Aspen Engineering Suite
From CAE Software
Process simulation with Aspen allows you to predict the behavior of a process using basic engineering relationships such as mass and energy balances, phase and chemical equilibrium, and reaction kinetics. Given reliable thermodynamic data, realistic operating conditions and the rigorous Aspen equipment models, you can simulate actual behavior.
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[edit] Product Features
- Windows Graphical Interface
- Accurately model wide scope of real-world applications
- Supports scalable workflows
- Contains multiple solution techniques
- Allows users to leverage and combine the power of sequential modular and equation-oriented techniques in a single product
[edit] Availability
AspenONE Engineering Suite 2004 r2 on CAE managed Windows workstations. Menu pick: CAE Applications > Engineering > AspenTech >
- Aspen ADSIM 12.1, Aspen Console, Aspen Custom Modeler 12.1, Aspen Dynamics 12.1, Aspen Pinch 12.1, Aspen Plus Documentation, Aspen Plus User Interface 12.1, Aspen Properties User Interface 12.1, Aspen Split 12.1, AspenTech Documentation
- NOTE: The first time you run ASPEN on a CAE workstation it may fail. If it does, right click on the menu option and choose "verify". This will ensure the workstation has been configured properly to run ASPEN before startup.
- How to Add Applications to a CAE Windows workstations.
- Tethered AspenONE Engineering Suite 2006 is now available as unsupported for Windows. Be sure to follow the Aspen Tethered Installation instructions to get the install done correctly.
[edit] More Help
- Report a problem via email to helpdesk@cae.wisc.edu
- A link to Aspentech homepage.
[edit] Additional Information
- "Error accessing registry key: Software\AspenTech\AMSystem\12.1 \Dir"
- This is a known issue with Aspen. The work around is to "verify" the software after receiving this error. To verify, do a right mouse click over the menu option and choose verify from the pop-up menu.>
- The core of the problem is that the NAL install of ASPEN is actually two processes. At times, much too often, those two processes don't finish in the proper order.

