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Civil Engineering
The faculty has approval to offer the following courses in the academic years 1999-2000 and 2000-2001; however, not all courses are taught each semester or summer session. Students should consult the Course Schedule to determine which courses and topics will be offered during a particular semester or summer session. The Course Schedule may also reflect changes that have been made to the courses listed here since this catalog was published.
Unless otherwise stated below, each course meets for three lecture hours a week for one semester.
Civil Engineering: C E
380P. Ocean Engineering Principles: Theory and Applications.
May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing; and Mathematics 427K and a course in fluid mechanics, or consent of instructor.
Topic 3: Principles of Hydrodynamics.
Motion of a viscous or ideal fluid, waves and wave body interactions, lifting
surfaces, cavitating flows, computational hydrodynamics.
Topic 4: Boundary Element Methods.
Formulation and numerical implementation of boundary element methods;
applications to problems in fluid mechanics, structural analysis, and solid mechanics.
Civil Engineering 380P (Topic 4) and 397 (Topic:
Boundary Element Methods) may not both be counted.
380S. Environmental Fluid Mechanics.
Basic concepts, conservation of mass, momentum equation, energy
equation, potential flow, flow in porous media, turbulence, diffusion, jets and plumes.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and Civil Engineering 319F or the equivalent.
380W. Water Resources Engineering Research Seminar.
Presentations and discussions on various topics in water resources
engineering. Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Civil Engineering 380W and 397
(Topic: Water Resources Seminar) may not both be counted.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
381P. Computer Methods in Structural Analysis.
Analysis of discrete member systems; displacement and force methods;
energy formulation; direct stiffness method; large displacements and stability; static
and kinematic condensation; substructure analysis.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
381R. The Finite Element Method.
Basic concepts; interpolation functions; numerical quadrature; applications to
plane stress-strain, torsion, three-dimensional and axisymmetric solids, plates and
shells. Prerequisite: Graduate standing, and Civil Engineering 381P or consent of instructor.
381T. Numerical Modeling of Physical Systems.
Survey of numerical methods; weighted residuals, finite differences, finite
elements, boundary elements; applications to equilibrium, eigenvalue, and
propagation problems. Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
382. Frame Analysis.
Analysis and behavior of framed structures; moment distribution;
nonprismatic members and matrix analysis; loading combinations, stability and P-
effects, inelastic behavior. Prerequisite: Graduate standing, Civil Engineering 363 or
the equivalent, and consent of instructor.
382L. Plastic Design in Metals.
Principles and methods of plastic analyses and design, and their applications
to continuous beams, frames, plates, connections, and multistory buildings.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing, Civil Engineering 335, and consent of instructor.
382M. Administration of Municipal Public Works.
Organization and operation of public works units in municipal government;
techniques of administrative practice; personnel and public relations; budgeting;
finance; role of the engineer in administration.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent
of instructor.
382N. Structural Systems.
Application of systems engineering principles to planning, design, and
construction of building and bridge structures with emphasis on performance requirements
and economic factors. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
383L. Advanced Reinforced Concrete Members.
Behavior of reinforced concrete members; critical review of specifications; limit
states; anchorage and development of reinforcement; shear; torsion.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing, Civil Engineering 331 or the equivalent, and consent of instructor.
383N. Advanced Reinforced Concrete Structures.
Behavior of reinforced concrete structures, with emphasis on ductility and detailing
of frames, slabs, and braced (shearwall) structures. Detailing for seismic loads.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing, Civil Engineering 383L or the equivalent, and consent
of instructor.
383P. Prestressed Concrete.
Theory, advantages, and limitations; various systems of prestressing;
composite construction; continuous span theory.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing, Civil
Engineering 331, and consent of instructor.
383R. Repair and Strengthening of Reinforced Concrete Structures.
Evaluation of condition, strength, serviceability, and ductility of existing
structures; criteria for rehabilitation; retrofit techniques for change in function, loading,
and seismic forces. Civil Engineering 383R and 397 (Topic:
Repair and Strengthening of Reinforced Concrete
Structures) may not both be counted.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
383S. Structural Concrete Bridges.
Planning, design, and construction of reinforced concrete and prestressed
concrete bridges, including arch, frame, girder, and cable stay systems; aesthetics,
economy, and durability. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
383T. Plasticity in Structural Concrete.
Application of plasticity theory to structural concrete columns, girders, frames,
and joints. Development and application of transparent detailing methods such as
truss models, struct-and-tie models, and both strip and yield line methods for slabs.
