📍Do be sure to like and subscribe if this video was useful! ⚙Check out MathEqualsMusic here! : www.youtube.com/@mathequalsmusic4583 youtube.com/@MathEqualsMusic1
It depends! You can either do a computational based PhD (more coding, simulation etc) or a experimental based on (the one that Andrew is doing)- both require a lot of researching and thus reading, so there is an element of admin in both 👍
The answer is… it depends 😅 if you are looking to do a career in the lab, then a chemistry or a ChemEng lab based PhD is equally useful (doesn’t make too much of a difference fron my understanding as they want the specialist skills of being a lab professional). However, if you are pursuing a computational career, ChemEng is arguably much better for the ChemEng PhD topic areas because everything is more grounded in practical applications and for different scales rather than just the traditional lab scale for chemistry, and engineering typically goes further into technical computational skills than the chemistry PhD would. Hope this helps!
Thank you for having me for your collaboration! Looking forward to more of your content.
Thank you for participating! It was a pleasure to have you 🤝
📍Do be sure to like and subscribe if this video was useful!
⚙Check out MathEqualsMusic here! : www.youtube.com/@mathequalsmusic4583
youtube.com/@MathEqualsMusic1
Amazing insight into PhD tenure!! Really informative for students and future researchers!! 😀
Thank you!
Cool interview with Andrew, have been following him since a couple of years already... nice job Jup!
Thank you Emmanuel! It was a pleasure to work with a fellow ChemE creator, looking forward to more collabs in the future!
Thanks and cheers, Emmanuel!
Very informative, great work!
Thank you, glad it’s helpful!
This is bussin fr.
Thank you!
Lmao fr
Thank you Sardar ji.. 😊.. It was really insightful
You’re very welcome! Glad to hear 👍
Is there a lot of lab work in chemE pHD? I dont want a boring office job...
It depends! You can either do a computational based PhD (more coding, simulation etc) or a experimental based on (the one that Andrew is doing)- both require a lot of researching and thus reading, so there is an element of admin in both 👍
like
I am a chemistry undergraduate student. Should I do my phd on chemical engineering instead of chemistry for my better career?
The answer is… it depends 😅 if you are looking to do a career in the lab, then a chemistry or a ChemEng lab based PhD is equally useful (doesn’t make too much of a difference fron my understanding as they want the specialist skills of being a lab professional). However, if you are pursuing a computational career, ChemEng is arguably much better for the ChemEng PhD topic areas because everything is more grounded in practical applications and for different scales rather than just the traditional lab scale for chemistry, and engineering typically goes further into technical computational skills than the chemistry PhD would. Hope this helps!