Chemical engineer

Chemical engineer
Chemical engineers design, construct and operate plants

Part of Chemical engineering

History

Concepts
Unit operations
Unit processes
Chemical engineer
Chemical process
Process integration
Unit operations
Momentum transfer
Heat transfer
Mass transfer
Mechanical operations
Chemical reaction engineering
Chemical kinetics
Chemical process modeling
Chemical technology
Process integration
Branches
Process design  · Fluid mechanics
Process systems engineering
Chemical plant design
Chemical thermodynamics
Transport phenomena  · *More*
others
Outline of chemical engineering
Index of chemical engineering articles
Education for chemical engineers
List of chemical engineers
List of chemical engineering societies
List of chemical process simulators
Perry's Chemical Engineers' Handbook

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In the field of engineering, a chemical engineer is the profession in which one works principally in the chemical industry to convert basic raw materials into a variety of products, and deals with the design and operation of plants and equipment to perform such work.[1] In general, a chemical engineer is one who applies and uses principles of chemical engineering in any of various practical applications; primarily with respect to the study of the design, manufacture, and operation of plant and machinery in industrial chemical and related processes. However, modern chemical engineers are becoming more heavily involved in the development of new technologies such as fuel cells, hydrogen power and nanotechnology, as well as working in fields such as polymer engineering and biomedical engineering. A number of famous or historical chemical engineers can be found in the list of chemical engineers.

Contents

History

The term appeared in print in 1839, though from the context it suggests a person with mechanical engineering knowledge working in the chemical industry.[2] In 1880, George E. Davis wrote in a letter to Chemical News 'A Chemical Engineer is a person who possesses chemical and mechanical knowledge, and who applies that knowledge to the utilisation, on a manufacturing scale, of chemical action.' He proposed the name Society of Chemical Engineers, for what was in fact constituted as the Society of Chemical Industry. At the first General Meeting of the Society in 1882, some 15 of the 300 members described themselves as chemical engineers, but the Society's formation of a Chemical Engineering Group in 1918 attracted about 400 members.[3]

In 1905 a publication called The Chemical Engineer was founded in the USA, and in 1908 the American Institute of Chemical Engineers was established.[4]

In 1924 the Institution of Chemical Engineers adopted the following definition 'A chemical engineer is a professional man experienced in the design, construction and operation of plant and works in which matter undergoes a change of state and composition.'[5] (The first female member joined in 1942.)[6]

As can be seen from the later definition, the occupation is not limited to the chemical industry, but more generally the process industries, or other situations in which complex physical and/or chemical processes are to be managed.

In 1951 the President of the Institution of Chemical Engineers said in his Presidential Address "I believe most of us would be willing to regard Edward Charles Howard (1774-1816) as the first chemical engineer of any eminence".[7] Others have suggested Johann Rudolf Glauber (1604–1670) for his development of processes for the manufacture of the major industrial acids.[8]

Overview

Historically, the chemical engineer has been primarily concerned with process engineering. The modern discipline of chemical engineering, however, encompasses much more than just process engineering. Chemical engineers are now engaged in the development and production of a diverse range of products, as well as in commodity and specialty chemicals. These products include high performance materials needed for aerospace, automotive, biomedical, electronic, environmental and military applications. Examples include ultra-strong fibers, fabrics, adhesives and composites for vehicles, bio-compatible materials for implants and prosthetics, gels for medical applications, pharmaceuticals, and films with special dielectric, optical or spectroscopic properties for opto-electronic devices. Additionally, chemical engineering is often intertwined with biology and biomedical engineering. Many chemical engineers work on biological projects such as understanding biopolymers (proteins) and mapping the human genome.

Employment and Salaries

In the United States of America, the Department of Labor estimated in 2008 the number of chemical engineers to be 31,000. According to a 2011 salary survey by the American Institution of Chemical Engineers (AIChE), the median annual salary for a chemical engineer was approximately $110,000.[9] In one salary survey, chemical engineering was found to be highest-paying degree for first employment of college graduates.[10]Chemical engineering has been successively ranked in the Top 2 places in the Most Lucrative Degrees Survey by CNN Money in the United States of America.[11][12][13] In the UK, the Institution of Chemical Engineers 2006 Salary Survey reported an average salary of approximately £53,000, with a starting salary for a graduate averaging £24,000.[14] Chemical engineering is a male-dominated field: as of 2009, only 17.1% of professional chemical engineers are women.[15] However, that trend is expected to shift as the number of female students in the field continues to increase.[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ Licker, Mark, D. (2003). Dictionary of Engineering", McGraw-Hill, 2nd Ed.
  2. ^ Ure, Andrew (1839) A Dictionary of Arts Manufactures and Mines, London: Longman, Orme, Brown, Green & Longman, page 1220
  3. ^ Colin Duvall and Sean F, Johnston (2000) Scaling Up: The Institution of Chemical Engineers and the Rise of a New Profession Kluwer Academic Publishers
  4. ^ John C. Olsen (December 1932), Chemical Engineering As A Profession: Origin and Early Growth of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers
  5. ^ Transactions of the Institution of Chemical Engineers volume 2 page 23 (1924)
  6. ^ Colin Duvall and Sean F, Johnston (2000)Scaling Up: The Institution of Chemical Engineers and the Rise of a New Profession Kluwer Academic Publishers
  7. ^ Transactions of the IChemE (1951) Volume 29 page 163
  8. ^ Herman Skolnik in W. F. Furter (ed) (1982) A Century of Chemical Engineering ISBN 0-306-40895-3 page 230
  9. ^ U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics: Chemical Engineers
  10. ^ Chemical Engineering Ranked Highest Paying Degree, Department of Chemical Engineering, Princeton University, February 15, 2006
  11. ^ [1], 2009
  12. ^ [2], 2006
  13. ^ [3], 2007
  14. ^ Institution of Chemical Engineers Annual Review 2006
  15. ^ "Chemical Engineer Careers: Employment & Salary Trends for Aspiring Chemical Engineers". CollegeDegreeReport.com. http://www.collegedegreereport.com/articles/chemical-engineer-careers-employment-salary-trends-aspiring-chemical-engineers. 
  16. ^ http://www.intstudy.com/articles/sl275a43.htm

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