Courses | Mechanical Engineering

ME 290. Laboratory Problems. 1-3 Credits.

Laboratory investigations of interest to student and faculty. Repeatable to a maximum of 6 credits. Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. Repeatable to 6.00 credits. On demand.

ME 322. Design of Machinery. 3 Credits.

Analytical study of motions, velocities, accelerations and forces for design of machine elements. Introduction to spatial mechanisms, robotics, and actuator selection. Prerequisites: ENGR 200 with a grade of C or better, ENGR 202 with a grade of C or better, and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. F,S.

ME 341. Thermodynamics. 3 Credits.

Fundamental energy relationships applied to both closed and open systems. Determination of thermodynamic properties, first and second laws of thermodynamic processes and basic cycles. Prerequisites: PHYS 251 and MATH 166, both with a grade of C or better. F,S.

ME 342. Intermediate Thermodynamics. 3 Credits.

Power and refrigeration cycles. Exergy analysis, psychrometrics, reacting and non-reacting mixtures. Prerequisite: ME 341 with a grade of C or better and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. On demand.

ME 313. Material Properties and Selection. 3 Credits.

Study of relationships between materials, manufacture and design of engineering component. Prerequisite: ME 301 and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. On demand.

ME 428. Advanced Manufacturing Processes. 3 Credits.

Individual projects involving the manufacturing economics and flow charts for selected products and basic technical principles of manufacturing processes. Includes laboratory. Prerequisites: ME 418 and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. On demand.

ME 323. Machine Component Design. 3 Credits.

Design of machine elements such as shafts, bearings, gears, clutches, springs, threaded components, and bolted, riveted, welded, and bonded joints. Stress and failure theory analyses of the implementation of machine components are covered. Prerequisites: ENGR 203 with a grade of C or better, and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. Corequisite: ME 323L. S.

ME 426. Mechanical Vibrations. 3 Credits.

Vibration analysis and design as it applies to single and multi degree freedom mechanical systems, isolation and absorption of vibration, vibration of continuous systems, numerical methods of solution. Prerequisites: ENGR 202 with a grade of C or better, MATH 266, and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. S.

ME 446. Gas Turbines. 3 Credits.

General principles, thermodynamics, and performance of gas turbine engines. Design consideration of engine components. Prerequisites: ME 341 with a grade of C or better and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. On demand.

ME 449. Internal Combustion Engines. 3 Credits.

Fundamentals of spark ignition and compression ignition engines, related components and processes. Prerequisites: ME 342 and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. On demand.

ME 451. Heating and Air Conditioning. 3 Credits.

Psychometrics, heating and cooling loads and analysis of air conditioning systems. Prerequisites: ME 342 and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program or consent of instructor. Corequisite: ME 474. On demand.

ME 474. Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer. 3 Credits.

Convection, conduction, radiation, dimensional analysis and design of heat transfer equipment. Prerequisites: MATH 266, ME 306, ME 341 with a grade of C or better, and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. S.

ME 476. Intermediate Fluid Mechanics. 3 Credits.

Differential forms of conservation of mass, energy, and momentum for viscous fluid flow. Boundary layer theory and its applications. Principles of one-dimensional compressible flow. Prerequisites: ME 306, MATH 266, and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. On demand.

ME 480. Mechanical Engineering Seminar. 3 Credits.

Reports and presentations on current developments in mechanical engineering and engineering ethics. Prerequisites: Senior Standing and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. F.

ME 483. Mechanical Measurements Laboratory. 3 Credits.

Experiments and written reports on the operation and performance of instruments and basic mechanical engineering equipment. Prerequisites: ENGR 206 and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. F.

ME 490. Special Laboratory Problems. 1-3 Credits.

Laboratory investigations of interest to students and faculty. Repeatable to maximum of 6 credits. Prerequisites: Consent of instructor and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. Repeatable to 6.00 credits. On demand.

ME 489. Senior Honors Thesis. 1-8 Credits.

Supervised independent study culminating in a thesis. Repeatable to 9 credits. Prerequisites: Consent of the Department, approval of the Honors Committee, and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. Repeatable to 9.00 credits. F,S.

ME 523. Advanced Machine Design. 3 Credits.

Advanced design and analysis of machine components; kinematic synthesis and analysis of mechanisms, force analysis, rotor dynamics, gyrodynamics, stresses in thick cylinders and flywheels, lubrication, statistical considerations, energy methods, curved beams. Prerequisites: ME 322 and ME 323.

