Chemical Engineering BSCHE
Major: Chemical Engineering
Degree Awarded: Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering (BSCHE)
Calendar Type: Quarter
Minimum Required Credits: 181.5
Co-op Options: Three Co-op (Five years); One Co-op (Four years)
Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP) code: 14.0701
Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) code: 17-2041
About the Program
The department of Chemical and Biological Engineering offers a rigorous curriculum grounded in the fundamental physical sciences, integrates practical engineering design and modern computational techniques throughout, and includes expansive opportunities to explore the humanities. An extensive, hands-on laboratory experience rounds out a dynamic program that prepares our graduates for rewarding careers in chemical engineering as well as other quantitative disciplines.
Chemical engineers are dedicated to designing devices and processes that convert input materials into valuable products, and also to the design of those products. These include end products such as pharmaceuticals, plastics and other materials, fine chemicals, integrated circuits, electrical energy, petrochemicals, biologically derived fuels, and much more. Chemical engineering often begins with small laboratory scale processes that must be scaled up to production levels through carefully integrated design, optimization, economic, environmental and safety analyses.
The Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering is responsible for equipping our graduates with the broad technical knowledge and teamwork skills required to make substantial contributions to society.
Sample Senior Design Projects
A special feature of the major is senior design. Teams of chemical engineering seniors work with a faculty or industrial advisor over an entire academic year to develop a realistic, practical industrial design project of their choosing. Some recent examples include the start-to-finish design of production processes for:
- Low-cost solar cells, manufactured by printing
- Scaled-up synthesis of MXene, a novel nanomaterial for energy storage discovered at Drexel
- Biotechnologically derived antibiotic medicine
- Jet fuel derived from bioethanol
Program Educational Objectives
The Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering has four goals pertaining to student outcomes within a few years of graduation:
- Our graduates will succeed in careers requiring strong skills in engineering, science, creative problem solving, communication, teamwork and appropriate leadership.
- Our graduates will continue their professional development through life-long learning involving self- or group-study and on-the-job training.
- Our graduates will hold paramount the safety, health and welfare of the public. They will conduct their work ethically and understand its global impact and sustainability.
- Our graduates will be thought leaders in their area of expertise who are prepared to contribute to research, development and industrial innovation at the forefront of chemical engineering and related fields.
Student Outcomes*
- An ability to identify, formulate, and solve complex engineering problems by applying principles of engineering, science, and mathematics
- An ability to apply engineering design to produce solutions that meet specified needs with consideration of public health, safety, and welfare, as well as global, cultural, social, environmental, and economic factors
- An ability to communicate effectively with a range of audiences
- An ability to recognize ethical and professional responsibilities in engineering situations and make informed judgments, which must consider the impact of the engineering solutions in global, economic, environmental, and societal contexts
- An ability to function effectively on a team whose members together provide leadership, create a collaborative and inclusive environment, establish goals, plan tasks, and meet objectives
- An ability to develop and conduct appropriate experimentation, analyze and interpret data, and use engineering judgment to draw conclusions
- An ability to acquire and apply new knowledge as needed, using appropriate learning strategies
Additional Information
*The BS in Chemical Engineering is accredited by The Engineering Accreditation Commission of ABET, www.abet.org.
For more information about this program, visit the BS in Chemical Engineering program and Drexel University's Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering webpage.
