Required Courses
| 12 |
| Intermediate Transport Phenomena | |
| Intermediate Problems in Chemical Engineering | |
| Advanced Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics | |
| Kinetics and Catalysis | |
| Biological Engineering: Molecules, Cells & Systems | |
| 6 |
| 3 |
| at least 9 |
- Grades of B or better are required in all Chemical and Biological Engineering courses used towards degree requirements.
- Chemical and Biological Engineering Elective courses shall be in the range numbered 500-899 and will not be laboratory courses, Independent Studies or Research.
- The requirement of four core Chemical and Biological Engineering graduate courses shall not be met by substitution of other courses.
Students taking advanced courses outside the department in excess of breadth requirements may, with department approval, use up to two of these courses toward the requirement of two Chemical and Biological Engineering Elective courses. Seminar courses may not be used to satisfy Chemical and Biological Engineering Elective course requirements.
PhD Elective Course Requirement
Students must complete at least one course from another program outside Chemical and Biological Engineering totaling at least three credits. Courses must be numbered 300 and above. A B average is required. Pass/fail or audit courses may not be used for the elective course requirement. Courses used to satisfy the breadth program may not be used for the PhD Elective course requirement. Advisor approval is required and secured through submission of the PhD Elective Course Approval Form. PhD Elective courses can be foreign language courses.
Breadth Requirement
The breadth requirement is designed to represent a coherent body of work and should not be simply an after-the-fact ratification of a number of courses taken outside the major department. To ensure coherence, the student must consult with his or her advisor. The minor/certificate should be submitted for approval at an early date, before the student is halfway through the proposed course sequence.
Teaching Assistantship
Each student in the PhD program is required to serve as a teaching assistant (TA) for two semesters. Under normal circumstances, each student should serve as a teaching assistant one semester of the second year and one semester of the third year. Requests for alternate arrangements, partial or full waiver of the requirement, should be submitted in writing to the Graduate Program Committee.