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UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO DEPARTMENT OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING ChE 100 Lectures/tutorials: CHEMICAL ENGINEERING CONCEPTS 1 Dr.

Eric Croiset Room E6-3036 e-mail: ecroiset@uwaterloo.ca Dr. Christine Moresoli Room E6-4010 e-mail: ecroiset@uwaterloo.ca Dr. Michael Fowler Room E6-1110 e-mail: mfowler@uwaterloo.ca Shuixiu Lai Room E6-2108 email: s22lai@uwaterloo.ca Thomas Finley Room E6-1106 email: tdfinley@uwaterloo.ca Sheng Lu Room DWE-3521B email: shenglu@uwaterloo.ca Alison Scott Room E6-5114 email: ajscott@uwaterloo.ca William Scott Room E6-1106 email: w4scott@uwaterloo.ca WEEF TAs: Olivia Kwik, ofkwik@uwaterloo.ca Patwant Sandhu, p5sandhu@uwaterloo.ca Adelle Vickery, avickery@uwaterloo.ca FALL 2013 Ext. 32295

Tutorials/lectures: Eng. Comm. Lab.:

Ext. 35254 Ext. 33415

Teaching Assistants:

Ext. 31617

Ext. 31605

Ext. 33816

Ext. 31666 Ext. 31605

Schedule: See Table next page Notes : No lecture during midterm week (week of October 14-18). Make-up lectures (4:30-5:20pm, RCH 301): September 24 October 8 October 22 November 5 November 19 Texts Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes, R.M. Felder and R.W. Rousseau, 3rd Edition, J. Wiley & Sons, 2005. Introduction to Professional Engineering in Canada. Andrews et al., Prentice Hall, 2006.

University of Waterloo Faculty of Engineering Undergraduate Office

Division 1 - Chemical Engineering Fall 2013


Monday
8:30am

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Math 115
TUT-101 EV3-4408 TUT-102 DWE-3518 TUT-103 MC-4040

ChE 100
LEC-001 MC-2065

Phys 115
TUT-101 MC-4040 TUT-102 DWE-3518 TUT-103 RCH-211

ChE 100
LEC-001 MC-2065

ChE 102
TUT-101 TUT-102 TUT-103 TUT-104 DWE-3518 MC-4061 MC-4040 MC-4064

9:30

ChE 100
TUT-202 RCH-106

ChE 100
TUT-205 DWE-1502

10:30

Math 116
TUT-101 EV3-4412 TUT-102 DWE-3518 TUT-103 AL-124

ChE 100
TUT-203 RCH-106

ChE 100
TUT-206 DWE-1502

ChE 100
TUT-204 HH-336

11:30

ChE 100
TUT-201 DWE-3522A

Math 115
LEC-001 MC-2065

Math 115
LEC-001 MC-2065

ChE 100
TUT-201-206 MC-2065

12:30

Math 115
LEC-001 B1-271

Math 115
LEC-001 RCH-301 MAKE-UP LECTURE

GenE 119
SEM-001 RCH-301 Week 2,4,8
1:30 2:30

ChE 100
LAB-101 CPH-1346

Math 116
LEC-001 RCH-302

Phys 115
LEC-001 RCH-302

Phys 115
LEC-001 RCH-302

ChE 100
LEC-001 RCH-101

3:30

ChE 102
LEC-001 RCH-302

ChE 102
LEC-001 RCH-302

ChE 102
LEC-001 RCH-302

Phys 115
LEC-001 RCH-302

4:30

ChE 102/ChE 100


LEC-001 RCH-301 LEC-001 RCH-301 MAKE-UP LECTURES

Math 116
LEC-001 MC-1085

Math 116
LEC-001 RCH-302

Math 116/Phys 115


LEC-001 RCH-301 LEC-001 RCH-301 MAKE-UP LECTURES

5:30 7:00

ChE 100
LAB-101 CPH-1346

8:00 9:00 10:00pm

Instructors: ChE 100 - E. Croiset (LEC)/ M. Fowler (LAB)/C. Moresoli (TUT) ChE 102 - J. Grove Math 115 - R. Kashef Math 116 - A. Wires Phys 115 - T. Jennewein

Ecopied to: 1A Instructors, EUG, EERC, R. Hull (Math), Denise Mueller (CHE)

Aug 28.13

CECS/PD/DIVERSITY
CHE 100 Chemical Engineering 4 & 8 F2013(September - December) Time Room Topic 11:30-12:20 MC 2065 COOP1 11:30-12:20 MC 2065 COOP2 11:30-12:20 MC 2065 MIDTERMS Fri Nov 1 11:30-12:20 MC 2065 PD* COOP3

Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Date Fri Sep 13 Fri Sep 20 Fri Oct 4

