Graduate Courses

Below on this page are CAEM graduate courses with syllabi and prerequisites.

See the CAEM Graduate Handbook (PDF) for program details.

CAEM Graduate Handbook (PDF)

Additional course information, including fees and grading bases, is available through the UA Catalog.

CE 502: Introduction to Finite Element Methods
Units: 3

Theory and formulation procedures: energy and residual. One-dimensional problems: stress analysis in axial structures, steady and transient fluid and heat flow, consolidation, wave-propagation, beam-column. Two-dimensional problems: field and plane/axisymmetric, use of computer codes for solution to typical problems.

Prerequisite(s): CE 303
Cross-listed as: EM 502
Usually offered: Fall
 
CE 503: Subsurface Fluid Dynamics
Units: 3

Dynamics of immiscible fluids in porous and fractured media, anisotropy and scale, advective solute transport, consolidation and land subsidence, multiaquifer systems, free surface flow, and salt water/fresh water interfaces.

Prerequisite(s): MATH 250B or MATH 254 or MATH 355; CE 318
Usually offered: Fall
CE 504: Numerical Methods in Subsurface Hydrology
Units: 4

Finite difference, finite element and boundary integral methods for subsurface fluid flow and mass transport; applications to aquifers, unsaturated soils, earth structures.

Usually offered: Spring
CE 510: Probability in Civil Engineering
Units: 3

Outlines the extent of uncertainties under which civil engineering designs and decisions are made. Theory and application. Advanced topics in risk-based engineering design. System reliability concepts. Statistical decision theory and its application in civil engineering. Identifying and modeling, nondeterministic problems in engineering and in understanding many recently issued engineering codes.

Prerequisite(s): MATH 129, CE 310
Usually offered: Fall, Spring
CE 511: Research Methods and Data Analysis in Civil Engineering
Units: 3

This course introduces students to the concepts of the conduct of research in an empirical setting.

Prerequisite(s): CE 310
Usually offered: Fall
CE 522: Open-Channel Flow
Units: 3

Differential equations governing unsteady flow in open channels. Simple surface waves in subcritical and supercritical flows. Introduction of kinematic, diffusion, and dynamic wave methods. Applications to reservoir routing, dam break flow and overland flow.

Prerequisite(s): CE 323 or consent of instructor.
Usually offered: Fall, Spring
 
CE 523: Hydrology
Units: 3

Discussion and analysis of major topics of the hydrologic cycle and their interrelationship, such as rainfall, infiltration, evaporation and runoff. Statistical and probabilistic methods in water supply and flood hydrology.

Prerequisite(s): CE 218
Usually offered: Fall
 
CE 525: Sediment Transport Analysis
Units: 3

This web-based, distance-deliverable course teaches engineering practitioners and college students the basic principles of sediment transport and the skills for performing sediment transport analysis using hydraulic models, such as the HEC-RAS4.1. The course consists of three parts: fundamental theories of hydraulic models, basis of sediment transport models, and application of HEC-RAS unsteady flow and sediment transport models. Practice examples are designed based on two dry land rivers in Arizona: the Rillito River and the Pantano Wash. Sixty percent of the content is the fundamental principles that govern flow and sediment transport in open channel flows, and 40 percent is regarding the application of HEC-RAS models. Concepts of bed material, bed load, and suspended load; formulas to predict bed load, suspended load, and total load; methods to estimate fluvial resistances based on bed forms (e.g. ripples, dunes, antidunes); calculation of local scour and bank erosion; and design of stable channels are also included.

Prerequisite(s): CE 218 and CE 323
Usually offered: Fall
CE 526: Watershed Engineering
Units: 3

Design of waterways, erosion control structures and small dams. Methods for frequency analysis and synthetic time distribution of rainfall. Methods for estimating infiltration and runoff from small watersheds, flow routing and stormwater management. Estimating erosion using the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation.

