Mar 28, 2024  
2012-2013 General Catalog 
    
2012-2013 General Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Petroleum Engineering, Ph.D.


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(PPETE)

The PhD program is open to students holding an MS in petroleum engineering, other engineering disciplines, or enrolled in the petroleum engineering master’s program at LSU. In the latter case, the MS enrollment status of the student may be upgraded to the PhD status using the following guidelines:

Eligibility:

  • Master’s student who has completed a BS in Petroleum Engineering:
  • Master’s student who has completed MS in another engineering discipline:
  • The student has completed 24 hours of course work (including all makeup work) and has a 3.0 cumulative GPA

Process:

  • The student must request approval from his/her major advisor, the graduate advisor, and the department chair;
  • The student’s major advisor will then email all faculty and solicit information regarding the student’s academic performance;
  • Once all faculty advisor, graduate advisor, and chairman have all agreed, the chairman sends a request for student’s status change to the dean of The Graduate School.

Assistantship upgrade:

  • After the upgrade is granted, the student must pass the qualifying exam to receive the increase from MS to PhD level of the stipend.

To become a doctoral candidate, a student must pass the qualifying and general examinations, meet a one-year residence requirement, and complete a minimum of 54 semester hours of approved graduate course work beyond the BS degree or 30 semester hours beyond the MS degree. The departmental-level academic course plan for each student will be developed in consultation with and approved by the student’s graduate advisory committee. The committee will include the student’s major advisor and at least two additional members of the graduate faculty such that the LSU Graduate School’s requirements are satisfied. The advisory committee is typically identical to the student’s committee for the general examination.

The curricular requirements include:

  • At least 30 hours at the 7000 level or above beyond BS degree; without MS degree
  • At least 24 hours at the 7000 level or above beyond BS degree; with MS degree
  • At least 15 hours at the 7000 level or above beyond MS degree;
  • Minimum core requirement of 21 credit hours in drilling, production, formation evaluation, reservoir engineering, and engineering mathematics – shown in the Core Curriculum Requirements document.
  • A secondary concentration area consisting of a minimum of six hours of earned credit in a specified field of study may be required by the advisory committee.

Within the first year after admission to the doctoral program, the student must pass a qualifying exam administered by the advisory committee. The qualifying exam is a comprehensive oral exam based upon the student’s proposal of the dissertation research project. At the discretion of the student’s advisory committee, a written exam may be required. After passing the qualifying exam, and upon approval by the advisory committee, the planned departmental-level academic course plan should be submitted for approval to The Graduate School.

The student must pass a general examination within three calendar years after admission to the doctoral program and not later than two semesters prior to graduation. This is a rigorous comprehensive oral exam that also includes assessment of the progress made by the student in the dissertation research to make sure that the student may proceed successfully to a doctoral degree.

PhD Examination Milestones

This document defines expectations of student achievements at various stages in the PhD program.

  1. Research Proposal Within the first two years after admission to the doctoral program, the student must present a research proposal to the advisory committee. The research proposal serves as a qualifying examination in petroleum engineering. The qualifying examination is a comprehensive oral examination based on the student’s proposal of the dissertation research project. To pass the examination, the candidate will:
    1. Define the problem, including formulating a hypothesis and a test for that hypothesis
    2. State the engineering, science, economic, and/or social motivations for a solution
    3. Read, understand, and summarize the most important previous work in the area
    4. Place the proposed research into a meaningful context with petroleum engineering
    5. Formulate a credible approach for carrying out the research and identify tools (analytical, numerical, laboratory instrumentation, and equipment)
    6. Demonstrate competence or potential to carry out the approach, including sufficient knowledge of and proficiency in other areas of petroleum engineering, geosciences, engineering sciences, basic sciences, and mathematics
    7. Provide a sufficiently detailed plan for the research, including a timeline
    8. Submit a written research proposal to the committee at least a week before the examination. The written proposal (not more than 15 pages excluding references) includes items discussed in 1.1-1.7. Along with a record of discussion related to the proposal, the written proposal is a working plan for the research, agreed upon by the student and the dissertation committee.
    9. Demonstrate a commitment to clear communication
    10. Announce the examination to all department faculty and graduate students 1 week in advance
  2. General Examination The student must pass a general examination administered by the examining committee.
    The examining committee must be approved by The Graduate School. The timing of the general examination is
 
  1. Generally within three years after admission to the doctoral program
  2. No later than four years after admission to the doctoral program
  3. No later than two semesters prior to graduation.
 

The general examination is a rigorous, comprehensive oral examination that includes assessment of the progress made by the student in the dissertation research and overall proficiency in Petroleum Engineering to ensure that the student can proceed successfully to a doctoral degree. To pass the general examination, a student must demonstrate progress in all areas examined at the proposal.

Specifically, the candidate will:

  1. State the problem clearly and convincingly, in a style suitable for including in the dissertation. Clearly identify the elements of the problem and approach that are creative, challenging, or original.
  2. Review relevant literature completely and informatively, in a style suitable for including in the dissertation
  3. Demonstrate expertise in the area of petroleum engineering science and technology related to the dissertation
  4. Demonstrate proficiency in other areas of petroleum engineering
  5. Perform significant, but possibly incomplete, original research that promises to contribute relevant new knowledge within petroleum engineering
  6. Present a detailed plan, including timeline, for completion of the dissertation
  7. Prepare a quality document for the examination including some preliminary results, with proper use of figures, tables, references, mathematical notation, grammar, spelling, etc., and submit the document to the dissertation committee at least one week before the examination. The document should generally follow format guidelines for a dissertation, and is expected to be less than 50 pages long (including appendices and excluding references).
  8. Communicate clearly, including addressing question
  9. Announce the examination to all department faculty and graduate students 1 week in advance
  1. Final Examination The final examination focuses on the dissertation, to ensure that the work is of sufficient scope, difficulty, originality, and creativity to merit a PhD. In addition to the requirements of a general examination, the candidate will:
    1. Complete a significant amount of original research that contributes relevant knowledge in petroleum engineering. Publications in conference proceedings and/or refereed journals are strong, independent evidence that a significant, original, and relevant contribution has been made
    2. Compare, benchmark, verify, calibrate, and/or validate original results against alternative and existing solutions, techniques, and datasets
    3. Demonstrate mastery of the research tools used
    4. Prepare a properly formatted dissertation and presentation and submit the dissertation to the committee at least two weeks before the examination
    5. Communicate clearly, including answering questions well
    6. Announce the examination to all department faculty and graduate students 1 week in advance

Minimum core requirements***


Engineering Math


MS: One of the following courses (3)
PhD: Two of the following courses (6)

18-21 Total Hours


* Prior equivalent courses may be substituted for coverage but not for credit unless officially transferred.

** This list is a supplement and not a substitute for the LSU catalog requirement.

*** Students with BS in other engineering areas or science (zero graduate credit hours)

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