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Type | Faculty |
---|---|
Established | 1958 |
Affiliation | McMaster University |
Dean | Heather Sheardown |
Students | 5,500 |
Location | , , |
Website | Faculty of Engineering |
The McMaster Faculty of Engineering is a faculty located at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario. The faculty was established in 1958 and was the first engineering program to developed problem-based learning curriculum. [1] It currently has seven departments in chemical engineering, civil engineering, computing and software, electrical and computer engineering, engineering physics, material science and engineering and mechanical engineering. [2] The faculty offers bachelors, masters, and doctoral degrees.
The faculty is home to 1 Canada Excellence Research Chair, 13 Canada Research Chairs, 4 Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council chairs, and 14 Endowed Chairs. [3]
The B.Eng. undergraduate programs are accredited through the Canadian Engineering Accreditation Board. All undergraduate students take a common first-year program which outlines the fundamentals of engineering disciplines. At the end of the first year, students choose one of fourteen program disciplines. This includes some five-year programs such as Engineering & Management, Engineering & Society, or streams in Integrated Biomedical Engineering and Health Sciences.
Graduate programs in biomedical engineering are offered through the School of Biomedical Engineering, and graduate engineering practice programs through the Walter G. Booth School of Engineering Practice.
The joint McMaster-Mohawk Bachelor of Technology program offers four-year bachelor-degree programs in engineering technology, including process automation technology, biotechnology and automotive and vehicle technology, as well as degree-completion programs in civil engineering infrastructure technology, computing and information technology, energy engineering technology and manufacturing engineering technology.
In 1956, McMaster named its first Director of Engineering Studies – Dr. John W. Hodgins, a Chemical Engineering professor from the Royal Military College – to develop a full engineering program for the university. The program was approved by the McMaster University Senate in February 1958. The engineering building, now John Hodgins Engineering Building, officially opened a few months later. The first class of 25 students graduated in 1961.
Five departments were established in the first two years – Chemical, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Metallurgical Engineering — and, later, Engineering Physics joined them. The first engineering degrees from McMaster were Master of Engineering (M.Eng.) degrees, with the first ones awarded in 1959. The first doctoral degrees (Ph.D.) were awarded in 1965.
In 1972 over 100 engineers received their Bachelor of Engineering degrees, with the annual total passing 200 by 1980, and in 2014 this number equaled 588.
1971 marked the start of the Engineering and Management program and later that decade, the Engineering and Society program began. In the early 1980s, the Electrical Engineering started its unique Computer Engineering program, and Mechanical Engineering began its program in Manufacturing Engineering.
The Faculty of Engineering began joint faculty appointments, research associates and collaborative research activities with McMaster's Faculty of Health Sciences. Courses in Biomedical Engineering were offered as electives in all engineering programs.
In 1997, the Faculty of Engineering began a joint venture with the Department of Engineering Technology at Mohawk College and created the Bachelor of Technology program.
The 2017 Shanghai Ranking's Global Ranking of Academic Subjects [4] ranked the Faculty's civil engineering program 29th in the world, and metallurgical engineering, computer science and engineering, and transportation science and technology programs within the top 75 around the globe. Also rated within the top 101-150 programs in the world were the Faculty's water resources and telecommunication engineering disciplines. [5]
Dean | Years served |
---|---|
Heather Sheardown | 2022- |
Ishwar K. Puri | 2013-2021 |
David S. Wilkinson | 2008-2012 |
Mo Elbestawi | 2001-2007 |
Mamdouh Shoukri | 1994-2001 |
Gary R. Purdy | 1989-1994 |
Arthur C. Heidebrecht | 1981-1989 |
John W. Bandler | 1979-1981 |
Leslie W. Shemilt | 1969-1979 |
John W. Hodgins | 1958-1969 |
Canada Research Chair | |||
---|---|---|---|
Name | Title | Discipline | Lab |
Gianluigi Botton | Electron Microscopy of Nanoscale Materials | ||
Jamal Deen | Senior Canada Research Chair in Information Technology | Information technology | Micro- and Nano-Systems Laboratory |
Younggy Kim | Water and Health | ||
Todd Hoare | Engineered Smart Materials | ||
Prashant Mhaskar | Fault-Tolerant Control | ||
Shinya Nagasaki | Nuclear Fuel Cycle and Waste Management | ||