Prerequisite(s): CE 218 or AME 331
Usually offered: Fall
 
CE 527: Computer Applications in Hydraulics
Units: 3

Computer modeling of surface water hydrology, flood plain hydraulics and water distribution systems. Theoretical basis. Application and design studies.

Prerequisite(s): CE 323 or consent of instructor.
Usually offered: Fall
CE 529: Special Topics in Hydraulics & Water Resources Engineering
Units: 3

Selected advanced topics will be covered in the fields of hydraulics and water resources engineering with emphasis on analysis and design of water systems.

Prerequisite(s): Consent of instructor
Usually offered: Fall, Spring
CE 532: Advanced Structural Design in Steel
Units: 3

Advanced problems in the analysis and design of steel structures including beam columns, plate girders, composite construction, multi-story buildings; static and dynamic lateral and vertical loads; connections; computer applications.

Prerequisite(s): CE 334
Usually offered: Fall
 
CE 534: Design of Wood and Masonry Structures
Units: 3

Determination of gravity and lateral loads on structures. Design of wood structures for axial load and bending; structural wood panels, diaphragms and shear walls. Types of masonry construction. Design of masonry structures for gravity and lateral loads.

Prerequisite(s): Concurrent registration, CE 333
Usually offered: Fall, Spring
CE 535: Prestressed Concrete Structures
Units: 3

Behavior, analysis and design of statically determinate and indeterminate prestressed concrete structures; calculation of loss of prestress.

Prerequisite(s): CE 333, CE 335
Usually offered: Spring (alternating)
 
CE 537: Advanced Structural Design in Concrete
Units: 3

Advanced problems in the analysis and design of concrete structures, design of slender columns and one- and two-way slabs; lateral and vertical load analysis of bridges and multistory buildings; introduction to design for torsion and seismic forces; use of structural computer programs.

Prerequisite(s): CE 333, CE 335
Usually offered: Spring (alternating)
CE 538: Behavior and Design of Structural Systems
Units: 3

Structural systems, gravity load resisting systems, lateral force resisting systems, tall building design, computer structural analysis, structural steel, reinforced concrete, building codes, seismic resistant design.

Prerequisite(s): CE 333, CE 334 and CE 335 not required but strongly recommended.
Usually offered: Spring
CE 540: Foundation Engineering
Units: 3

Settlement and bearing capacity of shallow and deep foundations; beam on elastic foundation; design of footings and pile foundations; foundations on metastable soils; the use of computer codes for foundation problems.

Prerequisite(s): CE 343
Usually offered: Spring
CE 541: Earth Structures in Geotechnical Engineering
Units: 3

Stability analysis for earth slopes, including planar, circular piecewise-linear, and composite-surface methods; analyses for static and steady-flow conditions; earth pressure theories and calculations for generalized conditions; design of rigid and flexible retaining structures; design of braced and tie-back shoring systems; design of reinforced earth walls; computer-aided analysis and design.

Prerequisite(s): CE 343
Usually offered: Fall
CE 542: Ground Improvement
Units: 3

This course covers different ground improvement techniques, including those without addition of materials, by adding materials and using reinforcing elements. During the course, opportunities will be given to students to develop a range of generic skills including written communication skills, problem-solving skills and analysis and critical evaluation skills. Upon successful completion of this course, the student will be able to understand the principles, applications and design procedures for various ground improvement techniques; use analytical/theoretical/numerical calculations to assess the effectiveness of a ground improvement technique; gain competence in properly evaluating alternative solutions; and the effectiveness before, during and after using ground improvement.

Prerequisite(s): CE 343 or consent of instructor
Usually offered: Fall
 
CE 543: Block Theory Applications for Rock Mass Stability
Units: 3

The objective of the short course is to show the applications of block theory for rock mass surficial and underground excavations. Three papers will be given to illustrate the application of theory to shiplock slopes of the Three Gorges dam site in China, a mine in Arizona and a highway rock slope in Arizona.

Usually offered: Spring
CE 544: Special Topics in Geomechanics
Units: 3

Introduction to geoenvironmental engineering; physiochemical and microstructural behavior of geomaterials, effect of pollutants, design of waste disposal systems; advanced laboratory testing, geotextiles, space geomechanics, etc.

