Students
Tuition Fee
Start Date
Medium of studying
Duration
Details
Program Details
Degree
Bachelors
Major
Mining Engineering | Mining Technology
Area of study
Engineering
Course Language
English
About Program

Program Overview


Overview

The Department of Mining and Minerals Engineering offers an engineering program containing aspects of mineral science, engineering, and technology that is professionally related to the minerals industry. Graduates of this program find domestic and international employment opportunities with hardrock, coal, industrial minerals, and construction aggregates producers, as well as with government agencies and equipment vendors.


Mission

The mission of the department is to produce high-quality, rigorously trained mining engineers, whose background and education reflect the current level of technology and thought of the profession, and who can enter directly into engineering practice or, alternatively, graduate school for further study.


Accreditation

The Bachelor of Science in Mining Engineering (BSMNE) degree program is accredited by the Engineering Accreditation Commission of ABET, under the commission’s General Criteria and Program Criteria for Mining and Similarly Named Engineering Programs.


Program Educational Objectives

The goal of the BSMNE program is to prepare alumni within a few years of completing their degree to possess:


  • the intellectual ability to critically assess and tackle any engineering problem they may encounter;
  • the communication skills to communicate technical information to a variety of audiences including technically trained supervisors and subordinates as well as non-technical members of the work force and the general public;
  • the leadership and team building skills to lead projects and function as entry-level managers as well as work productively as members of a team;
  • an understanding of the practical aspects of the mining industry and an appreciation for mining as a business; and
  • an awareness of societal issues and how these issues affect their role as future professional engineers working for the general benefit of society.

Student Outcomes

Upon completion of the undergraduate program curriculum in Mining Engineering, students will attain the following outcomes:


  1. An ability to identify, formulate, and solve complex engineering problems by applying principles of engineering, science, and mathematics.
  2. An ability to apply engineering design to produce solutions that meet specified needs with consideration of public health, safety, and welfare, as well as global, cultural, social, environmental, and economic factors.
  3. An ability to communicate effectively with a range of audiences.
  4. An ability to recognize ethical and professional responsibilities in engineering situations and make informed judgments, which must consider the impact of engineering solutions in global, economic, environmental, and societal contexts.
  5. An ability to function effectively on a team whose members together provide leadership, create a collaborative and inclusive environment, establish goals, plan tasks, and meet objectives.
  6. An ability to develop and conduct appropriate experimentation, analyze and interpret data, and use engineering judgment to draw conclusions.
  7. An ability to acquire and apply new knowledge as needed, using appropriate learning strategies.
  8. The experience acquired through internships or cooperative education to apply engineering management and design in the industrial context.

Curriculum

The mining engineering curriculum utilizes the basic and engineering sciences to develop the various areas of activity of the mining engineer: mineral exploration, evaluation, development, extraction, mineral processing, conservation, protection of the environment, and mineral economics. Course work in these areas provides a unique background for engineering and management positions in industry and government, as well as for continuation of specialized graduate studies.


Intrinsic to the curriculum is the development of a meaningful, major engineering design experience that builds upon the fundamental concepts of mathematics, basic sciences, the humanities and social sciences, engineering topics, and communication skills. This design experience is stressed within the major and grows with the development and progression of the student. Ethical, social, safety, economic, and environmental considerations are emphasized in the design experience throughout many courses, including the capstone senior design course. Finally, the major engineering design experience is a focal point of the mining engineering curriculum and is consistent with the objectives and goals of the program.


The program has an emphasis on the application of computers to mining and minerals processing operations. Furthermore, it exposes students to laboratory courses which focus on conducting experiments, understanding the principles involved in each experiment, and analyzing and interpreting experimental data. Information on the mission, goals, and curriculum of the program is continuously updated on the departmental website.


The Cooperative Education Program, as well as opportunities for financial support in the form of scholarships, loans, awards, and summer employment, are available to undergraduate and graduate students. Graduate programs are available leading to the M.S., M. Eng., and Ph.D.


