2015-2016 Graduate Catalog [NOTE!!!! THIS IS AN ARCHIVED CATALOG. FOR THE CURRENT CATALOG, GO TO CATALOG.NIU.EDU]
Chemistry and Biochemistry
|
|
Return to: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
Chair: Jon W. Carnahan
Graduate Faculty
Marc J. Adler, assistant professor, Ph.D., Duke University
Gary M. Baker, associate professor, Ph.D., Purdue University
David S. Ballantine, Jr., associate professor, Ph.D., University of Maryland
Jon W. Carnahan, professor, Ph.D., University of Cincinnati
Robert F. Cunico, professor emeritus, Ph.D., Purdue University
James E. Erman, Distinguished Research Professor, emeritus, Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Elizabeth R. Gaillard, Presidential Research Professor, Ph.D., University of Texas
Thomas M. Gilbert, associate professor, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley
Timothy J. Hagen, assistant professor, Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Heike Hofstetter, adjunct assistant professor, Ph.D., University of Tübingen (Germany)
Oliver Hofstetter, associate professor, Ph.D., University of Tübingen (Germany)
James Horn, associate professor, Ph.D., University of Iowa
Narayan S. Hosmane, Distinguished Research Professor, Board of Trustees Professor, Ph.D., Edinburgh University
Dennis N. Kevill, Distinguished Research Professor, emeritus, Ph.D., University of London
Douglas Klumpp, professor, Ph.D., Iowa State University
Chhiu-Tsu Lin, Distinguished Teaching Professor, Distinguished Research Professor, Board of Trustees Professor, emeritus, Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles
W. Roy Mason III, professor emeritus, Ph.D., Emory University
Victor V. Ryzhov, associate professor, Ph.D., Case Western Reserve University
Lee Sunderlin, associate professor, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley
Petr Vanýsek, professor emeritus, Ph.D., Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences
Lidia Vitello, adjunct associate professor, Ph.D., Clarkson University
Tao Xu, associate professor, Ph.D., University of Alabama
Chong Zheng, professor, Ph.D., Cornell University
The Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry offers programs leading to the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees. Bulletins describing graduate programs in chemistry are available from the department chair.
Admission to graduate programs in chemistry requires a baccalaureate degree in chemistry or a related area.
Course Information
Course numbering system. Courses offered by the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry are divided into different areas as a general guide to students using the following numbering system.
-00, special topics
-15, seminar
-01 to -19, general chemistry
-20 to -29, analytical chemistry
-30 to -39, organic chemistry
-40 to -49, physical chemistry
-50 to -59, nanochemistry
-60 to -69, inorganic chemistry
-70 to -79, biochemistry
-80 to -99, research, dissertation, and miscellaneous
Return to: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
|