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  • 1.00 Credits

    Continuous courses; 1 lecture hour. 1-1 credit. Prerequisites: senior standing and participation in a senior design (capstone) project. This weekly seminar presents and discusses topics relevant to senior-level engineering students in support of the capstone project and upcoming graduation. A single course coordinator manages and administers the course and schedules the various faculty lectures and guest speakers. Topics include, but are not limited to, the following: proposal writing, project planning and management, scheduling resources and budgeting for technical projects, patents and intellectual property, quality systems (six sigma, ISO standards, statistical process control), entrepreneurship, creativity and innovation and professional registration.
  • 1.00 Credits

    Semester course; 1 credit. Prerequisite: Chemical, electrical or mechanical engineering majors or research experience to satisfy the engineering internship. Students complete oral presentations and written reports summarizing the internship experience.
  • 1.00 Credits

    Semester course; 1 lecture hour. 1 credit. Prerequisite: senior standing or permission of instructor. This course prepares students for taking the fundamentals of Engineering Exam. Passing the FE Exam is the first step to getting a Professional Engineering license. This course is not intended to teach the various subject matters, but to review the subject areas and help students prepare as well as possible for the examination.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Prerequisite: MATH 301 or equivalent. Advanced topics in engineering mathematics. Topics include partial differential equations, boundary value problems, infinite series, Fourier series, Sturm- Liouville theory, orthogonal functions and the theory of a function of a complex variable. Engineering applications include heat and mass transfer, oscillations in plates and membranes, buckling of columns under axial loads, traveling waves and electromagnetic fields.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Prerequisite: Senior standing in the School of Engineering or permission of the instructor. Introduction to the state-of-the-art and technology of robotics and its applications for productivity gain in industry.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Prerequisite: Senior standing in chemical engineering. Process modeling and simulation are an integral part of process design and analysis. This course continues training in the derivation of steady-state and dynamic mass and energy balances. Emphasis is placed on the use of student-written and commercially available software to develop and analyze models for individual process units (a single reactor or distillation column), process modules (combination of a reactor, crystallizer, centrifuge and dryer) and entire plant flowsheets.
  • 4.00 Credits

    Semester course; 3 lecture and 3 laboratory hours. 4 credits. Prerequisites: EGRE 335 or ENGR 305 or ENGR 315. This course covers the design and analysis of linear feedback systems. Emphasis is placed upon the student gaining mathematical modeling experience and performing sensitivity and stability analysis. The use of compensators to meet systems design specifications will be treated. Topics include: an overview and brief history of feedback control, dynamic models, dynamic response, basic properties of feedback, root-locus, frequency response and state space design methods. The laboratory will consist of modeling and control demonstrations and experiments single-input/single-output and multivariable systems, analysis and simulation using matlab/simulink and other control system analysis/design/implementation software.
  • 1.00 - 3.00 Credits

    Semester course; variable hours. 1-3 credits. May be repeated with different content. Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor. A series of specialized topics in engineering that are of general interest but not covered by an existing course or program. Lectures will be presented in seminar format by speakers from business, industry, government and academia. Subjects will be multidisciplinary in nature. Graded as pass/fail or normal letter grading at the option of the instructor.
  • 1.00 - 5.00 Credits

    Semester course; variable hours. 1-5 credits. Prerequisite: Determined by the instructor. Specialized topics in engineering designed to provide a topic not covered by an existing course or program. General engineering or multidisciplinary. May be repeated with different content. Graded as pass/fail or normal letter grading at the option of the instructor. See the Schedule of Classes for specific topics to be offered each semester and prerequisites.
  • 1.00 - 5.00 Credits

    Semester course; variable hours. 1-5 credits. May be repeated with different content. Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor. Students must submit a written proposal to be approved by the supervising instructor prior to registration. Investigation of specialized engineering problems that are multidisciplinary or of general interest through literature search, mathematical analysis, computer simulation and/or laboratory experimentation. Written and oral progress reports as well as a final report and presentation are required. Graded as pass/fail or normal letter grading at the option of the instructor.
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