Prerequisite(s): CE 343 or consent of instructor
Usually offered: Spring (alternating)
CE 545: Geoenvironmental Engineering
Units: 3

Waste generation and disposal regulations; types and characterization of wastes; engineering properties of soil-water-contaminants; use of earth and geosynthetic materials in waste containment applications; evaluation, design and construction of liner and leachate collection systems used in landfills and heap leach mining; remediation of contaminated sites.

Prerequisite(s): CE 343
Usually offered: Fall, Spring
CE 546: Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering
Units: 3

Review of plate tectonics and seismology, analysis of earthquake ground motions, travel path and distance effects, and site response effects. Soil liquefaction susceptibility, identification, and mitigation. Introduction to seismic slope stability.

Prerequisite(s): CE 343
Usually offered: Fall
CE 548: Numerical Methods in Geotechnical Engineering
Units: 3

Brief statements and applications of numerical methods based on closed-form solutions; finite difference and finite element methods for problems involving soil structure interaction such as piles, retaining walls, group piles, underground works; seepage; and consolidation.

Prerequisite(s): CE 402, CE 343
Usually offered: Spring
CE 549: Statistical Hydrology
Units: 3

Application of statistics and probability to uncertainty in the description, measurement and analysis of hydrologic variables and processes, including extreme events, error models, simulation, sampling.

Prerequisite(s): SIE 305 or MATH 461 or equivalent calculus-based probability/statistics course.
Usually offered: Spring
CE 555: Soil and Water Resources Engineering
Units: 3

Introduction to soil and water relationships, irrigation systems, irrigation water supply and irrigation management; basic designs.

Prerequisite(s): CE 218 or AME 331
Usually offered: Fall
CE 556: Irrigation Systems Design
Units: 3

Design and operation of surface, sprinkler and trickle irrigation systems based on economic and environmental criteria.

Prerequisite(s): CE 218
Usually offered: Fall
CE 558: Soils, Wetlands and Wastewater Reuse
Units: 3

Water quality and system design for agricultural drainage and wastewater systems.

Prerequisite(s): CE 218 or AME 331
Usually offered: Spring
CE 560: Special Topics in Transportation Engineering
Units: 3

Selected advanced topics will be covered in the field of transportation engineering, with emphasis on analysis and design of transportation systems.

Prerequisite(s): CE 363 or equivalent or consent of instructor
Usually offered: Fall, Spring
CE 561: Traffic Modeling & Simulation
Units: 3

The course will cover various modeling and simulation approaches used in studying traffic dynamics and control in a transportation network. The model-based simulation tools discussed include dynamic macroscopic and microscopic traffic flow simulation and assignment models. Models will be analyzed for their performance in handling traffic dynamics, route choice behavior and network representation.

Usually offered: Spring
CE 562: Traffic Engineering and Operations
Units: 3

This class will introduce traffic system design concepts, control components, management strategies and tools for evaluating their effectiveness.

Usually offered: Spring (alternating)
CE 563: Traffic Flow and Capacity Analysis
Units: 3

Methods for the efficient and safe operation of transport facilities through analysis of capacity, safety, speed, parking and volume data.

Prerequisite(s): CE 363
Usually offered: Spring (alternating)
CE 564A: Integrated Highway Bridge Design Using LRFD Methodology
Units: 3

Methods for the integrated design of components typically found in transportation structures including bridge super- and sub-structures, retaining walls, pavements, highway geometrics, traffic, drainage, etc. Taught by practicing engineers.

Prerequisite(s): CE 310, CE 323, CE 343, and CE 363. Concurrent registration, CE 335.
Usually offered: Fall
 
CE 565: Transportation Data Management and Analysis
Units: 3

This course introduces important concepts of database design and application. Popular database and analytical tools are introduced and demonstrated using traffic sensor data, roadway geometric data and traffic accident data. The objective is to introduce modern concepts, algorithms and tools for transportation data management and analysis. With the instructions, assignments and projects in this course, students are expected to learn database design theories; analytical methods for capacity, safety and time series analyses; and skills on popular software tools for transportation data management and analysis.

