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CH 06

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Chapter 6 – Answer Key, Introduction to Chemical Engineering: Tools for Today and Tomorrow

Reading Question 6.1:

You should have followed the example in the book and printed a spreadsheet page that looks
like the one illustrated in Figure 6.4.
Chapter 6 – Answer Key, Introduction to Chemical Engineering: Tools for Today and Tomorrow

Reading Question 6.2:

Entering the information into cells in the spreadsheet has at least two advantages:

a) It makes it simple to change the input information and repeat the calculations.

b) It provides more complete documentation which is also easier to follow.


Chapter 6 – Answer Key, Introduction to Chemical Engineering: Tools for Today and Tomorrow

Reading Question 6.3:

Use of the formula with the fixed cell addresses allowed the user to copy the formula directly
(without modification) into additional cells.
Chapter 6 – Answer Key, Introduction to Chemical Engineering: Tools for Today and Tomorrow

Reading Question 6.4:

You should follow the steps and turn in a printout that looks like Figure 6.6.
Chapter 6 – Answer Key, Introduction to Chemical Engineering: Tools for Today and Tomorrow

Homework Problem 6.1:

a. (15.1*TAN(0.71))^4.3

b. SQRT((A9+G27)/C21)

c. (21.3*EXP(D7))/F19 + 3.85
Chapter 6 – Answer Key, Introduction to Chemical Engineering: Tools for Today and Tomorrow

Homework Problem 6.2:


Salary:
The salary increases by the amount of the designated interest. For example, in the
spreadsheet shown below, the first year’s salary in cell C10 is the value given in D2. But
the second year’s salary in C11 is calculated by applying the raise to the previous year, as
in the following formula:
C11: =C10(1+D$3)
The dollar sign is used with the D3 address so the contents of C11 can be filled down to
C29 without incrementing the D3 address.

Retirement Account:
The first year of the retirement account is the amount saved from the first year’s salary,
so the contents of D10 is
D10: =C10*D5
The second year’s retirement account is the amount saved from the second year’s salary
plus the amount of interest from the first year:
D11; =C11*D$5+D10*(1+D$4)
This is then filled down to D29.
Chapter 6 – Answer Key, Introduction to Chemical Engineering: Tools for Today and Tomorrow

Homework Problem 6.3:


Solving the Ideal Gas Law for Volume gives
nRT
V=
P
where the following are given
n = 1 gmol
R = .08206 atm L/gmol K
T = 273 K
⎛ atm L ⎞
(1 gmol)⎜.08206 (273 K )
⎝ gmol K ⎠ 22.4 atm L
So V = =
P P
That calculation is illustrated below:
A B
1 Volume of an Ideal Gas
2
3 Pressure V=22.4/P
4 (atm) (L)
5
6 1.0 22.40
7 1.1 20.36
8 1.2 18.67
9 1.3 17.23
10 1.4 16.00
11 1.5 14.93
12 1.6 14.00
13 1.7 13.18
14 1.8 12.44
15 1.9 11.79
16 2.0 11.20
24.00

22.00

20.00

Volume (L)

18.00

16.00

14.00

12.00

10.00

1.0
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
1.6
1.7
1.8
1.9
2.0

Pressure (atm)

Chapter 6 – Answer Key, Introduction to Chemical Engineering: Tools for Today and Tomorrow

Homework Problem 6.4:


Length: Since the Drilled Volume = πR2L = π(D/2)2L = 85 cm3, then L = 4V/πD2
Volume Before Drilling: Add the wall thickness (0.4 cm) to the drilled length and add twice
the wall thickness to the drilled diameter to determine the outside dimensions of the total
piece. The volume of that piece is Volume = πR2L = π(D/2)2L
Material Cost: The cost of $.025/cm3 is multiplied times the volume of the piece.
Drilling Cost: Applying the given drilling costs, that cost is calculated by setting up the
spreadsheet as shown, and the formula for cell E5 is
E5: =IF(B5<3,I$6*B5+I$7*A5,I$9*B5+I$10*A5)
Total Cost: This is the Material Cost plus the Drilling Cost
A B C D E F G H I
1 Drilled Cylinders
2 D (cm) L (cm) Vol.bef.drill Material Drilling Total dr.vol.(cm3) 85
3 (cm^3) cost ($) cost ($) cost ($) thcknss (cm) 0.4
4 $/cm3 0.025
5 2.0 27.056 169.063 $4.227 $4.197 $8.424
6 2.1 24.541 164.740 $4.118 $3.904 $8.023 D<3, $/L 0.13
7 2.2 22.361 160.885 $4.022 $3.655 $7.677 D<3, $/D 0.34
8 2.3 20.458 157.433 $3.936 $3.442 $7.377
9 2.4 18.789 154.328 $3.858 $3.259 $7.117 D≥3, $/L 0.13
10 2.5 17.316 151.525 $3.788 $3.101 $6.889 D≥3, $/D 0.41
11 2.6 16.010 148.987 $3.725 $2.965 $6.690
12 2.7 14.846 146.681 $3.667 $2.848 $6.515
13 2.8 13.804 144.582 $3.615 $2.747 $6.361
14 2.9 12.869 142.666 $3.567 $2.659 $6.226
15 3.0 12.025 140.914 $3.523 $2.793 $6.316
16 3.1 11.262 139.310 $3.483 $2.735 $6.218
17 3.2 10.569 137.839 $3.446 $2.686 $6.132
18 3.3 9.938 136.489 $3.412 $2.645 $6.057
19 3.4 9.362 135.248 $3.381 $2.611 $5.992
20 3.5 8.835 134.107 $3.353 $2.584 $5.936
21 3.6 8.351 133.057 $3.326 $2.562 $5.888
22 3.7 7.905 132.092 $3.302 $2.545 $5.847
23 3.8 7.495 131.204 $3.280 $2.532 $5.812
24 3.9 7.115 130.388 $3.260 $2.524 $5.784
25 4.0 6.764 129.638 $3.241 $2.519 $5.760
26 4.1 6.438 128.950 $3.224 $2.518 $5.742
27 4.2 6.135 128.319 $3.208 $2.520 $5.728
28 4.3 5.853 127.741 $3.194 $2.524 $5.717
29 4.4 5.590 127.214 $3.180 $2.531 $5.711
30 4.5 5.344 126.733 $3.168 $2.540 $5.708
31 4.6 5.115 126.297 $3.157 $2.551 $5.708
32 4.7 4.899 125.902 $3.148 $2.564 $5.711
33 4.8 4.697 125.546 $3.139 $2.579 $5.717
34 4.9 4.508 125.228 $3.131 $2.595 $5.726
35 5.0 4.329 124.944 $3.124 $2.613 $5.736
Chapter 6 – Answer Key, Introduction to Chemical Engineering: Tools for Today and Tomorrow

Homework Problem 6.4 (continued):

$8.000

$7.500

$7.000

Total cost ($)

$6.500

$6.000

$5.500

$5.000

2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
5.5

Drilled diameter (cm)

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