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MPhil in Engineering for Sustainable Development

global challenges, engineering solutions
 

Individual research projects

 

The Dissertation of the MPhil component is undertaken between April and August when students complete an individual piece of research. This can involve working with companies, government agencies and other organisations and often produces work that is subsequently published in peer-reviewed technical journals. The dissertation of 12,000 – 15,000 words is submitted by noon on the last Friday of August.  This aspect of the course is equivalent to four modules and allows an aspect of engineering and sustainable development to be pursued in depth.   The dissertation represents a major element of the MPhil and is the opportunity for students to extract maximum value from their time at Cambridge.

Topics might range from the design of geothermal heat pumps or the infrastructure requirements for hydrogen-based transportation systems to using sustainability criteria to prioritise asset management decisions in the water industry or how effective sustainability reporting is in an engineering sector.  Students discuss their ideas with the Course Director during Michaelmas term, and then they are assigned appropriate supervisors and agree titles for their work during Lent term.  This process allows preliminary preparation and planning to take place before the execution of the work itself gets underway around Easter.