Carnegie Mellon University

Environmental Engineering

Course Number: 12-351

Environmental engineering applies sustainability science, engineering principles, and systems approaches to protect the environment and human health. This includes protecting natural ecosystems and enhancing the quality of human life through environment-related policy development and technological innovation, and assessing the environmental impacts or benefits of infrastructure projects. 

This course provides a scientific and engineering basis for understanding and developing sustainable solutions for challenges in environmental and public health protection, especially in relation to urban water systems, with links to energy and climate.  Topics covered include:  sustainability; basic principles of water chemistry and microbiology; mass and energy balances; reactor theory and models; physical-chemical and biological processes; drinking water treatment; wastewater treatment; rivers, lakes, and ecosystems.  

Students will develop quantitative problem-solving skills for environmental engineering challenges.  Students will also learn about and analyze current environmental and public health issues.

Semester(s): Spring
Units: 9
Prerequisite(s): 09-105, 12-355, 21-260

Format

  • Lecture

Textbook(s):

Textbook information can be found at the CMU Bookstore