Robert Pelton | Canada Research Chair in Interfacial Technologies | Sentinel Bioactive Paper Network [6] | |
Ravi Selvaganapathy | Biomicrofluidics | ||
Heather Sheardown | Canada Research Chair in Ophthalmic Biomaterials and Drug Delivery Systems | ||
Leyla Soleymani | Miniaturized Biomedical Devices | ||
Shiping Zhu | Polymer Science Engineering | ||
Ali Emadi | Transportation Electrification and Smart Mobility | ||
NSERC Industrial Chairs | |||
Saeid Habibi | NSERC/Ford Chair in Hybrid Technologies | Automotive engineering | |
Thia (Kiruba) Kirubarajan | NSERC/General Dynamics Mission Systems-Canada Industrial Research Chair in Target Tracking and Information Fusion | Fusion | Estimation, Tracking and Fusion Research Laboratory |
John Luxat | NSERC/UNENE Industrial Research Chair in Nuclear Safety Analysis and Thermal Hydraulics | Nuclear safety | |
Joseph McDermid | NSERC/Stelco Inc. Industrial Research Chair in Advanced Coated Steels | Materials science | |
Dave Novog | NSERC-UNENE Industrial Research Chair | Nuclear engineering | |
Ali Emadi | Canada Excellence Research Chair in Hybrid Powertrain | Automotive engineering | |
Endowed Chairs | |||
Lotfi Belkhir | Class of 1962 Mechanical Engineering Chair in Eco-Entrepreneurship | ||
Jonathan Bradley | Barber-Gennum Chair in Information Technology | ||
Cameron Churchill | Don Pether Chair in Engineering and Management | ||
Sarah Dickson | Philomathia Chair | ||
Neslihan Dogan | US Steel Chair in Sustainable Steel Processes | ||
Wael El-Dakhakhni | Martini, Mascarin and George Chair in Masonry Design | ||
Peter Mascher | W. Sinclair Chair in Optoelectronics | ||
Greig Mordue | ArcelorMittal Dofasco Chair in Advanced Manufacturing Policy | ||
Andre Phillion | ArcelorMittal Dofasco Chair in Ferrous Metallurgy | ||
Saiedeh Razavi | Chair in Heavy Construction | ||
Shahram Shirani | L.R. Wilson/BCE Chair in Data Communications | ||
Christopher Swartz | ArcelorMittal Dofasco Chair in Process Automation and Information Technology | ||
Michael Tait | Joe Ng/JNE Consulting Chair in Design, Construction, and Management of Infrastructure Renewal | ||
Stephen Veldhuis | Braley-Orlick Chair in Advanced Manufacturing | Manufacturing | McMaster Manufacturing Research Institute |
The Faculty of Engineering at McMaster is known for its active student life[ citation needed ]. The McMaster Engineering Society (MES) offers an Engineering Co-op and Career Services (ECCS), which is a joint venture with the Faculty of Engineering. Engineering Co-op & Career Services connects students with employers, provides career-planning tools and resources, and provides opportunities for students to gain employment experience.
Some student-led groups within the faculty include: McMaster Ecocar 3, McMaster Formula Electric, Engineers Without Borders, McMaster Engineering Musical, McMaster Baja Racing and the McMaster Solar Car Team.
Engineering students at McMaster University can purchase leather jackets with their faculty and graduation date embroidered on the arms and back of the coat. Since this tradition was established, these jackets have become a distinctive characteristic of McMaster Engineering on campus. [7]
Student representatives to the faculty are chosen each year to lead the upcoming first years and represent the faculty of engineering at events. They typically dress in a red jumpsuit which they often personalize throughout their stay at McMaster Engineering. These representatives, nicknamed "Redsuits" or "Reds" are a fixture on campus and are known for their spirited behaviors'. The Redsuits have become synonymous with McMaster Engineering as well as McMaster University.
Undergraduate students produce an annual Engineering Musical every March that is written and directed by engineering students, with all of the 20-30 member cast and 10-15 member crew consisting of engineers. The musical takes a well known play, theme, or story and uses it as inspiration, but with a new script that includes jokes about professors, courses, faculty, and "arties". [8]
The fireball is the official symbol of McMaster Engineering. It historically comes from the coat of arms of Hamilton College. McMaster's Faculty of Engineering emerged from Hamilton College in 1958 and hence adopted a red fireball as its own emblem in 1960. [9] The fireball symbol is used widely by both the faculty and students to represent everything from culture, to excellence in research and innovation, as well as the energy that cuts across science and engineering. [10] In 2016, the Engineering Student Society of Conestoga College in Kitchener, Ontario applied to make the fireball a registered trademark. [11]
The faculty's facilities include:
The Canadian Centre for Electron Microscopy at McMaster is home to the world's most advanced microscope. The titan 80-300 cubed microscope has a magnification of 14 million and is used for material, medical and nano-research.
