CE 1412 | Indeterminate Structural Analysis | 3 Credit Hours |
Analysis
of indeterminate structures by the force and displacement methods, Maxwell’s
method for indeterminate trusses; analysis of members with non-prismatic
members; approximate analysis of indeterminate structures; stiffness method
of structural analysis; fundamentals and algorithms; numerical analysis of
plane trusses, grids and frames using matrix method; introduction to the
finite element method for plane stress and plane strain; application of
gravity and lateral loads on structures according to SBC/IBC. |
CE 1413 | Advanced Reinforced Concrete Design | 3 Credit Hours |
Study
of the strength, behaviour, and design of two way slab systems using direct
design and equivalent frame methods, design of continuous beams and slender
columns, design for torsion; behaviour and design of lateral load resisting
systems (moment frames and shear walls); design of combined footings, drawing
typical plans and sections of R/C structures. |
CE 1414 | Bridge Engineering | 3 Credit Hours |
Historical
overview of bridge building and bridge types; bridge aesthetics and
materials; bridge geometry; review of applicable design codes; loads (truck
and lane, impact, braking, thermal, wind, seismic, hydraulic etc.) on bridges
and force distribution; influence lines; grillage analysis for
super-structure elements; design of concrete and steel girder bridges; design
of sub-structure components (foundations, pier, abutment, wing walls,
approach slab); bridge bearings and expansion joints; bridge maintenance and
rehabilitation. |
CE 1415 | Prestressed Concrete | 3 Credit Hours |
Theoretical
basis for the analysis and design of pre-stressed concrete members;
estimation of losses in pre-stressed reinforced concrete members and
structures; design of posttensioned beams and slabs; introduction to
pretensioned, precast construction systems and techniques; use of
prestressing in containment structures and structural strengthening and
rehabilitation. |
CE 1416 | Structural Dynamics | 3 Credit Hours |
Analysis
of the dynamic response of structures and structural components to transient
loads and foundation excitation; single-degree-of-freedom and multi-degree of
freedom systems; time and frequency domain analysis; response spectrum
concepts; simple inelastic structural systems; and introduction to systems
with distributed mass and flexibility; application of computer methods.
Introduction to code-based seismic design procedures. |
CE 1417 | Advanced Concrete Materials | 3 Credit Hours |
Rheology
models for concrete, microstructure and strength relationships, failure
modes, fracture mechanics, creep, shrinkage and thermal deformations, design
for durability and performance, quality control and quality assurance for
concrete materials, fiber-reinforced concrete. |
CE 1419 | Special Topics in Structural Engineering | 3 Credit Hours |
This
course covers special advanced topics in structural engineering. The contents
vary depending on the topic. |
CE 1423 | Traffic Engineering | 3 Credit Hours |
Elements
of the road traffic system; traffic flow theory and road capacity analysis;
theory and design for signalized intersections; principles and procedures in
traffic impact analysis and traffic survey methods. |
CE 1424 | Pavement Engineering | 3 Credit Hours |
Design
approaches, new pavement and rehabilitation design, failure mechanisms,
effects of materials and construction on pavement performance. Emphasis on
understanding of fundamental issues of pavement engineering, approaches to
evaluation and design for new pavements and maintenance and rehabilitation
design, practical lab experience with asphalt concrete materials and tools
used for evaluation of pavements, understanding of construction issues. |
CE 1425 | Urban Transportation Planning | 3 Credit Hours |
Principles
of planning, evaluation, selection, adoption, financing, and implementation
of alternative urban transportation systems; formulation of community goals
and objectives, inventory of existing conditions; transportation modelling:
trip generation, trip distribution, modal choice, assignment; transport
related land-use models. |
CE 1426 | Public Transportation Systems | 3 Credit Hours |
Analysis
of mass transit systems, their operation, and management. Technology of
transit vehicles and structure. Public policy and financing. |
CE 1427 | Traffic Safety | 3 Credit Hours |
Principles
of engineering, behavioural science, and vision science to preventing traffic
collisions and subsequent injury. A systematic approach to traffic safety,
human behaviour, vehicle design, and roadway design as interacting approaches
to prevent traffic crashes, vehicle and roadway designs approaches to prevent
injury after collision. |
CE 1429 | Special Topics in Transportation Engineering | 3 Credit Hours |
This
course covers special advanced topics in transportation engineering. The
contents vary depending on the topic. |
CE 1431 | Design of Water and Wastewater Treatment Systems | 3 Credit Hours |
Characterization
of water and wastewater; Design of advanced water treatment systems
(adsorbers and membrane processes). Wastewater Treatment design: screening,
grit removal, primary and secondary clarification, biological process
(suspended and attached growth system), disinfection of the effluent,
processing of sludge, and water reuse. |
CE 1432 | Environmental Impact Assessment | 3 Credit Hours |
Study
of environmental impacts of engineering projects on the environmental
components of water, air, and soil. Social, economic and cultural impacts.
