College of Engineering & Information Technology
Chemical Engineering

 

 Undergraduate Index


Michael A. Matthews, Interim Chair of the Department
Professors
Joseph H. Gibbons, Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh, 1961
Michael A. Matthews, Ph.D., Texas A&M University, 1986
Branko N. Popov, Ph.D., University of Zagreb, 1972
Vincent Van Brunt, Ph.D., University of Tennessee, 1974
John W. Van Zee, Ph.D., Texas A&M University, 1984
Ralph E. White, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley, 1977
Dean of the College of Engineering and Information Technology, Westinghouse Distinguished Scientist
Associate Professors
Michael D. Amiridis, Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, 1991
Francis A. Gadala-Maria, Ph.D., Stanford University, 1979
Undergraduate Director
Thanasis D. Papathanasiou, Ph.D., McGill University, 1990
Harry J. Ploehn, Ph.D., Princeton University, 1988
James A. Ritter, Ph.D., State University of New York at Buffalo, 1989
John W. Weidner, Ph.D., North Carolina State University, 1991
Graduate Director

Assistant Professors

    Perla B. Balbuena, Ph.D., University of Texas, 1996
    Edward P. Gatzke, Ph.D., University of Delaware, 2000
    Thomas G. Stanford, Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1977
    Christopher T. Williams, Ph.D., Purdue University, 1997

Research Professor

    Thomas A. Davis, Ph.D., University of South Carolina, 1967

Distinguished Professor Emeritus

    Milton W. Davis Jr., Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley, 1951

Overview

Chemical engineers are involved in the design of materials and devices and in the design and operation of plants which manufacture a wide variety of chemicals, including plastics, textile fibers, gasoline, and pharmaceuticals. The work of the chemical engineer can be highly diverse, ranging from research on pollution prevention to the marketing of new chemical products.

The objectives of the undergraduate program in chemical engineering are to provide the student with a thorough grounding in mathematics, chemistry, and chemical engineering subjects, and to prepare the student for a professional career or graduate studies in chemical engineering and other fields.

Degree Requirements

Chemical Engineering Curriculum (131 hours)

ECHE 101, ENGR 101, or UNIV 101 for engineers (3 hours)
ENGL 101, 102 (6 hours)
Liberal Arts (18 hours)
MATH 141, 142, 241, 242 (14 hours)
CHEM 111, 112, 333, 334 (14 hours)
PHYS 211, 211L, 212, 212L (8 hours)
ECHE 310 or ENGR 290 (3 hours)
ECHE 320 or ENGR 360 (3 hours)
ECHE 300, 311, 321, 322, 430, 440, 460, 461, 465, 466, 550, 567 (36 hours)
Chemistry electives (6 hours)
Chemistry laboratory electives (2 hours)
Engineering electives (6 hours)
Technical electives (12 hours)

Accelerated B.S./M.E. Education Plan

The Accelerated B.S./M.E. Plan in Chemical Engineering allows students to complete both the B.S. degree and a Master of Engineering degree in chemical engineering in as few as five years. The use of dual credit--courses that can be used toward both degrees--enables acceleration of the program, reducing the total enrollment of the student by one semester.

Chemical engineering students may apply for approval of an accelerated education plan in the semester in which they will complete 90 hours of undergraduate course work. In addition, students must have a sufficient foundation in chemical engineering course work to enable them to take graduate-level courses. University and department regulations stipulate that applicants must have a minimum GPA of 3.40, both overall and in chemical engineering courses. Students may apply by submitting an accelerated education plan, an application for senior privilege, and a copy of a Graduate School application to the graduate director in chemical engineering. The dean of The Graduate School has final authority for approving accelerated education plans.

Only graduate-level courses (numbered 500 and above) may be used for dual credit. No more than nine credit hours may be used as dual credit. The graduate courses used for dual credit must be taken during the student’s final undergraduate year. The student graduates with the B.S. degree after completing the B.S. degree requirements. At that time, the student is admitted to the graduate program with up to nine hours of graduate credit.

