Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Jobs are there but not many
OP here. This is what I've read on the bachelor's and masters level. Is it as true on the PhD level?
Anonymous wrote:ChemE vs Chem is pretty close. ChemE requires, ochem, pchem, biochem. Then take polymer engineering, computational chemistry. Lots of electives you can take in chemistry or related subjects. Even plasma and nuclear engineering. Material science and even EE take solid state chemistry classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Jobs are there but not many
OP here. This is what I've read on the bachelor's and masters level. Is it as true on the PhD level?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ChemE vs Chem is pretty close. ChemE requires, ochem, pchem, biochem. Then take polymer engineering, computational chemistry. Lots of electives you can take in chemistry or related subjects. Even plasma and nuclear engineering. Material science and even EE take solid state chemistry classes.
Goodness. Are you a Chem engineer or a chemist? I highly doubt it. Learning all these thru your son?
post doc in bioinformatics. Then moved to quant finance. Never have worked a day as a ChemE!!!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is a rising 2nd year ChemE major and currently doing summer research/internship on electrochemical batteries. I’d suggest to major in engineering that has lots of chemistry … material science, ChemE, bioE,
So clueless. Engineering is totally different than Chem. Just because you see "Chem" in front, that doesn't mean Chem and ChemE are close.
Anonymous wrote:ChemE vs Chem is pretty close. ChemE requires, ochem, pchem, biochem. Then take polymer engineering, computational chemistry. Lots of electives you can take in chemistry or related subjects. Even plasma and nuclear engineering. Material science and even EE take solid state chemistry classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is a rising 2nd year ChemE major and currently doing summer research/internship on electrochemical batteries. I’d suggest to major in engineering that has lots of chemistry … material science, ChemE, bioE,
So clueless. Engineering is totally different than Chem. Just because you see "Chem" in front, that doesn't mean Chem and ChemE are close.
Anonymous wrote:No. Jobs are there but not many
Anonymous wrote:DC is a rising 2nd year ChemE major and currently doing summer research/internship on electrochemical batteries. I’d suggest to major in engineering that has lots of chemistry … material science, ChemE, bioE,
Anonymous wrote:DC is a rising 2nd year ChemE major and currently doing summer research/internship on electrochemical batteries. I’d suggest to major in engineering that has lots of chemistry … material science, ChemE, bioE,