Bioengineering

University of California, Berkeley

This is an archived copy of the 2014-15 guide. To access the most recent version of the guide, please visit http://guide.berkeley.edu/.

About the Program

Bachelor of Science (BS)

Rated one of the top 10 bioengineering undergraduate programs in the country, Bioengineering at Berkeley is a multidisciplinary major intended for academically strong students who excel in the physical sciences, mathematics, and biology. Coursework provides a strong foundation in engineering and the biological sciences, with the freedom to explore a variety of topics and specialize in advanced areas of research. All students benefit from intensive group design work, either through a senior capstone project  or through independent research in faculty laboratories. The major features small, specialized upper division courses and direct interaction with faculty. 

The stimulating environment of Berkeley offers a wealth of opportunity for learning, research, service, and community involvement, and provides dedicated students the knowledge and skills to become the next leaders in bioengineering.

Bachelor of Science (BS), 120 units

Course of Study Overview

The Department offers one Bioengineering major, with several concentrations. For detailed descriptions of these concentrations, please see the department's website .

  • Biomaterials, Biomechanics and Cell Tissue Engineering
  • Biomedical Devices
  • Computational Bioengineering
  • Biomedical Imaging
  • Premed
  • Synthetic Biology

Admission to the Major

Prospective undergraduates of the College of Engineering will apply for admission to a specific program in the College. For further information, please see the College of Engineering's website .

Admission to Engineering via a Change of College application for current UC Berkeley students is highly unlikely and very competitive as there few, if any, spaces open in the College each year to students admitted to other colleges at UC Berkeley. For further information regarding a Change of College to Engineering, please see the College's website .

Minor Program

The Department offers a minor in Bioengineering that is open to all students who are not majoring in Bioengineering and who have completed the necessary prerequisites for the minor. For further information regarding the prerequisites, please see the Minor Requirements tab on this page.

Joint Major

The Department of Bioengineering also offers a joint major with the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, for students who have an interest in the field of biomaterials. For further information regarding this program, please see the Bioengineering/Materials Science and Engineering joint major  page in this Bulletin.

Visit Department Website

Major Requirements

In addition to the University, campus, and college requirements, listed on the College Requirements tab, students must fulfill the below requirements specific to their major program.

General Guidelines

  1. All technical courses (courses in engineering, mathematics, chemistry, physics, statistics, biological sciences, and computer science) must be taken for a letter grade.

  2. No more than one upper-division course may be used to simultaneously fulfill requirements for a student’s major and minor programs.

  3. A minimum overall grade point average (GPA) of 2.0 is required for all work undertaken at UC Berkeley.

  4. A minimum GPA of 2.0 is required for all technical courses taken in satisfaction of major requirements.

For information regarding residence requirements and unit requirements, please see the College Requirements tab.

For a detailed plan of study by year and semester, please see the Plan of Study tab.

Students are advised to consult the approved concentrations  to identify an appropriate course sequence for bioengineering specialty areas and may also design their own program that meets with the below requirements with permission from their faculty advisor. Regular consultation with an advisor is strongly encouraged. Recommended courses for each concentration can be found on the department's website .

Summary of Major Requirements

A student's course of study must include:

  1. 42 units of upper-division coursework in technical subjects such as engineering, chemistry, physics, integrative biology, molecular and cell biology, mathematics, or statistics. Of these units, at least 22 must be in bioengineering.
  2. 45 units of engineering (upper- or lower-division). These units must be from courses that appear on the Bioengineering Topics or Engineering Topics lists.
Lower-division Requirements: 48 units
Engineering Biology Preparation: Two courses
Bioengineering Fundamentals: Two courses
Engineering Topics: Two courses
Bioengineering Lab: One course
Bioengineering Topics: Two courses
Technical Electives: Three courses
Upper-division Biology Elective: One course
Bioengineering Design Project or Research: One course

Lower-division Requirements

Select one course from the following:

MATH 1ACalculus4
MATH 1BCalculus4
MATH 53Multivariable Calculus4
MATH 54Linear Algebra and Differential Equations4
CHEM 1A
  & 1AL
General Chemistry
   and General Chemistry Laboratory 1
4
or CHEM 4A General Chemistry and Quantitative Analysis
CHEM 3A
  & 3AL
Chemical Structure and Reactivity
   and Organic Chemistry Laboratory 1
5
or CHEM 112A Organic Chemistry
PHYSICS 7APhysics for Scientists and Engineers4
PHYSICS 7BPhysics for Scientists and Engineers4
BIOLOGY 1A
  & 1AL
General Biology Lecture
   and General Biology Laboratory
5
ENGIN 7Introduction to Computer Programming for Scientists and Engineers4
or COMPSCI 61A The Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs
BIO ENG 10Introduction to Biomedicine for Engineers 24
BIO ENG 24Aspects of Bioengineering1
BIO ENG 25Careers in Biotechnology1
Total Units48
1

CHEM 4A and CHEM 112A are intended for students majoring in chemistry or a closely-related field.

2

Junior transfer admits are exempt from completing BIO ENG 10

Engineering Biology Preparation

Select two courses from the following:

ENGIN 45Properties of Materials3
EL ENG 20NCourse Not Available
EL ENG 40Introduction to Microelectronic Circuits4
or EL ENG 100 Electronic Techniques for Engineering
CHEM 120BPhysical Chemistry3
CHEM C130/MCELLBI C100ABiophysical Chemistry: Physical Principles and the Molecules of Life4
CIV ENG C30/MEC ENG C85Introduction to Solid Mechanics3
COMPSCI 61BData Structures4
or COMPSCI 61BL Data Structures and Programming Methodology

Bioengineering Fundamentals

Select one course from the following:

BIO ENG 101Instrumentation in Biology and Medicine4
BIO ENG 102Biomechanics: Analysis and Design4
BIO ENG 104Biological Transport Phenomena4
BIO ENG 110Biomedical Physiology for Engineers4
BIO ENG 116Cell and Tissue Engineering4
BIO ENG 131Introduction to Computational Molecular and Cell Biology4
BIO ENG 150Introduction of Bionanoscience and Bionanotechnology4

Engineering Topics

Select two courses from the following:

BIO ENG 192Senior Design Projects4
BIO ENG H194Honors Undergraduate Research3,4
BIO ENG 196Undergraduate Design Research4
CHM ENG 140Introduction to Chemical Process Analysis4
CHM ENG 141Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics4
CHM ENG 150ATransport Processes4
CHM ENG 150BTransport and Separation Processes4
CHM ENG 170ABiochemical Engineering3
CHM ENG 170BBiochemical Engineering3
CHM ENG C170LBiochemical Engineering Laboratory3
CHM ENG 171Transport Phenomena3
CHM ENG C178Polymer Science and Technology3
CIV ENG C30/MEC ENG C85Introduction to Solid Mechanics3
CIV ENG 130NMechanics of Structures3
COMPSCI 61AThe Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs4
COMPSCI 61BData Structures4
or COMPSCI 61BL Data Structures and Programming Methodology
COMPSCI 170Efficient Algorithms and Intractable Problems4
COMPSCI 186Introduction to Database Systems4
COMPSCI/PHYSICS C191Quantum Information Science and Technology3
ENGIN 7Introduction to Computer Programming for Scientists and Engineers4
ENGIN 45Properties of Materials3
ENGIN 115Engineering Thermodynamics4
ENGIN 170Course Not Available4
ENGIN 190Course Not Available4
EL ENG 20NCourse Not Available4
EL ENG 40Introduction to Microelectronic Circuits4
EL ENG 100Electronic Techniques for Engineering4
EL ENG 105Microelectronic Devices and Circuits4
EL ENG 120Signals and Systems4
EL ENG 117Electromagnetic Fields and Waves4
EL ENG 120Signals and Systems4
EL ENG 126Probability and Random Processes4
EL ENG 129Neural and Nonlinear Information Processing3
EL ENG 142Integrated Circuits for Communications4
EL ENG 143Microfabrication Technology4
EL ENG 192Mechatronic Design Laboratory4
IND ENG 162Linear Programming3
MEC ENG C85/CIV ENG C30Introduction to Solid Mechanics3
MEC ENG 102BMechatronics Design4
MEC ENG 104Engineering Mechanics II3
MEC ENG 106Fluid Mechanics3
MEC ENG 109Heat Transfer3
MEC ENG 118Introduction to Nanotechnology and Nanoscience3
MEC ENG 119Introduction to MEMS (Microelectromechanical Systems)3
MEC ENG 128Computer-Aided Mechanical Design3
MEC ENG 132Dynamic Systems and Feedback3
MEC ENG 133Mechanical Vibrations3
MEC ENG 167Microscale Fluid Mechanics3
MEC ENG 185Introduction to Continuum Mechanics3
MAT SCI 102Bonding, Crystallography, and Crystal Defects3
MAT SCI 104Materials Characterization4
MAT SCI 111Properties of Electronic Materials4
MAT SCI 113Mechanical Behavior of Engineering Materials3
MAT SCI 151Polymeric Materials3
NUC ENG 101Nuclear Reactions and Radiation4
NUC ENG 107Introduction to Imaging3
NUC ENG 170BNuclear Design: Design in Bionuclear, Nuclear Medicine, and Radiation Therapy3
PHYSICS/COMPSCI C191Quantum Information Science and Technology3
any Bioengineering Topics Course

