosophies.

I'm a big fan of "The Alchemy of Air":

https://www.amazon.com/Alchemy-Air-Jewish-Scientific-Discovery/dp/0307351793/

Then, they are 100% chem E / mech E related, but I like Norm Lieberman's books on troubleshooting process equipment.

https://www.amazon.com/Working-Guide-Process-Equipment-Fourth/dp/0071828060/

https://www.amazon.com/Process-Equipment-Malfunctions-Techniques-Identify/dp/0071770208/

There are CHEAPER earlier versions you can dig out on Amazon. Note, troubleshooting a pump hasn't changed a lot in 60 years... so... you know.

u/IcarusBrewing · 2 pointsr/TheBrewery

Really depends what end of brewing you're trying to make your way into. Brewing theory is nice and all, but unless you're going into the Engineering end at a much larger brewery it might be more than you ever need. I've read the gamut at this point but these two have remained helpful:

I'd suggest reading through Beer by Dr. Bamforth, he runs the Brewing (Food Science) program at UC Davis and theres a wealth of knowledge you can gain out of it

Slightly more advanced is Brewing by Michael J Lewis, gets a bit more into the Food Chemistry end of brewing, but still plenty to gain.

u/Perpetualdynamism · 2 pointsr/MechanicalEngineering

I bought this book a few years ago when I needed to start designing more complex injection molded parts. I still reference it. Great easy to read book. https://www.amazon.com/Plastic-Part-Design-Injection-Molding/dp/1569904367

u/Vorian-Atreides · 2 pointsr/CognitiveSurplus

Maybe you could use a basic crystal structure like the one pictured on the cover of Callister? (https://www.amazon.com/Materials-Science-Engineering-Introduction-8th/dp/0470419970) Its the most often used Intro MSE course textbook.

u/londonzoo · 2 pointsr/science

Also The Science of Cooking, written by an actual food scientist.

u/PlaysForDays · 2 pointsr/ChemicalEngineering

I can second this. You're going to have to take a course on the first three topics and likely one on the math and numberical methods behind it all. I used Bird, Fogler, and McCabe. The Bird text is unnecessarily theoretical in my opinion, but Fogler and McCabe are excellent. McCabe is particularly good at covering everything without going too in-depth. For Thermo, this is the one I see used most commonly, though only about half the text is used in most curricula and it's a fairly dry read in my opinion.


Like I said, you're probably going to want to review some math as well. There's quite a bit of calculus involved, so if you've been away from that for a few years, I would brush up on some basic integration, partial derivatives, and some fairly basic differential equations. The other topic is numerical and computational methods, but that's something you can learn on the fly with a solid background.

u/Biobrewer · 2 pointsr/Homebrewing

Brewing, by Lewis and Young

I have read almost this entire book, and even though I have a very solid footing in science, I found that it would be very approachable, even for the beginner with no formal science/engineering training. I have been meaning to do a book review, but the planning for my small yeast operation has really gotten in the way of writing it up. The book starts off with great background, and gives you a solid basis upon which to understand the more technical portions.

EDIT: Even an ignoramus could understand it (pun intended!)

u/MiddleEarthGIS · 2 pointsr/manufacturing

There are a few injection molding guides on Amazon. Here’s one that I found. Search on Amazon and other used book sites. I bet you can find something for $30.

u/FatFingerHelperBot · 2 pointsr/manufacturing

It seems that your comment contains 1 or more links that are hard to tap for mobile users.
I will extend those so they're easier for our sausage fingers to click!


Here is link number 1 - Previous text "one"



----
^Please ^PM ^/u/eganwall ^with ^issues ^or ^feedback! ^| ^Delete

u/C0unt_Z3r0 · 2 pointsr/engineering

As an engineering manager for a contract manufacturing firm that specializes in Plastic Injection molding, if you're looking at "free" online resources, the "best" I've run across is [The GE Plastic Design Guide](http://www.manterra.com/GE_Design_Guide.pdf)

For non-free, the "gold standard" is [Malloy](https://www.amazon.com/Plastic-Part-Design-Injection-Molding/dp/1569904367)

u/TOLstryk · 2 pointsr/EngineeringStudents

Download the NCEES Reference Manual from their website.

