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12 min read
Last updated: May 23rd, 2026
It can be a struggle to find the best gifts for chemical engineers, especially if you aren't into chemistry yourself. I work closely with chemical engineers and they love practical tools that help them solve problems, but also sometimes enjoy nerdy chemistry gear that lets them show their passion for chemistry. This list helps get rid of the kitsch like printed chemistry mugs and periodic table joke t-shirts to narrow it down to items they will truly love and keep for a long time.
This list ties together our favorite gifts for scientists from around the internet. Some are our own Genius Lab Gear inventions and some we’re just jealous we didn’t think of first! Some links in this page contain affiliate links, which means that any purchase of the items after clicking the link will result in a small monetary referral fee paid back to Genius Lab Gear at no cost to you. We appreciate your support which allows us to continue inventing and testing the best tools for chemists on the planet!
If you've already spent hours looking for gifts for chemical engineers or chemical engineering students, you can stop here.
"This would have made my life 10x easier!" - said one chemist during our first Instagram giveaway. The only solvent-proof and wallet-sized organic chemistry stencil available, this little tool will help your favorite chemical engineer draw beautiful chemical reactions and save them time referencing important physical constants.
Not sure? It was even featured in the Holiday Gift Guide from the authority Chemical & Engineering News magazine!
To see how it's used, check the 45-second video below:
Get it with free shipping from our website or on Amazon using the links below!
You can also add a custom logo to this for events, networking, or promotional giveaways! Custom orders start at 100 pieces - just email us for more info.
The Pocket Chemist at Genius Lab Gear
The Pocket Chemist from Amazon
How to use The Pocket Chemist – Full Feature Guide
Science-themed gifts are rarely as entertaining and enduring as our science-themed word magnet sets! We recently launched these to encourage creativity and self-expression in labs, classrooms and offices. Each specialty pack comes with 144 tiles carefully designed by a PhD in that field for technical accuracy and tacit absurdity.
The Chemistry Word Magnet set was designed with help from professional chemists and chemistry teachers, who chose words to make it both science-y and humorous. Combine it with the Engineering Word Magnet set for a customized creative experience for chemical engineers. These are just plain fun!
Also now available on Amazon.
Chemical engineers spend their careers reasoning about elements they rarely see in pure form, and a good photographic poster brings the table back to physical objects. These posters, by Theodore Gray (an element collector and the author of one of the better element references in print), use real photographs of each element rather than generic icons. They come in a 53 by 27 inch version for an office or lab wall and a 40 by 20 inch version for a smaller space. A nice piece of decor for the chemical engineer who wants the table where they can see it.

Large Classroom Periodic Table Poster (53x27) at Genius Lab Gear | Classroom Periodic Table Poster (40x20) at Genius Lab Gear
From the same makers of games like Periodic, Peptide, and Cytosis, is Ion! This is more the inorganic chemistry version that's great for high school chemistry and PhD level to professional inorganic chemistry majors. Both have similar gameplay and will be well-loved by any chemical engineer who would love to play it with their family, friends or your chemistry club! Get Ion if they primarily work with solid materials instead of liquid chemicals.
Another chemistry-themed card game with a different goal - with Valence you make your own chemical compounds to win!
A chemist in a neighboring lab recommended this to me as a fun game to get kids familiar with the charges (valences) on atoms which cause them to form molecules like H2O and CO2. You really just collect cards that add to zero, but learn a ton of chemistry while you do it! It takes 2-4 players, ages 8+ and about 20 minutes per game.

If your chemical engineer is graduating soon and going into a job that requires a professional engineering certification, they will need to take and pass the FE exam first. This is an excellent practice problem book to get them started. Even at your peak in college, the FE exam takes extensive studying and practice to pass!

I personally love having one or two high-end full-color reference books on my coffee table, related to my field of study. For me, one is a microscopy book and the other is a gems/minerals book.
The Beauty of Chemistry has over 400 pages of visually stunning full-color photos along with explanations of the reactions and processes shown in each. It's a fun way for a chemical engineering major to nerd out while taking a break from research on their couch.

Most chemical engineering professors and professional chemical engineers have quite a book collection. (Some from this list, probably!) Keeping them neatly organized can be a challenge, but bookends can help. My favorite are these simple metal bookends with the serotonin molecule (the molecule of happiness)!

Like a Rubix cube, but with the periodic table. Each side is color-coded for solving the classic problem, but you get to reinforce your elemental basics as you go. This also makes a great gift for a younger student interested in chemistry or chemical engineering.

