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Chemical Engineer

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AVG. SALARY

$139,170

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EDUCATION

Bachelor's degree

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JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

Interviews

Insider Info

What's the catalyst for a career in chemical engineering? Well, it depends.

William Conger recalls the chemical engineer that rented a room in his family home while he was growing up in Kentucky. Conger spoke with the engineer in the evenings over the kitchen table. He was further inspired by his high school chemistry teacher.

Christine Tomacci was attracted to engineering while growing up in California. "My father is an engineer and it just seemed that a lot of my girlfriends' fathers were engineers," she recalls. "I helped my father build a deck on our home and I was always interested in math and the sciences. I've always liked to know how things worked."

And Keeran Srinivasan has been a "science nut" from a very young age. "It was a toss-up between physics and chemistry, and I chose chemistry because of the color."

Heather Sheardown didn't have these early influences, however. "It was a fluke, really. There's no one in my immediate family with an engineering background, so I wasn't really even aware of the whole engineering profession until late high school. I had actually wanted to go into medicine, but I found that I much preferred math and chemistry and even physics to biology."

Conger is now the chairman of Virginia Tech's chemical engineering department. In this role, he has been able to share his knowledge with others. He recalls one student from the University of Kentucky. The student became the only chemical engineer ever to receive the prestigious Alan T. Waterman Award. The award is presented annually by the National Science Foundation to an outstanding scientist under the age of 35.

Before he turned to teaching, Conger worked on a project that involved the recovery of oil from so-called depleted oilfields. While a faculty member at the University of Kentucky, he researched the use of alternative fuels. Conger earned a bachelor's degree in chemical engineering from the University of Louisville and his doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania.

Tomacci holds a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering, but she works on a team with chemical engineers. She's involved in the design of systems and the delivery of industrial gases to industries.

Srinivasan is a research scientist who is keenly interested in the future of chemical engineering. "The discipline is morphing rapidly and, to some extent, losing its identity in a melting pot of interrelated, interdependent research activity like material science, metallurgy and environmental engineering. Some of these fields feed off of chemical engineering."

A practicing chemical engineer should do more than one task, he adds. "A lot of chemical engineers are working in the area of biomedical engineering, designing and building artificial skins, synthetic organs and biosensors. The key is, we should clone ourselves to do many things. It's this [large number] of skills that is at once the challenge and charm of chemical engineering."

A desire to get the broadest knowledge of science led Manolis Tomadakis -- assistant professor of chemical engineering at the Florida Institute of Technology -- to the profession. The university is located near the site of the Kennedy Space Center.

"I've never regretted my decision," he says. "I thoroughly enjoy everything I do. My research project for my doctorate concerned fiber-enforced composites, which basically tests and simulates molecular reaction and their movements."

Composites of this nature range from high-tech implementations like tile on the space shuttle to basic uses like insulation for buildings.

Sheardown is now an assistant professor with a university's department of chemical engineering. She has fond memories of her studies.

"Graduate studies were quite rigorous in a different way than undergraduate studies. But being a post-doctoral fellow was truly interesting, stimulating and fun. I'm sure that it was partly the people that I was working with, since I'm sure that they will be my friends for life."

She enjoyed the atmosphere of those times.

"I was working...for a researcher who had enough money to pay for the research and enough foresight to give the researchers the trust to do the experiments. Everyone worked together and when a problem arose or a result didn't make sense, there was always someone who had some sort of insight into what it might be."

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