|
Overview The Department of Civil Engineering at UNC Charlotte provides opportunities for discipline specific and multidisciplinary graduate-level education in civil engineering. Advanced course work and research are used to enhance professional competency through a master's degree. Doctoral studies leading to the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) are available through a cooperative arrangement with North Carolina State University (NCSU). Research and teaching assistantships and tuition remission are available in the Department of Civil Engineering at UNC Charlotte (place link here to the Dept.) on a competitive basis to highly qualified applicants. The Environmental and Water Resources Engineering Program within the Department of Civil Engineering offers graduate study in several areas including in water and wastewater treatment, solid waste management, remediation of contaminated groundwater and soils, water quality analysis and modeling, hydraulics and hydrology, and watershed analysis (Click to learn more about College of Engineering and UNC Charlotte).
|
|
|
Facilities The Department of Civil Engineering is located in the Smith Building on the UNC Charlotte campus. Facilities available for research and instruction in civil engineering are located in Smith and Kennedy Buildings, and the C.C. Cameron Applied Research Center (CARC). The environmental engineering program is well equipped to perform high quality research. Computing laboratories and office space are available in the Smith Building. Additional laboratory, office, and supporting facilities can be found in the Kennedy Building and in the C.C. Cameron Applied Research Center. The Cameron Center provides excellent facilities for research in collaboration with regional business and industrial partners. Instruments are available in the environmental engineering laboratory facilities for analysis of heavy metals, inorganic and organic species, conventional water quality parameters, radioactive tracers, and microbiological analyses. Nearby in the Cameron Center is RACHEL, the Regional Analytical Chemical Laboratory operated by the Chemistry Department, with a comprehensive analytical capability and research expertise in organics analysis. Other research tools include access to the College of Engineering's UNIX and Windows based computer networks that include over 400 computational, graphical, and GIS workstations. |
|
|
Faculty James D. Bowen, Associate Professor, 1990, Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, EI. Water Quality and Eutrophication Modeling, Tracer Methods for Surface Water Assessment, Predicting Harmful Algal Blooms.
Helene A. Hilger, Associate Professor, 1998, Ph.D. North Carolina State University, EI. Solid Waste, Anaerobic Digestion, Wastewater Reclamation, Wastewater
Treatment.
Jy S. Wu, Professor, 1980, Ph.D. Rutgers University, PE. Infrastructure and Environmental Systems, Disaster Research and Management, Watershed Management and Modeling, Industrial Waste Management, Air Pollution Control. |
|
|
Graduate and Undergraduate Students Graduate Students Mohammad Madjdinasab,
William Saunders, Dinakar Nimmala, Robert Billings, Gayatri Jason Irish, Jacob Basinger, Sreejith Nair, Nada Chamu
|
|
|
Recent Projects
-
Modeling
of Human Pathogens in a Eutrophying Estuary (National Science Foundation)
|
|
|
Selected Publications
|
|