Program Structure and Requirements (with MSc Degree)
Overall Program Structure
The Ph.D. in Nuclear Engineering (NUCE) program for candidates with a Master’s Degree consists of a minimum of 60 credit hours. The required program credits are distributed as follows: 3 credits of Program Core courses, 21 credits of Program Elective courses, 36 credits for a PhD Research Dissertation, and two zero-credit PhD Research Seminar courses. The technical background of the student will be assessed by a Written Qualifying Examination (WQE), followed by a Research Proposal Examination (RPE) which the student must successfully complete in order to progress further in the program. The table below summarizes the structure and requirements of the Ph.D. in Nuclear Engineering program. All the Ph.D. in Nuclear Engineering program courses, except the Research Seminar courses and the PhD Research Dissertation, have a credit rating of three credits each.
Summary of Ph.D. in Nuclear Engineering Degree Program Structure and Requirements for Candidates with a Master’s Degree
Category
|
Credits Required
|
Program Core
|
3
|
Program Electives
|
21
|
ENGR 703 PhD Research Seminar I
|
0
|
ENGR 704 PhD Research Seminar II
|
0
|
NUCE 795 PhD Written Qualifying Exam
|
0
|
NUCE 796 PhD Research Proposal Exam
|
0
|
NUCE 799 PhD Research Dissertation
|
36
|
Total
|
60
|
Students admitted to the PhD program with a Master’s Degree must satisfy the following requirements:
- Complete a minimum of 24 credits of coursework (8 courses of 3 credit hours each).This is in addition to two zero-credit PhD Research Seminar courses. Subject to the advisor's approval, up to two PhD level courses (maximum of 6 credits) can be taken from other doctoral programs offered at KU.
- Pass all courses with a minimum passing grade of C in every course.
- Achieve an overall CGPA (Cumulative Grade Point Average) of at least 3.0 out of 4.
- Pass the Written Qualifying Exam (WQE), which assesses the technical background of the student. WQE is typically administered at the end of the 2nd regular semester after a full-time student’s admission into the PhD program, and before the end of the 4th semester in the case of a part-time student.
- Pass the Research Proposal Examination (RPE), typically before the end of the 4th semester for full-time students and before the end of the 6th semester for part-time students.
- Have at least one full paper accepted for publication in a quartile one ranked journal, per Scopus, in the research field of the dissertation before submitting the request of intent to defend the dissertation. The paper must be based on one of the research contributions in the dissertation, and the student must be the lead author of the paper.
- Complete a Dissertation on original research and defend it successfully in a viva voce Dissertation Defense examination.
Program Core (3 credit hours)
Students must complete the core courses listed below.
Core Courses
Program Electives (21 credit hours)
Students must complete a minimum of seven technical elective courses from the list below. Subject to the approval of the dissertation Main Advisor, up to two elective courses (6 credit hours) can be taken from another relevant PhD program in KU.
Electives
NUCE 701 | Advanced Computational Methods of Particle Transport | 3 |
NUCE 702 | Nuclear Systems and Materials/Accident analysis | 3 |
NUCE 703 | Aging Management of Nuclear Materials | 3 |
NUCE 704 | The Reactor Core Design Analysis for light water reactors | 3 |
NUCE 705 | Nuclear Criticality Safety Assessment | 3 |
NUCE 794 | Selected Topics in Nuclear Eng | 3 |
NUCE 744 | Interfacial Transport and Phase Change Heat Transfer | 3 |
NUCE 785 | Materials Selection in Mechanical Design | 3 |
NUCE 786 | Materials Characterization Techniques | 3 |
PhD Research Dissertation (minimum 36 credit hours)
Students must complete a PhD Research Dissertation that involves novel, creative, research-oriented work under the direct supervision of at least one full-time faculty advisor from the College, and at least one other full-time faculty who acts as a co-advisor. The Main Advisor of a student who opts for a PhD must be a faculty member in the Department offering that particular program. The outcome of research should demonstrate the synthesis of information into knowledge in a form that may be used by others. The research findings must be documented in a formal Dissertation and defended successfully in a viva voce examination. Furthermore, the research must lead to publishable quality scholarly journal articles.
Dissertation
Total Credit Hours: 60