MSc Information and Process Systems Engineering
- Programme director
- Franjo Cecelja
- Programme length
- Full-time: 12 months, Part-time: up to 60 months
- Programme start date
- February 2013, September 2013, February 2014
This programme provides high-quality education with substantial intellectual challenges and job satisfaction when venturing into the real world.
Programme overview
The MSc Information and Process Systems Engineering programme is aimed at graduates of traditional engineering, science and related disciplines. Graduates from non-IT or related disciplines tend to be ill prepared for the information and knowledge-related challenges and demands of today’s business environments.
Key learning outcomes are an understanding of the principles of knowledge management, decision-making in technical systems and business information technologies, with the focus on the process industry.
The programme provides high-quality education with substantial intellectual challenges, commensurate with the financial rewards and job satisfaction when venturing into the real world. It also makes you aware of current technologies and trends based on rigorous training in matters relating to the fundamentals of the subject.
There is a wide selection of modules on offer within the programme from the subjects of process engineering, information systems, business and management. All taught modules are delivered by qualified experts in the topics and academic members of the University staff, assisted by specialist external lecturers.
Entry requirements
Candidates should be graduates with a minimum 2.2 honours degree (or equivalent) in an engineering, science or related subject. Practitioners with suitable qualifications and relevant experience in engineering, science or technology are also welcome to apply.
English language requirements
IELTS minimum overall: 6.5
IELTS minimum by component:
6.0
We offer intensive English language pre-sessional courses, designed to take you to the level of English ability and skill required for your studies here.
Fees and funding
All fees are subject to increase or review for subsequent academic years. Please note that not all visa routes permit part-time study and overseas students entering the UK on a Tier 4 visa will not be permitted to study on a part-time basis.
| Programme name | Study mode | Start date | UK/EU fees | Overseas fees |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MSc Information and Process Systems Engineering | Full-time | Feb 2013 | £5,740 | £14,830 |
| MSc Information and Process Systems Engineering | Part-time | Feb 2013 | £638 per 15 credits | £1,648 per 15 credits |
| MSc Information and Process Systems Engineering | Full-time | Sep 2013 | £6,025 | £15,570 |
| MSc Information and Process Systems Engineering | Part-time | Sep 2013 | £670 per 15 credits | £1,730 per 15 credits |
| MSc Information and Process Systems Engineering | Full-time | Feb 2014 | £6,025 | £15,570 |
| MSc Information and Process Systems Engineering | Part-time | Feb 2014 | £670 per 15 credits | £1,730 per 15 credits |
Programme content
Module Overview
Compulsory Modules
Optimisation and Decision-Making
This module will develop your understanding of the technology available to optimise process systems, business models and operations. You are provided with state-of-the-art versions of modelling and optimisation approaches in order to understand both the potential and the limitations of available techniques.
Information Security Management
Security is one of the greatest challenges for computer and information systems in the near future. Information security is a managerial problem as well as a technical one, and good security solutions depend on an ability to identify security requirements based on business needs and business processes. Thus, this module has a two-fold objective. It will look at how information systems can be managed and designed to fill actual business needs. It will also raise an awareness of the great range of security threats and how protection depends on a holistic view of the system.
Technology, Business and Research Seminars
Designers and managers working in technology-intensive industries constantly face new problems to which they have to find solutions. Research is becoming an important part of their job, carried out daily and in a routine manner. One of the best ways to get insights into these challenges is to get first-hand experience from experts who have already faced them and provided appropriate solutions which have proven to be successful. This module aims to provide an introduction to the general principles and practices associated with planning, undertaking and reporting research in engineering or physical sciences. At the same time, a series of seminars will be delivered by academics and industrial experts from diverse hi-tech industries and businesses (including chemicals, oil and gas, information systems and renewable technologies) which will present students with valuable insights into today’s challenges faced by technology-intensive industries in terms of their business and information systems activities. It also covers general business aspects that will explain how to start up a technology-based company.
Knowledge-based Systems and Artificial Intelligence
This module presents the current understanding of the development of decision support systems and knowledge management systems. It uses a common thread and examples from the design of chemical processes, focusing on the use of artificial intelligence techniques such as knowledge representation, knowledge-based decision support and agents technology.
Intelligent Information Systems
The aim of this module is to equip you with the knowledge and an overview, as well as the analytical skills, to assess security in large systems and organisations, and to incorporate security in every step of a system’s life cycle.
E-commerce and Emerging Technologies on the Internet
This module gives you an understanding of the role and importance of information management in organisations through the critical analysis of specific case studies. You will learn about the future role of information bases in organisations and gain practical experience in using these prototype technologies to solve business problems.
Optional modules include:
- Software Development
- Process and Energy Integration
- Process Systems Design
- Supply Chain Management
- Biomass Processing Technologies
- Process Modelling and Simulation
- Process Control
- Information Systems Development
Dissertation
The dissertation project provides an opportunity for you to pursue a single topic in depth and to demonstrate evidence of research potential for the master’s award. You will be encouraged to either research a new concept or apply existing technology in a new field. A number of dissertations are carried out in collaboration with industry. Upon successful completion of the module, you will be able to approach an open-ended topic to research new ideas and experiment with new technologies.
