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List of engineering branches

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(Redirected from List of engineering fields)

Engineering is the discipline and profession that applies scientific theories, mathematical methods, and empirical evidence to design, create, and analyze technological solutions, balancing technical requirements with concerns or constraints on safety, human factors, physical limits, regulations, practicality, and cost, and often at an industrial scale. In the contemporary era, engineering is generally considered to consist of the major primary branches of chemical engineering, civil engineering, electrical engineering, materials engineering and mechanical engineering.[1] There are numerous other engineering sub-disciplines and interdisciplinary fields that may or may not be grouped with these major engineering branches.

This is a list of notable professional engineering disciplines and does not include practices which apply engineering methods to non-technical fields (e.g.: financial engineering). The list has been organized logically and roughly follows established academic, regulatory and professional definitions, though there may be some variation as disciplines evolve from their traditional origins and new disciplines emerge.

Chemical engineering

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Chemical engineering is the application of chemical, physical, and biological sciences to developing technological solutions from raw materials or chemicals.

Subdiscipline Engineering scope Major specialties
Electrochemical engineering Large-scale electrosynthesis of chemicals, electrowinning and chemical energy storage
Explosives engineering
Molecular engineering Chemical behaviour and interactions at a molecular level
Paper engineering Production of paper products
Process engineering Focuses on the design, operation, control, and optimization of chemical processes at an industrial level

Civil engineering

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Civil engineering comprises the design, construction, and maintenance of the physical and naturally built environment.

Subdiscipline Engineering scope Major specialties
Civionics Integration of sensors into structures to monitor structural health
Geotechnical engineering The behaviour of earth materials, soil and rock mechanics, often in preparation of a project site
Municipal or urban engineering The coordination and management of municipal infrastructure networks.
  • Sanitary engineering – separation and removal of community sewage; increasingly interdisciplinary as a branch of environmental engineering.
Structural engineering Structures that support or resist structural loads.
Transportation engineering Facilities and infrastructure for any form of transportation of people and cargo
Water resources engineering Technical application of hydrology

Electrical engineering

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Electrical engineering comprises the study and application of electricity, electronics and electromagnetism.

Subdiscipline Engineering scope Major specialties
Broadcast engineering Radio and television broadcasting
Computer engineering Electronic computing devices
Electronic engineering Low-power electrical circuits using active components such as semiconductor devices
Microwave engineering Devices operating at microwave frequencies
Optical engineering Technologies that utilize light
Power engineering Generation and distribution of electric power.

Materials engineering

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Materials engineering is the application of material science and engineering principles to understand the properties of materials. Material science emerged in the mid-20th century, grouping together fields which had previously been considered unrelated. Materials engineering is thus much more interdisciplinary than the other major engineering branches.

Subdiscipline Engineering scope Major specialties
Biomaterials engineering Materials implanted in a living body
Ceramic engineering Inorganic, non-metallic materials
Composite material engineering Composite materials
Corrosion engineering Management of corrosion
Crystal engineering Materials with crystal structure
Electronic materials Semiconductors and other electronic materials
Forensic materials engineering Analysis of material evidence to identify the material, determine the cause of failure, or reconstruct a crime or accident
Material characterisation Methods of investigating material structure and properties
Metallurgical engineering Metallic materials
Nanotechnology Nanoscale manipulation of materials
Polymer engineering Polymer materials
Surface engineering Surfaces of solid materials
  • Tribology – friction and wear of surfaces in relative motion

Mechanical engineering

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Mechanical engineering comprises the design and analysis of heat and mechanical power for the operation of machines and mechanical systems.[3]

Subdiscipline Engineering scope Major specialties
Acoustical engineering Analysis and control of vibration and sound
Manufacturing engineering Technologies, practices and systems for manufacturing
Optomechanical engineering Mechanical aspects of optical systems: design, packaging, mounting, and alignment of optical systems[4]
Sports engineering Sports equipment
Thermal engineering Heating or cooling of processes, equipment, or enclosed environments
Vehicle engineering Systems and equipment that propel and control vehicles

Interdisciplinary

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While some recently emerging fields of engineering are considered specializations within one of the five main branches, many others are interdisciplinary and combine traditional aspects of different branches or are technical applications of emerging scientific fields.

Discipline Engineering scope Major specialties
Agricultural engineering A broad collection of disciplines encompassing the technical requirements of modern agriculture and agribusiness, combining civil, chemical, electrical, environmental and mechanical engineering and agricultural and food science.
Biological engineering Application of biology to create products. Some fields are traditionally considered subdisciplines of chemical engineering. Also referred to as biological systems engineering, biosystems engineering or biotechnology.
Biomedical engineering A historical discipline of biological engineering specializing in medicine and healthcare
Climate engineering Feasibility planning of large-scale interventions to mitigate climate change, generally through removal of atmospheric carbon dioxide or reflection of solar radiation
Electromechanics The interaction of electrical and mechanical systems, prominent in alternating-current electrical generators and motors.
Energy engineering Energy systems, with an emphasis on energy efficiency and sustainability.
Environmental engineering Applications of environmental science
Facilities engineering Conditions of indoor environments
Geological engineering Technical application of geology, often in support of a civil, mining, or environmental engineering project
Geomatics engineering Systems for collecting and analyzing spatial information. Previously known as surveying engineering.
Humanitarian engineering Affordable and sustainable programs to provide clean water, heat, shelter and sanitation to disadvantaged and marginalized communities
Industrial engineering Integration, management and optimization of complex systems of people, information, resources and technology (a.k.a. applied engineering in the US[5])
Industrial & production engineering Applies industrial and mechanical engineering and management science to the production process.
Mechatronics engineering Robotics and automation
Military engineering Fortifications, military transport routes and communication lines
Nuclear engineering Nuclear reactors and power plants
Petroleum engineering Extraction of hydrocarbons from subsurface reservoirs
Quantum engineering Emerging discipline based in quantum mechanics
Textile engineering Manufacture of textiles

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Julie Thompson Klein, Robert Frodeman, Carl Mitcham. The Oxford Handbook of Interdisciplinary. Oxford University Press, 2010. (pp. 149–150)
  2. ^ Wiebe, A. J.; Chan, C. W. (April 2012). "Ontology driven software engineering". 2012 25th IEEE Canadian Conference on Electrical and Computer Engineering (CCECE). pp. 1–4. doi:10.1109/CCECE.2012.6334938. ISBN 978-1-4673-1433-6. S2CID 9911741.
  3. ^ Clifford, Michael. An Introduction to Mechanical Engineering. Taylor & Francis Group LLC, 2006. ISBN 978-1-44411337-2
  4. ^ "OPTI 421/521: Introductory Optomechanical Engineering" (PDF). University of Arizona. Retrieved 9 December 2024.
  5. ^ "ATMAE Membership Venn Diagram". Untied States: Association of Technology, Management, and Applied Engineering (ATMAE). Archived from the original on 2013-11-13.