r/ChemicalEngineering 4d ago

Meme :)

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889 Upvotes

23 comments sorted by

94

u/Vallanth627 4d ago

Oops, maintenance mode engaged

70

u/narcolepticcatboy 4d ago

Me immediately after seeing my salary adjustment for the year:

3

u/Tadpole_420 2d ago

Holy shit! Salary adjustment?

3

u/narcolepticcatboy 2d ago

Yeah, -0.2%

2

u/biochem-daddy 2d ago

what the hell - what type of industry are you in?

1

u/Tadpole_420 2d ago

That’s so ass

36

u/OrionShade 4d ago

Kirby is right

31

u/SubjectMountain6195 4d ago

What if instead of coolant we add tomato soup?

21

u/a_trane13 4d ago

The coolant is usually water, and tomato sauce is mostly water and has a heat capacity of roughly 90% that of water. The other properties should be pretty close to water too. The cooling system is certainly designed with way more margin than 10%.

The coolant pipes are (nowadays) stainless steel or an even more corrosion resistant alloy, so corrosion is not an immediate concern (long term on the scale of years, probably, at least more concern than with water).

The pumps are almost certainly capable of handling the increased viscosity of the sauce.

So overall I think it would be fine, at least for months and probably years.

5

u/Mafoobaloo 4d ago

It would scale up really fast tho, at high temps, small amounts of impurities in water will scale without inhibitors or high purity O2

7

u/a_trane13 4d ago

We make tomato sauce on an industrial scale without that issue https://youtu.be/o8RwcBlw3rk?si=DNRQCtShNr5Omaco

2

u/Suigurumi 4d ago

But wouldn't the residue build up incredibly quickly, reducing efficiency of the cooling, so it would most likely not even last a week.

1

u/a_trane13 4d ago

If it’s flowing then I don’t think so. A stirred pot of cooking tomato sauce doesn’t building up any residue.

12

u/South-Attorney-5209 4d ago

Our operators just got a $3+ raise out of the blue. We got 3% so far this year. Last year 2%.

Can I return my degree?

5

u/TmanGvl 4d ago

Great, now you’re fired

2

u/8Traps 3d ago

Give us 80% or less benefits but ask us to work with 120% effort.

1

u/mbs07 3d ago

As it should be