Buy the FE Review Manual

They also have a discipline specific review manual for chemical.

u/alpastortacos · 2 pointsr/pics

Found all these books for less than 250, don't buy books at the bookstore
first, second, third, fourth

u/klystron · 1 pointr/WWIIplanes

During the lead-up to the invasion several hundred gliders were produced and stored on airfields, waiting for their one-way trip. In English weather this caused a lot of them to develop mould and collect water inside, which could have caused the gliders to break up in flight.

In The New Science of Strong Materials by JE Gordon, we are told about the problems this caused and how they were overcome. This is in the chapter Glue and Plywood which also discusses the problems of constructing planes such as the Horsa and the Mosquito out of plywood.

A fascinating book and an interesting look at some of the technicalities involved in constructing them.

u/th3rick_c137 · 1 pointr/slavelabour

Looking for Solution Manuals for:

Fundamentals of Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics 1st Edition by Kevin D. Dahm & Donald P. Visco

ISBN: 1111580707


Heat and Mass Transfer: Fundamentals and Applications 5th Edition by Yunus A. Cengel &‎ Afshin J. Ghajar

ISBN: 0073398187

Offer 10$ ... Thanks.

u/PrincessYukon · 1 pointr/IWantToLearn
u/whatisnuclear · 1 pointr/NuclearPower

If you understand everything in this free textbook, you'll be way ahead of most undergrads with a nuclear engineering degree in terms of chain reaction physics. Unfortunately it's hard to get through without some instruction. Also there's a lot more to engineering. Another good introductory book that deals a little more with engineering but is not free is Lamarsh.

Basically, nuclear engineers deal with the nuclear core. They deal with the chain reaction, the heat removal, the fuel performance, the material degradation, and the coupled transient performance. Once the heat is produced, it's up to mechanical, structural, civil, control, reliability, and electrical engineers to turn that heat into usable electricity.

u/ohmyohmeohmy · 1 pointr/chemistry

March's Advanced Organic Chemistry is very good. It's a graduate level book, but it'd be good to step it up.

Otherwise, you'd be wanting to look for a book of Named Reactions.

http://www.amazon.com/Strategic-Applications-Reactions-Organic-Synthesis/dp/0124297854

That one is also very good, but again, graduate level. I don't think it'll be above you if you have a good grasp on basic mechanism at the undergraduate level. More of the advanced reactions (aside from things with transition metals) are usually built from combinations/extensions of undergraduate mechanisms.

Step it up man. You got this.

Addendum edit: Green and Wuts (sp?) Protecting groups book is also very good. It's mostly built from literature examples and empirical data.

u/SlipShift · 1 pointr/EngineeringStudents

Materials science and engineering student here. If it's an intro to materials science type course, mwalsh2010 has covered most of it. Additionally, expect to index planes and directions in crystal structures, solid solubility, mechanical properties testing methods, phase percentage and lever rule calculations (under phase diagrams), phase transformation reactions (eutectic, eutectoid, paratectic, etc.), and various processing methods. You'll probably mainly study metals and ceramics since they're generally not as complex as polymeric and electronic materials.

This was the text book used in an intro course I took. I'm sure there's a torrent of it out there and should serve as a pretty solid resource.

Basic mechanical properties of materials.

If you would like more resources, feel free to PM me.

u/people40 · 1 pointr/EngineeringStudents

I agree about Felder and Rousseau for Mass and material balances. It is probably the only textbook that I actually reference (mostly for the charts in the back and the unit conversions on the front cover).

I also like Callister for general materials science information.

Perry's is a wonderful reference.

u/1eyed_king · 1 pointr/politics

Ahhhhh, it all makes sense now, thanks for finally dropping a clue about your credentials. Sorry if I was brusque; I'll clue you into something. Years ago I was also an engineering grad student (also for free) and foolishly thought all that groovy stuff I was learning actually meant something. It does, don't get me wrong, but not in the way I thought it did. Professional engineering is not science; we make assumptions, we take short cuts, we use handbooks and correlations. We have to be able to call upon that school knowledge to help guide us in making decisions but the work we do is something entirely different. Diffusivities (be they related to neutrons, heat transfer, momentum transfer, or mass transfer) are known well enough over the appropriate regions for most engineering calculation. You may claim that this is false, or far from the truth, but I don't have the time to go over 3 semesters of nuclear power plant design theory. What I will do, though, since you are in engineer school as we type, is point you to the library: this one and that one are good starting places. A tip: if you mention Lamarsh in a question about nuclear engineering, every nuclear engineer in sight will automatically treat you with respect and answer your question or point you to someone who can.




