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![]() | Unit Operations In Chemical Engineering by Warren L. McCabe, Julian C. Smith, Peter Harriott ISBN-10: 9780070448445 ISBN-10: 0-07-044844-2 ISBN-13: 9780070448445 ISBN-13: 978-0-07-044844-5 Hardcover 1993-01-01 McGraw-Hill Companies Find Lowest Price | |
Editorials | ||
Book Description This text contains much updated and new material in new areas such as fool processing, electronics, and biochemical applications. It is a text written for undergraduate students in the junior or senior years. An elementary knowledge of material and energy balances and of thermodynamic principle is assumed. | ||
Reviews | ||
HSLOE Best book I know about Chemical Engineering. It provided me with the theoretical understanding of most of the technological problems through out my life as a responsible engineer working 25 years for an international food company. | ||
A Chemical Engineering Classic Some prior reviewers are mistaken about this book being an annotation of Perry or of little value. The "unit operations" are the framework of chemical engineering. McCabe and Smith was the definitive work on unit operations when I was a student in the 1960's. Updated and with additional authors, it still is. | ||
Excellent book Warren McCabe has written a unit operations book that is most adequately utilized for fluid mechanics. The separations sections are slightly abbreviated, and lack more refined details that might be found in a more specialized work. However, as a student in a separations course, I found myself referencing this book several times. The examples in the chapters were 'open-ended' enough to require real engineering problem-solving skills. Overall, an extremely well put-together text. | ||
fluid mechanics ,transprtation of fluids it is the best books i have ever read in my semester ofchemical engineering. the topic i like the most, is transportation offluids .this book is recommended by my professor. the matter of turbulent flow and laminar flow is just fantastic. thank you! | ||
This book is inadequte I feel that this book is inadequte for students and professionals alike. It does not explain well how systems act in real life situations, like most academia books | ||