Bioengineering Lab

Select one course from the following:

BIO ENG 22
  & BIO ENG 22L
Course Not Available
   and Course Not Available
5
BIO ENG 101Instrumentation in Biology and Medicine4
BIO ENG 115Cell Biology for Engineers4
BIO ENG 121LBioMems and BioNanotechnology Laboratory4
BIO ENG C136LLaboratory in the Mechanics of Organisms3
BIO ENG 140LSynthetic Biology Laboratory4
BIO ENG C144LProtein Informatics Laboratory2
BIO ENG C145LIntroductory Electronic Transducers Laboratory3
BIO ENG C145MIntroductory Microcomputer Interfacing Laboratory3
BIO ENG 163LMolecular and Cellular Biophotonics Laboratory4
BIO ENG 168LPractical Light Microscopy3

Bioengineering Topics

Select two courses from the following:

BIO ENG 101Instrumentation in Biology and Medicine4
BIO ENG 102Biomechanics: Analysis and Design4
BIO ENG 104Biological Transport Phenomena4
BIO ENG 110Biomedical Physiology for Engineers4
BIO ENG 111Functional Biomaterials Development and Characterization4
BIO ENG 112Molecular Cell Biomechanics4
BIO ENG 113Stem Cells and Technologies4
BIO ENG 115Cell Biology for Engineers4
BIO ENG 116Cell and Tissue Engineering4
BIO ENG C117Structural Aspects of Biomaterials4
BIO ENG C118Biological Performance of Materials4
BIO ENG C119Orthopedic Biomechanics4
BIO ENG 121BioMEMS and Medical Devices4
BIO ENG 121LBioMems and BioNanotechnology Laboratory4
BIO ENG C125Introduction to Robotics4
BIO ENG 131Introduction to Computational Molecular and Cell Biology4
BIO ENG 132Genetic Devices4
BIO ENG 135Frontiers in Microbial Systems Biology4
BIO ENG C136LLaboratory in the Mechanics of Organisms3
BIO ENG 140LSynthetic Biology Laboratory4
BIO ENG C144Introduction to Protein Informatics4
BIO ENG C144LProtein Informatics Laboratory2
BIO ENG C145LIntroductory Electronic Transducers Laboratory3
BIO ENG C145MIntroductory Microcomputer Interfacing Laboratory3
BIO ENG C146Course Not Available3
BIO ENG 147Principles of Synthetic Biology4
BIO ENG 148Bioenergy and Sustainable Chemical Synthesis: Metabolic Engineering and Synthetic Biology Approaches3
BIO ENG 150Introduction of Bionanoscience and Bionanotechnology4
BIO ENG 151Micro/Nanofluidics for Bioengineering and Lab-On-A-Chip4
BIO ENG 163Principles of Molecular and Cellular Biophotonics4
BIO ENG 163LMolecular and Cellular Biophotonics Laboratory4
BIO ENG 164Optics and Microscopy4
BIO ENG C165Medical Imaging Signals and Systems4
BIO ENG 168LPractical Light Microscopy3
BIO ENG C181The Berkeley Lectures on Energy: Energy from Biomass3
Courses numbered BIO ENG 190A-BIO ENG 190H (courses of 3 units or more)

Technical Electives

Select three courses from the following:

Pre-med students should take BIOLOGY 1B and CHEM 3B/CHEM 3BL.