Usually offered: Contact Department
 
CE 566: Highway Geometric Design
Units: 3

Study of geometric elements of streets and highways, with emphasis on analysis and design for safety.

Prerequisite(s): CE 363
Usually offered: Fall, Spring
CE 568: Urban Transportation Planning
Units: 3

Transportation planning in relation to urban development; techniques and procedures for developing long-range regional plans.

Usually offered: Fall (alternating)
CE 569: Travel Demand Modeling
Units: 3

Detailed investigation of methods to model travel demand, covering data collection and analysis, model development, and forecasting applications.

Prerequisite(s): CE 363
Usually offered: Spring
CE 573: Biodegradation of Hazardous Organic Compounds
Units: 3

Students will learn and integrate the basic principles of microbiology required for understanding of application of bioremediation to contaminated sites, become familiar with current research in bioremediation, and learn to solve problems often encountered in application of bioremediation.

Usually offered: Spring
CE 574: Environmental Transport Processes
Units: 3

Engineering concerns in toxic and hazardous waste management with focus on aspects of chemical transport between air, water and soil systems; and microbial degradation processes in natural and engineered environment.

Usually offered: Spring
CE 576A: Water Treatment System Design
Units: 3

Application of theory and engineering experience to the design of unit operations for the production of potable water. Covers water regulations, conventional treatment technologies and selected advanced treatment topics.

Prerequisite(s): CE 370R and 370L are recommended for civil engineering students.
Usually offered: Fall
CE 576B: Wastewater Treatment Design System
Units: 3

Application of theory and engineering experience to the design of unit operations for the treatment of wastewater. Covers water regulations, conventional treatment technologies and selected advanced treatment topics.

Usually offered: Spring
CE 578: Introduction to Hazardous Waste Management
Units: 3

Management, planning, legal and engineering aspects of liquid and solid hazardous waste treatment and disposal.

Prerequisite(s): Consult department before enrolling.
Usually offered: Spring
CE 582: Construction Project Planning, Scheduling, and Control
Units: 3

Develop an enhanced understanding of construction project planning, scheduling, execution and control in preparation to contribute to construction firms, project management consultants and owners upon graduation. Topics include network scheduling, critical path method, resource allocation, cost control, software applications to scheduling and contract documents.

Usually offered: Spring
 
CE 583: Construction Cost Estimating
Units: 3

Develop an enhanced understanding of quantity take-off and cost estimating of construction resources including materials, labor and equipment. Skills and knowledge of cost estimating will provide preparation for builders and designers to contribute to construction firms, project management consultants and owners upon graduation. Topics include: types of cost estimates, budget estimates, pre-construction services estimates, quantity take-off, self-performed estimates, subcontractor work estimates and bid preparation.

Usually offered: Spring
 
CE 584: Fundamentals of Industrial and Environmental Health
Units: 3

Introduction to the principles of occupational and environmental health, with emphasis on industrial hygiene aspects of recognition, evaluation, and control of environmental and industrial health hazards.

Usually offered: Fall
CE 584A: Soil Engineering
Units: 3

The objective of this course is to prepare you to identify, characterize and evaluate prevalent soil types in Arizona and to design safe and economical foundations.

Usually offered: Fall, Spring, Summer
CE 585: Construction Equipment and Methods
Units: 3

Develop an enhanced understanding of construction equipment and methods to contribute to construction firms, project management consultants and owners upon graduation. Topics include: costing, safety, earth-moving equipment, cranes, creating and securing deep digs, constructing deep foundations, and forms and temporary structures.

Usually offered: Spring
CE 596A: Research Topics
Units: 1

Research presentation only for CE and EM majors.

