Employment opportunities for chemical engineers are moving away from petroleum and petrochemicals toward new
applications such as materials processing, pharmaceuticals, and foods. Chemical reactors remain at the center of
any chemical process; they are essential to improving existing processes and to designing new ones. Today and in
the future chemical engineers must be able to use their knowledge of reactors in combination with other skills
in order to think creatively and strategically about new processes and growing applications. The Engineering of
Chemical Reactions addresses these issues by focusing on the analysis of chemical reactors while simultaneously
providing a description of industrial chemical processes and the strategies by which they operate. Ideal for upper-level
undergraduate courses in chemical reactor engineering and kinetics, this text provides a concise, up-to-date alternative
to similar texts. In addition to the analysis of simple chemical reactors, it considers more complex situations
such as multistage reactors and reactor-separation systems. Energy management and the role of mass transfer in
chemical reactors are also integrated into the text.