The Iron Ring Clock is a clock of unusual design, based on the Iron Ring received by Canadian engineers during the Ritual of the Calling of an Engineer. [12] It was designed and built as a thesis project by four Mechanical Engineering students: Patrick Burton, Braden Kurczak, Michael Paddags, and Peter Whitred. It won the 2nd prize for Manufacturing at the 2003 Canadian Society for Mechanical Engineering Student Design Competition. [12] The clock was donated to the University in September 2003, at which time it was also put into commission.
The clock was designed in large part in a four-month period at the end of 2002, with some features that were originally intended for an outdoor installation. The clock keeps time through the use of a synchronous alternating current motor, which regulates its speed based on the frequency of the electricity that it is fed. The top and bottom halves of the ring rotate independently, with the top half of the ring displaying the hours, and the bottom half the minutes. The minute ring moves constantly, while the hour ring increments once an hour through the use of a Geneva drive mechanism. The rings are driven through a gearbox that was designed and partly manufactured by the group. The two ring sections are made of forged stainless steel, [12] with machined surfaces, and facets cut using a robotic six-axis water jet cutter. The central shield, which is the university coat of arms, [12] is made of hand-crafted stained glass. The design of the clock was completed entirely with computer-aided design software, and CNC tools were used for components where the most precision was required. Although the clock was donated to McMaster University on completion, it is maintained by members of the team that built it.
To minimise costs, the team with help from technicians manufactured as many components as possible in an on-campus machine shop. The total cost of the clock was approximately $20,000 CAD, which was raised through donations, with donors listed on a nearby plaque.
While it is quite well known on campus, [13] the Iron Ring Clock is not always recognized as a clock. The most common criticism of the clock is that it is counterintuitive to read. (It must be read straight on, with the number on the top ring denoting the hour and the number on the bottom ring denoting the minute. If there is no number directly under the hour indicator, the minute must be inferred from the nearest two numbers.) As the rings move slowly, the clock has been mistaken for a static display. It has shown the wrong time in the past, due to events such as power outages or breakdowns; in 2006/2007, the clock stopped for three months due to motor bearing failure. In 2007, an uninterruptible power supply was installed to eliminate the problem with power outages. However, in the absence of such events the motor and mechanism have shown themselves to be quite accurate.
The clock has also had issues with mechanical wear; the use of steel ball bearings to support and position the rings has led to grooves being worn into the rings themselves, as the bearings are hardened steel and the rings are not. Some of these bearings have been replaced, as it becomes necessary; the group is considering future solutions to this problem. Other portions of the gear train are mounted on bronze bearings; these are expected to have a shorter wear life and will likely have to be replaced sooner than other gearbox components.
The Geneva wheel, made of aluminum for ease of manufacture, has also experienced some wear and will eventually need to be remade (the mechanism used in the clock differs slightly from the one shown in the graphic as it has only four spokes).
Biomedical engineering (BME) or medical engineering is the application of engineering principles and design concepts to medicine and biology for healthcare applications. BME is also traditionally logical sciences to advance health care treatment, including diagnosis, monitoring, and therapy. Also included under the scope of a biomedical engineer is the management of current medical equipment in hospitals while adhering to relevant industry standards. This involves procurement, routine testing, preventive maintenance, and making equipment recommendations, a role also known as a Biomedical Equipment Technician (BMET) or as a clinical engineer.
Mechanical engineering is the study of physical machines that may involve force and movement. It is an engineering branch that combines engineering physics and mathematics principles with materials science, to design, analyze, manufacture, and maintain mechanical systems. It is one of the oldest and broadest of the engineering branches.
The Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering is the engineering school of the University of Toronto, a public research university in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was founded in 1873 and currently is housed in 15 facilities on the southern side of St. George Campus and 3 building located across downtown Toronto. The faculty offers undergraduate, master's, and doctoral degrees in engineering sciences and has a partnership with the Rotman School of Management for a dual-degree program.
A Bachelor of Engineering or Bachelor of Science in Engineering or AMIE (Sec:A&B) is an undergraduate academic degree awarded to a college graduate majoring in an engineering discipline at a higher education institution.
Bialystok University of Technology is the largest technical university in northeast Poland.
