Fusion Or Confusion
Sean Moran CEng FCIWEM
Independent Expert Engineer: Chemical, Water and Environmental Engineering
The “Chemical Engineering” of academia has very little to do with the profession of that name any more. As we have staffed our universities with people with no experience of the profession, this should come as no surprise to us.
No doubt many readers who consider themselves academic engineers have stopped reading at this point, but for the open-minded few who remain, I’d like to explain what I mean by that.
An undergraduate degree in Chemical Engineering no more makes you a chemical engineer than a law degree makes you a barrister.
Neither is there any such thing as a PhD in Chemical Engineering. All PhDs are in philosophy, irrespective of which department the candidate studies in. A PhD no more makes you a chemical engineer than a PhD in medical research makes you a medical doctor.
Nor does carrying out research or teaching in a chemical engineering department make you a chemical engineer. It makes you an academic, doing the same job as the academics in the philosophy department.
A real chemical engineer has an accredited (postgraduate in the UK) degree in chemical engineering, and a number of years of experience either designing or operating full-scale process plant. This is the mark I had to hit to become a chartered chemical engineer, aligned with the international accords on what constitutes an engineer.
Engineering is a practical profession. Like other practical professions such as law and medicine, properly calling yourself by the title of the profession requires the acquisition of a combination of academic knowledge, professional experience and training.
Becoming confused about this issue in respect of my profession has had a secondary effect. Academics claim that “chemical engineers” do all kinds of things, when what they mean is one of two things:
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“Chemical engineering graduates do all kinds of things”
Chemical engineers by my definition do not do all kinds of things. They do chemical engineering. Half of chemical engineering graduates are not able to obtain work as chemical engineers, because we now train twice as many graduates are there are jobs for. In the case of the majority of them who wanted to be engineers, this means that they have failed to become chemical engineers.
“Academics in chemical engineering department s do all kinds of things”
The academics in chemical engineering departments tend largely to follow their original discipline, (unless that was engineering). Nowadays this discipline tends to be chemistry, though there are also geologists, physicists, and a smattering of miscellaneous engineering graduates. The confusion here is magnified by the preference of many grant awarding bodies for “interdisciplinary” research.
If we take people with no experience of the profession, and put them in interdisciplinary teams with philosophers, no wonder they get muddled about what the profession is about.
I have been to Malaysia a few times, home of the original “fusion cuisine”. I have had Indian-influenced food cooked by chefs from a Chinese tradition, and Chinese-influenced food cooked by chefs from an Indian background in Kuala Lumpur, and it is all reliably great. I have had the same dishes cooked in different styles by chefs of different traditions - also great. But when I try many western chefs’ attempts at these dishes, it is clear that they do not really understand either tradition. It is not fusion food, it is confusion food.
This is akin to what has happened in most chemical engineering departments nowadays. If you want to be interdisciplinary, you must first master your discipline.
First you must understand that the profession of chemical engineering is the same as it was back in 1995, when I became chartered. We do the same type of jobs, in much the same way. I know that this is true, as I have interviewed many hundreds of chemical engineers worldwide in order to write my books on process plant design, as well as continuing to practice myself.
Secondly you must understand that most of the research carried out in chemical engineering departments is nothing to do with chemical engineering. Shoehorning it into the curriculum so that you can teach what you know is overloading curricula with irrelevant material.
Thirdly you need to genuinely involve practitioners. We want to help. We do not however want our role to be confined to offering a few amusing anecdotes, or rubber-stamping the often irrelevant curriculum you have already decided to teach. Ask us what chemical engineers do all day, and listen to our answers. Teach some of that. If you can.
Bio-Chemical, Environmental, Manufacturing Engineer at CPSSCO
4 个月Retired at Self Employed
4 个月acedemic courses should prepare you for the industrial world - dont sandwich courses happen any more? finished mine in 1983
Owner Polymers and Process Engineering Consulting
4 个月From a really old chemical engineer across the ocean -Academic criticisms seem appropriate on this side also. I would add two additional thoughts. For the new graduate going into the industrial world, he must do his learning on larger and more complicated processes than 50 years ago. Since his academiic courses did not prepare him for industrial work, he must rely on industrial experienced mentors. For the most part these are limited in availability or non-existent. Thus the new graduate often gravitates to guess work. This is promoting a whole new business field of "post graduate education"
Principal Engineer (Water Technology - Wastewater), GTS, PETRONAS
4 个月Always insightful! If ever you are back in KL, lets meet up and have a chat over some 'fusion' Malaysian food (normal food here!)...
AECOM Water Eng. Senior Project Manager (seconded to Environment Agency)
4 个月I completed my Masters MSc in Information Systems in 1995, which covered 'Systems Thinking' and 'Systems Approach'. That was 29 years ago. I apply it in Multi-Disciplinary Engineering and in Stakeholder Engagement through stages of optioneering. And it has a much bigger potential in broader applications. However, Systems Thinking is presently often referred to in the media and by many academics, as an important new approach (?).