Materials ScienceOn this page: Introduction | Programs | See also: Faculty Members | Course Descriptions | Course Winter Timetable | Introduction |
A Collaborative Program of the Faculty of Arts & Science and the Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering Materials science is the study of the structure, properties and applications of all types of materials including metals, ceramics, glasses and polymers. Currently many exciting scientific developments are in the materials field. Notable advances have been made recently in studies of amorphous metals, the quasicrystalline state, liquid crystals, semiconductors, nanostructured materials, high critical temperature superconductors, biomaterials, high strength polymers, materials processing techniques such as ion implantation and laser melting, and in new categories of engineered materials such as advanced industrial ceramics or composite materials. Materials science is interdisciplinary, drawing on the basic sciences
of chemistry and physics and on more applied subjects such as metallurgy,
ceramics and polymer science. Its tools and techniques include electron
microscopy, x-ray diffraction, surface analysis using Auger emission
spectroscopy,
x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, etc. For further information on materials courses from
the Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering, consult the Undergraduate
Student Counsellor. Undergraduate Counsellor: Professor U. Erb, Department of Materials Science and Engineering Science,Wallberg Building, ROOM 140 (416-978-7308) Materials Science ProgramsMaterials Science (Science program) Consult Professor Eugenia Kumacheva, Department of Chemistry and Professor U. Erb, Department of Metallurgy and Materials Science. Enrolment in this program requires completion of four courses; no minimum GPA required. This program draws both on the basic sciences of chemistry and physics, and on the more applied areas such as metallurgy or ceramics. Courses dealing with these latter fields are offered through the Department of Materials Science in the Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering. This would be an appropriate program for students with career interests in solid state, polymer or composite materials industries, or for graduate work in either chemistry or materials science, with an appropriate choice of options. Students may follow the Materials Chemistry stream by taking research course CHM499Y1 or the Materials Science and Engineering stream by taking research course MSE498Y1. Specialist program: (14 full courses or their equivalent, including at least ONE 400-series course) First Year: Second Year: Third and Fourth Years: |