Prerequisite(s): May be repeated one time for credit when enrolled in the PhD program.
Cross-listed as: EM 596A
Usually offered: Fall, Spring
CE 606: Wave Propagation in Solids
Units: 3

Stress (acoustic wave propagation and dispersion in infinite solids and finite wave guides), application of wave propagation theory in destructive and nondestructive evaluation of materials and structures, dynamic failure behavior of materials. 

Prerequisite(s): AME 564A or AME 564B
Cross-listed as: EM 606
Usually offered: Spring (alternating)
 
CE 622: Sedimentation Engineering
Units: 3

This course is an advanced research topic for graduates interested in pursuing a professional career in water resources engineering.

Prerequisite(s): CE 422 or CE 522
Usually offered: Spring
CE 630: Advanced Catchment Hydrology
Units: 3

Concepts and methodology required to upscale near-surface hydrologic processes to catchment scales with development of watershed models to quantify hydrologic response in different climates. Special attention given to how landscape geomorphologic structure affects hydrologic behavior.

Prerequisite(s): HWRS 518, HWRS 519, or consent of instructor. Computer programming skills (e.g. MATLAB, C++)
Usually offered: Fall
CE 632: Infrastructure Rehabilitation
Units: 3

Status of infrastructure and causes of deterioration of constructed facilities. Strengthening of bridges and buildings. Application of advanced modern materials such as fiber composites in new structures and for rehabilitation of existing structures.

Prerequisite(s): CE 333, CE 334
Usually offered: Spring (alternating)
CE 633: Reinforced Concrete
Units: 3

Inelastic behavior of beams and columns; short- and long-term beam deflections; combined bending, shear and torsion in beams; behavior under load reversals; analysis and design of beam to column connections and shear walls.

Prerequisite(s): CE 437 or consult department before enrolling.
Usually offered: Fall (alternating)
CE 638: Advanced Structural Stability
Units: 3

The course covers stability theory as it pertains to structural engineering. The lectures will primarily involve theoretical derivations of stability behavior and how this theory is translated into design rules. Course coverage begins at the structural member level, including the examination of in-plane elastic stability, in-plane inelastic stability and three-dimensional elastic stability. The course concludes with an examination of two-dimensional structural stability, including elastic-plastic collapse of frames.

Usually offered: Spring (alternating)
CE 648: Constitutive Laws for Engineering Materials
Units: 3

The course covers stability theory as it pertains to structural engineering. The lectures will primarily involve theoretical derivations of stability behavior and how this theory is translated into design rules. Course coverage begins at the structural member level, including the examination of in-plane elastic stability, in-plane inelastic stability and three-dimensional elastic stability. The course concludes with an examination of two-dimensional structural stability, including elastic-plastic collapse of frames.

Usually offered: Spring (alternating)
CE 655: Stochastic Methods in Surface Hydrology
Units: 3

Topics and applications will vary with instructor. Advanced application of statistics and probability to hydrology, time series analysis and synthesis, and artificial neural network methods, as applied in the modeling of hydro-climatic sequences or Bayesian and other analyses in the decision-making process of water resources. A combination of theory and application to the fields of hydrology, environmental and water resources engineering, climatic modeling and other related natural resource modeling.

Prerequisite(s): Consult with course instructor.
Usually offered: Fall
CE 663: Advanced Transportation Modeling and Analysis
Units: 3

Introduction of advanced modeling and solution techniques for management and operation problems in the modern urban transportation systems. A term project is required in addition to regular scheduled homework assignments and exams.

Prerequisite(s): CE 310, CE 363. Concurrent registration; student should select one of the following courses: MATH 215, SIE 540, SIE 544, or SIE 546.
Usually offered: Fall (alternating)
CE 664: Transportation Economics
Units: 3

Economic analysis of transportation projects and transportation infrastructure investment, including analysis of travel demand, benefits, costs, equilibrium, pricing and market structure.

Prerequisite(s): CE 363 or equivalent, or consent of instructor.
Usually offered: Spring
CE 676: Advanced Water and Wastewater Treatment
Units: 3

Advanced design for water and wastewater treatment. Emphasis on modern environmental engineering processes for water and wastewater treatment.