Are they a pipette ninja? Someone who deftly transfers precise volumes of liquids to and from a chemical reaction? Designate them an official Pipette Ninja with our Pipette Ninja sticker!
Marie Curie was a Nobel prize-winning chemist (and physicist) who shattered the glass ceiling and stayed true to her passions for scientific discovery. This Marie Curie silhouette sticker coveys a cute but meaningful message - "Stay Curie-ous" in honor of her life and mission.
Both of these are perfect gifts under $5 for adding to a chemical engineering student's laptop, thermos or notebook!
Chemical engineers do a lot of work both on paper and with software for system-level simulations. Rocketbook finally solved the problem of merging your hand-written notes into your favorite digital services. You simply use their app to take a photo of your pages of notes and the QR code and marked symbols on each page trigger the app to send the digitized page to any of the 9 pre-set digital destinations you choose. This includes OneNote, Evernote, Google Drive, Dropbox and even specific emails. Want a shortcut to send notes via email straight to your colleague or boss? This is what you’re looking for.
The Rocketbook Matrix is my personal favorite because it's designed for more technical work. It's got 30 pages of graphing paper and one regular lined page for taking notes, plus a built-in ruler on the inside cover. Did I mention they are resuable? Use their "Pilot Frixion" pens and then wipe the page with a damp cloth after uploading your notes to use it all over again (and win one for the environment!).
Check the price on Amazon.

Behind every technological breakthrough, eco-friendly solution, and life-saving medication lies the ingenuity and dedication of these unsung heroes. To show appreciation, a simple but useful tool is a fantastic option.
Enter the venerable Pocket Protector which became a cultural icon in the 1960's and 1970's, but somewhere along the way the newer generation of STEM researchers forgot about them.
Chemical Engineers need these back in their labs to stay organized, stay efficient, protect their lab coats, and finish their experiments without being late to lunch. So we researched and tested every type ever made to methodically solve each problem and come up with this refreshed design.
Available in spruce green, sapphire blue, and faded pink - the top 3 colors voted on by our fans! You can even get it from our Amazon page if that's easier.

Check price on Amazon.
Chemical engineers have a reputation for being fascinated by gins and homebrewing. Nearly every one I've known either wanted to open their own brewery or distillery, and some universities even often elective classes on alcohol production. It's a fun way to use their extensive training!
If your chemical engineer enjoys craft beverages, one of these kits is an excellent way to open a door to something they could one day turn into their life's passion. My favorite kits are this gin-making kit and this amber ale brew kit.
This book finally made cooking enjoyable for me. It's always been one of those imprecise arts where you just follow the directions and hope to get it about right. As a scientist, understanding what I'm doing is paramount. This cookbook walks you through the chemistry behind your every-day cooking recipes so you can make adjustments and improvements by logic, not guesswork! Any chemical engineer would love to have this book to apply their advanced knowledge of chemistry to something they do every day.
Molecular gastronomy is a field of food science that studies the physical and chemical reactions that occur during the cooking process. If you know a chemical engineer who enjoys cooking, they'll appreciate the creativity in this Molecular Gastronomy Starter Kit, which is essentially a miniature lab for food. The set comes with a slotted spoon, tubes, pipettes, and a sodium alginate sachet, among other things. Experimenting with food can bring out the chef in any chemical engineer!
Who doesn't enjoy a cup of coffee? Chemical engineers often work long hours, especially in research laboratories. This Greenline Goods’ beaker mug, which features a diagram of the molecules found in coffee, is the ideal way for a science nerd to start the day. It's the perfect gift for a coffee aficionado which will also remind them of their passion for science while at home.
This amazing classical instrument was inspired from an invention by Galileo back in the 16th century. A Galileo thermometer is made of a sealed glass cylinder containing a clear liquid and several glass vessels of different densities. As the liquid within the colorful weights changes temperature their density changes allowing the weights to rise or fall. It also comes with a glass globe barometer used to measure air pressure. A fun desk gift for chemical engineers that combines old and new technology with chemical engineering principles.
Engineers often get stuck in a loop of always reading technical documents, textbooks and journal articles. It’s important to occasionally break that cycle and dive into a book for pleasure. Below are a few of our favorite science-related books that will be an enjoyable read for a chemical engineer.
This is our all-time favorite book that chemical engineers will enjoy reading. For such a technical book, it’s got an incredible plot yet isn’t overly dramatized (except a little at the end). No other fiction book has captured this much popularity while running through exact calculations, estimations and scientific principles just to keep someone alive. You’ll be rooting for Mark Watney and inspired by the idea that your technical knowledge could one day save your life.

A perfect gift for a female chemical engineer nearing graduation, this book helps to address a major issue not often discussed in school: the “boys” culture of engineering. The author has been an engineer in industry for over 15 years and gives practical strategies in an easy-to-read conversational tone to help any female engineer navigate the male-dominated workplace. It’s well-structured and filled with immediately applicable advice not only on excelling in your career but keeping work-life balance while you do it.