Faculty

  • Head: A. Noble
  • University Distinguished Professor and Nicholas T. Camicia Professor: R.H. Yoon
  • Stonie Barker Professor: E.A. Sarver
  • Professor: A. Noble and E.C. Westman
  • Associate Professors: B. Nojabaei, N. Ripepi, and W. Zhang
  • Assistant Professors: R. Pandey
  • Professor of Practice: R. Bishop
  • Affiliated Faculty: R. Pollyea

Undergraduate Course Descriptions (MINE)

MINE 1024 - Leadership and Service in the Mineral Industries

Leadership and service principles. Awareness of self and others through personality typing. Strategic planning. Importance of energy and mineral industries to developed and developing countries as well as associated consequences. Mineral extraction and purification processes and calculations. Conflict resolution. Challenges and opportunities available in the energy and mineral industries. May include guest speakers and field trips.


MINE 1034 - Automation and Data Analytics in the Mineral Industries

Discovering challenges and opportunities available in autonomous vehicles, systems, and data analytics associated with the energy and mineral industries. Fundamentals of robotics and data analytics; hands-on projects with autonomous kits and drones; analysis of industry data, including production studies; introduction to presentation of complex data in a simplified manner; introduction to simulations and digital twins.


MINE 1044 - Space Mining

Explore challenges and opportunities in off-earth mining. Resources currently identified on earth and critical uses; astroidal, lunar, and martian resources; operating conditions in space; environmental, social, and governance issues; economic drivers; in situ resource utilization.


MINE 1984 - Special Study

Variable credit course.


MINE 2114 - Energy and Raw Materials: Geopolitics and Sustainable Development

Supply and demand of energy resources and raw materials. Domestic and global trends. Development of energy and mineral resources. Electricity generation, efficiency, and distribution. Energy and raw materials infrastructure. Disparities in resource-producing vs. resource-consuming regions. Environmental considerations and engineering management. Land use and reclamation. Greenhouse gas management. Policy, regulations, and incentives. Geopolitical considerations. Conservation and efficiency. Sustainable development.


MINE 2504 - Introduction to Mining Engineering

Introduction to the complete field of mining and minerals engineering, including phases of mine development, discreet mining methods and mineral processing operations. Consideration in unconventional oil and gas development. Emphasis on basic engineering problem-solving skills, and considerations for worker health and safety, economics, and environmental and social issues.


MINE 2534 - Mine Surveying and Mapping

Specialized principles of field surveying and mapping as applied to the delineation of mineral deposits and the design and monitoring of surface and underground mining operations. Introduction to modern surveying instruments, field techniques, and computational procedures. Basic digital mine mapping to include standard mine symbols and representation of surface and underground mine workings.


MINE 2544 - Leadership for Responsible Mining

Principles of leadership for the global resource industries including identification of project impacts and risks, stakeholder analysis and conflict management. Emphasis on engineering ethics and effective communications. Sustainable development of mineral and energy resources, with focus on emerging technical, economic, environmental, and social issues in the US and abroad.


MINE 2564 - Resource Exploration and Design

Basic methods and concepts in exploration and modeling of ore bodies. Resource exploration planning. Exploration technologies for potential mine sites. Design of mining systems. Computational modeling of ore bodies and mine systems. Environmental, regulatory, ethical, and social considerations in mine system design.


MINE 2714 - Introduction to Petroleum and Natural Gas Engineering

Introduction to basics of petroleum and natural gas engineering. Concepts of conventional and unconventional fossil fuel energy; basics of rock mechanics and reservoir fluid properties. Concepts of drilling and completion engineering. Concepts of hydraulic fracturing; basic knowledge of formation evaluation and various rock types. Basics of geophysical monitoring methods; basics of different oil and gas reservoirs; basics of production engineering and fundamentals of recovery mechanisms, discussion of petroleum and natural gas social and policy issues.


MINE 2974 - Independent Study

Variable credit course.


MINE 2984 - Special Study

Variable credit course.


