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Corrigenda for Transport Phenomena 2nd Edition

This document provides corrections to errors found in the second edition, first printing of the textbook "Transport Phenomena". It lists over 60 pages and locations within the textbook where errors were discovered, such as incorrect values, variables, equations, figures, or problem answers. The errors are clearly described and the correct information provided to fix the issues.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
151 views15 pages

Corrigenda for Transport Phenomena 2nd Edition

This document provides corrections to errors found in the second edition, first printing of the textbook "Transport Phenomena". It lists over 60 pages and locations within the textbook where errors were discovered, such as incorrect values, variables, equations, figures, or problem answers. The errors are clearly described and the correct information provided to fix the issues.

Uploaded by

lotanna
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

(Version: 16 October 2001)

Corrigenda for Transport Phenomena


(2d Edition, 1st Printing)
(In designating line locations, "a" means "from above" and "b" means
"from below")

Page Location Reads Should Read

14 Table 1.1-2 The kinematic viscosities for air and


water are too large by a factor of 100

22 Fig. 1.3-1 On the horizontal axis, the T r values


after 1.0 should be 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8

23 Fn 1, line 2a kinetic energy kinetic theory

31 Eq 1.5-9 exp 0.408 exp (0.408


7
37 Prob 1A.1, Ans 1300 10 lb m ft s 1. 4 10 4 lb m ft s

38 Prob 1A.3 The predicted viscosities of oxygen,


nitrogen, and methane in centipoises
are 0.0202, 0.0172, & 0.0107 respectively

38 Prob 1A.4, Ans 0.013515 cp 0.01317 cp

38 Prob 1A.5, Ans 0.0131 cp 0.0130 cp.

44 3 lines above z z vz z
Eq. 2.2-10

49 After Eq. 2.3-7 r rz r rz

2 4 2 4
  

R R R R
   

+ + cos
       

59 Eq 2.6-5
  

     

r r r r

 
4 4
3 v R 3 v R
 

sin sin
   

59 Eq 2.6-6    

2 r r 2 R r

62 Prob 2A.1 wall length wall width

62 Prob 2A.3, Ans 0.108 ft 3 s 0.110 ft 3 s

64 Fig 2B.6 2 rL 2 rrL

65 Prob 2B.7 rod of diameter rod of radius

65 Prob 2B.7 F Fz
Ans. (c),(d) 2 2

77 Eq 3.1-2, line 2 y + x y + y

104 Prob 3A.3 32.19 ft/s 32.19 ft/s2

104 Prob 3A.3 712 713 (if the pressure


dependence of the
density is included)

105 Prob 3A.6 (Ans) 60 60C

115 4 lines before Fig. 4.4-1 Fig. 4.1-4


Eq 4.1-1

123 Table 4.2-1 with v z = 0 with no with v z = 0 and no


2nd column

141 Prob 4A.1 (title) steady flow steady state

141 Prob 4A.1 (Ans) 22 s 0.22 s

142 Prob 4A.6 (title) equations formulas


146 Prob 4C.1 (b-e) 4.4-14 and 15 4C.1-1 and 4C.1-2

172 Prob 5A.1 (Ans) 42 and 1.8 26 and 1.1

173 Last line of text ...for the fluid. ...for the fluid, and J
is the total momentum
flow defined analog-
ously to Eq. 5.6-2.

174 Line 1a Eq. 5.4-2 Eq. 5.4-3

174 Prob 5C.2(j) line z = constant plane z = constant

J z
174 Eq. 5C.1-10 w = 23 3 w = 2 3 3 JWz
W

180 1 line after flow in circular flow in smooth


Eq. 6.2-3 tubes circular tubes

186 Table in text The only contribution The only contribution


to f, is the friction to f is the friction drag
drag (if the tubes are
smooth)

189 Line 1a near flow around flow near

193 Prob 6A.1 1.97 m/s 1.97 m3/s

193 Prob 6A.1 82 diameters 32 diameters

193 Prob 6A.1 4630 and 21.5 4700 and 33

193 Prob 6A.3 4070 gal/hr 68 U. S. gal/hr

193 Prob 6A.4 5.00 mm 0.5 cm


2
f = 396 f = 3. 96 10
= 370 cp = 3.7 10 2 cp
194 Eq 6A.7-3 ( z z

194 Prob 6A.7 (a) Verify...2.4. Verify that, for de-


veloped laminar flow,
Eqs. 6A.7-1 and 3 with
the tabulated K values
are consistent with
Eq. 2.4-16.