John Clark, a chemist and sci-fi writer instrumental in creating the rocket fuels which took the Apollo astronauts to the Moon, documents the story in a humorous and engaging way. He gets into the chemistry of the propellants, feuds between rival labs, backchannel negotiations and the hair-raising dangers of inventing and testing these fuels. A chemical engineer with the slightest interest in space or rocket technologies would love to read this book about the golden age of rocketry from a chemist point of view.

Molecules is the 2nd book in the 3-book series about the building blocks of our world. (Elements was Book 1). These books come with gorgeous full-color photography and illustrations of molecules and the "stuff" that they form.
I personally love how the photos make otherwise invisible molecules tangible, and tie them to the world we live in. The book has range too - it's approachable enough to get my 8 year old nephew interested, but technical enough for a chemical engineering grad student or professional chemical engineer to keep as a fun coffee table book.
Following the Molecules book above, Reactions is another illustrated chemistry book that shows what "stuff" we can form when molecules get a chance to react! In the last book of this trilogy, Theodore Gray shows the more dynamic side of chemistry.
As a sort of inside joke, he even includes a section about the most boring reactions - like those that cause paint to dry and grass to grow. I highly recommend this affordable trilogy as a fantastic bookshelf for chemistry lovers of any age!

If the person you have in mind is also a graduate student, take a look at our new list of The Best Books to Make You a Better Grad Student.
Chemical engineers are some of the quietest periodic-table fans I know, which makes Periodic a fun, unexpected gift. It's a strategy board game from Genius Games where you move across the actual periodic table, using atomic trends like radius and mass to claim element sets. Mensa Recommended, designed with input from working scientists. A satisfying one for the chemical engineer on your list who can quote the heat capacity of any noble gas off the top of their head, but rarely gets to actually play with the table.

I'm recommending the Heritage Periodic Table specifically for the chemical engineer who spends their days reasoning about elements they almost never see in pure form. It's a handmade acrylic display with 83 real element samples, including alkali metals, halogens, and gases sealed in micro glass ampules within the acrylic. Specific standouts: ferrous meteorite for iron, native gray diamonds for carbon, antique radium-painted watch hands for radium. Only the heavy radioactives past uranium are absent. A satisfying gift for the chemical engineer on your list who'd enjoy seeing the table as physical objects rather than rows of letters.

Heritage Periodic Table at Genius Lab Gear
Chemical engineers are some of the quietest fans of nuclear chemistry I know, and Radium is one of the better elements to surprise them with. This cube contains a real, sealed radium sample, safely housed in a clear acrylic block, with a Geiger counter reading you can verify yourself. It's the kind of conversation piece that opens up half a century of nuclear and chemical history every time someone asks what it is. A great desk addition for the engineer who likes their gifts to come with a story.

Radium Element Cube at Genius Lab Gear
Chemical engineers hard to buy gifts for. This list will help!
Any chemistry student is going through a challenging course load. The most appreciated gift would be The Pocket Chemist, which can help them get through homework faster and turn in spectacularly neat chemical reactions! It's basically a pocket tool for chemistry students.

Derek Miller, Ph.D.,
Materials Scientist and founder of Genius Lab Gear
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Keep your most-used unit conversions handy for quick calculations, and use the built-in ruler, compass and protractor to sketch out your best ideas. All in the size of a credit card.

We're making pocket protectors cool again. Your shirt pocket is about to transform into a hub for all of your favorite pens, markers, and tiny machine tools, without wearing holes through the bottom.

Leave a mysterious rant or engineering poem to your coworkers to keep them guessing. Or take a creative break to loosen up your brain for the next project. All you need is a magnetic surface.

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Looking to create a Mad Scientist costume that’s more legendary than last-minute? Skip those flimsy party-store outfits with see-through polyester and plastic buttons. No self-respecting villain would wear that garbage. The secret to nailing the Mad Scientist look is starting with a real lab coat, and we’ve got the perfect one.

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After spending three years researching lab coats and surveying over 1,500 scientists in what I call "The Lab Coat Project," I've discovered something troubling: most of us are wearing the wrong lab coat. Let me break down the five major classes of lab coats you'll encounter, so you can make an informed decision that keeps you safe and comfortable in the lab.

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Ever wondered why lab coats are white? Discover the surprising history behind the iconic garment and why today’s scientists might wear more than just white in the lab.
Best-selling gifts for engineers of all types including Mechanical, Civil, Electrical, Aerospace, Chemical, Industrial, and Materials Science. These small items from $10-$50 make nerdy stocking stuffers for college engineering majors and professional engineers alike.
If you can't decide, just grab the engineer gift bundle to create a kit with a little of everything. From stickers, to Pocket Tool gadgets, to geeky word magnets and a retro pocket protector - this collection will be unique and win you that smile for their next birthday, graduation, or Christmas present.