Degree Requirements
General Education/Liberal Studies Requirements | ||
CIVC 101 | Introduction to Civic Engagement | 1.0 |
COOP 101 | Career Management and Professional Development * | 1.0 |
ENGL 101 | Composition and Rhetoric I: Inquiry and Exploratory Research | 3.0 |
or ENGL 111 | English Composition I | |
ENGL 102 | Composition and Rhetoric II: Advanced Research and Evidence-Based Writing | 3.0 |
or ENGL 112 | English Composition II | |
ENGL 103 | Composition and Rhetoric III: Themes and Genres | 3.0 |
or ENGL 113 | English Composition III | |
UNIV E101 | The Drexel Experience | 1.0 |
General Education Requirements ** | 18.0 | |
Foundation Requirements | ||
BIO Elective: Select from BIO 100, BIO 101, BIO 122, or BIO 141 | 3.0-4.5 | |
Chemistry Requirements *** | 3.5-7.5 | |
General Chemistry I and General Chemistry I | ||
OR | ||
General Chemistry I | ||
CHEM 102 | General Chemistry II | 4.5 |
Engineering (ENGR) Requirements | ||
ENGR 111 | Introduction to Engineering Design & Data Analysis | 3.0 |
ENGR 113 | First-Year Engineering Design | 3.0 |
ENGR 131 | Introductory Programming for Engineers | 3.0 |
or ENGR 132 | Programming for Engineers | |
MATE 220 | Fundamentals of Materials | 4.0 |
Math Requirements † | 4.0-10.0 | |
Algebra, Functions, and Trigonometry and Calculus I | ||
OR | ||
Calculus and Functions I and Calculus and Functions II ‡ | ||
OR | ||
Calculus I | ||
MATH 122 | Calculus II | 4.0 |
MATH 200 | Multivariate Calculus | 4.0 |
MATH 201 | Linear Algebra | 4.0 |
MATH 210 | Differential Equations | 4.0 |
Physics Requirements † | 4.0-8.0 | |
Preparation for Engineering Studies and Fundamentals of Physics I | ||
OR | ||
Fundamentals of Physics I | ||
PHYS 102 | Fundamentals of Physics II | 4.0 |
Professional Requirements | ||
CHE 211 | Material and Energy Balances I | 4.0 |
CHE 212 | Material and Energy Balances II | 4.0 |
CHE 220 | Computational Methods in Chemical Engineering I | 3.0 |
CHE 230 | Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics I | 4.0 |
CHE 320 | Computational Methods in Chemical Engineering II | 3.0 |
CHE 330 | Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics II | 4.0 |
CHE 331 | Separation Processes | 3.0 |
CHE 341 | Fluid Mechanics | 4.0 |
CHE 342 | Heat Transfer | 4.0 |
CHE 343 | Mass Transfer | 4.0 |
CHE 350 | Statistics and Design of Experiments | 3.0 |
CHE 351 [WI] | Chemical Engineering Laboratory I | 2.5 |
CHE 352 [WI] | Chemical Engineering Laboratory II | 2.5 |
CHE 362 | Chemical Kinetics and Reactor Design | 4.0 |
CHE 371 | Engineering Economics and Professional Practice | 3.0 |
CHE 372 | Integrated Case Studies in Chemical Engineering | 3.0 |
CHE 453 [WI] | Chemical Engineering Laboratory III | 2.5 |
CHE 464 | Process Dynamics and Control | 3.0 |
CHE 466 | Chemical Process Safety | 3.0 |
CHE 471 | Process Design I | 4.0 |
CHE 472 [WI] | Process Design II | 3.0 |
CHE 473 [WI] | Process Design III | 3.0 |
CHEC 353 | Physical Chemistry and Applications III | 4.0 |
CHEM 241 | Organic Chemistry I | 4.0 |
CHEM 242 | Organic Chemistry II | 4.0 |
CHEM 356 | Physical Chemistry Laboratory | 2.0 |
Technical Electives ^ | 12.0 | |
Total Credits | 181.5-197.0 |
- *
Co-op cycles may vary. Students are assigned a co-op cycle (fall/winter, spring/summer, summer-only) based on their co-op program (4-year, 5-year) and major.
COOP 101 registration is determined by the co-op cycle assigned and may be scheduled in a different term. Select students may be eligible to take COOP 001 in place of COOP 101.
- **
- ***
CHEM sequence is determined by the student's Chemistry Placement Exam score and the completion of a summer online preparatory course available based on that score.
- †
MATH and PHYS sequences are determined by the student's Calculus Placement Exam score and the completion of any summer online preparatory courses available based on that score.
- ‡
Some students may need a one-credit concurrent practicum course depending on their calculus exam score and summer preparatory review participation.
- ^
6 credits in the following subjects (200-499): ACCT, AE, BIO, BLAW, BMES, BUSN, CAEE, CHEM, CIVE, CMGT, CS, CT, ECE, ECEC, ECEE, ECEP, ECES, ECON, EET, EGMT, ENSS, ENVE, ENVS, FDSC, FIN GEO, INDE, INFO, INTB, MATE, MATH, MEM (except MEM 310), MET MGMT, MIS, MKTG, NFS, ORGB, OPM, PBHL, PENG, PHYS, SE, or CHE 399-380, CHE I399, CHE T480, ENGR 370, or courses approved by CHE advisor.
