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Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering, Vol.96, No.11, 2312-2316, 2018
Experimental methods in chemical engineering: Preface
Chemical engineering research encompasses a plethora of subjects ranging from nanoscale to climate change, from medicine to hazardous waste management, and from electronics and photonics to process intensification, manufacturing, and modelling. The 2017 AIChE meeting included 8000 oral presentations and posters with all these diverse topics. Here we identify experimental methods and instrumentation that straddle these subjects based on Can. J. Chem. Eng. articles published from 2016-2017. Temperature, pH, pressure, and flow rate are the physical properties most researchers report. We identified over 50 experimental techniques, reactor types, and modelling methodologies and show that articles with an experimental focus are more strongly linked than those that concentrate on hydrodynamic modelling and numerical simulation. Spectroscopy dominates instrumental techniques to characterize solids and catalyst properties and we classify 36 instruments according to what property they measure and the scale, nature of the phase, composition, and morphology. A bibliometric analysis grouped the physicochemical properties into three major research clusters centered around solid properties, liquid phase properties, and gas phase and aqueous phase properties. Articles in this special series describe the basic principles of one experimental method or instrument that appears frequently in the journal. Together with a short background, the articles highlight fields of application, assess the sources of error, detection thresholds, and uncertainty. This series provides chemical engineers with a concise, accessible reference guide to help identify and choose appropriate experimental techniques and instruments.