Stream

Nuclear Engineering - ENGGRS7320

Stream Summary

Faculty: Faculty of Engineering

School: School of Electrical Eng and Telecommunications

Contact: School

Program: 7320 - Engineering Science

Award(s):

Graduate Certificate in Engineering Science (Specialisation)

View stream information for previous years

Stream Outline

The nuclear debate is ongoing. Irrespective of the outcome of ‘new build’ proposals in the Western world, there is an existing portfolio of reactors that require maintenance, servicing, operation and eventually decommissioning. There is waste to be managed and there is a fuel cycle that requires servicing and handling. They all necessitate engineers with an understanding of the unique environment experienced at nuclear sites.

In addition, many countries are assessing nuclear energy programmes as one of a number of mechanisms to provide secure, low-carbon energy, and some have embarked on national nuclear build programmes. Such programmes are raising many global challenges, not least due to proliferation concerns and environmental security.

The long-term needs of the nuclear engineering field are clear and many nations have long-term commitments to nuclear engineering including conventional power generation, radiological applications in medicine and healthcare, and proliferation monitoring and control. There is an ageing workforce in the sector and ample opportunities for nuclear engineering graduates.

Hence there is a strong need for a new generation of nuclear-conversant engineers. The development of nuclear engineering skills is a timely opportunity for engineering graduates. The aim of the Nuclear Engineering stream is to educate and inform engineering graduates in the underpinning theory behind nuclear engineering techniques, technologies and processes, and provides a stream that allows engineering graduates, from traditional engineering disciplines, to prepare themselves for a career in nuclear engineering. The stream aims to produce graduates capable of embarking on a nuclear engineering career and contributing to the nuclear debate from a knowledgeable standpoint.

The stream will have contributions from national and international experts in the Nuclear Engineering sector including material from the Centre for Nuclear Engineering at Imperial College, London, and the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO) in Australia.

ENTRY REQUIREMENTS

Students need a recognised 4 year Bachelor of Engineering degree with a minimum 65% average. Students with a 3- or 4-year Bachelor of Engineering or Science combined with at least 2 years of relevant discipline experience will also be considered.

NOTE: The minimum average required for entry is as determined by the UNSW Postgraduate Entry Score Calculator. Students from a non-211 university in China need a minimum 70% average. For entry details please click here.

Stream Structure

The stream requires completion of 24 Units of Credit from Disciplinary, Advanced Disciplinary, Research or Elective courses.

Disciplinary Courses

Disciplinary courses are selected from relevant disciplines such as Maths, Physics, Electrical, Mechanical, Civil, Mining on approval of the program authority. Up to 12 UOC foundational disciplinary courses may be taken to provide necessary background and only with program authority approval.

Sample list for an electrical engineer with other similar lists for other engineering disciplines:
Advanced Disciplinary Course
Students must complete ENGG9741 and one 6UOC course from the following list:
Exemptions or Advanced Standing

This stream does not grant advanced standing on enrolment.
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Study Levels

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