Biochemical Process Design (Carbon Dioxide Capture in Coal Fired Power Plants)
Technical Report on Biochemical Process Design
Topic
- Capture and Use of Greenhouse Gases
- Carbon Dioxide Capture in Coal Fired Power Plants
- Bio/Electro/Catalytic Conversion of CO2 to Chemicals or Fuels
Report Format
- Title Page
- Executive Summary (~ 200-500 words)
- Introduction (3 pages)
- Brief Background
- Why is the subject important?
- Relate topic to
- current energy prices and energy demand in the world today or
- sustainability or
- the environment (e.g., greenhouse gas formation) or
- human health
- Advantages/Disadvantages relative to other processes
- Theory (3 pages)
- Details on theory of operation, including pertinent equations
- How is the product produced? Describe the process!
- Flow Diagram/Sketch of Process (1/2 to 1 page) – This is critical
- Conclusions and Recommendations (2 page)
- Quantify the advantage of the product/process over others!
- g., CO2 capture reduce greenhouse gas emissions by X% but raises the cost of plant design by Y%.
- Is the product/process feasible?
- If not, why is not in use?
- What could be done to further implement the product/process into society?
- References
- Use the Chicago Manual of Style and Author/Date style: http://www.libs.uga.edu/ref/chicago.html
- Also, you must site all material from the web
Grading
- Grammar, format, style, spelling: 35%
- Introduction: 25%
- Theory: 25%
- Conclusions: 15%
Format
- 1 inch margins
- 1.5 line spacing
- 12 pt font (Times Roman, Arial)
- Number pages, except for the title page
- Use the equation editor in MS Word to develop equations
- All equations must be numbered and variables defined
- Number all figures and tables
- Provide a caption for all figures and titles
- Use a simple format for any tables
- All images and drawings captured from the web or scanned must be referenced
Potential Sources of Information
- Galileo Databases/Science and Technology
- Ei Engineering Village
- Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology
- Dept. of Energy (DOE): http://www.doe.gov/engine/content.do
- National Renewable Energy Lab: http://www.nrel.gov/
- EPA: http://www2.epa.gov/science-and-technology/land-waste-and-cleanup-science
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