"Reviewed and approved by the AIChE Education Services Committee in 2005"
You Should Attend If: You are engaged in process development, engineering, or the operation of organic or inorganic crystallization processes.
Process engineers who need to address challenges associated with separations involving crystallization will benefit from this course.
You Can Expect To:
Apply the fundamentals of crystal growth and nucleation to industrial processes.
Use case studies to examine special operating problems, such as fouling and crystallizer control.
Utilize the theory of material, energy, and population balances in the production of crystalline materials.
Develop methods for manipulating crystal size distribution, morphology, and purity.
04/15/10 - 04/16/10 Las Vegas, Nevada Held At: Flamingo Las Vegas
06/10/10 - 06/11/10 Houston, Texas Held At: Omni Houston Hotel at Westside
11/29/10 - 11/30/10 Orlando, Florida Held At: Omni Orlando Resort at Champions Gate
03/10/11 - 03/11/11 Houston, Texas Held At: Omni Houston Hotel at Westside
Wayne J. Genck, PhD is president of Genck International, a consulting firm that specializes in crystallization and precipitation. He has consulted for over 130 companies in the effect of additives, caking, design, the impact of impurities, mixing, polymorphism, centrifugation/ filtration, drying, scale-up, and troubleshooting. Genck authored the chapter on crystallization for the third edition of McGraw-Hill’s Handbook of Separation Techniques for Chemical Engineers.
Unique Features of Crystallization
Yields and Purity Considerations; Crystal- Size Distribution; Population Balances
Modeling and Experimentation Techniques; Crystallizer Classification and Selection
Practical Design Considerations
Design-Case Study
ASME Travel Policy: ASME is not responsible for the purchase of non-refundable airline tickets or the cancellation/change fees associated with canceling a flight. Please call to confirm that the course is running before purchasing airline tickets. ASME retains the right to cancel a course up to 3 weeks before scheduled presentation date.
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