Chemistry majors have high employment prospects every year, and the employment industries include education, materials, military industry, automobile, military industry, electronics, information, environmental protection, municipal administration, construction, building materials, fire protection, chemical industry, machinery and other industries. Departments include: quality supervision and inspection departments at all levels, scientific research institutes, design institutes, teaching units, production enterprises, fire brigades at or above the provincial level, etc.
Market research shows that graduates majoring in applied chemistry are suitable to engage in applied research, scientific and technological development, production technology and management in petrochemical, environmental protection, commodity inspection, health and epidemic prevention, customs, medicine, fine chemical plants and other production, technical and administrative departments and factories and mines; Suitable for scientific research and teaching in scientific research departments and schools; Suitable for continuing to pursue a master's degree in applied chemistry and related disciplines.
The employment direction of chemistry major is still very wide. After graduation, students majoring in chemistry can engage in product research and development, device design, production process control and enterprise management in the chemical industry.
Chemical work: sales engineer, chemist, sales representative, R&D engineer, sales manager, high school chemistry teacher, junior high school chemistry teacher, process engineer, experimenter, quality inspector, chemical analyst, sales assistant, etc.