Civil Engineering 383T and 397 (Topic: Plasticity in Structural
Concrete) may not both be counted.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing, Civil Engineering 383L, and consent
of instructor.
384P. Dynamic Response of Structures.
Single and multidegree-of-freedom systems; dynamic load factors, response
to harmonic excitation; damping; modal analysis; direct integration of equations
of motion; analysis in time and frequency domains; application to earthquake,
wind, wave, and traffic loadings.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing, and Civil Engineering
381P or consent of instructor.
384R. Earthquake Engineering.
Earthquake characteristics; seismic loads; elastic and inelastic response; analysis
and design of buildings for earthquakes.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent
of instructor.
385D. Water Resources Planning and Management.
Application of engineering economics, microeconomic theory, and
operations research to the planning and management of water systems; major topics
include flood control, hydroelectric power, water supply, multiobjective planning, and
urban water resource management.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
385J. Hazardous Waste Management.
Legal and technological approaches to control of hazardous wastes, studied
through problem evaluation and solution.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing, and Civil
Engineering 342 or the equivalent or consent of instructor.
385K. Water Quality.
Analysis of water quality in natural systems and of effects of wastewater
discharges. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Topic 1: Stream, Impoundment, and Estuarine Analysis I.
Basic physical, chemical, and biological properties of streams,
impoundments, estuaries, and coastal waters; methods for analysis of water quality problems.
Additional prerequisite: Civil Engineering 341 and one year of chemistry, or consent
of instructor.
Topic 2: Stream, Impoundment, and Estuarine Analysis II.
Application of methods of analysis to development of a water quality
management plan for a waterbody in Texas. Additional prerequisite: Civil Engineering 385K
(Topic 1) and a basic computer programming course.
Topic 3: Water Quality Modeling.
Mathematical modeling of water quality, including dissolved oxygen, nutrients,
and toxic substances in lakes, reservoirs, rivers, and estuaries. Additional prerequisite:
Civil Engineering 385K (Topic 1) or consent of instructor.
Topic 4: Water Pollution Ecology.
Advanced topics in the application of engineering solutions to ecological problems
in freshwater and marine environments.
385L. Water and Wastewater Treatment.
Principles of treatment of domestic and industrial water, wastewater, and
sludges. Three lecture hours or two and one-half lecture hours and one laboratory a week
for one semester. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Topic 1: Physical and Chemical Treatment.
Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Additional prerequisite: Civil
Engineering 342 or consent of instructor.
Topic 2: Biological Wastewater Treatment and Sludge Processing.
Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Additional prerequisite: Civil
Engineering 342 or consent of instructor.
Topic 3: Advanced Treatment Processes.
Project-based course addressing advanced topics in treatment process design:
alternative designs, computer models, laboratory testing, economics, and least-cost
designs. Two and one-half lecture hours and one laboratory hour a week for one
semester. Additional prerequisite: Civil Engineering 385L (Topic 1).
385M. Unit Operations in Water and Wastewater Treatment.
Physical, chemical, and biological unit operations for water treatment and
pollution control problems. One lecture hour and six laboratory hours a week for one
semester. Prerequisite: Graduate standing, and Civil Engineering 385L (Topic 1:
Physical and Chemical Treatment or Topic 2:
Biological Wastewater Treatment and Sludge
Processing) or consent of instructor.
385N. Industrial Wastewater Treatment.
Industrial wastewater characteristics; methods of in-plant control; application
of various biological, chemical, and physical processes in practical water
pollution control systems. Prerequisite: Graduate standing, and credit or registration for
Civil Engineering 385L or consent of instructor.
385R. Land Treatment of Wastes.
Principles of the use of land in management of municipal and industrial
wastewaters, sludges, and solids; includes problem evaluations.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing, and Civil Engineering 342 or the equivalent or consent of instructor.
385W. Drinking Water: Treatment and Public Health Issues.
Fundamentals and applications of drinking water treatment processes,
interactions among treatment processes, source water quality, and public health issues.
Civil Engineering 385W and 397 (Topic: Drinking
Water) may not both be counted.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing, Civil Engineering 385L (Topic 1:
Physical and Chemical Treatment), and consent of instructor.
386M. Design of Water and Wastewater Systems.
Problems in the design of water and wastewater treatment plants. Problems may
be chosen to meet individual interests. Six hours of lecture and laboratory a week for
one semester. Prerequisite: Graduate standing, and credit or registration for Civil
Engineering 385L or consent of instructor.
386P. Engineering Fracture Mechanics.
