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Nanosensors

This "electronic nose" chip contains an array of 16 different sensor devices that identify gasses through pattern recognition. This technology could be used to deter terrorism, to monitor pollution, and to measure air quality and safety. The sensors were created using combinatorial thin film deposition, which improves the behavior of materials by altering their composition.

 
   

The design of advanced materials and hardware products begins with understanding the fundamentals of materials science. Our undergraduate curriculum has been developed to meet the challenges that future materials scientists and engineers will face.

The Undergraduate MSE Degree Program will enable the student to:

  • Understand the fundamental properties and structure of materials and how they may be tailored for a specific product
  • Engineer a wide variety of materials including metals, polymers, ceramics and electronic materials for the next generation of products
  • Design processing and manufacturing routes for advanced technology products
  • Work as a materials specialist on industrial product design teams, and select the materials based on quality and reliability.

Students may major in Materials Science and Engineering leading to a B.S. degree in Material Science and Engineering or use Materials Engineering as a field of concentration in the Bachelor of Science in Engineering degree program.

Requirements for the Major

  1. The required CORE (general education) requirements of the campus.
  2. A core of mathematics, physics, chemistry, and engineering courses required of all engineering students.
  3. Twelve credits of courses selected within a secondary, minor field.
  4. Twenty-three credits of materials engineering courses.
  5. Technical electives to be selected by the student and his or her advisor to enrich, specialize or expand certain areas of knowledge within the chosen field.
Course Number and Name
Semester and Credit Hours
Freshman Year
I
II
ENES 100 - Introduction to Engineering Design
3
--
MATH 140 - Calculus I
4
--
MATH 141 - Calculus II
--
4
PHYS 161 - General Physics
--
3
CHEM 135 - General Chemistry
3
--
CHEM 136 - General Chemistry Lab
1
--
ENES 102 - Statics
--
3
ENGL 101 - Introduction to Writing
3
--
CORE Program Requirements
--
6
Total Credits
14
16
 
Sophomore Year
I
II
MATH 241 - Calculus III
4
--
MATH 246 - Differential Equations
--
3
PHYS 260/261 - General Physics II
4
--
PHYS 270/271 - General Physics III
--
4
CHEM 231/232 or CHEM 481- Organic Chemistry I/Lab or Physical Chemistry I*
--
4/3
ENEE 204 - Basic Circuit Theory
--
3
ENMA 300 (formerly ENES 230) - Introduction to Materials and Their Applications
3
--
CORE Program Requirements
3
3
Total Credits
14
17/16

In general, students should not register for 300-400 level engineering subjects until and unless they have satisfactorily completed MATH 241 and MATH 246.

*Students specializing in polymers should take CHEM 231/232.

Course Number and name
Semester and Credit Hour
Junior Year
I
II
ENMA 310 - Materials Lab: Structural Characterization
3
--
ENMA 311 - Elec & Mag Lab
--
3
ENMA 362 - Mechanical Properties and Lab
4
--
ENMA 460 - Physics of Materials
3
--
ENMA 461 - Thermodynamics of Materials
--
3
ENMA 465 - Microprocessing of Materials
--
3
Specialization Electives or Minor Courses
3
3
CORE Program Requirements
3
3
Total Credits
16
15
 
Senior Year
I
II
ENMA 463 - Macroprocessing of Materials
3
--
ENMA 471 - Kinetics, Diffusion, Phase Transformations
3
--
ENRE 445/446 - Reliability and Quality OR ENME 392 Statistical Methods for Product and Process Development
--
3
ENMA 490 - Materials Design
3
Specialization Electives or Minor Course
3
3
Upper-level Science elective
3
--
Technical Electives (> 300 level)
3
3
CORE Program Requirements/ENGL 393
3
3
Total Credits
18
15

Minimum Degree Credits: 124 / 125 credits and the fulfillment of all Department, College, and University requirements. Students must consult with an advisor on selection of appropriate courses for their particular course of study.

   
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