Mon Nov 25

3:10-5:10

CPH 1346

DIVERSITY
*PD session for 8S will be in winter term

Note: Diversity session is Monday NOT Friday


CECS facilitator: Linda Davis Diversity facilitator: Matt Erickson PD facilitator: Marc Aucoin

Note to instructors: please be sure that AV equipment is available to the facilitator on the date of the session. Thank you. CFE grades sent to instructors mid December

Course support on the internet All online materials for CHE 100 can be found at Waterloo-LEARN: https://learn.uwaterloo.ca/d2l/home Lecture Outline The course covers material from Chapters 1-4 Felder and Rousseau. About 4 weeks of lectures will be spent on Introduction and Engineering Problem Analysis, 7-8 weeks on Material Balances. Tutorials Each student in the course has a one- hour tutorial each week, at a time and place indicated on his/her schedule. Please ensure that you come to the correct tutorial. Each tutorial involves a 30-40 minute quiz on the previous weeks lecture material. These will be graded and returned the following week. Quizzes are compulsory, and at least 9 must be completed (otherwise, will receive a mark of incomplete). The remaining tutorial time will be devoted to a discussion and illustration of lecture material. Engineering Communication Laboratory: DWE 1515 (more info to be given by Professor Fowler) Lecture Assignments Assignments will be posted on LEARN every Thursday and are usually due the following Thursday at 4:30pm. Assignments have to be handed in the drop box in E6 (5th floor, South-East corner). Lecture assignments are compulsory, and a minimum of 8 assignments must be submitted. The average grade for the assignment will be based on the 8th best assignment marks. If less than 8 assignments are submitted, the difference between 8 and the # of assignments submitted will be subtracted to the final mark. E.g., hand in 6 assignments, then 8-6 = 2 pts to be subtracted from the final mark! Each question on an assignment will be graded as follows: 2 - the solution is correct or very nearly correct 1 - the solution is partially correct 0 - the solution is incorrect or nearly incorrect You should plan to spend about five hours per week outside classes on this course. Examinations There will be a 1h45min mid-term exam on Saturday October 19 (2:45-4:30 pm). There will be a 2.5-hour final examination (covering the entire course) scheduled during the final examination period. Course Grading The normal course grade will be computed as follows: Final Examination Midterm Communication Laboratory Assignments: Assignments Quizzes (tutorials) Co-op/PDENG

50% 20% 18% 5% 5% 2%

Note that if the average of the Midterm and Final exams (with weights of 35% and 65%, respectively) is less than 50, then this average will become your course grade, resulting in a failed course. 3

E-mail correspondence: According to University policy all official correspondence with students must be done through uwaterloo.ca e-mail [see http://www.adm.uwaterloo.ca/infocist/emailuse.html]. E-mail received from other e-mail addresses (like gmail, hotmail, yahoo, etc.) will be ignored. Academic Integrity: In order to maintain a culture of academic integrity, members of the University of Waterloo community are expected to promote honesty, trust, fairness, respect and responsibility. [Check www.uwaterloo.ca/academicintegrity/ for more information.] Grievance: A student who believes that a decision affecting some aspect of his/her university life has been unfair or unreasonable may have grounds for initiating a grievance. Read Policy 70, Student Petitions and Grievances, Section 4, www.adm.uwaterloo.ca/infosec/Policies/policy70.htm. When in doubt please be certain to contact the departments administrative assistant who will provide further assistance. Discipline: A student is expected to know what constitutes academic integrity [check www.uwaterloo.ca/academicintegrity/] to avoid committing an academic offence, and to take responsibility for his/her actions. A student who is unsure whether an action constitutes an offence, or who needs help in learning how to avoid offences (e.g., plagiarism, cheating) or about rules for group work/collaboration should seek guidance from the course instructor, academic advisor, or the undergraduate Associate Dean. For information on categories of offences and types of penalties, students should refer to Policy 71, Student Discipline, www.adm.uwaterloo.ca/infosec/Policies/policy71.htm. For typical penalties check Guidelines for the Assessment of Penalties, www.adm.uwaterloo.ca/infosec/guidelines/penaltyguidelines.htm. Appeals: A decision made or penalty imposed under Policy 70 (Student Petitions and Grievances) (other than a petition) or Policy 71 (Student Discipline) may be appealed if there is a ground. A student who believes he/she has a ground for an appeal should refer to Policy 72 (Student Appeals) www.adm.uwaterloo.ca/infosec/Policies/policy72.htm. Note for Students with Disabilities: The Access Ability Services [https://uwaterloo.ca/disabilityservices/], located in Needles Hall, Room 1132, collaborates with all academic departments to arrange appropriate accommodations for students with disabilities without compromising the academic integrity of the curriculum. If you require academic accommodations to lessen the impact of your disability, please register with the OPD at the beginning of each academic term. Counselling Services: Here to help, do not hesitate to contact. There are both Engineering and University counselling services.

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