Application of fracture mechanics to fracture-safe design of metal structures;
material behavior and analysis of components containing cracks.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
386R. Inelastic Behavior of Materials.
Introduction to theories of inelastic behavior; theory of plasticity; applications
to materials such as steel, concrete, and soils; implementation of constitutive
equations in structural analysis.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
387C. Geotechnics of Waste Disposal.
Three lecture hours and three laboratory hours a week for one semester. May
be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Topic 1: Geotechnics of Landfill Design.
Theoretical and experimental study of soils and geosynthetics used for lining
systems, leachate and gas collection systems, and cover systems for solid and hazardous
waste landfills.
Topic 2: Geotechnics of Waste Site Remediation.
Site investigation; groundwater and vapor sampling; nonaqueous-phase
liquids; extraction of contaminated groundwater, vapor extraction, vertical cut-off
walls, solidification of sludges, in situ heating and vitrification, and other site
remediation technologies.
387L. Soil Mechanics I.
Three lecture hours a week for one semester; some topics require additional
hours. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Topic 1: Strength and Shearing Properties of Soils.
Theoretical and experimental studies of the shearing properties of both saturated
and unsaturated soils. Three lecture hours and two laboratory hours a week for
one semester.
Topic 2: Foundation Engineering.
Bearing capacity, design of piers and pile foundations.
387M. Soil Mechanics II.
May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Topic 1: Stability of Earth Slopes.
Development and application of limit equilibrium procedures for stability analysis
of earth slopes, including special conditions of rapid drawdown and seismic loading.
Topic 2: Seepage and Earth Dams.
Studies of seepage, emphasizing flow nets and numerical methods, plus control
of seepage problems; design of earth and rockfill dams.
387R. Soil Mechanics III.
Three lecture hours a week for one semester; some topics require additional
hours. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
Topic 1: Consolidation and Settlement of Cohesive Soils.
Limit states for buildings; settlement of shallow footings in sand and clay;
consolidation properties of soils; closed form and numerical analyses; case history studies
of consolidation and settlement of cohesive soils.
Topic 2: Soil and Rock Dynamics.
Wave propagation in soil and rock, foundation vibration and isolation,
dynamic behavior of soil. Three lecture hours and three laboratory hours a week for
one semester.
Topic 3: Case Histories.
Analysis of foundation engineering problems in the field.
Topic 4: Earth Retaining Structures.
Retaining walls, braced excavations, slurry walls, freezing, reinforced earth,
cofferdams, and anchored bulkheads.
Topic 5: Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering.
Application of soil dynamics to earthquake engineering; influence of soil
conditions on ground motion characteristics; evaluation of site response
using wave propagation techniques; liquefaction of soils; liquefaction
mitigation; seismic response of earth structures; seismic slope stability.
387S. Rock Engineering.
Intact rock, discontinuity, and rock mass characterization; applications of
structural geology; design of slopes, shallow tunnels, and foundations in rock masses.
Two lecture hours and three laboratory hours a week for one semester. May be repeated
for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
Topic 1: Rock Engineering I.
388N. Solid Waste Engineering.
Characterization and collection of solid wastes; biological, chemical, and
physical principles and integrated systems applicable to the treatment and disposal of
municipal and industrial residuals.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
389C. Advanced Technical Communication for Engineers.
Advanced work in theory and practice of communicating research and design
results to a variety of audiences, in print, orally, and through multimedia. Students use
their own work and writing projects as the material to communicate. Civil
Engineering 389C and 397 (Topic: Advanced Technical Communication for
Engineers) may not both be counted.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
390J. Engineering Microbiology.
Fundamentals of microbiology and biochemistry as applied to
environmental pollution and treatment processes, energetics and kinetics of microbial
growth, biological fate of pollutants; introduction to laboratory techniques. Two and
one-half lecture hours and one laboratory hour a week for one semester.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
390L. Environmental Analysis.
Advanced analytical procedures for the sampling, monitoring, and analyses of
air, liquid, and other wastes. Six hours of lecture and laboratory a week for one
semester. Prerequisite: Graduate standing, one year of chemistry, and consent of instructor.
390M. Water Quality Management.
A consideration of the technical, scientific, legal, and socioeconomic aspects of
water quality management. Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
390N. Water Pollution Chemistry.
Advanced topics in the application of engineering solutions to chemical problems
in freshwater and marine environments.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
390P. Environmental Organic Chemistry.
