Mineral Processing and Extractive Metallurgy (Certificate NDP)
The Graduate Certificate in Mineral Processing and Extractive Metallurgy (Certificate NDP) at University of Arizona can help you employ the industry’s most current methods of ore and mineral processing to efficiently harvest the metals and materials on which civilization depends.
Quick Facts |
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Full-time Duration: | 6 months |
Starting in: | August, January |
Tuition Fee: | $10,063 per semester |
Location: | Tucson, United States; Online |
The Mineral Processing and Extractive Metallurgy (Certificate NDP) at University of Arizona curriculum, built and led by influential figures in the mining industry alongside UA’s accomplished faculty, presents both a scientific and financial examination of mineral extraction and refinement to offer students a complete perspective on the challenges of geological processing.
Options
As a student of the program, you can also explore hydrometallurgy, leaching, and water chemistry, building on your expertise to master aqueous extraction. While the program also explores several other methods of mineral processing, acquiring this particular skill can help you use one of the most newly developed methods in the field.
Courses include:
- Mineral Processing
- Surface Chemistry of Flotation
- Elements of Solution Mining
- Hydrometallurgy
“Choosing the Master’s program for Physiological Sciences at the University of Arizona was one of the best decisions I could have made in my education. Our department is warm and collaborative, offering an array of research topics and techniques underneath a vast and integrative umbrella of physiology. Beyond my research experience, I was presented with teaching opportunities, which I feel honed my skill of scientific communication. Having the dynamic research/teaching/class schedule not only kept me active but helped me reinforce material in multiple contexts. Overall, this program was exactly what I wanted in my segway into the medical sciences… and with my teaching assistantship paying for my tuition, how could I say no?”
Andrew Wojtanowski // MS 2016