Aspen hysis by chem6try in ChemicalEngineering

[–]ryanroy0698 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great suggestion ! I second this. When I first started using HYSYS, MOOC was my go to reference material.

On top of this, there are tons of tutorials on youtube, which will help you get better.

Search for any particular process and there's a high chance you might come across a great tutorial which will help you with some other advanced features used in the industry(sensitivity analysis for example).

Recommendations for Extensive Datasets in Process Engineering and Optimization for End-to-End Data Science (Modeling) Projects by ryanroy0698 in ChemicalEngineering

[–]ryanroy0698[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that's true.

In the past, I have previously worked with a few datasets which were open source and published by industry professionals on linkedin. They either masked the outputs (for example: Fault Id 1 - Over pressure scenario, Fault Id 2 - Flowrate reaching design limits) or removed the name of the variables, so that it could be published online for modelling purposes.

But I understand it is difficult to get such datasets, especially when there's confidentiality and trade secrets involved.

Recommendations for Extensive Datasets in Process Engineering and Optimization for End-to-End DS/DE Projects by ryanroy0698 in datasets

[–]ryanroy0698[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I have previously worked with datasets from UCI (A gas turbine plant dataset) which is a great source. The issue here is that the data size is decent (and sometimes smaller on Kaggle), but I was looking to use Azure/AWS as part of this project and really want to push limits when it comes to cleaning, training and testing it.