I know I'm not going to change your mind about this so I'll stop trying; you do seem very passionate about it and I respect that. However, I do resent you implication that I'm only doing this for money(ha!), prestige (double-ha!), or curiosity (well, I am curious, but not really my purpose for working in this industry).




I also just noticed that you edited your original reply while I've been typing. I'm sorry if I've upset you, but you do have a rather abrasive way of conversing in these threads and before I realized where you were coming from I wasn't sure how to approach it. For the record I do not work at a plant but at a vendor (we design and analyze nuclear safety systems) and I hold both a B.S. and M.S. in nuclear engineering, concentrated in thermal-hydraulics design and analysis (although apparently this doesn't make me a real engineer in you definition). I guess the really infuriating thing about your threads is that you're painting an entire sector of the engineering community with the same brush, but no bother I guess. I'd like to reply to each of the searing accusations you put forth in your edited reply, but I fear they would fall on deaf ears. If you'd like to actually ask me a real engineering question and get a real answer, feel free to PM me, these threads just aren't suited to that type of exchange.




Best of luck on your finals and, I assume, your Quals (if you haven't already taken them).

u/zen_arcade · 1 pointr/askscience

Civil engineering to shipbuilding: Structures and The new science of strong materials, by J.E. Gordon. These are incredibly enlightening.

Physics (also some chemistry and biology): It Must Be Beautiful: Great Equations of Modern Science is a collection of essays by great scientists - among others, it contains a very insightful discussion on the birth of the Schroedinger equation, which is rather different from the usual stories of cats in boxes, chicken crossing the road, gods playing dice, and the like.

Chemistry: The Elements: A Very Short Introduction, by Philip Ball.

Biochemistry: Chance and necessity, by Jacques Monod. Seems it's out of print, I guess my knowledge of the field is a bit out-of-date. There must be some other book out there that explains elegantly protein folding and enzymatic regulation, which are the base mechanisms of living matter.

u/onlyYGO · 1 pointr/slavelabour

Looking for this full textbook PDF download https://www.amazon.com/Working-Guide-Process-Equipment-Fourth/dp/0071828060

paying $1 PP.

EDIT: open still. waiting on reply on 2nd person that pmmed me. going to 3rd after if no reply soon

EDIT2: got it. closed. thanks all

u/GeorgeTheWild · 1 pointr/AskEngineers

Unit Operations of Chemical Engineering by McGraw Hill and Perry's Chemical Engineering Handbook have the information on calculating heat transfer coefficients for heat exchangers. Heat exchangers can require itterative calculations if you're doing the calcs by hand. It's much easier to use software like HTRI

u/jerr30 · 1 pointr/ChemicalEngineering

This book has this information and a lot more:

https://www.amazon.ca/Transport-Phenomena-R-Byron-Bird/dp/0470115394

u/Shmoppy · 1 pointr/chemistry

It's not online, but this is one of my favorite books ever: https://www.amazon.com/Strategic-Applications-Reactions-Organic-Synthesis/dp/0124297854

It's basically a compilation of a ton of named reactions, with a two page spread for each covering its use, discovery, and mechanism. An amazing book to just open to a random page and learn about/refresh your knowledge on a reaction.