Programme structure
We offer a set of optional modules that will allow you to tailor the programmes to suit your individual needs, whilst the compulsory modules provide the fundamental knowledge and skills needed in industry today.
Graduate students will find the programmes of substantial benefit in developing the knowledge and skills acquired in their undergraduate programmes. For practising process engineers with professional business experience, the programmes are an opportunity to update their knowledge of current design practice and also to familiarise themselves with developments in codes and methods of analysis.
Successful completion of four modules is required to gain a Postgraduate Certificate and eight modules for a Postgraduate Diploma. To be awarded the MSc, you will need to take eight modules and successfully complete a dissertation.
Each module is worth 15 credits. The majority of modules are provided by University academic staff. In addition, the business and research seminars and renewable technologies and business modules are coordinated and supervised by University academic staff but delivered by experts from industry, research institutions and business organisations. The majority of modules run for ten weeks and comprise approximately 30 hours of class time (three hours per week) and 120 hours of self-study and assignments.
There is a wide selection of modules on offer within the programmes, covering the most relevant areas in the sector of business and technology in the process industry. At the end of the programmes, you will have an opportunity to pursue a single topic in depth and to demonstrate evidence of research potential through the dissertation project.
Academic support in the form of consultations is constantly available to enable further knowledge and skill comprehension.
Teaching and assessment
Our programmes utilise our research-active staff in conjunction with state-of-the-art facilities to provide a range of learning experiences – lectures, seminars, directed study, practical laboratories and project work.
Lectures are delivered by specialised, expert academic staff. Further in-depth knowledge and skills are gained through seminars delivered and guided by experienced professionals from industry, business and research organisations, with the focus on the latest trends and problem-solving methods. You will also work on a number of projects, individually and in groups, supervised by academic staff and focusing on real-life problems.
Modules are generally assessed by a combination of examinations and continuous assessment. The latter will be based on solutions to tutorial questions, reports covering practical sessions and fieldwork, and essays on a number of suitable topics. Each module is examined separately. There is a written final examination for most modules at the end of each semester, although some modules are examined by continuous assessment only. The modules and the dissertation project have a minimum pass mark of 50 per cent.
Facilities, equipment and academic support
Modules related to the different groups are taught by a total of six full-time members of staff and a number of visiting lecturers.
An extensive library is available for individual study. It stocks more than 85,000 printed ooks and e-books, and more than 1,400 (1,100 online) journal titles, all in the broad area of engineering. The library support can be extended further through inter-library loans.
As part of their learning experience, students have at their disposal a wide range of relevant software needed to support the programme material dissertation projects. In recent years, this work included the design of various knowledge-based and business systems on the internet, the application of optimisation algorithms, and semantic web applications.
Numerous laboratory facilities across the Faculty and the University are also available for those opting for technology-based projects, such as the process engineering facility, a control and robotics facility and signal processing labs.
The work related to the MSc dissertation can often be carried out in parallel with, and in support of, ongoing research. In the past, several graduates have carried on their MSc research to a PhD programme.
Centre for Process and Information Systems Engineering
Process integration and systems analysis for sustainability of resources and energy efficiency are carried out within the well-established Centre for Process and Information Systems Engineering (PRISE). PRISE, supported through industrial membership, fosters interactions with R&D centres around the world. The most notable of the successes in this area include design technology for chemical reactors and chemical process flow sheets, optimisation solvers, the knowledge management h-TechSight and a long array of synthesis tools.
Major research interests in PRISE include:
- Chemical reactor design, addressing specific industrial reactors or reaction/separation and reactive separation processes
- Process operations, including graph-based methods, mathematical programming and stochastic optimisation
- Computer-aided molecular design (CAMD): integrated synthesis of optimal process designs and optimal solvents, novel solvent options and retrofit decision-making
- Bioprocess systems: the research targets optimal biocatalytic process design problems, focusing on membrane and solvent-based reactive and non-reactive separations, and solid/liquid separations
- Knowledge management and grid applications, inviting real-life problems to be used as pilot studies
- Oil exploration: research investigates the effective production and exploration of oil and the optimum design capacity of production facilities
- Sustainable systems engineering: with strong links with the Centre for Environmental Strategy (CES)
Your career
Engineers and scientists are increasingly expected to have skills in information systems engineering and decision support systems alongside their main technical and/or scientific expertise.
Graduates of these programmes will be well prepared to help technology-intensive organisations make important decisions in respect of vast amounts of information, by adopting, combining, implementing and executing the right technologies.
Department links
Contact us
For general enquiries
0800 980 3200 or +44 (0)1483 681 681
For admissions enquiries
+44 (0)1483 682 357
