Material science v.s. chemical engineering?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the differences and similarities between chemical engineering and materials science, exploring their respective focuses, applications, and overlaps in research. Participants examine the roles of professionals in each field and how their educational backgrounds inform their work.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that chemical engineering focuses on large-scale chemical reactions, while materials science is concerned with the properties of materials.
  • One participant suggests that chemical engineers function as applied organic chemists, whereas materials scientists are likened to applied condensed matter physicists.
  • Another participant argues that chemical engineers are more aligned with physical chemists, emphasizing their role in calculations related to heat and fluid flow rather than synthesis.
  • It is noted that at the graduate level, the distinctions between the two fields may become less clear, with many professionals crossing over into each other's research areas.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the nature of the work in chemical engineering versus materials science, with some agreeing on certain overlaps while others emphasize distinct differences. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the extent of these overlaps and distinctions.

Contextual Notes

Participants acknowledge exceptions and overlaps between the fields, indicating that definitions and interpretations may vary based on individual experiences and educational backgrounds.

emyt
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what's the difference? it looks like a chemical engineer and material scientist does the same thing
 
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Chemical engineering is more about running large-scale chemical reactions while materials science is about studying specific properties of materials. A chemical engineer may be tasked with designing a reactor that runs continuously to produce some polymer while a materials scientist would be tasked with figuring out why the polymer, in its final form, acts the way it does.

In modern curricula, it seems to me that chemical engineers are essentially applied organic chemists while materials scientists are essentially applied condensed matter physicists.

Of course there are always exceptions and overlaps. Hope this helped.
 
cmos said:
Chemical engineering is more about running large-scale chemical reactions while materials science is about studying specific properties of materials. A chemical engineer may be tasked with designing a reactor that runs continuously to produce some polymer while a materials scientist would be tasked with figuring out why the polymer, in its final form, acts the way it does.

In modern curricula, it seems to me that chemical engineers are essentially applied organic chemists while materials scientists are essentially applied condensed matter physicists.

Of course there are always exceptions and overlaps. Hope this helped.

ah, I see. Thanks a lot!
 
I would definitely say that chemical engineers are not close organic chemists. If anything, we are closer to physical chemists. Sure, we deal with many organic reactions but we don't come up with syntheses, we do the math to come up with the heat flow, fluid flow, work in and out of the system, etc.
 
at the graduate level the differences become blurred. Many ChemE's do more materials research and many MatSci's do more ChemE research. They are very similar when it comes to research
 

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