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Overview
Our department offers two undergraduate degrees:
the Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering (BSChE) and Bachelor
of Arts (BA) degree. The BSChE degree is accredited by
the Accreditation Board for Engineering of Technology (ABET).
In today's rapidly changing
business
climate,
industrial
sectors from petrochemicals to biotechnology and semiconductor
manufacturing offer of wide variety of employment opportunities
to our graduates.
As a result, chemical engineering graduates may get involved
with (among others):
- the development of new processes and products for the chemical
industry;
- exploration, production, and refining of oil and natural gas;
- design and optimization of fabrication facilities for semiconductors
or magnetic storage devices;
- production of advanced materials - from plastics and fibers
to catalysts and biomaterials;
- design of water and air pollution control devices;
- production of pharmaceuticals and biologic devices used for
medical applications.
While industry employs the majority of chemical engineering students
receiving a bachelor's degree, a large fraction of our graduates
continue their education in:
- graduate schools to prepare for academic or industrial R&D
careers, and
- medical, law or business schools.
Our Curriculum
What opens all these career options to our graduates
is a broad education that encompasses both fundamentals and applications
to give students a sound scientific and technical grounding for
further development in a variety of professional environments.
Courses in mathematics, chemistry, physics and computational
engineering provide the foundation for the chemical engineering
core, which introduces students to chemical process fundamentals,
fluid mechanics, heat and mass transfer, thermodynamics, kinetics,
reactor design, process control and process design. Chemical engineering
curricula place an emphasis on chemistry not found in other engineering
disciplines. This background allows chemical engineers to tackle
a wide variety of technical problems arising in the chemical, electronic
and pharmaceuticals/biotechnology industries.
To complete their technical education, Rice students
seeking a BSChE degree in chemical engineering take course electives
in two or more other engineering disciplines to satisfy a "breadth"
requirement. Or, they can use their course electives to create
a
focus area in one of the following four disciplines:
- bioengineering,
- computational engineering,
- environmental engineering, and
- materials science/engineering.
UNDERGRADUATE
COMMITTEE
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DEPARTMENT CHAIR
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Information on scholarships and awards available to CHBE undergraduates click here.
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