Advanced subjects in the environmental chemistry of organic contaminants in
groundwater, soil, and air systems. Civil Engineering 390P and 397 (Topic:
Environmental Organic Chemistry) may not both be counted.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
391C. Analysis and Design of Transportation Systems I.
Introduction to conceptual, methodological, and mathematical foundations
of analysis and design of transportation services; review of probabilistic
modeling; application of discrete choice models to demand analysis.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
391D. Analysis and Design of Transportation Systems II.
Operations research techniques for modeling system performance and design
of transportation services; routing and scheduling problems, network equilibration,
and spatially distributed queueing systems.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent
of instructor.
391E. Advances in Transportation Demand Analysis.
Developments in the econometric and behavioral aspects of demand analysis
and forecasting; supply-demand integration; dynamic models. Applications to
passenger and freight transportation and other infrastructure services.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
391F. Advanced Theory of Traffic Flow.
Relations among traffic variables; distribution functions; single lane and
multilane traffic flow; characterization of traffic in cities; kinematic waves; yellow
signal dilemma; merging; fuel consumption; emissions; and special topics. Emphasis on
the interplay among theory, experimentation, and observation.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
391H. Urban Transportation Planning.
Interrelationship of transportation and the urban environment; methodologies
for planning multimodal transportation systems and developing feasible
alternatives; emphasis on developing insight into the transportation problem and the
planning process rather than on solving specific problems of limited scope.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
391J. Transportation Planning: Methodology and Techniques.
Analysis of a wide range of planning studies to establish the logic and foundation
for the transportation planning process. Emphasis on techniques of estimation
and forecasting population, economic activity, land use, and mobility patterns;
determination of goals and objectives; decision making; economic analysis; and
alternative evaluation. Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
391L. Advanced Traffic Engineering.
Characterization and analysis of arterial street traffic operations using theoretical
and experimental techniques, especially computer simulation. Introduction to the
most current analysis and optimization tools for control device design and
implementation. Three lecture hours and three hours of supervised work a week for one
semester. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
391M. Advanced Geometric Design.
Geometric design of highways and guideways, including topics on levels of
service, alignment, vehicle operations, intersection and interchange design, signing,
and economics. Three lecture hours and two hours of supervised work a week for
one semester. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
391N. Engineering System Evaluation and Decision Making.
Advanced methods for selection of transportation and other infrastructure systems
in the presence of multiple criteria, multiple decision makers, and uncertainty.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
391P. Highway and Airport Pavement Systems.
May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
Topic 1: Theory and Behavior of Pavements.
Theories of pavement behavior and concepts of pavement design.
Topic 2: Design and Performance of Pavements.
Pavement performance evaluation and the application of theory to the design
of pavements.
Topic 3: Pavement Management Systems.
Defines the interrelationships among all aspects of pavement technology.
Application of computer-based management methodology.
391Q. Bituminous Materials.
Design and use of asphalt mixtures; chemical, physical, and rheological properties
of asphalt; and practical applications in highways, airports, and other
construction. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
391R. Airport Design and Operation.
Aircraft characteristics, site selection, airport configuration, capacity, terminal
design, traffic control, and interfacing with other transportation modes.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
391T. Contemporary Transportation Issues.
Consideration, analysis, and evaluation of recent transportation-related
innovations and developments. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Offered on
the credit/no credit basis only.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
391V. Infrastructure Management Principles.
The basic concepts and principles of infrastructure management. Life and
performance models required for a sound management system. The concepts of
modeling performance (including maintenance and repair) for facilities such as
buildings, bridges, and air fields.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
391W. Transportation Systems Operations and Control.
Concepts and advanced methods for the design of control strategies for
transportation systems operations, including highway traffic systems (signalized street networks
and freeways), transit systems, and private carrier operations, including airlines.
Civil Engineering 391W and 397 (Topic 11: Transportation Systems Operations and
Control) may not both be counted.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
393. Plain Concrete.
Selected studies in design and properties of plain concrete, including
fabrication, corrosion, waterproofing, selection of materials, and use of lightweight
aggregates. Offered on the letter-grade basis only.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing, twelve
semester hours of upper-division civil engineering, and consent of instructor.
393M. Environmental Health Engineering Research Seminar.
Presentation and discussion of environmental topics in surface water,
groundwater, air resources, and land resources. May be repeated for credit when the topics
vary. Offered on the credit/no credit basis only.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
394. Interaction of Soils and Structures.
Beams on foundation, laterally loaded piles, applications of the finite-element
method, beam-columns with nonlinear soil support, and behavior of pile groups. May
be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing, and a course
in soil mechanics or consent of instructor.
