CAREER

Chemists

Overview

Salary Median (2023)

$84,680

Projected Job Growth (2023-2033)

+6.3% (as fast as the average)

Career

What Chemists Do

Conduct qualitative and quantitative chemical analyses or experiments in laboratories for quality or process control or to develop new products or knowledge.

Other Job Titles Chemists May Have

Air Quality Chemist, Analytical Chemist, Chemical Lab Scientist (Chemical Laboratory Scientist), Chemist, Forensic Chemist, Product Development Chemist, QC Chemist (Quality Control Chemist), R and D Chemist (Research and Development Chemist), Research Chemist, Scientist

How Leaders Describe a Typical Day at Work

Chief Science Officer ,

Avicenna Biosciences, Inc.

Reading, lots of reading. My work involves the intersection of chemistry, mathematics, and medicine in that we use machine learning to accelerate small molecule medicinal chemistry. As a consequence, I read a lot of scientific work to try and carve out new opportunities for drug discovery and development. I also spend a fair amount of time in meetings with other scientists to ensure we are moving our projects as quickly as we can.

Water Chemist ,

City of Santa Monica

The day begins at 6:00 AM and starts with prepping the lab for samples. Turning on instruments and making calibration standards are the first step. Then I go out in the field and collect water samples in various containers that have different preservatives that are test specific. Once the samples are back in the lab, we run a battery of tests on a fixed schedule that meets health department regulations.


Tasks & Responsibilities May Include

  • Develop, improve, or customize products, equipment, formulas, processes, or analytical methods.
  • Analyze organic or inorganic compounds to determine chemical or physical properties, composition, structure, relationships, or reactions, using chromatography, spectroscopy, or spectrophotometry techniques.
  • Induce changes in composition of substances by introducing heat, light, energy, or chemical catalysts for quantitative or qualitative analysis.
  • Conduct quality control tests.
  • Write technical papers or reports or prepare standards and specifications for processes, facilities, products, or tests.

This page includes information from theO*NET 29.2 Databaseby the U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration (USDOL/ETA). Used under theCC BY 4.0license. O*NET® is a trademark of USDOL/ETA.