The Doctor of Engineering is a professional doctorate in engineering and applied science. An EngD is a terminal degree similar to a PhD in engineering but applicable more in industry rather than in academia. The degree is usually aimed toward working professionals.
Integrated Engineering is a multi-disciplinary, design-project-based engineering degree program.
The School of Engineering and Applied Science (SEAS) at the George Washington University in Washington, D.C. is a technical school which specializes in engineering, technology, communications, and transportation. The school is located on the main campus of the George Washington University and offers both undergraduate and graduate programs.
The Schulich School of Engineering is the accredited engineering school of the University of Calgary located in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. It currently has 4,610 enrolled students and over 150 faculty members. The school offers seven engineering degree programs.
The Khajeh Nasir Toosi University of Technology is a public research university in Tehran, Iran. It is named after medieval Persian scholar Khajeh Nasir Toosi. The university is considered one of the most prestigious institutions of higher education in Iran. Acceptance to the university is highly competitive, entrance to undergraduate and graduate programs typically requires scoring among the top 1% of students in the Iranian University Entrance Exam.
The Gokongwei College of Engineering of De La Salle University is one of eight colleges that comprise the University. It was established in 1947 with the aim of providing young men who are knowledgeable in science and technology to help rehabilitate the Philippines, which was then devastated in the aftermath of World War II.
Engineering education is the activity of teaching knowledge and principles to the professional practice of engineering. It includes an initial education, and any advanced education and specializations that follow. Engineering education is typically accompanied by additional postgraduate examinations and supervised training as the requirements for a professional engineering license. The length of education, and training to qualify as a basic professional engineer, is typically five years, with 15–20 years for an engineer who takes responsibility for major projects.
The University of Santo Tomas Faculty of Engineering, or UST-Eng, is the engineering school of the University of Santo Tomas, the oldest and the largest Catholic university in Manila, Philippines.
Bioprocess engineering, also biochemical engineering, is a specialization of chemical engineering or biological engineering. It deals with the design and development of equipment and processes for the manufacturing of products such as agriculture, food, feed, pharmaceuticals, nutraceuticals, chemicals, and polymers and paper from biological materials & treatment of waste water. Bioprocess engineering is a conglomerate of mathematics, biology and industrial design, and consists of various spectrums like the design and study of bioreactors to the creation of kinetic models. It also deals with studying various biotechnological processes used in industries for large scale production of biological product for optimization of yield in the end product and the quality of end product. Bioprocess engineering may include the work of mechanical, electrical, and industrial engineers to apply principles of their disciplines to processes based on using living cells or sub component of such cells.
The University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Science is the undergraduate and graduate engineering school of the University of Pennsylvania, a private research university in Philadelphia. The school offers programs that emphasize hands-on study of engineering fundamentals while encouraging students to leverage the educational offerings of the broader University. Engineering students can also take advantage of research opportunities through interactions with Penn’s School of Medicine, School of Arts and Sciences, and the Wharton School.
The College of Engineering and Applied Science is the engineering and applied science college of the University of Cincinnati in Cincinnati, Ohio. It is the birthplace of the cooperative education (co-op) program and still holds the largest public mandatory cooperative education program at a public university in the United States. Today, it has a student population of around 4,898 undergraduate and 1,305 graduate students and is recognized annually as one of the top 100 engineering colleges in the US, ranking 83rd in 2020.
The Henry Samueli School of Engineering (HSSoE) is the academic unit of the University of California, Irvine that oversees academic research and teaching in disciplines of the field of engineering. Established when the campus opened in 1965, the school consists of five departments, each of which is involved in academic research in its specific field, as well as several interdisciplinary fields. The school confers Bachelor of Science, Master of Science, and Doctor of Philosophy degrees.
The John and Marcia Price College of Engineering at the University of Utah is an academic college of the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, Utah. The college offers undergraduate and graduate degrees in engineering and computer science.
The NUST School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, commonly known by its acronym NUST-SMME, located in Islamabad, Pakistan, is a constituent school offering undergraduate and postgraduate programs in the fields of mechanical and manufacturing engineering. It was founded in 2008.
The Faculty of Engineering is one of six faculties at the University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. It has 8,698 undergraduate students, 2176 graduate students, 334 faculty and 52,750 alumni making it the largest engineering school in Canada with external research funding from 195 Canadian and international partners exceeding $86.8 million. Ranked among the top 50 engineering schools in the world, the faculty of engineering houses eight academic units and offers 15 bachelor's degree programs in a variety of disciplines.
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