Course Descriptions (ECHE)

  • 101--Introduction to Chemical Engineering. (3) Introduction to engineering, with emphasis on chemical engineering. Problem-solving techniques, including the use of computer tools. Basic engineering design methods.
  • 300--Chemical Process Principles. (3) (Prereq: MATH 141, prereq or coreq CHEM 112) Material and energy balances in the chemical process industry. Properties of gases, liquids, and solids. Two one-hour lectures and one three-hour laboratory period devoted to problem solving.
  • 310--Introductory Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics. (3) (Prereq or coreq: ECHE 300, MATH 241) First law and second law of thermodynamics. Mathematical relationships between thermodynamic properties. Analysis of power and refrigeration cycles. Introduction to phase and chemical equilibrium.
  • 311--Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics. (3) (Prereq: ENGR 290) Mass, energy, and entropy balance analysis of chemical engineering systems; evaluation of thermodynamic property changes of pure materials; solution thermodynamics of single-phase multicomponent systems; phase and chemical reaction equilibrium.
  • 320--Chemical Engineering Fluid Mechanics. (3) (Prereq: PHYS 211; prereq or coreq: Math 241) Fluid statics and dynamics with emphasis on chemical engineering applications.
  • 321--Heat-Flow Analysis. (3) (Prereq: ENGR 360, grade of C or better in MATH 242) Theory of heat transmission; mechanism, generation, distribution, and measurement; use of theory in practical equipment design.
  • 322--Mass Transfer. (3) (Prereq: ECHE 300) Molecular diffusion in fluids; diffusion in laminar and turbulent flow; momentum, transport analogies; interfacial mass transfer; design applications include humidification, absorption, adsorption, and ion exchange.
  • 389--Special Topics in Chemical Engineering. (3) Course content varies and will be announced in the schedule of classes by suffix and title. May be repeated as topic varies.
  • 430--Chemical Engineering Kinetics. (3) (Prereq: ECHE 311; prereq or coreq: ECHE 321) Concepts of chemical kinetics, batch and flow reactors, catalysts and reactor design.
  • 440--Separation Process Design. (3) (Prereq: ECHE 300) Design of stagewise chemical separation cascades; analysis of binary and ternary systems; multicomponent separations, plate and column specification procedures; distillation, crystallization, extraction, and leaching.
  • 460--Chemical Engineering Laboratory I. (3) (Coreq: ECHE 311, ECHE 321) Review of technical-report writing and presentation techniques; topics in heat transfer, fluid mechanics, and thermodynamics; verification of theoretical results and determination of design parameters. One lecture and six laboratory hours.
  • 461--Chemical Engineering Laboratory II. (3) (Prereq: ECHE 460; coreq: ECHE 430, 440) Continuation of ECHE 460; topics in mass transfer, kinetics, and process control.
  • 465--Chemical-Process Analysis and Design I. (3) (Coreq: ECHE 430, 440) Economics of chemical engineering projects related to typical corporate goals and objectives; process-flowsheet development techniques; review of shortcut design techniques; selection of profitability criteria.
  • 466--Chemical-Process Analysis and Design II. (3) (Prereq: ECHE 430, 440, 465; prereq or coreq: ECHE 322, 467, 550) Continuation of ECHE 465; computer-aided design of chemical processes; written and oral presentation of a comprehensive design project.
  • 499--Special Problems. (1-3) (Prereq: advance approval of project proposal by advisor and instructor) Individual investigation or studies of special topics. A maximum of three credits may be applied toward a degree.
  • 520--Chemical Engineering Fluid Mechanics. (3) (Prereq: ENGR 360) Multi-phase pressure drop, phase contacting, flow through porous media, fluidization, mixing, and turbulence.
  • 550--Chemical-Process Dynamics and Control. (3) (Prereq: grade of C or better in ECHE 300 and MATH 242) Fundamental physical and chemical principles in mathematically modeling the dynamic response of chemical processes; feedforward and feedback control systems; design of control schemes for selected chemical processes.
  • 571--Corrosion Engineering. (3) (Prereq: senior standing) Basic principles of corrosion engineering developed from a chemical engineering approach to thermodynamics, kinetics, mass transfer, and potential theory.
  • 567--Process Safety, Health, and Loss Prevention. (3) (Prereq: senior standing) Reliability, availability, and fault-tree analyses, risk indices, hazard evaluation, vapor cloud modeling, toxicology, material safety classification and regulations, individual/corporate ethical responsibilities.
  • 572--Polymer Processing. (3) (Prereq: senior standing) Industrial polymers with emphasis on their characterization and on the modeling of the major polymer fabrication processes.
  • 589--Special Advanced Topics in Chemical Engineering. (3) Course content varies and will be announced in the schedule of classes by suffix and title. May be repeated as topics vary.

Return to College of Engineering


[Bulletin Home Page] [Undergraduate Bulletin Contents] [Disclaimer] [Office of Undergraduate Admissions]

This web site updated September 2001 by Thom Harman, and copyright © 2001-2002 by the Board of Trustees of the University of South Carolina. All Rights Reserved.
URL http://www.sc.edu/bulletin/ugrad/ChemEngr.html