ME 524. Deformation and Fracture. 3 Credits.

Aspects of elasticity theory, continuum mechanics and fracture mechanics. Fundamental relationships between material structure and engineering properties. Principles and properties of composite materials. Prerequisite: ME 301 or consent of instructor.

ME 526. Advanced Vibrations. 3 Credits.

Advanced vibration theory including the solutions of multi-degree of freedom coupled systems, continuous systems, energy methods, and non-linear vibrations. Prerequisite: ME 426.

ME 529. Advanced Finite Element Methods. 3 Credits.

Computer-aided techniques for finite element analysis of engineering systems. Topics include solution algorithm for nonlinear methods, large deflection, inelastic and contact analysis, and analysis of vibrating systems. Prerequisite: ME 429 or consent of instructor.

ME 574. Advanced Heat Transfer. 3 Credits.

Advanced conduction in isotropic media in two and three dimensions steady and unsteady problems. Advanced convection including solution of Prandtl Boundary layer equations. Numerical methods, Fourier series, Bessel functions, LaPlace transforms, and error functions. Radioactive heat transfer. Prerequisite: ME 474 or consent of instructor.

ME 590. Special Topics. 1-6 Credits.

Investigation of special topics dictated by student and faculty interests. May be repeated up to a total of 6 credits. Prerequisite: Departmental approval. Repeatable to 6.00 credits.

ME 591. Research in Mechanical Engineering. 1-6 Credits.

Independent graduate research in Mechanical Engineering. Repeatable to 6 credits. Repeatable to 6.00 credits.

ME 996. Continuing Enrollment. 1-12 Credits.

Repeatable. S/U grading.

ME 997. Independent Study. 2 Credits.

ME 998. Thesis. 1-6 Credits.

Development and documentation of scholarly activity demonstrating proficiency in Mechanical Engineering at the master’s level. Repeatable to 6.00 credits. F,S,SS.

ME 418. Manufacturing Processes. 3 Credits.

Descriptive and analytical study of manufacturing methods and economics as they pertain to machining, metrology and automation. Prerequisites: ENGR 203 with a grade of C or better, ME 301, and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. S.

ME 424. Systems Dynamics and Control. 3 Credits.

Theory, analysis, and design of linear closed-loop control systems containing electronic, hydraulic, and mechanical components. Differential equations. LaPlace transforms, Nyquist and Bode diagrams are covered. Prerequisites: MATH 266, ME 322, and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. On demand.

ME 487. Engineering Design. 2 Credits.

The first course of a two-course sequence in Engineering Design, students will establish important features of the machine or system to be designed, perform market analysis, establish design objectives, explore alternatives, conduct research, specify constraints. Prerequisites: ME 322, ME 323, ME 323L, ME 474 or any one elective from the thermal science group, and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. Corequisite: ME 483. Prerequisite or Corequisite: ENGR 460. F.

ME 488. Engineering Design. 3 Credits.

Systematic study and practice essential to the optimal design of a complete machine or system, utilizing economic and social constraints together with current mechanical and thermal design techniques. The course is a continuation of ME 487 taken the preceding semester. Prerequisites: ME 487 and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. S.

ME 545. Fluidized-Bed Combustion Engineering. 3 Credits.

Fluidized-bed hydrodynamics and heat transfer. Design of fluidized-bed coal combustors. Combustion models and their significance. Prerequisite: ME 306 and ME 474, or consent of instructor.

ME 397. Cooperative Education. 1-2 Credits.

A practical work experience with an employer closely associated with the student’s academic area. Arranged by mutual agreement among student, department and employer. Repeatable to 12 credits. Prerequisite: Admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. Repeatable to 12.00 credits. S/U grading. F,S,SS.

ME 301. Materials Science. 3 Credits.

The theory of the structure of matter, the prediction and evaluation of engineering properties of materials. Prerequisites: CHEM 121 with a grade of C or better, PHYS 252 with a grade of C or better, and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. F.

ME 306. Fluid Mechanics. 3 Credits.

Fluid properties; fluid statics and dynamics; transport theory and transport analogies, conservation of mass, energy, and momentum; dimensional analysis; boundary layer concepts; pipe flows; compressible flow; open channel flow. Prerequisites: PHYS 251 and MATH 265, both with a grade of C or better. F,S.