BIOLOGY 1BGeneral Biology Lecture and Laboratory4
CHEM 3BChemical Structure and Reactivity5
CHEM 120APhysical Chemistry3
CHEM 120BPhysical Chemistry3
CHEM C130/MCELLBI C100ABiophysical Chemistry: Physical Principles and the Molecules of Life4
CHEM 130BBiophysical Chemistry3
COMPSCI 61BData Structures4
or COMPSCI 61BL Data Structures and Programming Methodology
COMPSCI 70Discrete Mathematics and Probability Theory4
MATH 55Discrete Mathematics4
MATH 110Linear Algebra4
MATH 118Fourier Analysis, Wavelets, and Signal Processing4
MATH 127Mathematical and Computational Methods in Molecular Biology4
MATH 128ANumerical Analysis4
MATH 170Mathematical Methods for Optimization4
MCELLBI C100A/CHEM C130Biophysical Chemistry: Physical Principles and the Molecules of Life4
NUSCTX 121Computational Toxicology3
PHYSICS 7CPhysics for Scientists and Engineers4
PHYSICS 110AElectromagnetism and Optics4
PHYSICS 112Introduction to Statistical and Thermal Physics4
PHYSICS 137AQuantum Mechanics4
PHYSICS 177Principles of Molecular Biophysics3
PHYSICS C191Quantum Information Science and Technology3
PB HLTH 143Course Not Available4
STAT 133Concepts in Computing with Data3
STAT 134Concepts of Probability3
or IND ENG 172 Probability and Risk Analysis for Engineers
STAT 135Concepts of Statistics4
STAT 150Stochastic Processes3
Bioengineering Topics class, any Engineering Topics class, or any upper-division Biology Elective

Upper-division Biology Elective

Select one course from the following:

CHEM C130Biophysical Chemistry: Physical Principles and the Molecules of Life4
CHEM 135Chemical Biology3
INTEGBI 115Introduction to Systems in Biology and Medicine4
INTEGBI 127LMotor Control with Laboratory3
INTEGBI 131General Human Anatomy3
INTEGBI 132Survey of Human Physiology4
INTEGBI 135The Mechanics of Organisms4
INTEGBI 148Comparative Animal Physiology3
INTEGBI 163Molecular and Genomic Evolution3
MCELLBI C100A/CHEM C130Biophysical Chemistry: Physical Principles and the Molecules of Life4
MCELLBI 100BBiochemistry: Pathways, Mechanisms, and Regulation4
MCELLBI 102Survey of the Principles of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology4
MCELLBI 110Molecular Biology: Macromolecular Synthesis and Cellular Function4
MCELLBI 111Course Not Available4
MCELLBI/PLANTBI C112General Microbiology4
MCELLBI 130ACell and Systems Biology4
MCELLBI 132Biology of Human Cancer4
MCELLBI 133LPhysiology and Cell Biology Laboratory4
MCELLBI 136Physiology4
MCELLBI 140General Genetics4
MCELLBI 140LGenetics Laboratory4
MCELLBI/PLANTBI C145Course Not Available4
MCELLBI/PLANTBI C148Microbial Genomics and Genetics4
MCELLBI 150Molecular Immunology4
MCELLBI/NEUROSC C160Course Not Available4
MCELLBI 160LNeurobiology Laboratory4
MCELLBI 166Biophysical Neurobiology3
NEUROSC/MCELLBI C160Course Not Available4
PLANTBI/MCELLBI C112General Microbiology4
PLANTBI/MCELLBI C145Course Not Available4
PLANTBI/MCELLBI C148Microbial Genomics and Genetics4
PLANTBI 185Techniques in Light Microscopy3

