Prereq: 371.131 or permission required. This course offers the fundamentals of oil painting techniques for the serious student with minimal prior studio experience. Observational skills are taught through the extensive use of still-life setups, with particular attention paid to issues of light, color, and composition. Slide lectures and a museum trip give students an art historical context in which to place their own discoveries as beginning painters.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereq: 371.131 or Perm. Reqâd This intermediate drawing class will examine three grand traditions in representational art. We will explore problems in still life that have occupied artists from Chardin to Morandi; in interiors from Vermeer to Giacometti; in landscape from Corot to Diebenkorn. We will also look at where the boundaries between these genres blur and how they overlap.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Not open to Freshmen. A history-and-practice overview for students of the liberal arts. The conceptual basis and historical development of cartooning is examined in both artistic and social contexts. Class sessions consist of lecture (slides/handouts), exercises, and ongoing assignments. Topics include visual/narrative analysis, symbol & satire, editorial/political cartoons, character development, animation. Basic drawing skills are preferred but not required.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Students learn to use their digital cameras through a variety of projects which help them develop technical and creative skills. Students explore documentary, landscape and portrait photography. Critiques and slide lectures of historic photographs, which range from postmortem daguerreotypes to postmodern digital imagery, help students develop a personal vision. Students gain camera proficiency with one-on-one instruction in the field. Basics for print adjustment and output will be covered.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Students learn to use their digital cameras through a variety of projects which help them develop technical and creative skills. Students explore documentary, landscape and portrait photography. Critiques and slide lectures of historic photographs, which range from postmortem daguerreotypes to postmodern digital imagery, help students develop a personal vision. Students gain camera proficiency with one-on-one instruction in the field. Basics for print adjustment and output will be covered.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Seniors only or permission required. A studio course introducing students to sculptural concepts and methods. Emphasis is on the process of creating. Even the simplest materials can effectively activate space, convey meaning and elicit emotion when used thoughtfully and imaginatively. Students will learn different methods including additive and reductive techniques, construction, modeling and mold-making. No prerequisites except a willingness to experiment, make mistakes...and clean up when you are done.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
This film-based class guides students through the technical and creative process of producing black and white photographs. Working in the darkroom, students learn the fundamentals of film and print development. In-class critiques explore the elements which make this medium unique. Students develop critical vision through discussion and analysis of historic images as well as images they make themselves. With the instructor's guidance, students work on a project of their choice and produce a portfolio of ten mounted prints.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
This film-based class guides students through the technical and creative process of producing black and white photographs. Working in the darkroom, students learn the fundamentals of film and print development. In-class critiques explore the elements which make this medium unique. Students develop critical vision through discussion and analysis of historic images as well as images they make themselves. With the instructor's guidance, students work on a project of their choice and produce a portfolio of ten mounted prints.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Attendance at 1st class is mandatory. In this digital course, students explore the black-and-white aesthetic. They develop camera skills on numerous field trips including Ladew Topiary Gardens, Furst Brothersâ century-old frame factory and an optional weekend trip to Cape Henlopen State Park in Delaware. Students meet frequently for critiques and discussions based on historic and contemporary imagery. Techniques such as high dynamic range, duotone, panorama and infrared will be covered. Students work on a project of their choice and produce a portfolio of ten prints. Digital SLRs are provided.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereq: 371.152 In this class, students will have the opportunity to expand the photographic skills learned in Introduction to Digital Photography. Through advanced photographic techniques and exploration of new aesthetic concepts students will produce a portfolio of high quality prints. Students will be introduced to creative techniques such as flash photography, light painting, professional studio lighting for portraiture and still life, night photography, time-exposure, macro and cameraless photographic experiments.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
In this film based course, students develop a project of their choice over the semester working independently in the darkroom and meeting for weekly critiques and discussions. Using the zone system (a method of pre-visualization developed by Ansel Adams) students will experiment with different film, paper and developer combinations specific to their projects. Writing in the form of a journal as well as critical analysis of images are integral parts of the seminar experience.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Not Available
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Not Available
