EME301 - Thermodynamics in Energy and Mineral Engineering
Course: EME301 (Thermodynamics in Energy and Mineral Engineering) in EME department at Pennsylvania State University.
Credit Hours: 3 • Academic Level: third-year undergraduate course
Course Requirements: Requires 3 prerequisite courses
Prerequisite Chain Depth: 5 levels of foundational courses required
Future Opportunities: Unlocks 18 advanced courses for further study
Interdisciplinary Requirements: Prerequisites span 3 different departments
Course Type: Core pathway course - critical for degree progression
Part of the EME curriculum at Pennsylvania State University, helping students progress through degree requirements.
Courses unlocked by EME301
- EGEE304 - Heat and Mass Transfer
- ME430 - Introduction to Combustion
- METEO454 - Introduction to Micrometeorology
- METEO455 - Atmospheric Dispersion
- MNPR426 - Aqueous Processing
- ENVSE404W - Surface and Interfacial Phenomena in Environmental Systems
- BE464 - Bioenergy Systems Engineering
- EGEE420 - Hydrogen and Fuel Cells
- EGEE430 - Introduction to Combustion
- EGEE436 - Modern Thermodynamics for Energy Systems
- EGEE437 - Design of Solar Energy Conversion Systems
- EGEE470 - Air Pollutants from Combustion Sources
- EME407 - Electrochemical Energy Storage
- ENGR350 - Computational Modeling Methods
- MATSE426 - Aqueous Processing
- PNG480 - Surface Production Engineering
- PNG482 - Production Engineering Laboratory
- EGEE441 - Electrochemical Engineering Fundamentals
Academic Planning at Pennsylvania State University
Students planning EME301 at Pennsylvania State University should complete 3 prerequisites before enrollment.
Course Sequence: This course requires a 5-level prerequisite chain, requiring careful multi-semester planning for optimal progression.
Future Pathways: Completing EME301 enables enrollment in 18 advanced courses for further study
This third-year course at Pennsylvania State University integrates into structured degree pathways for EME programs, supporting timely graduation and academic progression.