AND
6 credits in the following subjects (300-499): AE, BIO, BMES, CAEE, CHEM, CIVE, CMGT, CS, CT, ECE, ECEC, ECEE, ECEP, ECES, EET, EGMT, ENSS, ENVE, ENVS, FDSC, GEO INDE, INFO, MATE, MATH, MEM (except MEM 310), MET, NFS, PBHL, PENG, PHYS, SE, or CHE 360, CHE 373, CHE 452, CHE 460, CHE 399-480, CHE I399, CHE T480, CHEM 230, CHEM 231 [WI] , CHEM 243, ENGR 370, or courses approved by CHE advisor.
Writing-Intensive Course Requirements
In order to graduate, all students must pass three writing-intensive courses after their freshman year. Two writing-intensive courses must be in a student's major. The third can be in any discipline. Students are advised to take one writing-intensive class each year, beginning with the sophomore year, and to avoid “clustering” these courses near the end of their matriculation. Transfer students need to meet with an academic advisor to review the number of writing-intensive courses required to graduate.
A "WI" next to a course in this catalog may indicate that this course can fulfill a writing-intensive requirement. For the most up-to-date list of writing-intensive courses being offered, students should check the Writing Intensive Course List at the University Writing Program. Students scheduling their courses can also conduct a search for courses with the attribute "WI" to bring up a list of all writing-intensive courses available that term.
Sample Plan of Study
4 year, 1 co-op
First Year | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fall | Credits | Winter | Credits | Spring | Credits | Summer | Credits |
CHEM 101* | 3.5 | CHEM 102 | 4.5 | ENGL 102 or 112 | 3.0 | VACATION | |
COOP 101** | 1.0 | CIVC 101 | 1.0 | ENGR 113 | 3.0 | ||
ENGL 101 or 111 | 3.0 | ENGR 131 or 132 | 3.0 | MATH 200 | 4.0 | ||
ENGR 111 | 3.0 | MATH 122 | 4.0 | PHYS 102 | 4.0 | ||
MATH 121*** | 4.0 | PHYS 101*** | 4.0 | General Education elective† | 3.0 | ||
UNIV E101 | 1.0 | ||||||
15.5 | 16.5 | 17 | 0 | ||||
Second Year | |||||||
Fall | Credits | Winter | Credits | Spring | Credits | Summer | Credits |
CHE 211 | 4.0 | CHE 212 | 4.0 | CHE 330 | 4.0 | CHE 320 | 3.0 |
CHE 220 | 3.0 | CHE 230 | 4.0 | CHE 341 | 4.0 | CHE 342 | 4.0 |
CHEM 241 | 4.0 | CHEM 242 | 4.0 | CHE 350 | 3.0 | CHE 343 | 4.0 |
MATH 201 | 4.0 | MATH 210 | 4.0 | MATE 220 | 4.0 | CHE 351 | 2.5 |
ENGL 103 or 113 | 3.0 | ||||||
15 | 16 | 15 | 16.5 | ||||
Third Year | |||||||
Fall | Credits | Winter | Credits | Spring | Credits | Summer | Credits |
CHE 331 | 3.0 | CHE 352 | 2.5 | COOP EXPERIENCE | COOP EXPERIENCE | ||
CHE 362 | 4.0 | CHE 371 | 3.0 | ||||
CHEC 353 | 4.0 | CHE 372 | 3.0 | ||||
CHEM 356 | 2.0 | CHE Technical elective† | 3.0 | ||||
BIO elective†† | 3.0-4.5 | General Education elective† | 3.0 | ||||
16-17.5 | 14.5 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Fourth Year | |||||||
Fall | Credits | Winter | Credits | Spring | Credits | ||
CHE 453 | 2.5 | CHE 472 | 3.0 | CHE 466 | 3.0 | ||
CHE 464 | 3.0 | CHE Technical elective† | 3.0 | CHE 473 | 3.0 | ||
CHE 471 | 4.0 | General Education electives† | 6.0 | CHE Technical elective† | 3.0 | ||
CHE Technical elective† | 3.0 | General Education elective† | 3.0 | ||||
General Education elective† | 3.0 | ||||||
15.5 | 12 | 12 | |||||
Total Credits 181.5-183 |
- *
CHEM Sequence is determined by the student's Chemistry Placement Exam score and the completion of a summer online preparatory course available based on that score.