194 Table ( = 0. 4 ) K =0.6759 K = 0.6757


4
194 Prob 6A.8 17,000 1.7 10 (since the re-
sult uses a 400-fold
extrapolation of Fig.
6.3-1)

194 Prob 6A.9 480 g/s 679 g/s

195 Prob 6B.6 47% 49%

224 Prob 7A.1 0.056 psi 1.64 psi


386 N m 2 1.13 10 4 N m 2

224 Prob 7A.2 2.3 hp 2.4 hp


1.7 kW 1.8 kW

224 Prob 7A.3 behavior. behavior and radially


uniform velocity
distribution.

224 Prob 7A.3 6.12 10 3 J kg 6.12 10 4 J kg

226 Prob 7B.2, straight channel straight horizontal


3rd line channel

226 Prob 7B.2 the force F f s is the drag force is


5th line
226 Eq 7B.2-1 Ref: R. B. Bird, CEP Symposium Series, #58,
Vol. 61 (1965), pp. 14-15

228 Prob 7B.10 It should be stated that the datum plane for
potential energy is taken to be z = 0, and that
Eq. 7B.10-1 must be used to get the result in
Eq. 7B.10-2.

242 3 lines above developing developed


Eq. 8.3-5

247 Eq 8.4-15 k k k k

259 Eq 8B.5-1 t

259 Prob 8B.5(a) Eq. 8.3-5 Eq. 8B.5-1

260 Prob 8B.7 (G) and (H) (F) and (G)

261 Eq 8C.2-1 2 (n + 1) (n + 1)
mR n+ 3 2 mR
n+ 3

276 Fn 3 "Eukcer" "Eucken"

287 Prob 9A.4, Ans. 2850 10 7 cal cm s K


0.1204 W m K

288 Prob 9A.7 table k e 10 6 (1 k e )


6
4.6 4.6 10
6
6.9 6.9 10
6
1.69 1.69 10
6
2.62 2.62 10
4
288 Prob 9A.8 5.08 10 cal cm s K
4
Ans. (a) 5.06 10 cal cm s K
288 Prob 9A.9 Change the last value from 6.74 to


p
8.74

288 Prob 9A.11 Volume fraction Volume fraction i


Table Heading

288 Eq 9A.11-1 i i (k i k 0 ) i (k i k0 ) i

3 3
288 Eq 9A.11-2



i =1 j= 1

288 Eq 9A.11-2 gi gj

289 Prob 9A.12(c) using K = 124 K using K from


Table E.1

289 Prob 9A.12 Ans 1.88 1.86


3.425 3.409
01 12 23
304 Fig 10.6-1 k ,k ,k k 01 , k 12 , k 23

320 Prob 10A.2 2080 Btu/hr 2074 Btu/hr

320 Prob 10A.3 0.055 cal s cm C 0.0055 cal s cm C

320 Prob 10A. 4 13.7 amp 13.4 amp

321 Prob 10A.6 14.4 Btu hr ft 2 14.3 Btu hr ft 2


4.24 ft 2 hr F Btu 4.2 ft 2 hr F Btu

321 Prob 10A.8 surrounding air film surrounding air

322 Ans to 10B.2 v0 v 2b

323 Eq 10B.5-1 T0 (Tb T0 )


2
330 Line 1a L L

330 Line 10b 1 = 1 = 1 1 = 1 1

330 Eq 10C.1-12 (( 1 2) (1 2)

330 Line 8b 9.4 10.4

331 Line 8a heat balance energy

340 Table 11.4-1 Bottom rule should be extended all the


way to the left margin

344 Eq 11.4-18 T 0 T in 2 places T 0 T in 2 places

351 Line 13a Kappa is in the wrong font; should be


like the kappa in Eq. 1.2-7

359 9 lines after 2 g (T 1 T 0 )l03 k 2 g (T 1 T0 )h 3 k


 

p p
Eq 11.5-25

361 Prob 11A.1 225 C 217 C (from both Eqs.


11.4-13 and 10.4-9)

368 Prob 11B.14(e) multiply both sides multiply both sides


by sin(mr R) by (r R)sin(m r R)

392 2 lines above of x and z. of x and z, evaluated


Eq 12.4-26 at y = 0, with h y = 1.