ME 429. Introduction to Finite Element Analysis. 3 Credits.

Finite element analysis is introduced as a design tool. Emphasis is given to modeling techniques and element types. Matrix methods are used throughout the class. Prerequisites: ENGR 203 with a grade of C and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. On demand.

ME 595. Design Projects. 3-6 Credits.

A three to six credit course of engineering design experience involving individual effort and formal written report. Prerequisites: Restricted to Master of Engineering students and subject to approval by the student’s advisor.

ME 464. Computational Fluid Dynamics. 3 Credits.

Provides a practical experience using computational fluid dynamics and provides supporting material in fluid dynamics, which is useful in understanding the need to resolve grids in boundary layers and other regions of high velocity gradients. The course is structured as half lecture and half laboratory. The lecture covers topics related to laminar and turbulence boundary layers with and without acceleration, turbulence modeling, wakes and jets. The laboratory provides experience in building grids using the program GAMBIT, the solid/fluid modeling and meshing program, and calculating solutions using FLUENT, a commercial flow solver. Prerequisites: ME 306, MATH 266, and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. On demand.

ME 477. Compressible Fluid Flow. 3 Credits.

Introduction to the theory and application of one-dimensional compressible flow. Course topics include isentropic flow in converging and converging/diverging nozzles, normal shock waves, oblique shock waves, Prandtl-Meyer flow, flow with friction and heat addition. Prerequisite: Admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. Prerequisites or Corequisites: ME 341 with a grade of C or better and ME 306. On demand.

ME 323L. Machine Component Design Laboratory. 1 Credit.

Application of design and analysis tools developed in the Machine Component Design course. Laboratory emphasizes creative design, analysis techniques, construction methods, and design report writing. Prerequisite: Admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. Corequisite: ME 323. S.

ME 101. Introduction to Mechanical Engineering. 3 Credits.

This course encourages the development of visualization, technical communication, documentation, and fabrication skills including 3-D geometric modeling as applied to CADD applications using current methods and techniques commonly found in industry. Students will receive an introduction to engineering design and the analysis of a machine or system, including team problem solving. Approximately two-thirds of the course is classroom-based instruction and one third is laboratory (computer lab and/or shop) instruction and experimentation. Prerequisites: Mechanical Engineering major. F,S.

ME 201. Student Design. 2 Credits.

Team problem solving with design and build of a machine or mechanism, typically ASME Design Contest project. Machine shop safety and introduction to fabrication processes. Special topic lectures on contemporary Mechanical Engineering issues and research activities. Prerequisite: ME 101 or ENGR 101. Corequisites: PHYS 251 or ENGR 201. F.

ME 532. Advanced Dynamics. 3 Credits.

Kinematics and kinetics of plane and three-dimensional motion, vector mechanics, general methods of linear and angular momentum, generalized coordinates, and variational methods including Hamilton’s and Lagrange’s equations. Prerequisites: ENGR 202 and MATH 266.

ME 370. Engineering Disasters and Ethics. 3 Credits.

Engineering disasters will be the basis for teaching an ethics course to engineering students. Starting with the premise that most people know the difference between right and wrong (this is not a course on criminal activity!), the course explores how engineers, in spite of their best intentions, sometimes create disastrous situations. The effect of cumulative adverse detail is difficult to teach except with case studies. Also explored is cost vs. safety trade-offs, the role of lawsuits, and government regulation. Prerequisites: Junior or Senior standing. F.

ME 576. Convective Heat Transfer. 3 Credits.

Advanced study of convective heat transfer, involving developing an understanding of boundary layers, flow in pipes, and convective heat transfer processes. Topics include the concepts of boundary layers, laminar and turbulent flow on surfaces and inside of pipes, and turbulence models. Analytical tools introduced are useful for estimating or bounding heat transfer rates when correlations are not available. Prerequisite: ME 474.

ME 525. Metal Fatigue in Engineering. 3 Credits.

Metal fatigue in engineering, involving design, development, and failure analysis of components, structures, machines, and vehicles subjected to repeated loading. Prerequisite: ENGR 203 and ME 301, or consent of instructor.

ME 542. Thermodynamics of Materials. 3 Credits.

Foundations of materials behavior in terms of energy and statistics. Topics will include entropy, free energy, phase equilibrium, ideal versus real solutions and diffusion. Prerequisites: ME 301 and ME 341, or consent of instructor.

