Chemical engineering research topics

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A Canadian university student recently scored 1480 on the GRE and is considering applying to top-tier U.S. graduate programs in chemical engineering, specifically at schools like Princeton and MIT. The student is interested in chemical engineering with industrial applications, as opposed to the more biochemical focus of schools like Berkeley and Stanford. Experienced contributors emphasize the importance of aligning graduate studies with personal career goals and the type of research being conducted by faculty at prospective schools. They suggest that while top-tier schools often emphasize theoretical work, larger state schools may offer more practical engineering training. It’s recommended to choose a program based on faculty research interests rather than solely on school ranking, as having a supportive and relevant advisor can significantly impact the graduate experience. Ultimately, the student should pursue a discipline within chemical engineering that resonates with their interests, such as reactions, separations, or control theory.
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Hey guys, I am from a Canadian university and have just recently took the GRE (1480 for verbal+quant).

I am thinking of applying for graduate studies in the United States, preferably tier 1 schools such as Princeton, MIT etc.. However, after doing some online research it seems that schools like Berkeley and Stanford are mostly focused on biochemical engineering, whereas I am more inclined toward a chemical engineering with some form of possibility for industrial application. Which leads me to the question that I wanted to ask more experienced people in the field, what are some good chemical engineering faculties in the top-tier universities and what discipline/field in chemical engineering would be a good field to look into for graduate studies?

Thanks a lot!
 
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MIT best grad school for that program ... other best ChemEng programs would be University of Texas or California Institute of Technology.
 
First off, congrats on your scores and your decision to look at graduate education in ChE!

I'd reframe the question that you're asking. What do you ultimately want to do when you graduate? Tier one schools, largely teach you to become a professor. They tend to have more ivory tower, theoretical projects for you to gnaw on. Many of the larger, state schools tend to turn out more pragmatic engineers, who go on to do less academically-based research. There are exceptions to every rule, but if I had to stereotype, that's how I'd do it.

And the second, possibly more important decision that you should consider, is who do you want to work for? This is a harder question to ask before you apply and meet some of these people, but who is doing interesting research at the schools you are looking at? Are they doing something you'd want to do?

I ended up getting accepted to a top 5 school and many other "second tier" schools. I didn't go with the top 5 school, because they only had one professor that had research in line with what I wanted to do. I chose a school that had 3-4 people that I was excited about working for. It's going to be at least 5 years of your life, so you should be excited about the prospects of the research you could do. In my opinion, it's always better to get a first tier professor at a second tier school, than a second tier professor at a first tier school.

As far as the discipline you want to study -- that needs to be solely your decision. Do you like reactions? Separations? Control theory? Find something that you love, then take it from there.

Good luck!
 

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