
|
 |

Geoenvironmental Engineering
Geoenvironmental Engineering is a new Interdisciplinary Program at CU Boulder
The objective of the Geoenvironmental Engineering program is to produce engineers capable of identifying, preventing and solving problems involving facilities that may adversely affect the environment. The interdisciplinary geoenvironmental engineering program encompasses concepts curricula, and faculty form environmental, geotechnical, and water resources engineering in the department. The graduate program in geoenvironmental engineering leads to the degrees of master of science and doctor of philosophy. Students studying toward the M.S. degree can pursue a thesis or a course work option of 30 semester hours. The Ph.D. degree requires additional course work beyond M.S. degree as well as a dissertation.
Faculty
Bernard Amadei, Professor, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley. Rock mechanics, geological engineering, Earth Systems Engineering, Engineering for Developing Communities
Angela Bielefeldt, Associate Professor, Ph.D., University of Washington. Environmental microbiology, biodegradation, engineered biodegradation systems.
John Crimaldi, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. Stanford University. Interaction of fluid mechanics with biological or ecological systems. Scalar transport; structure of passive chemical plumes. Turbulent processes in benthic boundary layers.
Mark Hernandez, Associate Professor, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley. Environmental microbiology, bioaerosols, acid mine drainage.
Hon-Yim Ko, Professor, Ph.D., California Institute of Technology. Soil and rock mechanics, centrifugal modeling, earthquake engineering, constitutive relations, multiaxial testing.
John S. McCartney, Barry Faculty Fellow, Assistant Professor, Ph.D., The University of Texas at Austin. Geotechnical engineering, geoenvironmental engineering, hydraulic and mechanical properties of unsaturated soil-geosynthetic systems, dynamic properties of reinforced soils, centrifuge modeling, reliability-based design.
Diane McKnight (Institute for Arctic and Alpine Research) Professor, Ph.D., MIT. Stream ecology and hydrology, reactive solute transport, biogeochemistry.
Roseanna Neupauer, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, Groundwater Hydrology and Contaminant transport, Probabilistic Approaches for Contaminant Source Identification, Wavelet Representations of Hydrogeologic Heterogeneity.
W. Tad Pfeffer, Professor, Ph.D. University of Washington. Dynamic glaciology; heat and mass transfer in snow, ice and porous media; mechanics and thermodynamics of continuous media; fluid dynamics; numerical and experimental methods.
Harihar Rajaram, Professor, Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Fundamental research in fluid mechanics and transport phenomena relevant to environmental, hydrologic and geological problems. Transport phenomena in porous media, stochastic transport theories, large-scale numerical computation, coupled processes.
Joseph Ryan, Professor, Ph.D., MIT. Contaminant fate and transport in natural waters, colloid and biocolloid transport, acid mine drainage characterization.
JoAnn Silverstein, Professor, Ph.D., University of California, Davis. Biological process engineering in water, wastewater, and soils.
Stein Sture, Vice Chancellor for Research and Dean of the Graduate School, Professor, Ph.D., University of Colorado at Boulder. Soil and rock mechanics, constitutive relationships, numerical methods in geomechanics, dynamics, laboratory modeling.
Scott Summers, Professor, Ph.D., Stanford University. Drinking water quality and treatment, natural organic matter, disinfection by-products, membrane processes.
Dobroslav Znidarcic, Professor, Ph.D., University of Colorado at Boulder. Soil mechanics, earth structures, flow processes in soils, contaminant transport, unsaturated soil mechanics, centrifuge modeling, numerical modeling.
Areas of Study
Contaminant Transport Remedial Action Waste Containment Systems Risk Assessments Waste Management Site Assessment and Monitoring Waste Treatment and Disposal Geosynthetics Remediation of Contaminated Sites Geochemistry Geohydrology Soil and Rock Properties Soil Behavior Geological Hazards Mining Geotechnics Flow Processes Consolidation and Unsaturated Soil Mechanics Systems Approach to Engineering Projects
Course Offerings
CVEN 3698 Engineering Geology CVEN 5313 Environmental Fluid Mechanics CVEN 5333 Surface Hydrology CVEN 5353 Groundwater Hydrology CVEN 5383 Groundwater Modeling CVEN 5343 Transport and Dispersion in Surface Water CVEN 5404 Environmental Engineering Chemistry CVEN 5537 Numerical Methods in Civil Engineering CVEN 5474 Hazardous Waste Management CVEN 5484 Environmental Microbiology CVEN 5494 Fate and Effects of Pollutants in the Environment CVEN 5524 Advanced Water Treatment CVEN 5534 Advanced Waste Treatment CVEN 5555 Risk Analysis CVEN 5708 Soil Mechanics CVEN 5718 Mechanics and Dynamics of Glaciers CVEN 5728 Foundation Engineering CVEN 5738 Applied Geotechnical Analysis CVEN 5748 Design of Earth Structures CVEN 5758 Flow Processes in Soils CVEN 5768 Introduction to Rock Mechanics CVEN 5778 Advanced Rock Mechanics CVEN 5834 Bioremediation CVEN 6313 Advanced Environmental Fluid Mechanics CVEN 6424 Advanced Biological Processes CVEN 6833 Flow and Transport Through Porous Media CVEN 6843 Advanced Groundwater Modeling CVEN 7718 Engineering Properties of Soils
Undergraduate Course Prerequisites for Graduate Admission
Before taking graduate courses the following minimum undergraduate course requirements must be satisfied:
Mathematic and calculus courses through differential equations and linear algebra. Physics, statics, mechanics of materials, fluid mechanics, geology, soil mechanics and foundation engineering.
Transfer Credits
For the Master of Science program the Department will accept up to 9 hours graduate credit from other institutions toward the minimum course requirements if not used toward another degree.
For the Doctoral program up to 15 semester hours of 5000 level or above course work may be transferred from another institution and applied towards the 30 hours minimum course work requirement. For a student who has obtained his/her M.S. degree at the University of Colorado at Boulder, up to 21 semester hours of 5000 level or above course work may be transferred.
Facilities
Laboratory facilities include analytical instruments for analysis of organics and metals in water and soils; a laboratory for conducting bench-scale experiments; centrifuge facilities for scale modeling of flow processes and geoenvironmental systems; a laboratory for characterization of soil and rock properties; multiple water flumes for turbulent transport studies. Substantial computer facilities are available from micros to supercomputers.
|