Identification and prediction of various impacts and mitigation measures. |
CE 1433 | Water Quality Engineering | 3 Credit Hours |
Fundamental
theories underlying the unit processes utilized in water and wastewaters
networks system and treatment processes. Ground water quality control
processes. |
CE 1434 | Solid & Hazardous Waste Engineering & Management | 3 Credit Hours |
Investigation
of the regulatory and technical issues affecting solid and hazardous waste
management, with an emphasis on the principles governing the transport, fate,
and remediation of solid and hazardous waste in the subsurface, including
advection, dispersion, sorption, inter-phase mass transfer, and
transformation reactions. |
CE 1435 | Air Pollution Engineering | 3 Credit Hours |
Description
and application of chemical and physical principles related to air
pollutants, aerosol mechanics, attenuation of light in the atmosphere, air
quality regulation, generation of air pollutants, methods to remove gaseous
and particulate pollutants from gas streams, and atmospheric dispersion.
Overview of practical and advanced approaches to air pollution modelling,
including aspects of pollutant transport, transformation, and loss. Models
considered include: Gaussian plume, chemical mass balance, chemical reaction,
grid and trajectory. Evaluation of models and the development of efficient
control strategies. |
CE 1439 | Special Topics in Environmental Engineering | 3 Credit Hours |
This
course covers special advanced topics in environmental engineering. The
contents vary depending on the topic. |
CE 1441 | Surface Hydrology | 3 Credit Hours |
Hydrological
analysis of surface water systems, main elements of the hydrological cycle.
Water and mass balance. Precipitation and rainfall data frequency analysis,
generation of IDF curves, evaporation and evapotranspiration, infiltration.
Introduction to GIS for hydrological applications, hydrological properties of
catchments, DEM and catchment delineation. Rainfall-runoff modelling, river
and reservoir routing using hydrological methods. Hydrological modelling
using software packages. Introduction to urban hydrology. Design of culverts
and Irish crossings. |
CE 1442 | Hydraulic Analysis and Design | 3 Credit Hours |
Hydraulic
analysis and design of engineering systems using spreadsheet and professional
software. Applications include: closed conduits; pipe networks; hydraulic
structures; water bridges, spillways, stilling basins, and gates, embankment
seepage; selection and installation of pumps and turbines. |
CE 1443 | Groundwater Engineering | 3 Credit Hours |
Introduction
to Sub-surface Water Hydrology and Types of Aquifers. Hydraulics of Porous
Media, Introduction to Darcy Law, Flow Net and Mass Balance Equations. The
Concept of Safe Yield, Storage. Estimation of Groundwater Recharge. Well
Hydraulics and Design of Aquifer Pumping Tests. Introduction to Numerical
Modelling of Groundwater Flow: Estimation of Flow Net and Seepage Analysis
using Spreadsheet and other Programs. Introduction to Groundwater
Contamination and Saltwater Intrusion. |
CE 1444 | Urban Hydrology and Hydraulics | 3 Credit Hours |
Hydraulic
analysis and design of urban, highway, airport, and small rural watershed
drainage problems; discussion of overland and drainage channel flows;
hydraulics of storm drainage systems and culverts; determination of design
flow; runoff for highways, airports, and urban areas; design of drainage
gutters, channels, sewer networks, and culverts. |
CE 1445 | Water Resources Management | 3 Credit Hours |
Water
laws. Reservoirs, dams, and reservoir basins. Hydro- power generation. Flood
estimation, routing and control. Engineering economy in water resources
planning. Introduction to system engineering in water resources. Topics in
arid and semi-arid region water resources. Desertification water conservation
techniques, reuse of water, remote sensing and arid water resources. Linear
programming and its applications in water resources. |
CE 1449 | Special Topics in Water Resources Engineering | 3 Credit Hours |
This
course covers special advanced topics in water resources engineering. The
contents vary depending on the topic. |
CE 1452 | Soil Mechanics and Behaviour | 3 Credit Hours |
Physical
and chemical properties of soils, Clay minerals, Soil structure, Shear
strength and deformation, Pore pressure parameters, Effective stress
analysis, Consolidation and settlement analysis, Introduction to unsaturated
soil mechanics. |
CE 1453 | Geosystems Engineering Design | 3 Credit Hours |
Stability
of shallow foundations, Analysis and design of piles and deep foundations,
