All courses listed below will automatically count as technical electives without completing a petition form. Advanced undergraduate courses (400-level courses) offered by the EME Department with MATH 141 as a prerequisite may count as technical electives upon approval of the student’s advisor and PNGE Program Chair. If a student is interested in taking a course not on this list as a technical elective, they should consult with their assigned advisor. Students must complete a petition form with approval from both their advisor and the PNGE Program Chair for courses not on this list.
Undergraduate Courses
- EBF 473: Risk Management in Energy Industries (FA)
- EBF 484: Energy Economics (FA)
- EGEE 420: Hydrogen and Fuel Cells (SP)
- EGEE 441: Electrochemical Engineering Fundamentals (FA)
- EME 407: Electrochemical Energy Storage (SP)
- EME 450: Energy Crisis Leadership (FA)
- ENVSE 450: Environmental Health and Safety (FA)
- ENVSE 470: Engineering Risk Analysis (SP)
- FSC 432: Petroleum Processing (FA)
- MNPR 426: Aqueous Processing (SP)
- PNG 488: Unconventional Wells (SP)
- PNG 494H: Undergraduate Honors Thesis (FA/SP)
- PNG 497: Special Topics (FA/SP)
Industry-led Courses
- PNG 456: Hydraulic Fracturing Analysis
- PNG 457: Pump Systems for Oil and Gas Production
- PNG 458: Assessment, Classification, and Reporting of Reserves and Resources
- PNG 459: Well Control Certification
- PNG 497: Special Topics
A maximum of three credits from honors thesis and industry-led courses will be counted.
Graduate PNGE Courses
- PNG 501: Flow in Porous Media
- PNG 502: Coupled Flow and Deformation in Porous Media
- PNG 512: Numerical Reservoir Simulation
- PNG 518: Design of Miscible Recovery Projects
- PNG 520: Thermodynamics of Hydrocarbon Fluids
- PNG 526: Well Stimulation
- PNG 530: Natural Gas Engineering
- PNG 555: Unconventional Resources Analysis
- PNG 566: Reservoir Characterization
- PNG 577: Production and Completions Engineering
- PNG 597: Special Topics
Students should be of senior standing and have >3.5 GPA to take graduate courses.