Well i know more then it might come across? but i am worried about how hard it is?
I'm in second year Chem Eng at Queen's Belfast. The workload is very intense, but it is manageable if you keep on top of it, and the career prospects at the end of the degree are great
I'm in second year Chem Eng at Queen's Belfast. The workload is very intense, but it is manageable if you keep on top of it, and the career prospects at the end of the degree are great
my onnly question is that is there a lot of physics in the course? i hate physics but i am really goood at chem and maths
my onnly question is that is there a lot of physics in the course? i hate physics but i am really goood at chem and maths
I did physics at A-level. Besides a part of one module that dealt with units (e.g. converting Newtons into SI units etc) there is no physics, at least none that I can remember off the top off my head. The course is VERY maths intensive, specifically there are lots of differentials, integrals and matrices. There is a lot of differentiation especially as you will look at many processes with respect to time e.g. fluid flow, heat transfer etc.
The Chemistry is fairly basic so if you're good at that at A-level then you'll have no problem. I would say the math is the hardest part of the course.
I did physics at A-level. Besides a part of one module that dealt with units (e.g. converting Newtons into SI units etc) there is no physics, at least none that I can remember off the top off my head. The course is VERY maths intensive, specifically there are lots of differentials, integrals and matrices. There is a lot of differentiation especially as you will look at many processes with respect to time e.g. fluid flow, heat transfer etc.
The Chemistry is fairly basic so if you're good at that at A-level then you'll have no problem. I would say the math is the hardest part of the course.
thanks for the information. my last question is that can i go into management after the course or do i have to become like a process engineer
I did physics at A-level. Besides a part of one module that dealt with units (e.g. converting Newtons into SI units etc) there is no physics, at least none that I can remember off the top off my head. The course is VERY maths intensive, specifically there are lots of differentials, integrals and matrices. There is a lot of differentiation especially as you will look at many processes with respect to time e.g. fluid flow, heat transfer etc.
The Chemistry is fairly basic so if you're good at that at A-level then you'll have no problem. I would say the math is the hardest part of the course.
and does it matter what uni i go to get my chem eng degree
and does it matter what uni i go to get my chem eng degree
I imagine you'd want an accredited one. I dunno about you, but I'd prefer a Russel Group uni too. QUB is both and one of the best Chem Eng Uni's in the UK so I'm fairly happy with my choice. I think 'Chemical Engineering' was actually invented here.