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Materials science and engineering focuses on creating, processing, analyzing, and characterizing metals, ceramics, polymers, and various materials, with a strong emphasis on exploring the connections between structure, properties, and practical uses. Our graduate research initiatives cover a wide spectrum, including studies on polycrystalline silicon, electronic ceramic interfaces, microstructural analysis of thin films in microelectronics, oxide thin films for advanced sensors and fuel cells, optical monitoring of thin-film production, ceramic nanocomposites, electroplating and corrosion mechanisms, transmission electron microscopy, crystal orientation mapping, magnetic thin films for enhanced magnetoresistance, nanomaterial synthesis, nanocrystals, carbon nanotubes, nanostructure examination via X-ray and neutron diffraction, and computational modeling of electronic structures using density functional and dynamical mean-field approaches. Polycrystalline silicon finds applications in thin-film transistors for display technologies and silicon-on-insulator configurations for ultra-large-scale integration devices. Innovative uses are emerging for oxide thin films, such as infrared imaging systems and compact fuel cells. Future possibilities for high-temperature superconductors include improved power distribution networks and ultra-sensitive magnetic detection devices.
Applicant must have bachelor's degree received from an institution of acceptable standing. Ordinarily, the applicant will have majored in the field in which graduate study is intended, but in certain programs preparation in a related field of engineering or science is acceptable. The applicant will be admitted only if the undergraduate record shows promise of productive and effective graduate work.
English Language Requirement
Applicant must have TOEFL score, IELTS score and Pearson Test of English (PTE).