ConfusedMSE
Materials
- Jun 29, 2015
- 3
What kinds of jobs are there for materials engineers that are vital to the success of a company. I suppose the follow-up question is what industries would these jobs be in?
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Short intro since it's my first post here:
I'm student graduating with my BS and MS in Materials Science and Engineering next year.
I interned at a midsize (small F500) industrial manufacturing company in R&D for metallurgy last year. It ended up being more project management though (pester heat treat shops to get parts on time, send in lab test requests so other people can test parts with new heat treatments for you, then compile the results and make a presentation). Ended up being very not-technical since it was really just making sure the project was flowing smoothly (I mean, I understood the basic science between the new alternative heat treatments, but I digress).
I'm interning at a large automotive company this year essentially as a laboratory engineering intern. My job is basically a materials testing specialist. Much more hands on and technical, but at the end of the day, I don't get the sense that I am doing something particularly important to the company. If they so wanted they could simply hire an outside materials testing lab to test all their parts instead. I also feel like while I am technically encompassed within the "Product Development" group, we're still in our little world compared to say, D&R (design and release) engineers which are the "prototypical" PD engineers within automotive.
I guess what I'm really asking is where can I find jobs where I feel like what I'm doing is completely vital to the company and not just a "support" role. E.g. Drilling engineer for O&G is vital, HR and IT in O&G would be "support".
Are these jobs really only in, say, metals companies such as Alcoa, Nucor, US Steel? Or like, specialized materials testing labs (which usually end up supporting other companies)?
This is definitely something I've pondered a lot since last year's internship, if the Materials (Science and) Engineering major is not practical enough for undergraduates. We spend so much time learning about different crystal structures, movement and formation of dislocations (Frank-Read sources??? when will I ever use that knowledge in the real world?), thermodynamics, etc.. We learn relatively little about materials selection, process selection, the design process, useful computer skills (just Matlab?), etc.. I've taken to learning CAD on my own in my free elective classes just purely out of interest, but that's not typical or required by any means.
I think if I do end up in a company and/or industry where materials is more of a "support" role (such as... automotive), I'll probably work towards a MS (paid for by the company of course) in another field, most likely Mechanical Engineering or Electrical Engineering, simply because there's far more opportunities in the field for such a background, and it seems more of those opportunities are "vital" to the company.
Sorry for getting sidetracked, but I'm just a bit lost in what my future career path might be with an educational background in materials.
Thanks in advance for any replies!
________
Short intro since it's my first post here:
I'm student graduating with my BS and MS in Materials Science and Engineering next year.
I interned at a midsize (small F500) industrial manufacturing company in R&D for metallurgy last year. It ended up being more project management though (pester heat treat shops to get parts on time, send in lab test requests so other people can test parts with new heat treatments for you, then compile the results and make a presentation). Ended up being very not-technical since it was really just making sure the project was flowing smoothly (I mean, I understood the basic science between the new alternative heat treatments, but I digress).
I'm interning at a large automotive company this year essentially as a laboratory engineering intern. My job is basically a materials testing specialist. Much more hands on and technical, but at the end of the day, I don't get the sense that I am doing something particularly important to the company. If they so wanted they could simply hire an outside materials testing lab to test all their parts instead. I also feel like while I am technically encompassed within the "Product Development" group, we're still in our little world compared to say, D&R (design and release) engineers which are the "prototypical" PD engineers within automotive.
I guess what I'm really asking is where can I find jobs where I feel like what I'm doing is completely vital to the company and not just a "support" role. E.g. Drilling engineer for O&G is vital, HR and IT in O&G would be "support".
Are these jobs really only in, say, metals companies such as Alcoa, Nucor, US Steel? Or like, specialized materials testing labs (which usually end up supporting other companies)?
This is definitely something I've pondered a lot since last year's internship, if the Materials (Science and) Engineering major is not practical enough for undergraduates. We spend so much time learning about different crystal structures, movement and formation of dislocations (Frank-Read sources??? when will I ever use that knowledge in the real world?), thermodynamics, etc.. We learn relatively little about materials selection, process selection, the design process, useful computer skills (just Matlab?), etc.. I've taken to learning CAD on my own in my free elective classes just purely out of interest, but that's not typical or required by any means.
I think if I do end up in a company and/or industry where materials is more of a "support" role (such as... automotive), I'll probably work towards a MS (paid for by the company of course) in another field, most likely Mechanical Engineering or Electrical Engineering, simply because there's far more opportunities in the field for such a background, and it seems more of those opportunities are "vital" to the company.
Sorry for getting sidetracked, but I'm just a bit lost in what my future career path might be with an educational background in materials.
Thanks in advance for any replies!