- **
Co-op cycles may vary. Students are assigned a co-op cycle (fall/winter, spring/summer, summer-only) based on their co-op program (4-year, 5-year) and major.
COOP 101 registration is determined by the co-op cycle assigned and may be scheduled in a different term. Select students may be eligible to take COOP 001 in place of COOP 101.
- ***
MATH and PHYS sequences are determined by the student's Calculus Placement Exam score and the completion of any summer online preparatory courses available based on that score.
- †
- ††
5 year, 3 co-op
First Year | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fall | Credits | Winter | Credits | Spring | Credits | Summer | Credits |
CHEM 101* | 3.5 | CHEM 102 | 4.5 | ENGL 102 or 112 | 3.0 | VACATION | |
COOP 101** | 1.0 | CIVC 101 | 1.0 | ENGR 113 | 3.0 | ||
ENGL 101 or 111 | 3.0 | ENGR 131 or 132 | 3.0 | MATH 200 | 4.0 | ||
ENGR 111 | 3.0 | MATH 122 | 4.0 | PHYS 102 | 4.0 | ||
MATH 121*** | 4.0 | PHYS 101*** | 4.0 | General Education elective† | 3.0 | ||
UNIV E101 | 1.0 | ||||||
15.5 | 16.5 | 17 | 0 | ||||
Second Year | |||||||
Fall | Credits | Winter | Credits | Spring | Credits | Summer | Credits |
CHE 211 | 4.0 | CHE 212 | 4.0 | COOP EXPERIENCE | COOP EXPERIENCE | ||
CHE 220 | 3.0 | CHE 230 | 4.0 | ||||
CHEM 241 | 4.0 | CHEM 242 | 4.0 | ||||
MATH 201 | 4.0 | MATH 210 | 4.0 | ||||
15 | 16 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Third Year | |||||||
Fall | Credits | Winter | Credits | Spring | Credits | Summer | Credits |
CHE 330 | 4.0 | CHE 320 | 3.0 | COOP EXPERIENCE | COOP EXPERIENCE | ||
CHE 341 | 4.0 | CHE 342 | 4.0 | ||||
CHE 350 | 3.0 | CHE 343 | 4.0 | ||||
MATE 220 | 4.0 | CHE 351 | 2.5 | ||||
ENGL 103 or 113 | 3.0 | ||||||
15 | 16.5 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Fourth Year | |||||||
Fall | Credits | Winter | Credits | Spring | Credits | Summer | Credits |
CHE 331 | 3.0 | CHE 352 | 2.5 | COOP EXPERIENCE | COOP EXPERIENCE | ||
CHE 362 | 4.0 | CHE 371 | 3.0 | ||||
CHEC 353 | 4.0 | CHE 372 | 3.0 | ||||
CHEM 356 | 2.0 | CHE Technical elective† | 3.0 | ||||
BIO elective†† | 3.0-4.5 | General Education elective† | 3.0 | ||||
16-17.5 | 14.5 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Fifth Year | |||||||
Fall | Credits | Winter | Credits | Spring | Credits | ||
CHE 453 | 2.5 | CHE 472 | 3.0 | CHE 466 | 3.0 | ||
CHE 464 | 3.0 | CHE Technical elective† | 3.0 | CHE 473 | 3.0 | ||
CHE 471 | 4.0 | General Education elective† | 6.0 | CHE Technical elective† | 3.0 | ||
CHE Technical elective† | 3.0 | General Education elective† | 3.0 | ||||
General Education elective† | 3.0 | ||||||
15.5 | 12 | 12 | |||||
Total Credits 181.5-183 |
- *
CHEM Sequence is determined by the student's Chemistry Placement Exam score and the completion of a summer online preparatory course available based on that score.
- **
Co-op cycles may vary. Students are assigned a co-op cycle (fall/winter, spring/summer, summer-only) based on their co-op program (4-year, 5-year) and major.
COOP 101 registration is determined by the co-op cycle assigned and may be scheduled in a different term. Select students may be eligible to take COOP 001 in place of COOP 101.
- ***
MATH and PHYS sequences are determined by the student's Calculus Placement Exam score and the completion of any summer online preparatory courses available based on that score.
- †
See degree requirements.