Topic 1: Dynamic Soil-Structure Interaction.
Fundamentals of wave propagation; determination of foundation stiffnesses;
mat foundations on the surface of a layered soil; embedded foundations; pile
foundations; effect of foundation conditions on dynamic response of structures to applied
loads (machine foundations) and to seismic excitation. Additional prerequisite: Consent
of instructor.
394K. Engineering Hydrology.
May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. With consent of instructor, any
topic may be repeated for credit.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing; and a basic course
in hydrology and in differential equations, or consent of instructor.
Topic 1: Groundwater Pollution and Transport.
Advection, diffusion, and dispersion; advection-dispersion equation and
analytical models; transport in the vadose zone; multiphase partitioning; multiphase flow
and free product recovery; numerical modeling. Additional prerequisite: A course
in groundwater hydrology.
Topic 2: Surface Water.
Rainfall runoff processes, hydrograph theory, linear and nonlinear hydrologic
system models, hydrologic and hydraulic streamflow routing, rainfall and flood flow
frequency analysis, watershed models.
Topic 3: Geographic Information Systems in Water Resources.
Principles of geographic information systems, hydrology, and database
management systems applied to water resources problems. Civil Engineering 394K (Topic 3)
and 397 (Topic 80: Geographic Information Systems in Water
Resources) may not both be counted. Additional prerequisite: Consent of instructor.
395P. Project Automation.
May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
Topic 1: Construction Graphical Simulation.
Same as Architectural Engineering 395P (Topic 1:
Construction Graphical Simulation). Application of computer graphics to three-dimensional simulation of
construction activities: hardware, two- and three-dimensional primitives, and graphic
algorithms. Students use simulation programs and C programming in application development.
Topic 2: Introduction to Construction Automation.
Same as Architectural Engineering 395P (Topic 2:
Introduction to Construction Automation). Construction automation activities, methods for opportunity identification
and financial analysis of automated systems, and tools from several disciplines that
are used in construction automation; students prepare a project that synthesizes
this information.
Topic 3: Design of Automated Construction Systems.
The elements of automated construction systems, including mechanisms,
sensors, perception, and control; construction automated systems design methods
and concerns. Students develop an individual design project.
395Q. Project Controls.
May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
Topic 1: Project Cost Management.
Management of construction equipment fleet, site organization and facilities
design control, and cost control systems in construction.
Topic 2: Project Time Management.
Fundamentals of planning and scheduling information systems; control of
activity sequence, time, resources, and cost in project environment. Includes both arrow
and precedence technique, PERT, litigation support, and a scheduling exercise on
the microcomputer.
Topic 3: Project Quality Assurance and Control.
Same as Architectural Engineering 395Q (Topic 3:
Project Quality Assurance and Control). The essentials of quality assurance and quality control in project design
and construction. Subjects include quality definition/objectives, the role people play
in quality, quality assurance plans, quality control systems, cost of quality,
specifications, inspection, tests, documentation, and corrective actions.
Topic 4: Procurement and Materials Management.
Purchasing and management of all materials and equipment for
construction projects; the integration of procurement and materials management into the
erection process; and their impact on quality, cost, schedule, and productivity.
395R. Project Information Systems.
Three lecture hours a week for one semester; some topics require additional
hours. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
Topic 1: Expert Systems for CEPM.
Same as Architectural Engineering 395R (Topic 1:
Expert Systems for CEPM). Introduction to logic foundations, knowledge acquisition, knowledge representation,
expert system shells, applications, and development of expert systems for
construction/engineering management.
Topic 2: Project Information Management Systems.
Information systems design and management concepts and their implementation
in construction projects. Data acquisition, transmission, and storage; database
management systems and information systems design.
Topic 3: Decision and Risk Analysis.
Fundamentals of decision analysis and risk assessment; construction
engineering/project management applications in decision analysis; methods of risk
management; overview of project insurance.
Topic 4: Metrics.
Measurement systems and benchmarking approaches for many aspects of
construction projects. Included are measurement systems for design effectiveness,
construction productivity, safety, cost and schedule controls, and overall industry statistics.
Topic 5: Artificial Intelligence for CEPM.
Same as Architectural Engineering 395R (Topic 5:
Artificial Intelligence for CEPM). Introduction to basic concepts in artificial intelligence and LISP programming.
Topics include theory and application of expert systems, neural nets, and fuzzy logic
to construction engineering and project management. Two lecture hours and
two laboratory hours a week for one semester. Additional prerequisite: A course
in computer programming.
