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The Department of Materials Science and Engineering provides advanced degree programs including Master of Applied Science (MASc), Master of Engineering (MEng), and Doctor of Philosophy (PhD). Qualified students can pursue graduate-level coursework and research across various specialized topics. The department's research spans multiple disciplines, focusing on metal alloy structures, ceramic coatings, semiconductor technology, nanocomposites, and biomaterials, with significant attention given to computational modeling and simulation.
Chemical metallurgy topics typically examine oxide reduction processes, iron and steelmaking slag characteristics, high-temperature reaction dynamics, metallurgical process modeling, extractive metallurgy, and hydrometallurgical techniques. Physical metallurgy and materials science explore the characteristics of metals, ceramics, and polymers, investigating areas like deformation mechanics, surface science, microscopy techniques, biomedical materials, nuclear materials, nanocomposites, amorphous metals, degradation mechanisms, material fatigue, joining technologies, phase changes, and crystallization processes.
These research efforts aim to deepen understanding of material properties, develop innovative materials and devices, and create sustainable manufacturing processes that incorporate lifecycle assessment and recycling principles. The PhD program represents the highest research qualification within the Faculty, where candidates conduct original investigations under faculty supervision while completing advanced coursework. PhD candidates benefit from guaranteed financial support throughout their four-year study period.
Students are normally expected to have completed a master's-level program before entering the PhD program.
For students whose primary language is not English, the department requires a Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with the following minimum scores:
International English Language Testing System (IELTS): Required score: 7.0 (Academic) with at least 6.5 for each component.
Internet-Based Test (TOEFL iBT) Including Writing and Speaking Sections: Overall score: 93; Writing: 22; Speaking: 22
Academic English Level 60: Required score: B
Canadian Academic English Language (CAEL) Online: Required score: 70 minimum total with at least 60 in each part.
The Certificate of Proficiency in English (COPE): Required score: 76 minimum total with at least 22 in each component and 32 in writing
Cambridge Assessment English: Required score: minimum 185 overall with at least 176 in each component.