Why choose this course?
Chemical Engineering at the University of Wolverhampton is industry-focused and aims to prepare students to tackle the challenges facing the chemical and allied industries in the 21st century. The central theme of the course is to make you an engineer.
Modern society relies on the work of chemical engineers. They help to manage resources, protect the environment and maintain stringent health and safety procedures, whilst all the while developing the processes that make the products we desire or depend on. The University of Wolverhampton’s Chemical Engineering course provides a deep understanding of chemical processes and the end products from industrial chemical reactions.
On the course, you will learn how raw materials can be transformed into useful products in a safe and cost-effective way. For example, petrol, plastics and synthetic fibres such as polyester and nylon all come from oil. Chemical engineers understand how to alter the chemical, biochemical or physical state of a substance, to create a range of products as diverse as food, cosmetics and pharmaceuticals.
The course covers energy resource exploitation and management, industrial practices and processes, chemical thermodynamics and reaction engineering, process design and control, health and safety, protection of the environment, and petroleum and chemical refining. Our course is aimed squarely at producing engineers. We will ensure you have the correct balance of underpinning science, mathematical skill, and core chemical engineering to ensure that you will have second-to-none employment qualities and expectation.
We are proud to say we are accredited by the Institution of Chemical Engineers (IChemE).
Chemical Engineering is taught at the City Campus in Wolverhampton.
Watch our video below featuring staff and students from Chemical Engineering here at the University of Wolverhampton.
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The course has been constructed to deliver chemical engineers into the UK and global workplaces. We strongly take the ethos that our students will leave us with a skill set to make a difference to the manufacture of world-changing materials and processes. We will teach you the underpinning chemistry and thermodynamics but then we will put this knowledge into an industrial, engineering, and 21st century context. We will prepare you for the final, all-important, 3rd year design project. You will be able to design a chemical manufacturing plant, as you will understand the chemistry; you will understand how to control the reaction rate; you will know which controlling transport processes need to be monitored. But more than this, the plant you design will be efficient, profitable, and green.
To achieve this, we will ensure that right from your first year, you’ll have an engineer’s skill set and knowledge toolbox to call upon. We’ll provide lectures that are research and case study-based and supported by tutorials which focus the understanding gained at lectures and make it relevant to contextual/industrial situations.
We will arrange seminars to enable the exchange of ideas and knowledge with peers and with tutors. Experts and industrialists from across the UK and beyond will give many of these seminars, showing you the potential future that a degree in Chemical Engineering can give you either here in the UK or beyond.
The University of Wolverhampton has in recent years spent £1.3 million on its specialist chemical engineering laboratories. These, along with the brand new £25 million chemistry laboratories and our new £10 million manufacturing facilities at Telford, will develop your practical skills, information gathering skills, and data handling. In the final semester, you’ll have the opportunity to use our new pilot rigs and explore how they work, the underpinning physics which control them, and the limitation a true engineer must provide solutions for. We promise you won’t just get to see the equipment – you will be hands-on and learning valuable and practical research skills, problem solving, data analysis and evaluation, and research data presentation.
In addition to this, we will make sure you interact with chemists, mathematicians, physicists, and mechanical and electrical engineers. We’ll ensure you see and use the latest in computational fluid dynamics and additive layer manufacture methods and have use of industry standard software packages. Our promise to you is that you won’t just be told about software, as we will teach you to use the packages right from day one. Why? Because the industry that will employ you expects you to use and understand them from day one.
Here at the University of Wolverhampton, we’ll also guarantee that we’ll push you to your limit and beyond what you thought you were capable of.