MINE 2994 - Undergraduate Research

Variable credit course.


MINE 3544 - Mineral Processing Laboratory

Laboratory investigations of the unit operations and principles of mineral processing including ore preparation (size reduction, mineral liberation, and classification) and mineral recovery (froth flotation, electrostatic separation, magnetic separation, and solid-liquid separation).


MINE 3564 - Underground Mine Design

Design fundamentals of mining systems and stope development for tabular and massive underground mineral deposits. Equipment selection and application, permitting, cost analysis, and production simulation.


MINE 3574 - Surface Mine and Quarry Design

Surface mining methods, and their selection; mine planning and design; excavation, haulage, and ancillary systems; equipment selection and maintenance; impoundment and piles design; mine closure/reclamation.


MINE 3584 - Ventilation Engineering

Subsurface ventilation systems. Ventilation planning and design, laws of airflow, airway resistance. Ventilation surveys, network analysis, ventilation economics. Ventilation software. Fan types, impeller theory, fan laws, and testing. Mine ventilation thermodynamics.


MINE 3604 - Mining Geomechanics

Properties and behavior of geologic materials and masses and their classifications and ratings. Design principles of structures founded on and in rocks and basic aspects of ground control in mining. Laboratory techniques used in the determination of geologic materials properties and behavior. Determination of rock index properties, strengths, failure criterion, and mechanical behavior.


MINE 3624 - Mineral Resource Project Management

Applied and theoretical concepts in the valuation and management of mining and energy extraction projects. Project engineering, resource management, scheduling, and tracking. Estimation of capital costs, operating costs, and revenues for underground and surface mines, mineral beneficiation plants, and oil and gas ventures. Commodity sales contracts and price projections. Cash flow analysis, revenue-generating and service producing alternative selection, taxes/deductions. Quantitative risk analysis including stochastic simulation. Environmental, ethical, and legal considerations in project management.


MINE 3634 - Fundamentals of Mineral Processing

Principles of mineral processing with an emphasis on metallurgical data evaluation, unit operations, and flowsheet configurations. Metallurgical accounting, slurry calculations, grade-recovery relationships, chemical aspects of mineral processing, and particle size analysis. Unit operations including crushing, grinding, size separation, gravity separation, magnetic and electrostatic separation, froth dewatering. Laboratory investigations of the unit operations and principles of mineral processing.


MINE 3644 - Applications in Mineral Processing

Applied concepts in the design and operation of mineral processing plants. Flowsheet engineering, unit selection, unit sizing, water/mass flow balancing, simulation, process control, and cost estimation. Environmental, economic, and legal considerations in process plant design.


MINE 3664 - Fluids and Thermodynamics for Resources

Fluid properties and hydrostatics. Derivation and application of the continuity, momentum, and energy equation (Bernoulli's equation) for ideal and real fluid flow (laminar or turbulent). Properties of pure substances: property tables, property software, equations of state. First law of thermodynamics. Second law of thermodynamics. Gas mixtures. Applications in the resource extraction industries.


MINE 3674 - Explosives and Rock Fragmentation

Rock fragmentation for excavation; drilling fragmentation, rock drilling systems; blasting fragmentation, types and properties of commercial explosives and accessories, system of initiation, design of blasting rounds, applications in mining and construction, structural damage criteria, overbreak control, safe practice and regulations; fragmentation by excavation machines; excavation system selection and design.


MINE 3714 - Petroleum and Natural Gas Reservoir Engineering

Introduction to oil and gas reservoirs; basics of reservoir rock and fluid properties; fundamentals of different petroleum reservoirs; determination of oil and gas in place; material balance equation; prediction of transient pressure distribution; prediction of saturation distribution; basics of recovery mechanisms; single and multiphase flows in petroleum reservoirs; and prediction of recovery factor and production rate.


