Introduction to Basic Concepts in Engineering: Student's Solution Manual - Paperback
Introduction to Basic Concepts in Engineering: Student's Solution Manual - Paperback
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by Andrew S. Heintz (Author)
This manual contains the complete worked-out solutions for all practice problems and comprehensive learning problems in the text Introduction to Basic Concepts in Engineering: for adept high school students. This manual is written as a companion to the first edition text.
Key Features- Solutions are shown and explained in a step-by-step process, ending with the final solution
- Solutions to all chapter-end practice problems:
- Chapter 4 - Units and Conversions (32 problems)
- Chapter 5 - Electrical Circuits (40 problems)
- Chapter 6 - Thermodynamics (37 problems)
- Chapter 7 - Fluid Statics and Fluid Dynamics (46 problems)
- Chapter 8 - Material and Energy Balances (27 problems)
- Chapter 9 - Engineering Statistics (17 problems)
- Chapter 10 - Computer Engineering (18 problems)
- Chapter 11 - Reliability Engineering (23 problems)
- Chapter 12 - Materials Science and Engineering (28 problems)
- Chapter 13 - Industrial Manufacturing and Operations (23 problems)
- Problem solving strategy and worked solutions for all comprehensive learning problems
Author Biography
Andrew S. Heintz is an Engineering Group Leader in the Logic Technology Development group at Intel Corporation. He received his BS in Chemical Engineering (2004) and his Ph.D. in Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering (2008) from Tulane University. He joined Intel in 2008 as a Process Technology Development Engineer specializing in wet cleans processes for semiconductor manufacturing. In 2012 he assumed leadership of a wet cleans process module. Andrew is passionate about the education of the next generation of US-educated engineers. In the spring of 2016 he began teaching an Introduction to Engineering course as a volunteer instructor at Sunset High School in Beaverton, Oregon. He has developed both that course and this text in support of the parallel goals of promoting interest in engineering to prospective students, and preparing students to succeed in a university undergraduate engineering program by building a foundation of basic knowledge and skills. His hope is not only to increase student interest in studying engineering, but to keep students enrolled in engineering programs once in college.