Usually offered: Spring
EM 502: Introductory Finite Element Method
Units: 3

General three-dimensional equations of elasticity; problems in plane stress, plane strain, extension, torsion; energy, residual and other solution methods; applications to rings, beams, plates, torsion and other problems.

Cross-listed as: CE 502
Usually offered: Fall
 
EM 504: Elasticity Theory and Application
Units: 3

General three-dimensional equations of elasticity; problems in plane stress, plane strain, extension, torsion; energy, residual and other solution methods; applications to rings, beams, plates, torsion and other problems.

Usually offered: Fall
EM 508: Fracture Mechanics
Units: 3

Modes of fracture, crack propagation, Griffith energy balance, crack tip plasticity, J-integral, fatigue cracks, analytical and numerical techniques, constitutive models for damaged materials.

Prerequisite(s): EM 504 or AME 564A
Usually offered: Fall
EM 511: Advanced Finite Element Analysis
Units: 3

Approximation functions; Lagrangian and Hermitian interpolation; isoparametric elements and numerical integration; mixed, hybrid and boundary element methods; nonlinear analysis; nonlinear problems in solids under static and dynamic loads; time integration schemes;  fluid and heat flow coupled problems and mass transport.

Prerequisite(s): CE 402 or consult department before enrolling.
Usually offered: Spring
EM 596A: Research Topics
Units: 1

Research presentation only for CE and EM majors.

Prerequisite(s): May be repeated one time for credit when enrolled in the PhD program.
Cross-listed as: CE 596A
Usually offered: Fall, Spring
EM 605: Mechanical Behavior of Materials II - Special Topics
Units: 3

Some of the following topic areas are covered in this class: theory of elasticity, plasticity, numerical methods, constitutive modeling, advanced structural mechanics, wave propagation and fracture. The detailed course content varies from semester to semester and could have interdisciplinary components; students should contact the department for details.

Prerequisite(s): EM 504 or AME 564A or equivalent.
Usually offered: Spring
EM 606 Wave Propagation in Solids
Units: 3

Stress (acoustic wave propagation and dispersion in infinite solids and finite wave guides); application of wave propagation theory in destructive and nondestructive evaluation of materials and structures; dynamic failure behavior of materials. 

Prerequisite(s): AME 564A or AME 564B
Cross-listed as: CE 606
Usually offered: Spring (alternating)
 
EM 633: Structural Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering
Units: 3

Vibrations and dynamic response of structural systems to periodic and arbitrary loadings and support motion; response spectrum and step-by-step formulations for seismic analysis and design.

Usually offered: Fall
EM 634: Advanced Structural Dynamics
Units: 3

This graduate-level course is designed to give students an in-depth understanding of the advanced concepts in structural dynamics. Topics include modal analysis theory and implementation, data acquisition and analysis, digital signal processing, random vibration concepts, system identification, structural health monitoring and damage detection, advanced sensor technologies, and smart structure technologies. A big portion of the course will be devoted to the fundamentals of numerical simulations and experimental methods in structural dynamics, exposing students to state-of-the-art simulation software and dynamic testing equipment and providing practical laboratory experience. For many problems, such simulation and testing is essential to validate new structural concepts, as well as to understand structural responses and failures that are not readily explained by intuition, analytical models or previous experience.

Prerequisite(s): EM 633 or knowledge of Structural Dynamics.
Usually offered: Fall, Spring
EM 648: Constitutive Laws for Engineering Materials
Units: 3

Statement of axioms of continuum mechanics. Strain, stress and nonlinear behavior. Laboratory testing including hyperelasticity; hypoelasticity; rate type models; plasticity review; hardening, volume change and dilatancy; softening; inherent and induced anisotropy;  laboratory testing and implementation.

Prerequisite(s): Consult department before enrolling.
Cross-listed as: CE 648
Usually offered: Spring

Contact: Megan Letchworth 520.621.6564 - mletchworth@arizona.edu

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