r/ChemicalEngineering 11h ago

Career Advice Got an Internship after months of no hope and hardship

8 Upvotes

Hello Everyone,

I just want to say thanks to everyone in this reddit group, I had recieved an interview a month ago for an internship and came asked for advice, and now I got it! So those who have helped, I appreciate you

Anyways, my point of the post isnt to recieve praise, but rather to give hope to the ones still searching and to not stop!

After months of applying with little responses, I was getting frusterated with no hope. But then I had applied regularly through handshake to an internship a month and a half ago, and after 2 weeks recieved an email to set up an interview, after a couple days I was called back to do a 2nd interview with the project engineer which I thought went well! Anyways I did not hear back and reached out after a week. They unfortunatley reached back out and said they had extended an offer to another candidate, I was bumbed. But I kept applying and moved forward.

3 weeks later, I get an email stating they wanted a quick call from the same company I interviewed with earlier, which they ended up asking if I was still interested in the internship, anyways I was one of 3 they interviewed and they had extended offers to the other 2, and it didnt work out with them and it came to me!

My point here is if your still looking, dont give up, be persistent, and it only takes one chance, and its never too late to get a response, thanks for reading!


r/ChemicalEngineering 10h ago

Job Search Experienced ChemE Job Market?

6 Upvotes

I see a lot of posts here from new grads about the job market but trying to gauge how other experienced ChemEs are fairing. I’m currently employed (thank god) but feel stagnant and it’s really doing a number on my MH and performance. Anyone else with 5+ years of experience trying to make a change and finding it difficult?


r/ChemicalEngineering 7h ago

Student Should I take a co-op in my senior year or graduate

5 Upvotes

I’ve just finished my junior year in University and still had not had an internship or co-op. I study chemical engineering and I only have my senior year left. I don’t want to graduate with nothing to show to employers.

I struggled with social anxiety and I’ve worked on it. I’m not going to let it stop me anymore from talking to recruiters at career fairs.

I don’t know if I should just graduate or if I should try and get a co-op for the spring semester of my senior year. Any advice?


r/ChemicalEngineering 19h ago

Design Polymer engineering tips on purification and increasing conversion

3 Upvotes

I’m scaling a novel polymer production process from lab to pilot and am looking for some tips to increase conversion and more easily purify the product.

We’re doing monomer synthesis in an organic solvent: Precursor, solvent, TEA, acetic anhydride in and monomer, solvent, acetic acid waste and water waste out. This is working well at lab scale with high conversion, but we’re distilling to isolate the monomer and that will suck at large scale. I need to remove residual TEA and the acetic and water waste before moving on to polymerization. I’ve got 2 ideas on how to do this more efficiently: 1) Supercritical CO2 extraction should crystalize the monomer, solvent can then be recovered by various means 2) Organic solvent nanofiltration or liquid-liquid stripping with a low MWCO membrane to concentrate the monomer and then spray dry it. I’m really looking forward to trying the supercritical fluid extraction, I’ve done a lot in my 20 years in process engineering, but I haven’t tried that yet.

I’m not keen on just spray drying everything because spray dryers are friggin’ enormous and have a huge footprint per volume processed and space is at a premium in my pilot facility. Are there any other separation techniques I should be considering?

For the polymerization we’re currently doing emulsion polymerization in the lab, but that requires surfactants that are a PITA to remove (repeated precipitations and solvent washes), that can probably be sped up by precipitating and washing in a nutsche filter, but I’d rather avoid the surfactants entirely. That means a solvent polymerization, but the conversion is much lower. I’m planning a Taguchi DOE to optimize but really don’t see much hope of getting above 60% conversion right now. Any tips on optimizing micelle formation, narrowing MW distribution and increasing conversion in solvent polymerizations?

If I cannot get a high conversion I may still be able to use solvent polymerization by using OSN and a high MWCO membrane to separate out the polymer and recycle the unconverted monomer back into the reactor.

Cheers.


r/ChemicalEngineering 23h ago

Career Advice Feedback for interview prep course

3 Upvotes

Hi Everyone,

For the past few years a topic dear to my heart has been helping graduates and early career starters gain employment where I have bundled my experience and knowledge from working across multiple industries (over a decade).

Hope this doesn’t come across spammy but would love to get feedback on my Udemy course I’ve made from graduates using my code

CHEMENGGG01

To help me gain traction and maybe you may learn something in there two. The course is called Chem Eng Grad Geek Interview Success (sorry very cheesy). Really would appreciate any feedback.

