Wrocław, Poland

Chemical Technology

Technologia chemiczna

Master's
Table of contents
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Chemical Technology at PWr

Language: PolishStudies in Polish
Subject area: engineering and engineering trades
Kind of studies: full-time studies
University website: pwr.edu.pl/en

Test: check whether Chemical Technology is the right major for you!

Technologia chemiczna

Answer all questions to see if Chemical Technology (Master's) is the right fit for you!

1. Are you motivated to apply chemical engineering principles to design and optimize industrial processes?

2. Do you want to work on scaling up laboratory chemistry to safe, efficient, and sustainable production?

3. Are you interested in developing or improving separation, reaction, and transport operations in industrial contexts?

4. Are you willing to engage in improving sustainability—reducing waste, designing green processes, and managing energy use?

5. Do you believe a two-year master’s degree will significantly elevate your ability to innovate or lead in chemical technology?

6. Are you interested in working with emerging materials, catalysts, or biochemical systems in technological applications?

7. Do you want to build competence in process control, instrumentation, and data-driven optimization?

8. Are you prepared to collaborate with chemists, engineers, regulatory experts, and production teams?

9. Are you interested in ensuring safety, compliance, and environmental regulation adherence in chemical processes?

10. What motivates you most to pursue a master’s in Chemical Technology?

Definitions and quotes

Technology
Technology ("science of craft", from Greek τέχνη, techne, "art, skill, cunning of hand"; and -λογία, -logia) is first robustly defined by Jacob Bigelow in 1829 as: "...principles, processes, and nomenclatures of the more conspicuous arts, particularly those which involve applications of science, and which may be considered useful, by promoting the benefit of society, together with the emolument [compensation ] of those who pursue them" .
Technology
When technology makes it perfect, art loses.
Brian Eno, as quoted in Wired (January 1999)
Technology
It is the constant attempt in this country [Canada] to make fundamental science responsive to the marketplace. Because technology needs science, it is tempting to require that scientific projects be justified in terms of the worth of the technology they can be expected to generate. The effect of applying this criterion is, however, to restrict science to developed fields where the links to technology are most evident. By continually looking for a short-term payoff we disqualify the sort of science that … attempts to answer fundamental questions, and, having answered them, suggests fundamentally new approaches in the realm of applications.
John C. Polanyi, A Scientist and the World He Lives In, Speech to the Empire Club of Canada (27 Nov 1986) in C. Frank Turner and Tim Dickson (eds.), The Empire Club of Canada Speeches 1986-1987 (1987), 149-161.
Technology
The marriage of reason and nightmare which has dominated the 20th century has given birth to an ever more ambiguous world. Across the communications landscape move the specters of sinister technologies and the dreams that money can buy. Thermonuclear weapons systems and soft drink commercials coexist in an overlit realm ruled by advertising and pseudoevents, science and pornography. Over our lives preside the great twin leitmotifs of the 20th century—sex and paranoia.
J. G. Ballard, Crash (1973, 1995), catalogue notes. In J. G. Ballard, The Kindness of Women (2007), 221.
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