2023 AIChE Annual Meeting
(528d) The Two-Semester Senior Capstone Design Course Sequence at UMass Lowell – Preparing Students for Engineering Careers in Industry
The senior capstone design course is a bedrock core course required by ABET in all engineering disciplines at all universities in the United States and probably throughout most of the world. Ideally, the implementation of a comprehensive capstone design project provides the soon-to-be chemical engineering graduate a chance to leverage the skills and knowledge learned over their undergraduate career in a group project that prepares them for the exciting challenges they will face as a practicing chemical engineer, be it in further academic graduate studies, or more likely, in a new position within industry.
Here at UMass Lowell, we have developed a comprehensive two-semester course sequence that incorporates many of the skills and challenges our graduates will face in their careers. Components of our program include:
- Six week intensive Engineering Economics segment in the Fall Course where students are introduced to the economics of business and project evaluations, including the Time Value of Money, Cash-Flow Analysis, Rates of Return Metrics (PW, FW, MARR, IRR, etc.) Depreciation, and Pro-Formas.
- Three group projects (3-4 students per group) in the Fall Semester:
- Fundamentals Project â a four-week deep dive project into a particular piece of equipment (compressors, membranes, filters, relief valves, etc.) or process (LL Extraction, Crystallization, Pollution Abatement), including design fundamentals, selection criteria and costing.
- Feasibility Project â a four-week study on the feasibility (technical, regulatory and market) for a potential new processing plant to manufacture a chemical within the United States.
- Design Project â a three-week âsimpleâ design project to introduce the design process.
- A full comprehensive capstone design project during the Spring semester done by âcompaniesâ of 6-7 students for a new greenfield plant to be designed and built within the continental United States. Each student is assigned two specific roles: one technical (e.g., Process Design Equipment â Separations, Material Transport Engineer â Liquids, Process Control, etc.) and one non-technical (e.g., Chief Financial Officer, Marketing, Human Resources Officer, Project Manager). The project deliverables include:
- A comprehensive FEED package (PFDs, P&IDs, Piping, Facility Layouts, Equipment Specifications, etc.)
- A 20-year economic analysis of the project of the economic feasibility of the project, including proposed financing for construction and start-up of the facility and all capital and operating costs (raw materials, personnel salaries and benefits, utilities)
- A âgo-to marketâ strategy and analysis on how the company will succeed as a new venture.
- Oral presentation (e.g., âpitchâ) of their project to outside interests and potential investors.
A more detailed description of the many elements and evolution of this capstone design sequence will be covered, including plans for how it may evolve in the future.