I apologise if this is the wrong place to ask. I tried asking on reddit but so far I didn't get a lot of answers/
It seems that in America these two degrees are considered separate. Not so much here in Russia. By American standards would I be classified as a chemist or a chemical engineer? I apologise for the boring list but I have no idea how else to present the information.
In my bachelor's course, which was called when translated literally "chemical technology I had:
-4 semesters of maths (covering integrals, limits, multiple variable derivatives, series, combinatorics, statistics, linear algebra and differential equations; not my forte),
-2 semesters of inorganic chemistry,
-2 semesters of organic chemistry,
-2 semesters of physical chemistry,
-3 semesters of physics,
-2 semesters of technical drawing,
-1 semester of material science,
-1 semester of polymer chemistry
-2 semesters of analytical chemistry
-1 semesters of colloidal chemistry.
-2 semesters of mechanics (the latter one being a giant technical drawing of a reactor with calculations with calculations for size),
-1 semester crash course of electrical engineering
-1 semester of computer modelling of chemical processes (definitely not my forte, we worked in matlab)
-3 of "chemical machines and process" (hydrodynamics, thermal and material exchange, pumps, filters, rectification columns etc. ) with the third semester being a giant project designing a rectification column to produce x amount of some chemical pre day with all the calculations; not my forte)
I specialise in coatings and corrosion protection so I also had
-1 semester of electrochemistry.
-1 semester of corrosion
-1 semester on the electrodeposition of various electrochemical coatings.
-1 semester of corrosion monitoring.
I had other stuff like computational mathematics (matlab), programming (basic), ecology, quantum chemistry, industrial safety, crystallography, and maybe something I don't remember 1 semester each, but these weren't taken seriously.
In my masters I had ( 1 semester each):
-Innovative materials,
-More material science
-Nanocorrosion (I have no idea what that is because our instructor was unbearable to listen too)
-Paints and varnishes (both their chemistry and how they are produces industrially)
-Non-metal corrosion.
-ChemCAD
-Coating testing methods (surface roughness, gloss etc. )
-Wastewater treatment (heavy focus on electroplating plant wastewater; at the end we had a project where we had to design a facility that would treat water of a certain composition)
-Electrochemical production line project (we were given a task, say, copper planting carbon steel chairs and we had to design the whole workshop: choose the right sequence of chemical processes, the right electrolytes, design a water treatment and air ventilation system that would satisfy the safety requirements, calculate the amount of chemicals and power the line would consume etc. )
-AND A LOT OF LAB RESEARCH. I wrote my graduation thesis on superhydrophobic coatings.
So what am I: a chemist or a chemical engineer?
I totally forgot. We also had 1 semester of "chemical technology" where we studied chemical reactors an 1 semester of "control systems in chemical technology"