Also, for sheer synthetic flexing, there's an app called chemistry by design, which has a lot of classic total syntheses and a quiz mode for each, where you see the reagents and guess the product, or vice versa. No mechanisms, though.

u/i621148 · 1 pointr/engineering

Here is a good snap fit guide:
http://web.mit.edu/2.75/resources/random/Snap-Fit%20Design%20Manual.pdf

Also we have this book in our library at work:
Plastic Part Design for Injection Molding 2E: An Introduction https://www.amazon.com/dp/1569904367/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_AjduzbRTN0ZFN

u/PM_ME_UR_MATHPROBLEM · 1 pointr/UMD

Ehhh, there's no secret there. You can pick up a classic textbook with knowledge that a 1935 researcher would kill for easily. Heck, wikipedia has some really amazing nuclear resources. Now, actually building things, now that's tricky.

https://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Nuclear-Engineering-John-Lamarsh/dp/0201824981

u/groundhogmeat · 1 pointr/engineering

A distressingly-high ratio of pop psych nonsense suggestions in here. Sticking to engineering, one of my faves is Structures: Or Why Things Don't Fall Down by JE Gordon (and The New Science of Strong Materials by the same author). Does a great job of qualitatively AND quantitatively explaining structures and materials.

u/oldsock · 1 pointr/Homebrewing

You are right on Fix, but my copy of New Brewing Lager Beers says 1986/1996 (purchased in 2006 IIRC). Maybe I just got a copy that had been sitting around. The newest Edition of Brewing is 2013? May just be when it went to paperback or something.

Regardless of the publication dates, I found Brewing to be a more comprehensive text for the science of brewing. New Brewing Lager Beer is a good step-up from How to Brew, more science while will being practical for a homebrewer. Brewing is very much intended for commercial brewers.

u/tokingdomcome623 · 1 pointr/hwstartups

This is a really good one:
Plastic Part Design for Injection Molding 2E: An Introduction https://www.amazon.com/dp/1569904367/ref=cm_sw_r_awd_YhdSub1FSJ2NJ

u/wutnowsucka · 1 pointr/EngineeringStudents

I don't know many good resources other than the fact that this book is amazing.
http://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Chemical-Engineering-Thermodynamics-Mcgraw-Hill/dp/0073104450/ref=sr_1_6?ie=UTF8&qid=1421900441&sr=8-6&keywords=introductory+chemical+engineering+thermodynamics

You don't use a whole lot from thermo 1 in thermo 2 in my experience. The entire class is phase diagrams and Gibb's free energy and Raoult's Law. If you understand those concepts, you have a chance at understanding fugacity, which is basically what thermo 2 is about lol.

u/vfl2014 · 1 pointr/ChemicalEngineering

You're welcome. First, they won't ask anything that isn't in the manual. So, as long as you know where to find what you need for that particular question, you are good. However, it may be in a different form than what you are used to. Using the book that you have to study is the best way to do it. It is what I used and is a pretty good representation of what will be on the exam. I wouldn't waste time going through old textbooks unless you want to read a little background on whatever topic it is.

The chemical engineering portion was a lot harder than I expected but since it is multiple choice, you have a decent shot at flat out guessing the answers. This is the book that I used to prep for it. However, I wouldn't recommend it because the problems are far harder in this review than are actually on the exam.

http://www.amazon.com/Chemical-Discipline-Specific-Review-EIT-Exam/dp/1591260671/ref=pd_sim_b_3?ie=UTF8&refRID=0DPK3Z2TG4GZ2FXTYEDW

The best way to prep for the chemical part of the test is just to brush up on the basics of chemical engineering. Know how to convert units, stoichiometry, calculating reynolds numbers and other dimensionless quantities, and key chemical engineering concepts. I would say, the most helpful thing you can do for yourself is to know what units things should be in. Example: acceleration should be m/s^2. This will help tremendously when you have no idea how to work a problem. You take the units you are given, the units the answer is given in, look up the formula and figure out how to make the units work out. This method could possibly score a lot of points without knowing exactly how to work something out.

u/dubbl_bubbl · 1 pointr/engineering

Plastic Part Design for Injection Molding is probably one of the best books out there on the design of plastic parts. Might also be worth looking into a course or book for injection mold tool design since understanding, draft, parting lines, shutoff, ejection, lifters, gates & runners and all other stuff that contribute to the limitations of plastic part design.

u/striple · 1 pointr/EngineeringStudents
u/theriversflows · 1 pointr/ChemicalEngineering

ah cool thx for the list. ill start from that order when i have time and can get ahold of those books.

to make sure,

A working guide to process equipment =

Lieberman Distillation operation ???

kister Distillation design =

kister Distillation troubleshooting =

kister Distillation design and control using aspen =

luyben = ????

