Metadata
Title
Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering
Category
courses
UUID
607be0dc2c1642a8a907a05148c22e25
Source URL
https://engineering.calendar.utoronto.ca/course/che249h1
Parent URL
https://engineering.calendar.utoronto.ca/section/Chemical-Engineering-and-Applie...
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T09:16:38+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering

Source: https://engineering.calendar.utoronto.ca/course/che249h1 Parent: https://engineering.calendar.utoronto.ca/section/Chemical-Engineering-and-Applied-Chemistry

Fixed Credit Value

0.50

Hours

36.6L/12.2T

Engineering analysis and design are not ends in themselves, but they are a means for satisfying human wants. Thus, engineering concerns itself with the materials used and forces and laws of nature, and the needs of people. Because of scarcity of resources and constraints at all levels, engineering must be closely associated with economics. It is essential that engineering proposals be evaluated in terms of worth and cost before they are undertaken. In this course we emphasize that an essential prerequisite of a successful engineering application is economic feasibility. Hence, investment proposals are evaluated in terms of economic cost concepts, including break even analysis, cost estimation and time value of money. Effective interest rates, inflation and deflation, depreciation and income tax all affect the viability of an investment. Successful engineering projects are chosen from valid alternatives considering such issues as buy or lease, make or buy, cost and benefits and financing alternatives. Both public sector and for-profit examples are used to illustrate the applicability of these rules and approaches.

Prerequisite

CHE221H1, CHE223H1

Total AUs

42.7 (Fall), 42.7 (Winter), 85.4 (Full Year)

Program Tags

AECERBUS: Economics Courses

AECERENTR: Economics Elective

AECHEBASC: Winter Session - Year 2

AEMINBUS: Courses offered in the Fall