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WORKING GUIDE TO PROCESS EQUIPMENT THIRD 3RD ED

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Diagnose and Troubleshoot Problems in Chemical Process Equipment with This Updated Classic!

Chemical engineers and plant operators can rely on the Third Edition of A Working Guide to Process Equipment for the latest diagnostic tips, practical examples, and detailed illustrations for pinpointing trouble and correcting problems in chemical process equipment. This updated classic contains new chapters on Control Valves, Cooling Towers, Waste Heat Boilers, Catalytic Effects, Fundamental Concepts of Process Equipment, and Process Safety.

Filled with worked-out calculations, the book examines everything from trays, reboilers, instruments, air coolers, and steam turbines…to fired heaters, refrigeration systems, centrifugal pumps, separators, and compressors. The authors simplify complex issues and explain the technical issues needed to solve all kinds of equipment problems. Comprehensive and clear, the Third Edition of A Working Guide to Process Equipment

Guidance on diagnosing and troubleshooting process equipment problems Explanations of how theory applies to real-world equipment operations Many useful tips, examples, illustrations, and worked-out calculations New to this Control Valves, Cooling Towers, Waste Heat Boilers, Catalytic Effects, and Process Safety Inside this Renowned Guide to Solving Process Equipment Problems

Trays Tower Pressure Distillation Towers Reboilers Instruments Packed Towers Steam and Condensate Systems Bubble Point and Dew Point Steam Strippers Draw-Off Nozzle Hydraulics Pumparounds and Tower Heat Flows Condensers and Tower Pressure Control Air Coolers Deaerators and Steam Systems Vacuum Systems Steam Turbines Surface Condensers Shell-and-Tube Heat Exchangers Fire Heaters Refrigeration Systems Centrifugal Pumps Separators Compressors Safety Corrosion Fluid Flow Computer Modeling and Control Field Troubleshooting Process Problems

Paperback

First published December 6, 2002

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About the author

Norman P. Lieberman

18 books7 followers

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Greg Ivey.
14 reviews
April 3, 2013
I originally bought this book as a reference manual, which I think is its intended purpose. For that, I've only found it to be moderately useful; there are some formulas, some diagrams, and a lot of introductory information that a person who's new to chemical engineering, operating, inspecting, or repairing of refinery process equipment might be able to make use of. For most people that already do this for a living, this book doesn't really present a lot of professional value as either a reference book, or an educational tool. The information IS solid, it's just that it's mostly stuff that you probably already know.

NOW, all that stuff aside, you should know that this book isn't really about troubleshooting problems in refineries. It's a stunning autobiography of a nerdy kid from Brooklyn who doesn't study hard, doesn't work hard, somehow becomes an engineer, and then leaves a trail of destruction and chaos in his wake. I was looking up something about gas-fired heaters, and stumbled across a light-hearted story wherein he admits to making a simple mistake. I think the purpose of including this anecdote was so that you could learn from a real-life lesson based on his experience, but it ends very abruptly with a sentence about how his mistake ended with 20 people rolling around on the ground because they were literally on fire. After staring in disbelief at what I had just read, I abandoned all pretext of doing any actual work that day and read the book all the way through.

With my new outlook on what this book was, my full read-through did not disappoint. Among the better stories in this book are a brief chapter about almost causing a young engineer to kill himself when the author mixed up the words "thermocouple" and "thermowell", a diatribe about his high-school girlfriend and how he wishes that she could see how much money he's made since she called him a "nerd", and a long introductory chapter about killing all his son's fish because he doesn't understand how the oxygen pump works.

So in the end, this book turned out to be a surprisingly poignant meditation on mortality, the ethics of accidentally killing people (no big deal), and the way that if you kind-of try then you can eventually have a wildly successful career and a book deal. As long as you've set a bunch of people on fire.

I did not throw this book.
Profile Image for Lucas.
82 reviews3 followers
December 22, 2022
When I was at university, a lecturer assigned two books for our Separations course - this book and another text book. I asked him which one I should buy if I could only choose one. He said whatever I do I should buy this book and I would still want to read it years later. He was right.

I still go back to this book because of its easy to understand technical writing, but also because it is often written as an autobiography of Norm Lieberman. There are so many funny stories and anecdotes, while still capturing the technical aspects of being a process engineer.

Some of my favourite quotes below:
“Trays, like people, rarely perform as expected.”
Profile Image for Ahmed Khattab.
13 reviews6 followers
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April 23, 2020
An interesting book.

At the first chapter Norman explains some process engineering concepts by comparing them to everyday life.

Then in the next chapters he explains some equipment from his real-life experiences and tells stories from his life in an exciting way! He got the talent of simplifying complex concepts while keeping you thrilled. He will even make you laugh at some points.

I partially read it. It's the first book to read for Norman and sure I am going to refer to other unread chapters when needed and read other books of him InShaaAllah.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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