395S. Project Organization.
May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
Topic 1: Human Resources Project Management.
Evaluation of individual, group, and organizational behavior in construction
work. In-depth study of communication, decision making, and the relationship
between controls and behavior.
Topic 2: Construction Productivity.
Construction productivity improvement by group field studies. In-depth study of
the way overtime, changes, weather, and staffing levels influence productivity.
Industrial engineering techniques are applied to the construction environment to improve
the use of equipment and human and material resources. Only one of the following
may be counted: Architectural Engineering 385N (Topic 3:
Construction Productivity Improvement), 395S (Topic 2:
Construction Productivity), Civil Engineering 395S
(Topic 2).
Topic 3: Design Management for Major Projects.
Effective management of factors involved in the detailed design of a facility, such
as design inputs, cost, schedule, quality, project teams, organizational alternatives,
and project objectives.
Topic 4: Project Management.
Same as Architectural Engineering 395S (Topic 4:
Project Management). Overall aspects of project management from inception to successful operation: establishing
product objectives, feasibility analyses, scope definition, contracting methods, project
control systems, and project execution planning.
Topic 5: Public Sector Project Management.
Same as Architectural Engineering 395S (Topic 5:
Public Sector Project Management). The application of innovative and state-of-the-art project management approaches
to public sector construction projects.
395T. Project Technology.
May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
Topic 1: Advanced Construction Technologies.
Same as Architectural Engineering 395T (Topic 1:
Advanced Construction Technologies). Survey of historical trends and recent developments in advanced
construction technologies, including materials, methods, equipment, condition assessment,
and project designs.
Topic 2: Constructibility and Modularization.
Same as Architectural Engineering 395T (Topic 2:
Constructibility and Modularization). Principles and methods of project constructibility enhancement; principles
and applications of modularization and preassembly; value engineering concepts;
techniques in creativity and optimization.
Topic 5: Heavy Construction.
Conventional heavy construction, equipment, methods, and practice; planning
for critical operations; modeling and simulation; safety. Additional prerequisite: Graduate standing in architectural or civil
engineering.
395U. General Topics in Construction Engineering and Project Management.
May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
Topic 1: Capital Facility Finance.
Corporate and project budgeting; preproject planning of capital facilities; cash
flow analysis; principles and applications of construction project finance and
accounting; equipment and overhead accounting; international project finance.
Topic 2: Continuous Quality Improvement.
History, concepts, and principles of continuous quality improvement (CQI)
in organizations. Implementation of CQI in engineering and construction
companies and projects. Use of statistical process control and management and planning tools
in engineering and construction applications.
Topic 3: Advanced Legal Concepts.
Same as Architectural Engineering 395U (Topic 3:
Advanced Legal Concepts). Contracts, documentation requirements, claims avoidance, and settlement of claims by
alternative dispute resolution. Students conduct and present in-depth studies of the
most frequent causes of claims (delay, disruption, acceleration, soil conditions,
and changes) and consider the way the court establishes causation and
determines damages.
395V. Seminar/Conference Course in Construction Engineering and Project Management.
May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
Topic 1: Seminar.
Offered on the credit/no credit basis only.
Topic 2: Conference Course.
396L. Air Resources Engineering. Sources, transport, fate, impacts, characteristics,
and control of air contaminants; source control and prevention; urban air
quality; occupational and residential indoor air quality. May be repeated for credit when
the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
Topic 1: Air Pollution Chemistry.
Classification, transport, transformation, deposition, sampling and analysis of
particulate and gaseous air pollutants in urban, regional, and global-scale systems.
Topic 3: Particulate and Gaseous Control.
Principles, design, and applications of air pollution abatement and cleaning
methods; inertial, filtration, scrubbing, and electrostatic precipitators for particulates;
absorption, adsorption, condensation, and incineration for gaseous pollutants.
Topic 4: Sources of Air Pollution.
Emissions estimation methods for industrial, commercial, residential, and
natural sources of air pollutants; source characterization and passive control; criteria
and hazardous air pollutants; volatile organic compounds; ambient, occupational,
and indoor sources. Civil Engineering 396L (Topic 4) and 397 (Topic:
Air Pollution Source Characterization) may not both be counted.
Topic 5: Atmospheric Dispersion Modeling.
Mathematical models of contaminant transport in the atmosphere;
atmospheric turbulence and air pollution meteorology; Gaussian plume, gradient transport,
and higher-order closure models; point, area, and line sources; theoretical
development and practical applications to engineering problems. Civil Engineering 396L (Topic
2: Turbulent Diffusion in the Environment) and 396L (Topic 5) may not both be counted.