, it seems kister distillation design is pretty easy to get a hold of. would it also be fine to start from there?

also, back in uni, the book i used to distillation column (which was in separations course) was mccabe. what do you think about mccabe for distillation? I never learned anything from it regarding distillation section, but if others think its good, ill have another go at it.

u/Oil_and_Gas_Guy · 1 pointr/AskEngineers

Bird, Stewart, Lightfoot...BSL for those in the know.
BSL

u/wombocombo087 · 1 pointr/pics

"Elements of Chemical Reaction Engineering" by Fogler (4th edition) sells on Amazon for $87.64. (https://www.amazon.com/Elements-Chemical-Reaction-Engineering-4th/dp/0130473944)

"Physical Chemistry" by Atkins, 8th edition sells for $31.50 on Amazon. (https://www.amazon.com/Physical-Chemistry-Peter-Atkins/dp/0716787598)

"Separation Process Principles" (I think 3rd edition if my image enhancer is working properly) sells on Amazon for $65.

"Chemistry" by Zumdahl (I think 7th edition) sells on Amazon for $25.77. (https://www.amazon.com/Chemistry-Steven-S-Zumdahl/dp/061852844X)

So $209.91 less shipping fees but these would mail via USPS Media Mail which runs like, at most $3.75 per book so take that out and you're left with $194.91.

u/EngineeredStrength · 1 pointr/AskEngineers

The new science of strong materials, or why we don't fall through the floor. Amazon link. I felt like it was a good read and it helped me explain some ideas to my coworkers who had different backgrounds.

u/G4RB4G3M4N · 1 pointr/engineering

As someone in a similar situation, I'd recommend these two books. They're what were were taught with when I was in college for my Plastics Engineering degree (Bachelors at Umass Lowell). I've had both of the authors as professors.

I'd also recommend this book by Professor Kazmer: Injection Mold Design Engineering if you want to design the mold of a injection molded part. DON"T OVERLOOK THIS. A lot of times our professors were explaining how they'd have to help companies who designed a good part that couldn't physically be molded.

The previous book mentioned by Professor Malloy: Plastic Part Design for Injection Molding 2E: An Introduction is for actually designing the part.

Also, make sure that you get a book on polymer material science. Learn about the different types of plastics, how they handle, ect.

Start with reading some simpler PDFs from resin suppliers like this one.

A big thing to consider is also this: Does the company

  • Design the part?
  • Manufacture the part?
  • Design or make it's own molds?
u/Science_Monster · 1 pointr/engineering

this is my very favorite text book from school. It'll get you started, although I don't remember if it specifically had a section on dryers or spray dryers, it has all the physical property tables you'll need, I think chapter 8 was relevant to your question.

this I do not own, but I've heard good things about, will probably have higher level stuff and be more specific to your application.

u/huzoor · 1 pointr/food

The Science of Cooking. This book turned me from a nerd into a nerd who can cook.

u/gnurdette · 1 pointr/Christianity

That does it. I'm pulling out the old Bird, Stewart, and Lightfoot and putting a hex on you. You're lucky my wife's asleep; I'm just an engineer, but as a working experimental physicist she can do death magic.

📷

u/BennyZee · 1 pointr/EngineeringStudents

If you can, pick up a copy/PDF of Introduction to Materials http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0470419970/ref=mp_s_a_1_6?qid=1404346873&sr=1-6&pi=AC_SX110_SY165_QL70 Extremely useful book for all things material science.

u/FreelanceSocialist · 1 pointr/askscience

In the same vein - The Science of Cooking by Peter Barnham.

In fact, Google Books has partial previews of both, and you can search within them:

On Food and Cooking

The Science of Cooking

u/testingapril · 1 pointr/Homebrewing

Brewing - Lewis and Young is another technical textbook on brewing that is used in college level brewing classes. It's a good bit more affordable. I got it on sale a long time ago for really cheap, I think like $30 $15.

edit: thanks Pricebot. I bought it at the low, $15.