393 Eq 12.4-34 The right parenthesis should be larger so as to


match the left parenthesis

399 Fig 12B.6 The coordinate should be measured from


the stagnation locus rather than from the
separation locus
f (0) = (23 ) , f (2 ) = 1. 1981, f ( ) =
1 3
399 Prob 12B.6
Ans (c)

420 Fn 5 Thomas Hamilton Thomas Hamilton


Chilton Chilton
5
436 Fig. 14.3-2 10 (on abscissa) 10

440 2 lines above corelation correlation


Eq 14.4-8

440 Fiug. 14.4-2 The abscissa should be labeled


"Reynolds number"

445 1 line before Eqs. 14.6-1 to 3 Eqs. 14.6-4 to 6


Eq 14.6-14

445 Eq 14.6-14 4.68 3.4


46.51 42.9
18.6 17.1

445 Eq 14.6-15 18.6 17.l


0.57 0.52

445 Eq 14.6-16 0.57 0.52


18 16

448 Fig 14.7-2, 2 3 5 3


abscissa

450 Prob 14A.4 Ans 6. 25 7. 8

450 Prob 14A.6 Ans (a) 3.35 cal/s (a) 12.9 W = 3.1 cal/s
--- (b) 16.8 W = 4.0 cal/s

450 Prob 14A.7 Ans 0.332 cal/s 0.80 W = 0.20 cal/s


450 Prob 14A.8 Ans 32 1930

451 Prob 14B.1(a) cooling a fluid heating a fluid

451 Eq 14B.5-1 dT dT b

V
457 2 lines after



V
Eq 15.2-4

460 Eq 15.3-6 w1 = w1a + w1b w1 = w1a + w1b = w2

(1 ) 2 (1 ) 2


1
   

 

474 Eq 15.5-46 1 1 1
 

0 0
     

 

474 Eq 15.5-46 (p 0 0 ) RT0 M

474 Prob 15A.1 Title Rates...exchanger Heat transfer in


double-pipe heat
exchangers

475 Prob 15A.3 (a) 7.0 6.97

475 Prob 15A.3 (a) Stream 1 Stream 1a


Stream 2 Stream 1b

475 Prob 15A.3 (a) 88F 86.5F

475 Prob 15A.3 (b) flow...possible fluid density were


treated as constant

476 Prob 15A.6 Ans 355 F 354 F

476 Prob 15A.7(a) 0.108 lb m hr ft 1.09 lb m hr ft

476 Prob 15A.7(b) combined is 0.001 is 0.001


476 Prob 15A.7 Ans 132 F 136 F

479 Eq 15B.5-1 S2 S0

479 Prob 15B.5 (d) (c)

480 Prob 15B.6 The table should be modified as follows:


0.286
p (atm) r r v T S

10 1.0 1.000 0000 560


9 0.9 0.970 449 543 0.977
8 0.8 0.938 645 525 0.739
7 0.7 0.903 807 506 0.650
6 0.6 0.864 956 484 0.613
5.28* 0.528 0.833 1058 466 0.606
5 0.5 0.820 1099 459 0.607
4 0.4 0.769 1245 431 0.628
3 0.3 0.709 1398 397 0.688
2 0.2 0.631 1574 353 0.816
1 0.1 0.518 1798 290 1.171
0 0.0 0.000 2591 0

*Pressure at the minimum cross-section

486 Footnote 3 Baton Rouge Boca Raton

501 Line 1a in referred is referred

508 Prob 6A.6 as gray. as a gray sphere.

515 1 line after as been has been


Eq. 17.1-2
517 Table 17.1-1 xA = 1 xA 1
xB = 1 xB 1

540 Prob 17A.8 136 atm at 351K 136 atm and 351 K

540 First line after when...inserted when the molecular


Eqs 17A9-6, 7 parameters of each
species are predicted
according to
Eqs. 1.4-11a,c

561 3 lines after Insert the following sentence:


Eq. 18.5-19 This equation has been approximately
confirmed6 for gas bubbles 0.3 to 0.5 cm in
diameter rising through carefully purified
water.

561 2 lines above flow6 flow7


Eq. 18.5-20

561 2 lines after Delete the sentence


Eq. 18.5-20 Equation 18.5-20....water.

