Chemical Engineering, Ph.D.

  • £26,613
  • Per Year
  • EEA
  • 3-4 years
  • On campus

Research within the Department covers a wide and exciting array of activities, ranging from quite fundamental research in biology through to the traditional fields of chemical engineering. You may find out more about this by looking under the research theme headings or at specific research activities that lie within these themes.

Description

Programme Structure Our PhD program is purely research-based with no taught components/lectures. Some academics will ask their PhD students to attend some lectures that are relevant to the research, but in such cases, the student does not undertake any of the assigned coursework or exams.

Detailed Course Facts

Start dates and application deadlines

  • University Name :

    University of Cambridge

    Course Started On :

    July - December

    Course Type :

    Full-time

    Course Fee :

    £26,613

    Course Sem/Year Type :

    Per Year

    Apply On :

    EEA

  • Course Location :

    Cambridge

    Course Language :

    English

    Type Of Education :

    On campus

    Duration :

    3-4 years

    Type of Degree :

    PhD

Requirements

  • Entry requirements

    Academic Requirements If you have not previously studied in the UK, it is important to check your relevant country guidelines (below) to ensure the qualifications you hold are considered suitable preparation for entry on to your chosen course. Whatever system you are being educated in, graduate work at Cambridge is intense and very intellectually demanding and so the University has high academic entry requirements. Please note the information given here is a guideline of the University's minimum academic requirements. Please refer to the Course Directory for the academic requirements for your specific course, as these may be higher than the University's minimum academic requirements. It should be noted that, for many countries, the University recognises significant variance between institutions and that, for example, a score of 70% from one university may not be considered to be the same as a score of 70% from another university.

  • Work Experience

    No Work Requirement

Relevant Links