Filtration and Drying Course
On line Training Course
Date: 14 June - 16 June 2022
Location: Online Platform
Tutors: Mr Robert Peeling
Filtration and drying are the essential but unsung heroes of whole process design: this 3 x 3-hour session course will guide you through the underlying principles you need to consider to successfully implement them during product commercialisation. Dates and timings are below:
Tuesday, June 14 | 2.00pm – 5.00pm BST
Wednesday, June 15 | 2.00pm – 5.00pm BST
Thursday, June 16 | 2.00pm – 5.00pm BST
New products can only be brought to market successfully with a viable whole process behind them. Your (bio-)synthesis and work-up might well be exciting and innovative but unless the isolated product can be handled and suitably packaged then commercial success is unlikely.
Ran in conjunction with
COURSE OBJECTIVES
Chemists, biologists, and engineers regularly interact and collaborate in process development projects. To do so within an effective team each must understand the needs and objectives of the other disciplines. This course gives scientists and engineers from other disciplines an introduction into the chemical engineering involved in the isolation and drying of products following chemical or biochemical synthesis and work-up. The aim is to equip participants with sufficient understanding of the underlying principles of filtration and drying to successfully engage in multi-disciplinary discussions within their project teams and identify the data requirements to enable successful process scale-up.

Remind Me

Course outline
Session One
Principles of Filtration
- Basic fluid properties
- Understanding the behaviour of fluids: hydrostatics and flow regimes
- Particle settling
- Flow through packed beds
- Principles applied to Filtration
- Factors affecting filtration
- Filtration rate and cake resistance
- Compressible cake
- Filtration at constant pressure
- Filtration at constant rate
- Tiller equation
- Residual moisture
Session Two
Filtration Technology
- Filtration equipment
- Effect of particle size and shape
- Improving filtration rates
- Cake washing
- Cake cracking and heels
- Scale-up
Centrifugation
- General principles
- Equipment types, pros and cons
- Basic centrifugation theory and empirical approaches to scaling
- Differences from filters
- Technology selection: when to centrifuge and when to filter
Session Three
Drying
- Material and Energy Balances
- Heat Transfer
- Drying Rate
- Drying (Air-Water)
- Drying (Solvents)
- Drying equipment and selection
- Process safety during drying
Course Objectives
COURSE OBJECTIVES
Chemists, biologists, and engineers regularly interact and collaborate in process development projects. To do so within an effective team each must understand the needs and objectives of the other disciplines. This course gives scientists and engineers from other disciplines an introduction into the chemical engineering involved in the isolation and drying of products following chemical or biochemical synthesis and work-up. The aim is to equip participants with sufficient understanding of the underlying principles of filtration and drying to successfully engage in multi-disciplinary discussions within their project teams and identify the data requirements to enable successful process scale-up.
Who should attend
Scientists and process technologists involved in chemical or biochemical process scale-up bringing new products from synthesis to commercialisation.
What's Included
The course fee includes:
- Link to watch all three live sessions
- Electronic version of the course manual*
- Course certificate
For this on line course, there will be no recordings available and *the e reader manual is NOT printable or downloadable (due to copyright). If you prefer a hard copy of the manual you will have the opportunity of purchasing a professionally printed hard copy during the booking process.