<p>in undergrad, chem e is tedious stoichiometry over and over again. I'm wondering if it's different in grad school. Should I major in chemistry if I want to go to grad school in chem e?</p>
<p>Chem E is thermodynamics, transport processes, reactor stuff, tons of math. Who told you otherwise?</p>
<p>My girlfriend says general chemistry and organic chemistry have nothing to do with her chem E stuff.</p>
<p>I was thinking that research in chem e in grad school is more oriented around applied technology than chemistry. </p>
<p>[ChemE</a> | Research Areas](<a href=“http://web.mit.edu/cheme/research/areas/index.html]ChemE”>http://web.mit.edu/cheme/research/areas/index.html)</p>
<p>Threads on this website have the highest view:reply ratio I’ve ever seen…it’s like for every 100 views one person freakin replies.</p>
<p>And yes you are right, as I said in my first post chem E in general does not have a whole lot to do with chemistry. If you want to do chem E grad school, get a chem E degree, not chemistry. Don’t chem E grad schools specifically say they want students to have an undergrad degree in it?</p>
<p>you could argue that chem e has more in common with mech e (thermo, transport phenomenon) rather than chemistry.</p>
<p>keep that in mind.</p>