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Organic works a lot with Carbon based chemistry along with carbohydrate functions and microorganisms.
Accounting, Engineering(except computer engineering, software engineering and electrical engineering), Physics, Chemistry, etc
Yes, quite a lot.
Math will help, not hinder, you in this. You actually need a LOT of math, especially for physics and engineering.
One reason (there are a lot more) is that in organic chemistry many more isomeres with the same chemical formula exist.Example:Na2S2O3: there is only 1 compoundBut C2H4O2 has 3 possibilities:ethanoic acid: H3C-C(-OH)(=O)methoxymethanal: H3C-O-C(-H)(=O)hydroxyethanal: CH2OH-C(-H)(=O)
Majors with a lot of math: Physics, Chemistry, Computer programming, Accounting, Math, Engineering and Architecture.
Organic chemistry is very important. It is required for synthesis of most drugs including paracetamol and asprin. A lot of new high tech materials have some sort of organic compounds and organic chemistry. An example is breathalysers used by the police to test for alcohol.
you can have quite a lot of chemical reactions depending on the topic you are doing hope i have helped thanks x
Chemical Engineering in other words can be described as process engineering related to chemical field. When is engineering math required? A chemical engineer while designing processes, process equipments, etc. does a lot of complex calculations. It is only Engineering Mathematics which can help. When it is not required? 1) You can do everything on Computer. 2) You copy others designs.
The salary for a chemical engineering job depends a lot on how much experience the chemical engineer has had. Entry-level chemical engineers have an average salary of $64,000; while senior chemical engineers or specialists make $90,000-$100,000 on average.
They translate processes developed in the lab into practical applications for the production of products such as plastics, medicines, detergents, and fuels; design plants to maximize productivity and minimize costs; and evaluate plant operations for performance and product quality.
Obviously you wouldn't have to re-take the courses that are required by both programs, but how many courses does that account for? ...probably General and Organic Chemistry. At my alma mater, they don't allow people that didn't start the engineering program freshman year to begin it, simply because they would have to start from scratch. Engineering programs don't allow a lot of flexibility because there is so much to learn. This may not apply to your school, but obviously speak with an advisor to confirm my advice and see if it's worth staying in school some extra time.