MINE 3724 - Formation Evaluation and Engineering

Well log measurements and interpretation; standard logging suites used in industry; core sampling methods and laboratory analysis; relationship of well data to seismic and other geophysical data; relationship of well-derived reservoir properties to reservoir estimation calculations, well completions strategies, and development strategies.


MINE 3984 - Special Study

Variable credit course.


MINE 4504 - Materials Handling and Power Systems

Principles of materials handling, fluid power, and electrical power systems for surface and underground mining operations. Engineering analysis and design of secondary haulage operations (belt conveyors, hoists, trucks, railways), fluid power systems (hydraulics, pumps, piping networks, compressors, pneumatic equipment). Electrical systems (electrical machinery, distribution networks, controls), and other ancillary systems required to support mining operations. Assessment of equipment reliability and development of preventive maintenance programs.


MINE 4614 - Health and Safety Systems

Investigation of health and safety management systems. Study of mine legislation; data analysis of accidents; hazard identification; risk management; training programs; emergency response plans.


MINE 4624 - Mine and Water Reservoir Engineering

Essential topics related to water in resource extraction projects, including surface and ground water hydrology, chemistry and treatment of mine-influenced waters and waters from unconventional oil and gas production, and mine dewatering. Emphasis on basic design calculations and modeling.


MINE 4635 - Mining Engineering Capstone

Serves as the capstone design course sequence for Mining and Minerals Engineering. Undertake a comprehensive design project and feasibility study that integrates courses taken throughout their curriculum, in consideration of public and occupational health, safety, and welfare, as well as global, cultural, social, environmental, and economic factors and constraints. Includes exploration of professional and ethical obligations of engineers and impacts of projects on communities, project management, communication, and working in teams.


MINE 4636 - Mining Engineering Capstone

Serves as the capstone design course sequence for Mining and Minerals Engineering. Undertake a comprehensive design project and feasibility study that integrates courses taken throughout their curriculum, in consideration of public and occupational health, safety, and welfare, as well as global, cultural, social, environmental, and economic factors and constraints. Includes exploration of professional and ethical obligations of engineers and impacts of projects on communities, project management, communication, and working in teams. Culminates in the preparation of a technical report that describes the commercial development, extraction, and closure of a mineral deposit under global reporting standards, and provides detailed operational layouts, production calculations, and engineering cost analyses.


MINE 4644 - Environmental Management for Mining and Geoenergy

Environmental impacts of mines and geoenergy resource development projects, including water, land, and air pollution. Statutory and regulatory environmental requirements, with an emphasis on permitting, monitoring, and compliance. Best practices for environmental management systems.


MINE 4654 - Mine Power Systems and Automation

Fundamentals of electrical theory. Circuit elements, calculations, and network analysis. Components and design of mine power systems. Motors, cables, load flow analyses, transmission, and distribution. Electrical safety. U.S. mine-specific regulation, intrinsic safety, and permissibility. Applications in mine systems automation via programmable logic control. Basic ladder logic routines.


MINE 4664 - Resource Engineering Leadership Seminar

Invited speakers and subject experts, assigned readings, facilitated activities and discussions, personality and values assessment, learning taxonomy and learning styles, diversity in the workplace, implications of personal differences for workplace and leadership dynamics, strategies and best practices for effective leadership, oral and written communication for diverse audiences.


MINE 4714 - Well Drilling and Completion Engineering

Introduction to drilling and completion design; functions of drilling fluids; wellbore hydraulics and drilling bits; principles of well control; casing design; design of cementing jobs; directional drilling in conventional and unconventional formations, completions.


MINE 4724 - Petroleum and Natural Gas Production Engineering

Extraction of reservoir fluids; oil and gas thermodynamic properties; phase behavior of petroleum fluids; analysis of surface production facilities; fluid separation; processing of reservoirs fluids; fluid disposal in an environmentally acceptable manner; surface transportation systems; separator design; design of artificial lift systems.


MINE 4974 - Independent Study

Variable credit course.


MINE 4984 - Special Study

Variable credit course.


MINE 4994 - Undergraduate Research

Variable credit course.


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