|
|
|

|
|
 |
On April 24-25, 2003, a two-day program celebrated the
Centennial of
the Department’s founding. The event was divided into two parts:
1. One day was devoted to a look backward at the chemical
engineering profession and at the history of the Department, including
reminiscences by alumni from the ‘30s to the ‘70s and by faculty of the
last 25 years:
A video power-point
presentation depicting the
100-year development of the department was presented by Geoffrey
Hulse: Streaming
video
Professor L.E. (Skip) Scriven described the development of
reaction engineering in his talk, “When
Chemical
Reactors Were Admitted and Earlier Roots of Chemical Engineering.”
PDF file Streaming
video

2. A symposium was
held in which four distinguished chemical
engineers addressed the future in their areas
of research under the
general title “Unsolved Problems in Chemical
Engineering.” The
topics are:
Howard Brenner –
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
“Unsolved
Problems in
Fluid Mechanics: On the Historical Misconception
of Fluid Velocity as Mass Motion, Rather than Volume Motion”
PDF file Streaming
Video
Michael L. Shuler – Cornell University
“Unsolved
Problems in
Biomolecular Engineering”
PDF file
Streaming
Video
Arthur W. Westerberg – Carnegie Mellon University
“Unsolved
Problems in
Process/Product Systems Engineering"
PDF file Streaming Video
Matthew Tirrell – University of California at Santa Barbara
“Unsolved
Problems in
Nanotechnology: Chemical Processing by
Self-Assembly
PDF file
Streaming Video
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
| THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY |
|
|
Home
> General Information > Centennial
|