Engineering 290 - ENGINEERING THERMODYNAMICS
Fall
2014
02
4.00
Michael Kinsinger
TTh 10:30-11:50
Smith College
20690-F14
FORD 015
mkinsinger@smith.edu
Modern civilization relies profoundly on efficient production, management, and consumption of energy. Thermodynamics is the science of energy transformations involving work, heat, and the properties of matter. Engineers rely on thermodynamics to assess the feasibility of their designs in a wide variety of fields including chemical processing, pollution control and abatement, power generation, materials science, engine design, construction, refrigeration and microchip processing. Course topics include first and second laws of thermodynamics, power cycles; combustion and refrigeration; phase equilibria; ideal and nonideal mixtures, conductive, convective and radiative heat transfer. Prerequisite EGR 110 and corequisite MTH 212. Enrollment limited to 20 students.