Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) is a professional organization for chemical engineers. [1] AIChE was established in 1908 to distinguish chemical engineers as professionals independent of chemists and mechanical engineers. Currently, AIChE has over 60,000 members from over 110 countries [2] or 40,000 members from 93 countries.
Donald Albert Dahlstrom (January 16, 1920 – June 16, 2004) was recognized by the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) as one 100 prominent chemical engineers of the modern era, for his work on liquid-solids separation, [1] particularly with respect to the hydrocyclone.
He proposed the name Society of Chemical Engineers, for what was in fact constituted as the Society of Chemical Industry. At the first General Meeting of the Society in 1882, some 15 of the 300 members described themselves as chemical engineers, but the Society's formation of a Chemical Engineering Group in 1918 attracted about 400 members. [5]
Practicing engineers may have professional certification and be accredited members of a professional body. Such bodies include the Institution of Chemical Engineers (IChemE) or the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE). A degree in chemical engineering is directly linked with all of the other engineering disciplines, to various extents.
Matthew V. Tirrell (born 5 September 1950) is an American chemical engineer.In 2011 he became the founding Pritzker Director and dean of the Institute for Molecular Engineering at the University of Chicago in addition to serving as senior scientist at Argonne National Laboratory.
Willis Harmon Ray (born April 4, 1940) is an American chemical engineer, control theorist, applied mathematician, and a Vilas Research emeritus professor at the University of Wisconsin–Madison [1] notable for being the 2000 winner of the prestigious Richard E. Bellman Control Heritage Award and the 2019 winner of the Neal Amundson Award.
This is the list of chemical engineering societies in the world. They are sorted by continent and alphabetically. They are sorted by continent and alphabetically. They include national or international ones, but not student societies or those otherwise restricted to a particular university or institution.
Martin Zdenek Bazant is an American chemical engineer, mathematician, physicist, and academic. He is the E. G. Roos (1944) Professor of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). [1] From 2016 to 2020, he served as executive officer of the department of chemical engineering. [2]