Crash Course Engineering

Drugs, Dyes, and Mass Transfer

Today we’re talking about mass transfer. It doesn’t just apply to objects and fluids as a whole, but also to the individual molecules and components that make them up. We’ll see that transfers of mass need their own driving force, discuss diffusion, and use Fick’s Law to help us model mass transfer.

Drugs, Dyes, and Mass Transfer

8m 23s

  • Metals & Ceramics: Crash Course Engineering #19: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Metals & Ceramics: Crash Course Engineering #19

    S1 E19 - 10m 3s

    Today we’ll explore more about two of the three main types of materials that we use as engineers: metals and ceramics. We’ll discuss properties of metals, alloys, ceramics, clay, cement, and glass-ceramic materials. We’ll also look at the applications of our materials with microelectromechanical systems and accelerometers.

  • Reaching breaking point: Materials, Stresses, and Toughness:: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Reaching breaking point: Materials, Stresses, and Toughness:

    S1 E18 - 11m 23s

    Today we’re going to start thinking about materials that are used in engineering. We’ll look at mechanical properties of materials, stress-strain diagrams, elasticity and toughness, and describe other material properties like hardness, creep strength, and fatigue strength.

  • Mass Separation: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Mass Separation

    S1 E17 - 11m 16s

    Engineers use three processes to separate chemicals: distillation, which separates substances based on their different boiling points; liquid-liquid extraction, which uses differences in solubility to transfer a contaminant into a solvent; and reverse osmosis, which filters molecules from a solvent by pressurizing it through a semipermeable barrier.

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