The program information below was valid for the spring 2020 term (May 1, 2020 - August 31, 2020). This is the archived version; the most up-to-date program information is available through the current Graduate Studies Academic Calendar.
The Graduate Studies Academic Calendar is updated 3 times per year, at the start of each academic term (January 1, May 1, September 1).
Graduate Studies Academic Calendars from previous terms can be found in the archives.
Graduate research fields
- Biochemical and Biomedical Engineering
- Green Reaction Engineering
- Interfacial Phenomena, Colloids and Porous Media
- Nanotechnology
- Polymer Science and Engineering
- Process Systems Engineering
- Separation Processes
- Graduate Academic Integrity Module (Graduate AIM)
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Courses
- Students with a MASc degree must complete CHE 600 Engineering and Research Methods, Ethics, Practice, and Law (0.25 credit weight) and 3 graduate courses (0.50 unit weight per course) as follows:
- 3 graduate level elective courses (a minimum of 2 CHE)
- If CHE 601 Theory and Application of Transport Phenomena and CHE 602 Chemical Reactor Analysis or course equivalents were not taken during MASc studies, electives are reduced and these courses are substituted
- 3 must be 600 or 700 level graduate courses.
- No more than 1 may be taught by supervisor(s).
- No more than 1 may be a reading course.
- Students without a MASc degree must complete CHE 600 Engineering and Research Methods, Ethics, Practice, and Law (0.25 credit weight) and 7 graduate courses (0.50 unit weight per course) as follows:
- CHE 601 Theory and Application of Transport Phenomena
- CHE 602 Chemical Reactor Analysis
- 5 graduate level elective courses of which 2 must be CHE courses
- 6 must be 600 or 700 level graduate courses.
- No more than 1 may be 500 level or held-with course.
- No more than 2 may be taught by supervisor(s).
- No more than 1 may be a reading course.
- The Chemical Engineering Department may require students to take more than 3 courses. In every case, a graduate course program is established by the supervisor(s) in consultation with the student and, if deemed necessary, with the Associate Chair Graduate Studies of the Department. Students may also be required to take additional courses as a result of a comprehensive examination.
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Graduate courses offered by the Faculty of Engineering are numbered as 600 or 700 series courses and are assigned a unit weight of 0.50, which means that they are one-term courses as defined in the Graduate Studies Academic Calendar.
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Only courses taken within five years prior to the completion of the PhD degree may be counted for credit towards a degree, unless a request for revalidation is granted.
- Students must achieve a:
- Minimum cumulative average of 70%.
- Minimum grade of 65% in each individual course.
- Each student is responsible for monitoring their own academic records and must immediately notify their Graduate Coordinator of any inadequate grade or average.
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Link(s) to courses
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Seminar Attendance
- Over the course of their degree program, all PhD students should attend 24 seminars from departments and research institutions where Chemical Engineering faculty members have a membership. The Chemical Engineering seminars are documented in the Events section of the Chemical Engineering Department.
- Note: At Chemical Engineering seminars, attendance is documented. At other approved seminars, students must complete an attendance form and get it signed by the seminar organizer. Full instructions are available on the Department website.
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PhD Comprehensive Examination
- The PhD Comprehensive Examination (due in 4th term) consists of an oral examination conducted at the University of Waterloo with the candidate and members of the Comprehensive Examining Committee present. The examination consists of the following two parts:
- An examination of the research proposal that the student intends to develop into a successful PhD research thesis.
- An examination of the breadth of the candidate's knowledge of the academic field of the thesis and the adequacy of the candidate's background preparation to pursue the proposed research.
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PhD Thesis
- Students are expected to maintain continuous registration until the thesis is submitted to Graduate Studies and Postdoctoral Affairs. Under exceptional circumstances, students may request Departmental approval for inactive terms.
- The role of a supervisor is to help a student establish a research problem with an appropriate scope, suggest alternative general approaches to the solution of a problem, and provide general advice on the structure and content of a thesis. The professional engineering code of ethics must be strictly observed in the supervisor-student relationship.