Cardiff School of Engineering

Summary

Cardiff School of Engineering is part of Cardiff University’s College of Physical Sciences.

Cardiff School of Engineering, Queen's Buildings

Cardiff School of Engineering has approximately 1,600 undergraduate and postgraduate students and employs around 300 academic, research, technical and administrative staff. The School offers taught undergraduate and postgraduate degrees (BEng, MEng, and MSc) and postgraduate research degrees (PhD) in a range of engineering subjects, as well as being involved in a number of community, commercial and industrial partnerships.

The school hosts academic conferences[1] and is involved in large scale research and engineering projects,[2] particularly in the field of renewable energy such as wind turbines[3][4] power grid efficiency[5][6] and tidal power generation.[7] Other topics under research include traditional engineering studies such as metal fatigue[8] and waste disposal engineering[9] as well as new fields of study such as carbon management in energy production.[10]

The school of engineering is organised into three departments with associated research groups. [11]

  • Architectural, Civil and Environmental Engineering
  • Electrical and Electronic Engineering
  • Mechanical and Medical Engineering

Institutes edit

Research at the School of Engineering is organised into seven research institutes:

  • Institute of Energy
  • Institute of Environment and Sustainability
  • BRE Institute of Sustainable Engineering
  • Institute of Mechanics and Advanced Materials
  • Institute of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering
  • Institute of Medical Engineering and Medical Physics
  • Institute of Green Electronic Systems

References edit

  • Raymond Nen Yong; Hywel R. Thomas (1 January 2001). Geoenvironmental Engineering: Geoenvironmental Impact Management. Thomas Telford. pp. 226–. ISBN 978-0-7277-3033-6.
  • Issues in Bioengineering and Bioinformatics: 2013 Edition. ScholarlyEditions. 1 May 2013. pp. 811–. ISBN 978-1-4901-0867-4.
  • "Secrets of bee honeycombs revealed". Phys.org
  • Nobel Prize Winners Cardiff University | Knowledge & Beyond
  • Robert Mitchell Lloyd; Carolynne Moore (1 January 1999). Civil Engineering Learning Technology: Proceedings of the 3rd AECEF International Symposium Civil Engineering Learning Technology in Cardiff (CELTic), 8-10 September 1999, Cardiff, Wales, UK. Thomas Telford. pp. 202–. ISBN 978-0-7277-2839-5.
  1. ^ Raymond N. Yong; H. R. Thomas (1997). Geoenvironmental Engineering: Contaminated Ground : Fate of Pollutants and Remediation. Thomas Telford. pp. 5–. ISBN 978-0-7277-2606-3.
  2. ^ "Cardiff University in super grid project for harnessing power created by Europe's offshore windfarms". Wales Online, 7 December 2014 By Sion Barry
  3. ^ "Cardiff University researchers aim to develop EU ‘super-grid’ for wind:. Renewable Energy Magazine. Robin Whitlock 16 December 2014
  4. ^ "UK, Belgium research teams aim for offshore wind grid-boost". ReCharge.
  5. ^ "'Super grid' project takes off" Archived 15 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine. ReNews.
  6. ^ "Cardiff researchers working on a super grid". News Wales. 9 Dec 2014
  7. ^ "Model to help Severn power plans". BBC News.
  8. ^ B. Barr; Hubert Roy Evans; J. E. Evans (September 1994). Bridge assessment management and design: proceedings of the Centenary Year Bridge Conference, Cardiff, U.K., 26-30 September 1994. Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-444-82063-1.
  9. ^ Haluk Demirkan; James C. Spohrer; Vikas Krishna (20 April 2011). The Science of Service Systems. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 262–. ISBN 978-1-4419-8270-4.
  10. ^ Mike Hodson; Simon Marvin (26 June 2013). Low Carbon Nation?. Routledge. pp. 140–. ISBN 1-136-66769-5.
  11. ^ "About us". Cardiff University. Retrieved 12 September 2022.

External links edit

  • Official website

51°29′03″N 3°10′10″W / 51.4843°N 3.1694°W / 51.4843; -3.1694