Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
CHE 422L
Chemical Engineering Laboratory 1
<REPORT TITLE>
(Subtitle)
<Name of Faculty>
CHE 422L Instructor
by
<Name of Student>
2
<Date>
1. Introduction
<Make an exposition here of the relevant concepts, theories, and principles used to describe the
operation or process that is investigated in the experiment. Emphasize on those that directly serve
as frame of reference for the objectives of the experiment. These are the same concepts, theories
and principles that you will use in the discussion and interpretation of experimental results.>
<If an equation describing important relationships is presented here, it should be indented by two
tab spaces from the left. It should be numbered with the number in parenthesis in the same line as
the equation and flushed to the right. Use MS Equation Editor. See example below.>
L 1 2
p 4 f . v (1)
D 2
<The introduction must not exceed 2 pages. References should be properly cited using APA
format. Use the “References” feature of MS-Word.>
3. Methodology
3.1. Methodological Framework
<Present in narrative, preferably with the aid of diagrams, the basic framework which guided
the experimental activities you have done to achieve the objectives. This answers the more
general “how” question associated with each objective. A step-by-step description of the
procedure should not be part of this.>
3.2. Materials
<Present in paragraph form the key materials (substances) used in the experiment.>
3.3. Equipment
3
<Present the key equipment, set-up used in the experiment. Describe its specific features
which allow for actual adjustment of operational settings, direct observation, or measurement
of parameters associated with an operation or a process.>
3.4. Procedures
<Describe here the specific procedures followed in gathering data used for answering the
questions related to the objectives. Here you provide information about the experimental runs,
measurement methods used, working equations for the determination of quantities, and any
details that will enable the reader to replicate the experiment independently. This part answers
the more specific “how” of your laboratory work.>
5. Conclusions
<Here you declare the conclusions that can be made about the experiment objectives, given the
experimental data and results that you have discussed in the preceding section. No more
explanations and elaborations are necessary here. Make sure that your conclusions are well backed
up by your experimental data.>
References
<It is expected that you use the “References” feature of MS-Word, so you can easily just insert
the list of cited references here.>
<After this section, you start with a new page regardless of how much space is still available on
the page. The new page is but an annex title page to be directly followed by the DPAR (original
and revised drafts).>
4
ANNEX