|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Course Criteria
Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
-
1.00 Credits
Prerequisite: CHEM 320, CHML 320; co-requisite: CHEM 421. A laboratory course covering the use of spectroscopic, chromatographic and electrochemnical instrumentation for the analysis of materials.
-
1.00 Credits
Co-requisite: CHEM 431. Basic purification and characterization techniques in biochemistry. (S)
-
1.00 Credits
Co-requisite: CHEM 432. Basic purification and characterization techniques in biochemistry. (F)
-
1.00 Credits
Co-requisite: CHEM 441. Theoretical principles and laboratory techniques involved in the preparation and the characterization of inorganic compounds. (F)
-
2.00 Credits
Prerequisite: PHY 211; Co-requisite: CIV 311. Plane surveying, measurement of distances and angles, differential leveling, traverse adjustment and area computations, topographic surveying and contours, horizontal and vertical curves, surveying computations, elements of site plan, professional ethics in surveying.
-
3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: EN 240. Analysis of statically determinate and indeterminate structures for fixed and moving loads. Equations of equilibrium and compatibility. Influence lines, and shear and moment envelopes. Analysis of forces and deflections in structures by methods of moment distribution, consistent deformation, and virtual work, computer analysis of structures, real life examples.
-
2.00 Credits
Prerequisites: EN 223, 240, and MATH 368; Co-requisite: CIVL 330. Fluid properties and definition; fluid statics; fluid dynamics; Bernoulli equation and linear momentum; viscous flow; drag forces and boundary layer concepts; ideal flow; velocity potential and stream functions; dimensional analysis and dynamic similitude, real life problems.
-
3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: CHEM 141; Co-requisite: CIVL 340, CIV 330, CIVL 330. Basic concepts of environmental engineering, local and global environmental issues, scientific, social, ethical, legal and political aspects of environmental issues; quantitative engineering analysis of sources, transformations, and effects of pollutants in water, air, and soil; introduction to water and wastewater treatment processes, air pollution control technologies, solid waste, and hazardous waste management. This course requires the completion of a service learning component in specific areas of environmental engineering.
-
2.00 Credits
Prerequisite: CIV 320. Engineering properties of steel, behavior and design of members subjected to fatigue, and combined loading and compression, plate girders composite beams, open-web joists and connections. Methods of allowable design stress, and load resistance factor design. Elements of plastic analysis and design. Framing systems and loads for industrial buildings and bridges, design constraints.
-
3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: CIV 330 and CIVL 330. This course is designed to review the fundamentals and practices of water resources engineering. Students will explore water resources engineering processes in the theoretical and applied realm in the fields of closed conduit (pipe) flow, open channel flow, surface water hydrology, and groundwater flow. Application of probability and statistical concepts along with the legal, economic and environmental considerations to the analysis and design of complex hydraulic and hydrologic systems will prepare interested student for future careers in water supply, wastewater, flood plain, storm water, and groundwater management.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Privacy Statement
|
Terms of Use
|
Institutional Membership Information
|
About AcademyOne
Copyright 2006 - 2025 AcademyOne, Inc.
|
|
|