From the Back Cover:
Maximize profitability by optimizing performance of separation processes! This book will help engineers, chemists, managers, and others in the chemical, petroleum, pharmaceutical, food, and paper industries maximize profitability by optimizing performance of separation processes. Focusing on distillation, extraction, adsorption, and membrane processes, it will help answer the following questions: Which process? Process choice significantly impacts profits. Criteria and comparisons are presented to aid in the selection process. Which process configuration? Costs can be minimized if the most efficient configuration is chosen. For example, the book compares regeneration configurations for adsorption, as well as optional configurations for other processes. What leading-edge processes are available? The best of commercially available leading-edge technologies are described in each process chapter. What follow-up information is available? Guidelines, references, and lists of equipment suppliers are provided for follow-up action. Separation Process Technology includes a foreword by Dr C. Judson King, noted authority on separations. Dr. King is Provost and Senior Vice President of Academic Affairs, and Professor of Chemical engineering at the university of California at Berkeley. commercially available leadin
About the Author:
Jimmy L. Humphrey is President of J.L. Humphrey & Associates, an engineering research and consulting company that specializes in the application of new and emerging separation technologies. He has a Ph.D. in chemical engineering and teaches at the University of Texas at Austin, where he is former associate head of the Separations Research Program. Dr. Humphrey is also former chair of the Separations Division of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers and a former project manager at Argonne National Laboratory. George E. Keller II is Senior Corporate Research Fellow and Manager of the Separations and Process Fundamentals Group at Union Carbide Chemicals and Plastics Co., Inc., in South Charleston, West Virginia. His work group won a Kirkpatrick Honor Award for the development of pressure-swing parametric pumping. Dr. Keller has received a number of prestigious awards, including an Outstanding Achievement Award from Chemical Engineering magazine and the Gerhold Award for contributions in separations. He was named a Chemical Pioneer by the American Institute of Chemists for his work in long-range hydrocarbon technology, including the development of a process to convert methane to ethylene. He holds a Ph.D. in chemical engineering.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.