ME 575. Conduction and Radiation Heat Transfer. 3 Credits.

Advanced study of conduction and radiation heat transfer. Solution methodologies to classical heat conduction problems will be introduced. Topics include: multidimensional steady conduction via separation of variables and principle of superposition; transient conduction with time-dependent boundary conditions via method of complex temperatures; numerical solutions to heat conduction problems; spectral dependence of radiation; blackbody and gray surface radiation; radiation exchange between surfaces; radiation shield. Prerequisite: ME 474 or consent of instructor.

ME 484. Ground Vehicle Dynamics. 3 Credits.

ME 484 is a junior and senior level elective course. This course deals with the design of ground vehicle suspension and steering systems. Vehicle ride, handling and safety systems are covered along with passive and active suspension control. Prerequisite: ME 322 and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program or consent of instructor. On demand.

ME 439. Introduction to Robotics. 3 Credits.

A systems engineering approach to robotics. Presents an introduction to manipulators, sensors, actuators, and end effectors for automation. Topics covered include kinematics, dynamics, control, programming of manipulators, pattern recognition, and computer vision. Prerequisites: ENGR 200 with a grade of C or better, MATH 166 with a grade of C or better, and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. On demand.

ME 420. Composite Materials. 3 Credits.

Prerequisites: ME 301 and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program. On demand.

ME 102. Professional Assessment and Evaluation. 1 Credit.

This course is designed for students with industrial experience. Students complete a portfolio documenting educational and work experiences for evaluation, and individualized curriculum plans are developed. Various cademic programs in engineering are also introduced. Based on the assessment and evaluation, some engineering requirements may be waived. S/U grading only. Prerequisites: Work experience and/or technician school training plus completion of CHEM 121, CHEM 121L, PHYS 251, PHYS 252, MATH 165, MATH 166, and MATH 265. S/U grading. F,S,SS.

ME 485. Multiphysics Modeling. 3 Credits.

Theory and techniques of modeling coupled thermal, fluid, mechanical, and/or electrical fields in components design. The focus is on the fundamental techniques used to simultaneously derive and solve coupled equations and the use of commercial multi physics finite element software. Prerequisite: ME 323. S.

ME 566. Introduction to Machine Vision. 3 Credits.

An introduction to machine vision providing students with a general understanding of the imaging process, feature extraction and matching, object detection and tracking, model fitting, and camera pose estimation. Prerequisites: ME 322, ENGR 200, and MATH 266. F, even years.

ME 580. Introduction to Autonomous Robotics. 3 Credits.

An introduction to autonomous mobile robots including hardware, modeling, sensors, and basic localization and mapping techniques. Prerequisites: ME 322, ENGR 200, and MATH 266. F, odd years.

ME 466. Aerodynamics. 3 Credits.

ME 466 Aerodynamics is an introductory course on the fundamentals of aerodynamics for engineers. The class will cover a review of fluid mechanics including boundary layers and compressible flow. The course topics include parameters for airfoil and wings, incompressible flow over airfoils and wings of infinite and finite span, compressible and transonic flow over wings and aircraft, supersonic flow over thin airfoils, and supersonic flow over wings and airplane configurations. The course will follow a standard text “Aerodynamics for Engineers,” 6th Edition by Bertin and Cummings. The course will qualify as either a thermal fluid science elective or an aerospace concentration elective. Prerequisites: ME 306 and ME 341. S, odd years.

ME 999. PhD Student Doctoral Dissertation. 1-18 Credits.

PhD student doctoral dissertation. Prerequisite: Admission to the PhD in Mechanical Engineering Program and consent of the instructor. Repeatable to 18.00 credits. S/U grading. F,S,SS.

ME 388. Undergraduate Research in Mechanical Engineering. 3 Credits.

Students will conduct a supervised independent study in a research lab or as part of a design team culminating in a research report. Prerequisite: Approval from department chair and faculty sponsor. S.

ME 514. High Temperature Materials. 3 Credits.