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereq: 030.101, 171.101 Introduction to chemical and biomolecular engineering and the fundamental principles of chemical process analysis. Formulation and solution of material and energy balances on chemical processes. Reductionist approaches to the solution of complex, multi-unit processes will be emphasized. Introduction to the basic concepts of thermodynamics as well as chemical and biochemical reactions.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereq: 030.101, 171.101 Introduction to chemical and biomolecular engineering and the fundamental principles of chemical process analysis. Formulation and solution of material and energy balances on chemical processes. Reductionist approaches to the solution of complex, multi-unit processes will be emphasized. Introduction to the basic concepts of thermodynamics as well as chemical and biochemical reactions.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereq: 540.202, 110.202; Coreq: 030.102, 171.101 Formulation and solution of material, energy, and entropy balances with an emphasis on open systems. A systematic problem-solving approach is developed for chemical and biomolecular process-related systems. Extensive use is made of classical thermodynamic relationships and constitutive equations for one and two component systems. Applications include the analysis and design of engines, refrigerators, heat pumps, compressors, and turbines.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereq: 540.202, 110.202; Coreq: 030.102, 171.101 Formulation and solution of material, energy, and entropy balances with an emphasis on open systems. A systematic problem-solving approach is developed for chemical and biomolecular process-related systems. Extensive use is made of classical thermodynamic relationships and constitutive equations for one and two component systems. Applications include the analysis and design of engines, refrigerators, heat pumps, compressors, and turbines. Non-mandatory TA Sessions will be offered on Tuesdays and Thursdays, 9:00am to 9:50am.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereqs: 540.203, 540.303 Review of numerical methods applied to kinetic phenomena and reactor design in chemical and biological processes. Homogeneous kinetics and interpretation of reaction rate data. Batch, plug flow, and stirred tank reactor analyses, including reactors in parallel and in series. Selectivity and optimization considerations in multiple reaction systems. Non isothermal reactors. Elements of heterogeneous kinetics, including adsorption isotherms and heterogeneous catalysis. Coupled transport and chemical/biological reaction rates.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereqs: 540.203, 540.303 Review of numerical methods applied to kinetic phenomena and reactor design in chemical and biological processes. Homogeneous kinetics and interpretation of reaction rate data. Batch, plug flow, and stirred tank reactor analyses, including reactors in parallel and in series. Selectivity and optimization considerations in multiple reaction systems. Non isothermal reactors. Elements of heterogeneous kinetics, including adsorption isotherms and heterogeneous catalysis. Coupled transport and chemical/biological reaction rates.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Coreq: Differential Equations Introduction to the field of transport phenomena. Molecular mechanisms of momentum transport (viscous flow), energy transport (heat conduction), and mass transport (diffusion). Isothermal equations of change (continuity, motion, and energy). The development of the Navier Stokes equation. The development of non isothermal and multi component equations of change for heat and mass transfer. Exact solutions to steady state, isothermal unidirectional flow problems, to steady state heat and mass transfer problems. The analogies between heat, mass, and momentum transfer are emphasized throughout the course.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Coreq: Differential Equations Introduction to the field of transport phenomena. Molecular mechanisms of momentum transport (viscous flow), energy transport (heat conduction), and mass transport (diffusion). Isothermal equations of change (continuity, motion, and energy). The development of the Navier Stokes equation. The development of non isothermal and multi component equations of change for heat and mass transfer. Exact solutions to steady state, isothermal unidirectional flow problems, to steady state heat and mass transfer problems. The analogies between heat, mass, and momentum transfer are emphasized throughout the course.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereq: 540.303, 540.202 This course covers staged and continuous-contacting separations processes critical to the chemical and biochemical industries. Processes considered include distillation, liquid-liquid extraction, gas absorption, leaching chromatography, crystallization, precipitation, filtration, and drying. Particular emphasis is placed on the biochemical uses of these processes and consequently on how the treatment of these processes differs from the more traditional approach.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereqs: 540.311 or 540.313, 540.301 and 540.306 This course guides the student through the contrasting aspects of product design and of process design. Product design concerns the recognition of customer needs, the creation of suitable specifications, and the selection of best products to fulfill the needs. Process design concerns the quantitative description of processes, which serve to produce many commodity chemicals, the estimation of process profitability, and the potential for profitability improvement through incremental changes in the process. Students work in small teams to complete a major project demonstrating their understanding of and proficiency in the primary objectives of the course. Students report several times both orally and in writing on their accomplishments.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereq: 540.311 or 540.313, 540.301 and 540.306 This course guides the student through the contrasting aspects of product design and of process design. Product design concerns the recognition of customer needs, the creation of suitable specifications, and the selection of best products to fulfill the needs. Process design concerns the quantitative description of processes, which serve to produce many commodity chemicals, the estimation of process profitability, and the potential for profitability improvement through incremental changes in the process. Students work in small teams to complete a major project demonstrating their understanding of and proficiency in the primary objectives of the course. Students report several times both orally and in writing on their accomplishments.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereq: 540.311 or 540.313, 540.301 and 540.306 This course guides the student through the contrasting aspects of product design and of process design. Product design concerns the recognition of customer needs, the creation of suitable specifications, and the selection of best products to fulfill the needs. Process design concerns the quantitative description of processes, which serve to produce many commodity chemicals, the estimation of process profitability, and the potential for profitability improvement through incremental changes in the process. Students work in small teams to complete a major project demonstrating their understanding of and proficiency in the primary objectives of the course. Students report several times both orally and in writing on their accomplishments.
Score: 6.7114224 Details | Listing | Web page
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