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Cullen College of Engineering
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Chair: Dr. Dennis A. Clifford
Note: Nonengineering majors may not register for engineering courses except
with the written permission of the dean.
Courses: Civil Engineering (CIVE)
6111: Graduate Seminar Cr. 1. (1-0).May be repeated for credit.
6198:6298:6398:6498:6598: Research Cr. 1-5 per semester or more by concurrent
enrollment. Prerequisite: approval of chair.
6320: Constitutive Modeling of Materials Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: consent of
instructor. Introduction to elasticity, plasticity, viscoelasticity and
fracture mechanics; mathematical modeling of stress-strain relationships and
failure theories for structural and geomaterials; use of rheological models.
6321: Experimental Soil Mechanics Cr. 3. (2-3). Prerequisite: CIVE 3339.
Determination, interpretation, significance, and application of engineering
properties of soils, including laboratory testing, sample handling, reliability
of results, and methods of evaluation; field instrumentation.
6322: Stormwater Management Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 3434. Detention
pond analysis and design, stormwater analysis and management alternatives,
governmental criteria, and computer programs.
6323: Advanced Foundation Design Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite CIVE 4369. Site
characterization; in-site testing methods; reliability in foundation design;
structural design of shallow and deep foundations.
6331: Hydraulics of Open Channel Flow Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 3434.
Flow in natural and artificial channels, flood routing, methods of
characteristics, and diffusion analogy.
6333: Stress-Deformation Behavior of Soil Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 6345.
Review of principles of elasticity and plasticity and their application
to the behavior of soil; constitutive models for soil including critical state
and cap models; numerical techniques.
6334: Geotechnical Stability Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 6345. Shear
strength of cohesive and cohesionless soils; stability of natural and man-made
slopes; bearing capacity theory.
6335: Advanced Concrete Design Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 4363. Design of
two-way slabs, long columns, and connections; deflection and cracking of beams
and slabs; ACI design criteria.
6336: Computer Methods in Structural Analysis Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisites: CIVE 3337,
INDE 2331, and MATH 3331.
6337: Matrix Analysis of Structures (formerly CIVE 7337) Cr. 3. (3-0).
Prerequisite: CIVE 3337. Systematic analysis of structures using computers;
including stiffness equation formation, flexibility equation formulation,
virtual work method, and special analysis methods.
6338: Advanced Steel Design Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 4364. Plastic
analysis of indeterminate structures; design of beams, columns, and
beam-columns using the Load and Resistance Factor Design (LFRD) method.
6341: Bridge Design Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: consent of instructor. History,
development and classification of highway bridges. Bridge loads and load
combinations. Design of deck slabs, steel and concrete girders. Design of
piers, abutments and bearings.
6345: Intermediate Soil Mechanics Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 3339. Theory
of consolidation; physicochemical properties of soils; expansive soils;
introductory concepts of shear strength.
6346: Soil-Structure Interaction Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 4369 or
equivalent. Introduction to advanced techniques in the design of axially and
laterally loaded piles; soil criteria for foundation design.
6348: Wave-Structure Interaction Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: consent of
instructor. Methods for calculation of wave loading on offshore structures;
probabilistic and spectral properties of ocean waves; estimating wave forces
dues to a random sea-state.
6349: Reliability and Safety of Structures Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 4364
or consent of instructor. Review of probability theory and treatment of
uncertainties in structural engineering. Probabilistic models for loads and
resistance variables. Structural analysis incorporating uncertainties.
Mathematical background of reliability theory. Probability-based limit state
design.
6350: Advanced Mechanics of Materials Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisites: CIVE 2332
and MATH 3331. Stress and strain at a point; failure criteria; energy
principles and their application in structural mechanics; theories of torsion,
unsymmetrical bending, shear center, curved beams, and beams on elastic
foundation.
6351: Advanced Concrete Behavior Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 4363.
Behavior of reinforced and prestressed concrete sections and members subjected
to axial force, movement, and shear. Confinement of concrete, creep, and
shrinkage.
6353: Behavior and Design of Prestressed Concrete Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisites:
CIVE 4363 and consent of instructor. Prestressing systems and materials; loss
of prestress; analysis and design for flexure, shear, and bond; anchorage zone;
continuous beams; columns.
6355: Introduction to Dynamics of Structures (formerly CIVE 5334) Cr. 3. (3-0).
Prerequisite: graduate standing in civil engineering. Fundamentals of
vibration; dynamic response of structures to periodic and general dynamic
loading; analytical and computational techniques.
6361: Groundwater Hydrology Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisites: CIVE 4332 or
equivalent and graduate standing in civil engineering and graduate standing in
environmental engineering. Fundamental processes that govern the flow of
groundwater in aquifers and soils. Survey of techniques to determine aquifer
characteristics. Conceptual modeling and application of computer models to
groundwater flow problems.
6362: Hydraulic Structures Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 3334. Analysis and
design of water transmission, storage, and energy dissipating structures.
6363: Evaluation of Water Quality in Natural Waters Cr. 3. (3-0). Water quality management planning for rivers, lakes, and tidal estuaries; mixing and
diffusion phenomena; biologic productivity; mineral, chemical, and oxygen
utilization and equilibria; photosynthetic light transfer and sediment
transport.
6372: Geotechnical Practice in Waste Disposal Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite:
graduate standing in civil engineering or graduate standing in environmental
engineering. Applications of geotechnical engineering principles and practices
to land disposal of hazardous and nonhazardous wastes.
