Metadata
Title
12-751   Air Quality Engineering
Category
courses
UUID
b00e6bd7849246a0ac5e9a32d109a8a5
Source URL
https://cee.engineering.cmu.edu/education/course-descriptions/12-751.html
Parent URL
https://cee.engineering.cmu.edu/education/graduate/courses.html
Crawl Time
2026-03-25T05:02:44+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown
# 12-751   Air Quality Engineering

**Source**: https://cee.engineering.cmu.edu/education/course-descriptions/12-751.html
**Parent**: https://cee.engineering.cmu.edu/education/graduate/courses.html

The course provides a quantitative introduction to the processes that control atmospheric pollutants and the use of mass balance models to predict pollutant concentrations.

We survey major processes including emission rates, atmospheric dispersion, chemistry, and deposition.

The course includes discussion of basic atmospheric science and meteorology to support understanding air pollution behavior.

Concepts in this area include vertical structure of the atmosphere, atmospheric general circulation, atmospheric stability, and boundary layer turbulence.

The course also discusses briefly the negative impacts of air pollution on society and the regulatory framework for controlling pollution in the United States.

The principles taught are applicable to a wide variety of air pollutants but special focus is given to tropospheric ozone and particulate matter.

The course is intended for graduate students as well as advanced undergraduates. It assumes a knowledge of mass balances, fluid mechanics, chemistry, and statistics typical of an undergraduate engineer but is open to students from other scientific disciplines.\
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**Textbook(s):\
\**Textbook information can be found at the [CMU Bookstore](https://bookstore.mbsdirect.net/vbm/vb_home.php?FVCUSNO=37983&url=CarnegieMellon.htm)