396M. Advanced Topics in Atmospheric Science.
May be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in a natural science or engineering.
Topic 1: General Topics.
Topic 2: Air Pollution Meteorology.
Basic meteorology applied to air pollution; diffusion of conservative
and nonconservative pollutants; plume rise; air pollution models.
197, 297, 397. Special Studies in Civil Engineering.
For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of one class hour a week
for one semester; some topics require additional hours. May be repeated for credit
when the topics vary. With consent of instructor, any topic may be repeated for
credit. Some topics may be offered on the credit/no credit basis only; these are identified
in the Course Schedule.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
Additional prerequisites vary with the topic and are given in the
Course Schedule.
Topic 4: Freight Transportation.
Topics include review of transport systems analysis; shipper objectives; demand
and supply modeling; freight flow data; network analysis; truck size and weight
policies; finance.
Topic 5: Infrastructure Management Systems.
Concepts and principles of infrastructure management and performance,
with emphasis on bridge and pavement management systems.
Topic 6: Traffic Science Seminar.
Topics range from fundamentals of vehicular traffic science to relevant
methodologies in physics, applied mathematics, and operational science.
Topic 7: Decision, Risk, and Reliability.
Principles and theory for modeling uncertainty in civil engineering, analyzing
how uncertainties affect performance, and developing rational bases for design
and decision making under uncertain conditions. Additional prerequisite: An
introductory course in probability and statistics.
Topic 8: Structural Plastics Design.
Review of plastic materials, reinforcements, fabrication methods, viscoelasticity,
and structural properties of lamina and laminates. Failure mechanisms, materials
criteria, design factors, and nondestructive tests. Design of reinforced and unreinforced
plastic structures, including use of laminant analysis computer program.
Topic 10: Transport Economics.
Application of economic theory and principles to transportation systems analysis and
evaluation. Topics include individual travel demand decisions, optimal private and
public transport supply (including pricing strategies), location choice and land
valuation, transport-market imperfections (negative externalities), and welfare-based
transport policy.
Topic 13: Acoustic Emission and Nondestructive Examination Methods.
Review of principal test methods, including visual, radiographic, ultrasonic,
magnetic particle, penetrant, and eddy current. Emphasis on acoustic emission
applications. Discussion of probability of detection, national standards, and topics selected to
meet students' interests.
Topic 14: Design of Wood Members and Systems.
Same as Architectural Engineering 383 (Topic 6:
Design of Wood Members and Systems). Design and behavior of solid wood and glued-laminated wood structural
members; light-frame and heavy timber systems, including trusses and arches.
Topic 15: Facilitating Process Improvement.
Civil Engineering 397 (Topic 15) is same as Management 385 (Topic 43:
Facilitating Process Improvement) and Mechanical Engineering 397 (Topic 3:
Facilitating Process Improvement).
Topic 16: Evaluation, Materials, and Techniques for Concrete Repair.
Civil Engineering 397 (Topic 16) is same as Architectural Engineering 383 (Topic 7:
Evaluation, Materials, and Techniques for Concrete
Repair). Causes of distress, evaluation methods, repair materials,
repair techniques, and quality control methods for repair of concrete. Three lecture hours
a week for one semester, with one and one-half additional hours a week for
guest speakers.
Topic 17: Air Sampling and Analysis.
Topic 18: Acquisition and Analysis of Transportation Data.
Methods and technologies for the aquisition and analysis of data on various
aspects of transportation systems. Topics may include properties of different
data sources and types, such as GIS-encoded land-use data, stated versus revealed
preferences, traffic sensing; survey design, sampling strategies; probabilistic
methods of data analysis; data fusion; overview of statistical methods and
various regression models, including random-utility, ordered-choice,
simultaneous-equations, time-series, and neural-network models.
Topic 19: Discrete Choice Theory and Modeling.
Methods and statistics of model estimation, with emphasis on maximum-likelihood;
individual choice theory; binary choice models; unordered multinomial and
multidimensional choice models; sampling theory and sample design; ordered models,
and aggregate prediction with choice models; introduction to advanced concepts,
such as unobserved population heterogeneity, joint slated preference and
revealed preference modeling, and longitudinal choice analysis.
Topic 20: Computer Methods for Civil Engineers.
