One of the most significant jumps for a chemical engineer is moving from to Dynamic simulation. This edition provides a clearer bridge for users looking to understand how a plant responds to upsets, startup, and shutdown procedures—critical for safety and control logic design. 4. Safety and Energy Analysis
When the first edition of this book was released, it quickly filled a void in the market. Most software documentation provided by vendors is functional but dry—a list of buttons and commands without context. Conversely, academic textbooks often lacked practical, step-by-step instruction on how to apply theory using industry-standard tools.
✅ – As a lab manual for your capstone design course. ✅ Graduate Students – For thesis work involving complex non-ideal systems or optimization. ✅ New Process Engineers – At EPC firms (e.g., Fluor, Bechtel, Worley) looking to ramp up quickly. ✅ Self-Learners – Who have access to an Aspen Plus license (e.g., through the Aspen Edubundle or a company subscription).
Misinterpreting the rate-based distillation results (Chapter 14). Rate-based columns converge more slowly. ✅ Fix: Always start with equilibrium stages (RadFrac) to achieve basic mass balance, then switch to rate-based for detailed design.
, demonstrating how municipal wastewater can be used to produce green hydrogen. Book Review & Overview : Summaries available on platforms like ResearchGate
By the end of 8–10 weeks, you will be more proficient than 80% of entry-level process engineers.
, including energy-saving measures.
The book is structured to follow a logical learning curve, from basic flowsheet convergence to complex optimization. Here is what readers can expect when they open .
– Each chapter is a standalone mini-project, so you can jump to distillation, reactors, or flowsheet optimization without reading linearly. Great for busy engineers.