Question by Rob: Will a bachelors in nanotechnology and masters in chemical engineering allow me to work as a chemical engineer?
Ive done 2 years of a 4 year nanotechnology course. If I do a masters in chemical engineering which is 1.5 years long, will I be able to work as a chemical engineer afterwards? Or should i just change my course to chemical engineering now and almost start from scratch?
Best answer:
Answer by asyn
Most chemical engineers like myself go BS in Chem Engr. then specialize in MS. It sounds like you would prefer chemical engineering in the long run so maybe that’s the optimal choice. Most traditional chemical engineering jobs require solid background in fundamental principles of said field. Though anything is possible
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Question by Chybabi: Where do I find reliable information on nanotechnology?
I need help finding a reliable resource to do some research on nanotechnology for a paper that I’m working on. Can anyone help me?
Best answer:
Answer by Tom
The Foresight Nanotech Institute has a good summary at
www.foresight.org/nano/whatisnano.html
Nanotechnology is so broad, however, that for any specifics you’ll need to look further. I would recommend looking through Wikipedia to find general descriptions (nanoelectronics, nanomedicine, etc.) and then looking at the research pages mentioned therein.
Provide some more specifics, perhaps I can give a better answer.
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