- ††
Co-op/Career Opportunities
Chemical engineers tend to work for large corporations with such job assignments as process engineering, design engineering, plant operation, research and development, sales, and management. They also work for federal and state government agencies on projects related to environmental problems, defense, energy, and health-related research.
Some major employers of Drexel’s chemical engineering graduates are DuPont, Merck, BASF, ExxonMobil, Dow Chemical, and Air Products. A number of graduates go on to pursue master’s and/or doctoral degrees. Graduate schools that Drexel’s chemical engineers have attended include the University of California at Berkeley and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, among others.
Co-op Experiences
Drexel is located in downtown Philadelphia with easy access to major pharmaceutical, chemical, and petroleum companies. When students complete their co-op jobs, they are asked to write an overview of their experiences. These brief quotes are taken from some recent student reports:
Research assistant, chemicals manufacturer: “Conducted research in a developmental polyamide process. Aspects included scale-up from bench-scale to batch demonstration, installation and calibration of on-line composition sensors, off-line analytical techniques to assess product quality, and interfacing with plant sites to define and standardize a critical quality lab procedure. Documented results in technical memos and in a plant presentation . . .I had a lot of freedom and responsibility. It was great interacting with other researchers and technicians. Everyone was so helpful. ”
Co-op engineer, chemicals manufacturer: “Created material safety data sheets, which involved chemical composition, hazard communication, occupational safety and health, emergency response, and regulatory issues for numerous products and wastes. Handled domestic and international regulatory reviews. Determined hazardous waste reporting requirements, handling and disposal procedures. Evaluated toxicological and ecological data for assessment of hazard ratings. Provided input on product safety technical reports.”
Visit the Drexel Steinbright Career Development Center page for more detailed information on co-op and post-graduate opportunities.
Dual/Accelerated Degree
Accelerated Program
The accelerated program of the College of Engineering provides opportunities for highly-talented and strongly-motivated students to progress toward their educational goals essentially at their own pace. Through advanced placement, credit by examination, flexibility of scheduling, and independent study, the program makes it possible to complete the undergraduate curriculum and initiate graduate study in less than the five years required by the standard curriculum.
Bachelor’s/Master’s Accelerated Degree Program
Drexel offers a combined BS/MS degree program for our top engineering students who want to obtain both degrees in the same time period as most students obtain a bachelor's degree. In Chemical Engineering, the course sequence for BS/MS students involves additional graduate courses and electives.
Facilities
The Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering occupies the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th floors of the Center for Automation Technology. Approximately 35,000 square feet (gross) are available for the department.
Two thousand square feet of laboratory facilities are designed for the pre-junior and junior year laboratory courses. Experiments in these laboratory courses focus on applying concepts in thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, heat and mass transfer, separations, and reaction engineering. Laboratory courses are run with class sizes of 18 students or less.
The department has two computer laboratories:
- The senior design laboratory features nine booths designed for team projects. Each booth contains a work station loaded with the latest process simulation software produced by Aspen, Simulation Sciences and HYSIS. Seniors use the room heavily during their Capstone design experience, although pre-junior courses in separations and transport also include projects requiring use of the process simulation software.
- A second computer lab contains over 30 individual work stations with general and engineering-specific software.
Many undergraduate students participate in research projects in faculty laboratories as part of independent study coursework or BS/MS thesis work. Chemical engineering faculty are engaged in a wide range of research activities in areas including energy and the environment, polymer science and engineering, biological engineering, and multi-scale modeling and process systems engineering. Further details can be found on the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering's Research Group web page.
Program Level Outcomes
- Identify, formulate, and solve complex engineering problems by applying principles of engineering, science, and mathematics
- Apply engineering design to produce solutions that meet specified needs with consideration of public health, safety, and welfare, as well as global, cultural, social, environmental, and economic factors
- Communicate effectively with a range of audiences
- Recognize ethical and professional responsibilities in engineering situations and make informed judgments, which must consider the impact of engineering solutions in global, economic, environmental, and societal contexts
- Function effectively on a team whose members together provide leadership, create a collaborative and inclusive environment, establish goals, plan tasks, and meet objectives
- Develop and conduct appropriate experimentation, analyze and interpret data, and use engineering judgment to draw conclusions
- Acquire and apply new knowledge as needed, using appropriate learning strategies