6377: Environmental Chemistry Cr. 3. (2-3). Prerequisites: CHEM 1331, 1332,
1111, and 1112; and graduate standing in civil engineering or graduate standing
in environmental engineering. Aqueous environmental chemistry in natural waters
and wastewaters: ionic equilibria, solubility, hardness, alkalinity, buffering,
and the carbonate system; theory and practice of quantitative water and
wastewater analysis.
6379: Stochastic Hydrology Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisites: CIVE 4332 and INDE 6361.
Advanced hydrology oriented toward probabilistic computer applications of
rainfall and runoff, including Stanford Watershed Model, single-multiple site
streamflow generation, stochastic reservoir analyses.
6381: Biological Processes for Wastewater Treatment Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite
or corequisite: CIVE 6391 or CHEE 6360. Theory and practice of biological
wastewater treatment including aerobic and anaerobic processes in suspended and
attached growth reactors, treatment models, advanced treatment, sludge
handling, and treatment plant design.
6383: Advanced Planning and Design of Water Resource Systems Cr. 3. (3-0).
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. Conventional and computer solutions to the
economical planning and design of single- and multiunit, multipurpose water
resources systems.
6385: Stability of Structures Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisites: MATH 3363 and CIVE 4364.
Elastic and inelastic buckling of columns, beams, frames, and plates;
classical and work-energy methods; background of AISC specifications.
6387: Physicochemical Treatment Processes Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 6377
or equivalent. Theory and practice of physicochemical processes for water and
wastewater treatment: reactors, sedimentation, aeration, adsorption,
ion-exchange, membrane processes, and disinfection.
6388: Solid and Hazardous Waste Treatment Processes Cr. 3. (3-0).
Prerequisites: CIVE 6361 or equivalent preferred and CIVE 6387. Physical and
chemical principles of solid and hazardous waste treatment processes; mass
conservation equations, transport phenomena, phase equilibria, fluid flow in
porous media with applications to soil vapor extraction, soil vapor extraction,
soil leaching/flushing, stabilization, and bioremediation processes.
6389: Civil Engineering Design Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: open only to
students in the Master of Civil Engineering degree program. Topics and projects
illustrating civil engineering design theory and practice. A final report is
required.
6390: Municipal Drinking Water Treatment Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite or
corequisite: CIVE 6377. Theory and design of unit processes used in
conventional drinking water treatment, coagulation, rapid mix, flocculation,
sedimentation, filtration, and disinfection. Source water control is also
studied.
6391: Environmental Engineering Microbiology Cr. 3. (2-3). Prerequisite:
graduate standing in environmental engineering. Fundamental aspects of
microbiology and biochemistry as related to environmental pollution and water
quality processes, engineering energetics and kinetics of microbial growth, and
biological fate of pollutants.
6392: Environmental Engineering Design Project Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisites:
CIVE 6381, 6387, 6390. A project design course for the Environmental
Engineering Program incorporating economic considerations, design details, and
ethics.
6399-7399: Master's Thesis Cr. 3 per semester.
7330: Organic Contaminant Control Cr. 3. (2-3). Prerequisite: CIVE 6390.
Emphasis on treatment for controlling organic contaminants, particularly
organic disinfection by-products in drinking water. Organic control unit
processes are discussed.
7332: Ground Water Contaminant Transport Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisites: CIVE 6361
or equivalent and graduate standing in civil engineering and graduate standing
in environmental engineering or consent of instructor. Principles of
contaminant transport in soils and aquifers. Mathematical modeling of
underground contaminant transport. Numerical modeling using existing and
student developed computer software.
7335: Coastal Hydrodynamics Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Analysis of motion of surface waves, linearized approximation, waves of finite
height, generation of waves, and coastal engineering applications.
7336: Finite Element Methods Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 6377 or consent
of instructor. Elasticity and energy principles; shape functions; isoparametric
elements; nonconforming elements; plate elements; hybrid formulation.
7340: Earthquake Engineering Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 6355 or consent of instructor. Characteristics of earthquake waves and ground motion; review of structural dynamics; building responses; inelastic spectrum; foundation effect; various support motions; hazard analysis; design procedure and seismic codes.
7352: Unified Theory of Reinforced Concrete Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 4363.
Unified theory applicable to the four basic actionsÐbending, axial load,
shear and torsion, rational models based on stress equilibrium, strain
compatibility and constitutive laws of materials. Equilibrium (Plasticity)
Model, Bernoulli Compatibility Model, Mohr Compatibility Model and Softened
Model.
7365: Design of Offshore Structures Cr. 3. (3-0). Prerequisite: CIVE 7364. Design of fixed, floating and compliant offshore structures; environmental loading; dynamic analysis; finite element applications; design of structural systems and components; fatigue analysis; safety and reliability analysis.
7397: Selected Topics Cr. 3. (3-0). May be repeated for credit.
8198:8298:8398:8498:8598: Doctoral Research Cr. 1-5 per semester or more by
concurrent enrollment. Prerequisite: approval of chair.
8311: Organized Graduate Research Discussions (also ECE, INDE, MECE) Cr. 3.
(3-0). Prerequisite: Doctoral standing. Group research discussions with the
intent of broadening the education and background of the student by exposure to
the related research activities in his/her field.
8399:8699:8999: Doctoral Dissertation Cr. 3, 6, or 9 hours depending on the
semester.
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Tuesday, July 15, 2003 - 11:16 AM
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