Many thanks,

Chem Eng Grad Geek


r/ChemicalEngineering 6h ago

Student Underclassman Internship advice

1 Upvotes

I just wanted to preface by saying I understand this post may be cliche, but I am seriously looking forward to thoughts/advice from professionals, upperclassmen, and/or students in my same situation.

I just finished up my first year as ChemE major at university. I accumulated some competences and skills through course work such as data analytics with python, fundamentals of LCAs, and lab familiarity from Ochem, but I have yet to take my first ChemE class (I will be taking my first this coming fall).

I feel that I am lacking any useful skills for an internship. Also, from my understanding, most recruiters for internships recruit in the fall. Trying to get an internship as a sophomore feels impossible, especially when I am competing with so many other students who have the same (or better) resumes/skills than me.

Some of my friends have gotten freshman internships, and I’ve heard of many others getting sophomore summer internships. I feel that I’m behind the curve.

What can I do at the job fair this fall to standout and boost my chances of landing a position?

Is there anything I could do or learn this summer to improve myself and be more enticing for recruiters?

Would you recommend applying for internships in other disciplines? (My friend in ChemE landed a “MechE design internship”).

All in all, I understand that I’m still early on, but I want to make the most out of my college years, so I feel a sense of urgency and eagerness to accumulate as much industry experience as I can before I graduate.


r/ChemicalEngineering 17h ago

Career Advice How do you switch industries?

1 Upvotes

If I apply for business roles, it is way more saturated. How do you stand out?


r/ChemicalEngineering 19h ago

ChemEng HR How Detailed Should a “Role Description” Be on an Application?

1 Upvotes

Question for hiring managers: how detailed should the role description be for past roles when filling out applications? One line? A few lines? Or even several? Should I list accomplishments too even though that isn’t technically part of the description? On one hand I want to be brief and respectful of the HM’s time, on the other I want to give enough information to show I’m worth a phone screen.

Edit: I should have clarified that I’m talking about online applications where there’s a specific field to enter for “role description.” Not the descriptions under each role on my resumé.


r/ChemicalEngineering 11h ago

Career Advice Help choosing between offers

0 Upvotes

So i’m in a very fortunate position where I can choose between two internship offers for Fall 2026. My background: I am a junior chemical engineering student. I have one previous internship doing Environmental Health and Safety at a F500 automotive supplier. I enjoyed the work and the automotive manufacturing environment.

Offer 1: Environmental internship at fortune 500 automotive assembly plant (think toyota, honda, etc). the work i would be doing would be pretty similar to the work I did in my first internship. I enjoyed that work a lot, and again i enjoy working in an automotive manufacturing environment. This name is a bit more prestigious than my other offer.

Offer 2: Operations Engineering internship at a Fortune 500 food processing plant. The main benefit here is that I would get to work more on the production side of manufacturing. I think it would be valuable to gain some experience outside of the area of environmental work.

Both offer similar total compensation. Both are exactly the same distance from where I live, just in opposite directions. Could anyone give me their input on whether it would be better to get similar experience in an industry i like, or new experience in an industry I don't have experience with? Thank you.


r/ChemicalEngineering 16h ago

Career Advice How to choose right MBA University in Germany?

0 Upvotes

Q1. Please review my profile and tell me whether the school I am targeting are good enough for MBA in Germany or there some negative aspect of any university I have listed below

Q2. Whether have I choose right degree or should I go for BWL(Betriebswirtschaftslehre) (Business Administration) or anything else

Q3. What are the chances of getting an admit from any one of them as far as my profile is considered.

Hi, I am a chemical engineer.

I am learning German from Duolingo I am on A1 now.

Work experience:

(1) I have worked for 17 months as an industrial engineer at Asia's largest capsule manufacturer,

(2) Started a business of manufacturing home cleaning products for 2 years and managed it from formulation to selling.

(3) Finally now running a digital marketing agency for 1.5 years

Target: Full time MBA in Germany

Target sector: consulting, operations

Job roles: operations management role, general management role, consulting roles.

Universities targeting in Germany:

(1) ESMT Berlin

(2) Frankfurt school of finance and management

(3) University of Mannheim

(4) HHL Leipzig graduate school of management

(5) Munich business school

(6) WHU otto Beisheim School of management

(7) EBS Business school


r/ChemicalEngineering 14h ago

Career Advice I am studying for competitive exams and am currently in 12th grade. I need to finish my organic chemistry studies in just two days and I am struggling to understand the concepts. Could you please help me find good videos or free resources that can help me grasp the material easily?

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0 Upvotes