561 Footnotes Interchange footnotes "6" and "7"

561 Fn 7 S18 S18-S24

569 Prob 18A.2 title Sublimitation Sublimation

569 Prob 18A.2 Ans 0.0887 0.0888


3 4
2. 43 10 1.06 10

570 Prob 18A.6(b) the results of 17.3 Eq. 17.2-1

570 Prob 18A.7(b) 100 cm/hr 117 cm/hr

570 Prob 18A.7 1.171 1.17


Ans 1.140 1.33
Delete the comment: (This is regarded as
unusually good agreement)

570 Prob 18A.6 table mm Hg mm

570 Prob 18A.6(b) the results of 17.3 Eq. 17.2-1

570 Fn 4 518 S18-S24

571 Line 7a 18.2-1 18.2-2

571 Ans 18B.2 5% 0.78%

571 Prob 18B.4 b

574 Eq 18B.9-1 C c

574 Eq 18B.10-2 In the expression for D change the plus sign


to a minus sign

578 Prob 18B.15 (1 L) in Ans.(c) (z L)

578 Eq 18B.17-1 a1 1a

578 Eq 18B.17-2 a1 1a

4
578 Eq 18B.17-2 3 4

579 Line 1a pseudo-steady quasi-steady

580 Eq 18C.1-3 References should be cited for this equation:


H. A. Wilson, Proc. Camb.Phil. Soc., 12, 406-
423 (1904); T. K. Sherwood and R. L. Pigford,
Absorption and Extraction, 1st edition, p. 42;
H. S. Carslaw and J. C. Jaeger, Heat
Conduction in Solids, 2nd edition, p. 267, Eq 2
589 Eq G Cv CV

593 Fig 19.4-1 Replace the rightmost "ripply" line by a


dashed line

597 Fn 6 AIChE Journal AIChE Journal

601 Line 11b be by

606 Prob 19A.1 z (3 times) y (3 times)

607 Prob 19B.6 1 1

608 Eq 19B.6-2 Equation should read:

1 + ( 1 d )R
 

2
2 1cA0 M A


AB
2 = exp (t t0 )
 

1 + ( 1 d AB )R 0 sph


 

1 1
617 Eq 20.1-24 +
2 2

650 Eq 20B.3-1 Left side should be multiplied by a factor 1/a

650 Eq 20B.3-1 v zA v Az
v zB v Bz

653 Eq 20C.3-2 erf erfc

654 Prob 20D.2 All superscripts lower case italic "o" should be
655 lower case Roman "o"

668 Prob 21A.1 Add to problem statement "The molar flow


rate of carbon dioxide is 1/1000 that of air"

668 Prob 21A.1(a) sc A ln scA

668 Prob 21B.1 Eq. 13.3-7 Eq. 13.4-20


670 Prob 21B.5 Insert "for" between the equation and
the qualifying statement about y

683 Ex 22.3-2, line 2 approximate approximate,

707 Eq 22.8-11 x A (in denominator) x A0

707 Eq 22.8-13 1/2 1/ 2

708 Eqs 22.8-20 to 22 remove two ";"

722 Prob 22A.2 0.0176 0.0158 (using n = 0.44


Answer in Eq. 22.3-38)

722 Prob 22A.2 x A = 0. 0176 x w = 0. 0158

723 Prob 22B.6 (title) controling controlling


2 2
723 Fig 22B.7 +0.0000798T 0.0000798T

759 Prob 23A.1 23.5-3 23.5-4

759 Prob 23B.2 23.5-3 23.5-4

760 Prob 23B.4 t0 t01


Last line

760 Prob 23B.5 xW = 0. 2 xW = 0. 22


yP = 0.75 yP = 0.713
P = 36.3 lbs P = 36.5 lbs
p = 862 Btu/lbm p = 877 Btu/lbm
 

= 170 Btu/lbm = 157 Btu/lbm


 

W W

761 Prob 23B.7 1% 10%

762 Prob 23C.4 Fig. 22C.4 Fig. 23C.4


22C.4-1 23C.4-1

769 Table titles permutation cyclic permutation

800 Eq 24C.1-1 = +

810 Eq A.1-14 Note Not

810 Line 6b W (boldface Roman) W (lightface italic)

d d
SdV sdV


825 Eq A.5-6
dt V dt V

826 Eqs. A.6-4, 5, 6 Equation numbers should be aligned with the


right margin

828 2nd equation 4


3d
4
3 d
in Exercise 1

869 Table F.3-3 chemical some some chemical


Footnote

878 Entry for Darcy 146 148

d A d A
Back cover (outside)
dy dy

dv x dv x
dy dy

dT dT
dy dy

Back over (outside) In each of the three figures, interchange


the labeling of the abscissa and the ordinate.

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