Course Objectives: The objective of this course is to provide students with their first in-depth exposure to high temperature materials, with a primary focus on ceramics and ceramics matrix composites. This course covers the fundamentals of mechanics and microstructure of structural materials for different high-temperature applications. The main emphasis during this course will be ceramic based materials. In addition, other high temperature materials like superalloys, Carbon, and their composites will be also covered. During this course, fundamental topics like bonding, structure, defects, sintering and grain growth, oxidation, and phase equilibria will be covered in detail. In addition, students will also get exposure to the mechanisms of time-dependent deformation, failure mechanism at high temperature, and thermal properties. Finally, different materials used at high temperature (metals, ceramics and their composites) will be reviewed. The successful completion of this course will prepare students for interdisciplinary problem solving and development of high temperature materials from both industrial and research context. Prerequisite: ME 301. S, even years.

ME 425. Numerical Methods for Engineers Using Advanced MATLAB Programming Techniques. 3 Credits.

In this course, numerical methods for solving differential equations, advanced Matlab programming techniques and their applications to practical engineering problems will be presented. Topics covered include Matlab programming, solving systems of equations, linear algebra, function and data manipulation, and differential equations. For students who enroll for graduate credit, they will apply class concepts to solve an engineering problem related to their research problems as a course project. Prerequisites: ENGR 200, MATH 266, and admission to PDP. S.

ME 418L. Manufacturing Processes Laboratory. 1 Credit.

Application of manufacturing methods in the Manufacturing Processes course including casting, machining, welding/soldering/brazing, forming (metals and plastics), heat treatment, metrology and automation. Prerequisite or Corequisite: ME 418. S,SS.

ME 398. Engineering Study Abroad Experience. 1 Credit.

Engineering Travel Abroad combines travel abroad for engineering students along with a significant learning component in engineering. The course will accommodate student travel opportunities led by engineering faculty. The course includes a significant learning component prior to travel requiring students to seek background information related to the engineering topics included in the travel experience. The course will require a completed essay prior to travel as well as an executive summary of the travel experience upon the return. This one credit class can be combined with a 2 credit cooperative experience from ME 397 to allow students to waive one technical elective in mechanical engineering. Prerequisite: Students should be matriculated in mechanical engineering or have a significant interest in engineering. Repeatable to 3.00 credits. S/U grading. S.

ME 530. UAS in Engineering Design and Applications. 3 Credits.

Students will be exposed to the emerging role UAS play in both engineering design and applications. Students will study the distinctive requirements when designing or developing components and/or specialized applications used by the UAS industry. Proper mission planning techniques that utilize the unique capabilities of UAS and appropriate regulatory and legal use of UAS will be covered. These objectives will be accomplished through in-class lectures and special guest presentations by leaders in the field, as well as teams of students demonstrating their competence in a capstone engineering design and/or application project. Prerequisite: Consent of Instructor. S, odd years.

ME 562. Graduate Seminar in Mechanical Engineering. 1 Credit.

This course exposes students to research topics in mechanical engineering and related disciplines. Students will learn how to present their research in technical presentations and papers. Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. Repeatable to 3.00 credits. S/U grading. F,S.

ME 599. Doctoral Research. 1-15 Credits.

Independent doctoral research work in mechanical engineering contributing to the student’s doctoral dissertation. Prerequisite: Admission to the PhD in Mechanical Engineering program. Repeatable. F,S,SS.

ME 515. Advanced Processing of Materials and Biomaterials. 3 Credits.

In this course, students will develop fundamental and applied understanding about biomaterials. More particularly, they will develop strong understanding about processing, mechanical and surface behavior, and degradation mechanisms of biomaterials at microscopic and macroscopic levels. In addition, students will do case studies on specialized topics like wound healing, cell interaction, and dental materials, among others. Prerequisites: ME 301 or consent of instructor. S, odd years.

ME 597. Graduate Cooperative Education. 1-2 Credits.

A practical work experience with an employer closely associated with the student’s academic area. Arranged by mutual agreement among student, department, and employer. A written report will be submitted by the student to their advisor at the completion of the course. Prerequisites: Approval of ME graduate director and student’s graduate advisor; must be legally eligible to work at the site. Repeatable to 4.00 credits. S/U grading. On demand.

ME 417. Friction, Wear and Lubrication. 3 Credits.

Tribology is the study of friction, wear and lubrication. This is an interdisciplinary discipline which requires knowledge on surface science, fundamental laws of physics, chemistry, materials science and manufacturing. Course topics include friction on different materials, wear mechanisms, lubrication regimes, surface metrology, gear and bearing failures, green tribology and tribological opportunities in additive manufacturing. Prerequisites: ME 301 and admission to the professional Mechanical Engineering program, or declared mechanical engineering graduate student. On demand.