Corrosion Engineering Degree: Worth It?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the value of pursuing a corrosion engineering degree, the first of its kind in the U.S. While the university promotes it as a degree in demand, opinions vary on its practicality. Some suggest that a Chemical Engineering degree with corrosion electives may provide broader opportunities, as corrosion impacts various sectors like architecture, pipelines, and transportation. The need for corrosion expertise is underscored by the aging infrastructure in the U.S., such as the power grid, which presents ongoing challenges and job prospects for engineers. Overall, while corrosion engineering is recognized as important, its specialized nature may limit career flexibility compared to a more general engineering degree.
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My school is offering the United State's first corrosion engineering degree, and I was curious if anyone knew just how useful that degree might be. The university makes it sound rather in demand, but I'd like to get an unbiased opinion. I've already finished my first year in Chemical Engineering, and if the switch isn't worth it, I'll stay away.
 
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Hi..just sa this port after posting a thread asking a similar question. Just wondering if you had made your desicion and if you took up corrosion engineering?

I found a good website that got me interested in corrosion engineering and I think I might make the switch.

This might be of interest to you... http://www.corrconnect.com"
 
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seems like such a degree would be rather limiting. If you are interested in corrosion it seems like you'd be better off getting a ChemE degree and then taking some corrosion electives.
 
It depends on how you approach corrosion. Corrosion touches a very broad range of technologies in one way or another. Architecture, pipelines, cables, superstructures of all sorts (ships, bridges, railroads, airplanes...etc). As a corrosion engineer, I am guessing, you will have to be able to apply specific knowledge of corrosion to some sort of engineering structure. You will end up being a kind of jack of all trades to be successful. I am surprised they are offering it as an undergraduate degree. Is corrosion important, absolutely. There is no end of structures and systems in the U.S. and elsewhere which are nearing the end of their service life due to corrosion. Take the power grid as an example. I believe it was built to last 50 years. Lots of it is much older than that and power consumption just keeps going up...sheesh...if that isn't a recipe for disaster (which for an engineer spells work) I don't know what is.
 
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