Essential methods for computer-aided problem solving in transportation and
other civil engineering areas. Topics may include computer operating systems
concepts; the Internet and World Wide Web site design; advanced programming
with C programming language; data structures; file manipulation and management;
Monte Carlo simulation techniques; interfacing with spreadsheets, SQL databases,
and computer-aided design packages; introduction to Geographic Information Systems.
Team programming is emphasized.
Topic 21: Transportation Systems Management.
Evolving concepts of transportation agency organization, management, and delivery
of transportation programs, products, and services. Separation versus integration
of transport policy-making and service delivery functions; emerging models for
delivering programs and services such as outsourcing, privatization, and
state-owned enterprises; review of national and international experiences with
innovative approaches and the benefits and costs associated with change.
Topic 22: Intelligent Transportation Systems Seminar.
Introduction to Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) concepts, evolution, and
current initiatives. Program evolution from Mobility 2000, through IVHS and
strategic planning activities by the Department of Transportation and ITS America,
to current operational tests and deployment projects.
Topic 23: International Transportation Systems.
Strategic planning of intermodal transportation systems (infrastructure and
rolling stock); how strategic planning pertains to freight transportation.
Freight logistics, intermodal technology, and intermodal terminal operations.
Intermodal freight transportation policy, planning, and operational systems
and programs.
Topic 50: Water Resources Development and Policies.
Analysis of water resources projects, particularly international water projects,
with emphasis on engineering and planning considerations and their relation to
governmental policies.
Topic 54: Water Pollution Control.
The application and evaluation of new concepts in water pollution abatement
and advanced water and wastewater treatment.
Topic 56: Air Pollution Control.
Evaluation of new theoretical approaches to air pollution control.
Topic 64: Rock Engineering II.
Underground excavation methods, rock support techniques, in situ stress origin
and measurement, numerical modeling of rock mass response, time-dependent response.
Topic 78: Design of Offshore Structures.
Selection of design storm; wave forces on structures; preliminary analysis of
steel jacket platforms; joint design; fatigue considerations; foundation design;
dynamic effects and responses.
Topic 79: Computer-Aided Structural Engineering.
Fundamentals of computer program development for engineering problems:
structured programming, data structures, databases, graphics, decision tables, and
object-oriented programming.
397F. Forensic Engineering: Materials and Structures.
Same as Architectural Engineering 383 (Topic 4:
Forensic Engineering: Materials and
Structures). Methods of forensic analysis; role of the expert witness; methods
of dispute resolution; case studies; term project. Two lecture hours a week for
one semester, with three laboratory hours a week for presentation of case studies.
Civil Engineering 397 (Topic: Forensic
Engineering) and 397F may not both be
counted. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
397K. Stability of Structures.
Stability as it relates to actual behavior and design; elastic and inelastic
theories; evaluation of specifications; columns, beams, and frames.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
397L. Advanced Structural Metals.
Elastic and inelastic design methods for steel members, connections, and
structures; torsion of open and closed sections, welding, plate buckling, and column
stability; bracing design. Prerequisite: Graduate standing, Civil Engineering 335 or the
equivalent, and consent of instructor.
197S, 297S, 397S, 697S.
Special Independent Studies in Civil Engineering.
Independent study. May be repeated for credit. Offered on the credit/no credit
basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of adviser.
Topic 14: Master's Research.
Topic 15: Dissertation Research.
698. Thesis.
The equivalent of three lecture hours a week for two semesters. Offered on the
letter-grade basis only. Prerequisite: For 698A, graduate standing in civil engineering
and consent of the graduate adviser; for 698B, Civil Engineering 698A.
398D. Departmental Report.
Preparation of a report to fulfill the requirement for the master's degree under
the departmental report option. Individual instruction. Offered on the letter-grade
basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in civil engineering and consent of the
supervising professor and the graduate adviser.
398R. Master's Report.
Preparation of a report to fulfill the requirement for the Master of Science in
Engineering degree under the Graduate School report option. The equivalent of three
lecture hours a week for one semester. Offered on the letter-grade basis only.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in civil engineering and consent of the supervising professor
and the graduate adviser.
398T. Supervised Teaching in Civil Engineering.
Special training in teaching methods and procedures for civil engineering
courses, including laboratory courses; the development of new material and methods
to update present courses. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in civil engineering
and appointment as a teaching assistant.
399R, 699R, 999R. Dissertation.
Offered on the letter-grade basis only.
Prerequisite: Admission to candidacy for
the doctoral degree.
399W, 699W, 999W. Dissertation.
Offered on the letter-grade basis only.
Prerequisite: Civil Engineering 399R, 699R, or 999R.
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