Rafts and combined footings, Foundations under lateral loads, Dewatering of
foundations, Embankments, Introduction to earth retention systems. |
CE 1454 | Soil and Site Improvement | 3 Credit Hours |
Problematic
soils, Need of soil improvement, Methods and principles for improving
engineering properties of soils, Mechanical, chemical, electrical and thermal
stabilization, Use of geo-synthetics in geotechnical and geo-environmental
applications. |
CE 1455 | Geotechnical Investigations | 3 Credit Hours |
Structure
of ground investigation, Sources of information, Planning, management and
control, Site exploration techniques, Geophysical testing methods,
Geotechnical instrumentation, Geotechnical report writing. |
CE 1456 | Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering | 3 Credit Hours |
Introduction
to earthquake engineering, Basic earth features and earthquake principles,
Common earthquake effects/damages, Site investigation for geotechnical
earthquake engineering, Liquefaction, bearing capacity of foundations,
Retaining wall and slope stability analysis, Seismic micro-zonation, Site
improvement methods to mitigate earthquake effects. |
CE 1459 | Special Topics in Geotechnical Engineering | 3 Credit Hours |
This
course covers special advanced topics with focus on modern trends and recent
developments in geotechnical engineering. The contents vary depending on the
topic. |
CE 1463 | Construction Planning | 3 Credit Hours |
Introduction:
Planning and Scheduling, Project Control, Why Schedule Projects, Scheduling
and Project Management. Bar/Gantt Charts and Basic Networks: Introduction,
Advantages and Disadvantages of Bar Charts, Arrow and Node Networks, Networks
versus Bar Charts, Time-Scaled logic Diagrams Resource Allocation, Categories
of Resources, Resource Levelling, Materials Management . Schedule Compression and Time Cost
Trade-Off: Setting priorities, Accelerating a Project, Direct and Indirect
Costs, Recovery Schedules, Potential Issues with uncoordinated acceleration,
Optimum Project Scheduling. |
CE 1464 | Decision and Risk Analysis | 3 Credit Hours |
Basic
notions of set theory and probability: Sample space and events; conditional
probability; statistical independence, total probability; Bayes theorem.
Random variables: univariate and multivariate distributions, expectation,
moments. Probabilistic models for engineering analysis: Bernoulli sequence,
binomial distribution, Poisson and related distributions, Normal and related
distributions, Extreme-value distributions, Other distributions used in
statistics. Introduction to decision theory: Basic notions of utility theory,
Decision tree, Terminal analysis, Pre-posterior analysis, Decision problems
in estimation. |
CE 1465 | Construction Cost Analysis | 3 Credit Hours |
Introduction
to the application of scientific principles to costs and estimates of costs
in construction engineering; concepts and statistical measurements of the
factors involved in direct costs, general overhead costs, cost mark-ups and
profits; and the fundamentals of cost recording for construction cost
accounts and cost. Construction Cost analysis. |
CE 1466 | Construction Productivity | 3 Credit Hours |
Introduction
to the application of scientific principles to the measurement and
forecasting of productivity in construction engineering. Conceptual and
mathematical formulation of labour, equipment, and material factors affecting
productivity, Motivation and construction productivity, Productivity
Improvement programs. Learning curves, Fatigue, Overtime, The physical
environment, Quality circles, Safety considerations. A System view of
construction Productivity, Techniques for measuring productivity: Cost
methods. |
CE 1467 | Quality and Safety Management in Construction | 3 Credit Hours |
Introduction
to quality management, Quality Standards, Development and implementation of
quality management systems, quality indicators, quality audits, Importance of
construction safety, safety culture, health and safety hazards, personal
protective equipment, OSHA Standards, new trends in safety and safety.
Accidents Causation Theories, Ethics in Safety and OSHA compliance.
Construction Equipment and Safety, Accident Investigation, Reporting and
Record Keeping, Emergency Response plan, Total Safety Management. Preventing
violence in workplace, stress and behaviour based safety, Promoting safety. |
CE 1469 | Special Topics in Construction Engineering and Management | 3 Credit Hours |
This
course covers special advanced topics in construction engineering and
management. The contents vary depending on the topic. |