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Graduate Program in Materials Science
The Materials Science Program at the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill is an interdisciplinary graduate program which brings
together faculty from Physics
& Astronomy, Chemistry, and various
departments in the health sciences (including Dentistry, Orthopedics, and Biomedical
Engineering) to engage in research and training in Materials
Science. Faculty from other departments, such as Computer Science, Mathematics, Environmental Sciences and
Engineering, and Biochemistry
and Biophysics, also participate.
Established in 1996 and administered through the Curriculum in
Applied and Materials Sciences, the program is unique among
materials science programs in that it is not located in an
engineering school, but rather builds on the strengths in
fundamental and applied science in the related disciplines at the
University. In 2007, the program was rated one of the top three
Materials Sciences programs in the United States by the Chronicles
of Higher Education. The primary areas of emphasis in the program are
electronic and optical materials, polymeric materials, and
biomaterials. Students pursuing M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in
Materials Science begin their studies with a core
curriculum covering the fundamentals of materials and their
structures, surfaces, fabrication, thermodynamics, and materials
science laboratory techniques. They continue with elective courses
as appropriate to their area of research concentration. Graduate
students engage in research
under the supervision of one of the participating Materials
Science faculty in the Curriculum in Applied and Materials
Sciences.
The University of North
Carolina, the nation's first state university, is located near
Research Triangle Park, home to over one hundred industries and
foundations vital to the nations ongoing research interests. The
cities of Chapel Hill, Raleigh and Durham, which form the points of
the "triangle," foster a unique metropolitan area offering abundant
cultural and educational opportunities. Money magazine (Sept. 1994)
ranked the Triangle area first among the top 300 places to live in
the United States. The Town of Chapel Hill, nicknamed "The Southern
Part of Heaven," enjoys the best of small town living in a unique
cosmopolitan environment. The campus, which covers over 700 acres,
enrolls 24,000 undergraduate, graduate and professional students,
and is one of 16 constituent institutions of the multi-campus state
university. |
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