Patient × Required Skills: Chemical Handling
37 jobs found.
Dye Mixing Worker (Leather Dyeing)
A profession that mixes dyes and pigments to achieve the required color tones in the dyeing process for leather products.
Decolorization Worker (Animal and Vegetable Oil and Fat Manufacturing)
A job responsible for the decolorization process to remove pigments and impurities from animal and vegetable oils and fats to meet quality standards.
Deinking Worker (Papermaking)
Worker who operates and manages deinking machines and washing equipment to remove ink and impurities from waste paper to produce recycled pulp.
Carbonization Worker (Wool Yarn Spinning)
A manufacturing job in a wool yarn spinning factory that performs carbonization processing using acid treatment and heating to remove impurities from raw materials and produce standard products for the next process.
Tanner (Tanning Hide Worker)
A profession that tans animal hides using chemicals or plant tannins to produce durable and flexible leather.
Fabric Washer (Textile Scouring)
A job that removes oil and dirt attached to textile products through chemical treatment or water washing, and adjusts the fabric's texture.
Desizing Worker (Fabric Scouring)
Manufacturing worker who removes adhered sizing agents from woven fabrics and performs scouring processes such as washing and neutralization.
Battery Manufacturing Worker
Battery manufacturing workers handle the production process of rechargeable batteries used in automobiles and electronic devices, performing a series of tasks from material preparation to cell assembly, charge-discharge testing, inspection, and packaging.
Pulp Manufacturing Worker
Worker who chemically and mechanically manufactures pulp, the raw material for paper, from raw materials such as wood chips.
Pulp Production Equipment Operator
This occupation involves operating, monitoring, and maintaining equipment that produces pulp from raw materials such as wood chips through chemical and mechanical processes.