JobsGas & Chemical System Design Engineer
Job description
Tesla is seeking a Gas and Chemical Process Design Engineer to join their Process Design team in Austin, TX. This role involves designing advanced gas, chemical, and slurry supply systems for a semiconductor facility, ensuring safety, reliability, and compliance with industry standards.
Requirements
- Bachelor’s Degree in Mechanical Engineering, Chemical Engineering, or equivalent experience
- Strong understanding of fluid control, supply, and distribution systems including piping, valves, PLCs, tanks, regulators, sensors, filters, piping connections, etc.
- Ability to read P&IDs, PFDs, and understanding gas/chemical supply systems, equipment operating principles, and fundamental operational skills
- Proficiency in design and documentation tools such as Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Bluebeam, Revit, and AutoCAD
- Willingness to work in a manufacturing facility or chemical processing facility environment
Responsibilities
- Design cutting-edge gas, chemical, and slurry supply systems tailored to fab requirements, ensuring safety and reliability
- Analyze equipment specifications, engineering drawings, P&IDs, PFDs, BOMs, and other design-related documents to validate performance, accuracy, and compliance
- Ensure all designs meet applicable codes, standards, and regulations (e.g., IFC, IBC, NFPA, SEMI, ASME)
- Integrate reliability focus and risk analysis into Systems Engineering job scope, including FMEAs, root cause analysis, cause mapping, design, commissioning, and training
- Collaborate with external stakeholders and internal teams to ensure satisfaction and alignment on design requirements
Benefits
- Employees at Tesla are often offered day-one coverage with multiple medical options (some at $0 paycheck cost), dental/vision, company HSA contributions, a 401(k) match, and equity programs. Most roles also include paid time off and holidays, family-building support, employee assistance, commuter and childcare benefits, and access to discounts and wellness programs.
Is this posting expired or inaccurate?
