Thermodynamics I - Part I | Lecture Notes
There is no doubt that thermodynamics is one of the most intimidating courses in the chemical engineering curriculum. In order to design and/or analyze chemical processes according to how energy is transferred to/from the system and its surrounding, thermodynamics knowledge is a fundamental building block in chemical engineering education.
This week, I would like to share with you my chemical thermodynamics handwritten lecture notes of Spring'18 as a Dropbox file. The notes consist of 59 pages as Part I. Part I is posted this week and Part II will be shared next week.
The reference book that was utilized during lectures is Chemical, Biochemical, and Engineering Thermodynamics, 5th Edition by Stanley I. Sandler. So far, the first 7 chapters of the book are utilized during the lecture. Further, there are page references in the lecture notes and there can be incompatible with the book editions, please do aware of this fact.
The reference book for the handwritten lecture notes [1] |
I would like to warn you to use them inquiringly since there can be mistakes that are overlooked while writing and editing them. I welcome you to comment on any mistake, error in calculations, and unreadable parts. We can discuss unclear parts in the comment section.
I hope these notes will assist you in your study and will enhance your problem-solving skills in the chemical engineering thermodynamics course.
The sample page of the lecture notes is shown as following,
You can easily download Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics I - Part I handwritten lecture notes for free by clicking the following underlined sentence.
What are you searching for? Chemical engineering is calling you!
Yours sincerely,
Chemicalling Team
REFERENCES
[1] Sandler, S.I. (2017). Chemical, Biochemical, and Engineering Thermodynamics, 5th Edition. [Book Cover]. Wiley. Retrieved from
https://media.wiley.com/product_data/coverImage300/9X/04705047/047050479X.jpg
As a current chemical engineering junior, I humbly thank you for this amazing resource. I've been creating all my notes in digital notebooks, as well, to hopefully compile something like this one day. I've been working on a network of mind maps to connect topics and courses.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I will share with others :)