Bioengineering Design Project or Research

Select one course from the following:

BIO ENG 121LBioMems and BioNanotechnology Laboratory4
BIO ENG 140LSynthetic Biology Laboratory4
BIO ENG 168LPractical Light Microscopy3
BIO ENG 192Senior Design Projects4
BIO ENG H194Honors Undergraduate Research3,4
BIO ENG 196Undergraduate Design Research4

Minor Requirements

Minor programs are areas of concentration requiring fewer courses than an undergraduate major. These programs are optional, but can provide depth and breadth to a UC Berkeley education. The College of Engineering does not offer additional time to complete a minor, but it is usually possible to finish within the allotted time with careful course planning. Students are encouraged to meet with their ESS Adviser to discuss the feasibility of completing a minor program.

All the engineering departments offer minors. Students may also consider pursuing a minor in another school or college.

General Guidelines

  1. All courses taken to fulfill the minor requirements must be taken for graded credit.

  2. A minimum overall grade point average (GPA) of 3.0 and a minimum GPA of 3.0 in the prerequisite courses is required for acceptance into the minor program.

  3. A minimum grade point average (GPA) of 2.0 is required for courses used to fulfill the minor requirements.

  4. No more than one upper-division course may be used to simultaneously fulfill requirements for a student’s major and minor programs.

  5. Completion of the minor program cannot delay a student’s graduation.

Recommended Preparation

The upper division requirements for the BIOE minor require competency in subject matters covered in the following recommended courses. 

CHEM 3AChemical Structure and Reactivity3
PHYSICS 7APhysics for Scientists and Engineers 14
PHYSICS 7BPhysics for Scientists and Engineers 14
MATH 53Multivariable Calculus4
MATH 54Linear Algebra and Differential Equations4
1

Students who have already taken PHYSICS 8A and PHYSICS 8B may substitute them for these courses.

Upper-division Minor Requirements

Bioengineering Fundamentals
Select one course from the following:
Instrumentation in Biology and Medicine
Biomechanics: Analysis and Design
Biological Transport Phenomena
Biomedical Physiology for Engineers
Cell and Tissue Engineering
Introduction to Computational Molecular and Cell Biology
Introduction of Bionanoscience and Bionanotechnology
Technical Elective
Select one upper-division course from the following:
Physical Chemistry
Physical Chemistry
Biophysical Chemistry: Physical Principles and the Molecules of Life
Biophysical Chemistry
Biophysical Chemistry: Physical Principles and the Molecules of Life
Linear Algebra
Fourier Analysis, Wavelets, and Signal Processing
Mathematical and Computational Methods in Molecular Biology
Numerical Analysis
Mathematical Methods for Optimization
Computational Toxicology
Electromagnetism and Optics
Introduction to Statistical and Thermal Physics
Quantum Mechanics
Principles of Molecular Biophysics
Quantum Information Science and Technology
PB HLTH 143
Course Not Available
Concepts in Computing with Data
Concepts of Probability
Probability and Risk Analysis for Engineers
Concepts of Statistics
Stochastic Processes
Any Bioengineering topics course (see below), any Engineering Topics course (see below), upper-division biology course
Engineering Topics
Select one upper-division course from the Engineering Topics list (see below)4
Bioengineering Topics
Select two upper-division courses from the Bioengineering Topics list (see below)8

Engineering Topics

BIO ENG 192Senior Design Projects4
CHM ENG 140Introduction to Chemical Process Analysis4
CHM ENG 141Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics4
CHM ENG 150ATransport Processes4
CHM ENG 150BTransport and Separation Processes4
CHM ENG 170ABiochemical Engineering3
CHM ENG 170BBiochemical Engineering3
CHM ENG 170LCourse Not Available4
CHM ENG 171Transport Phenomena3
CHM ENG C178Polymer Science and Technology3
CIV ENG C30/MEC ENG C85Introduction to Solid Mechanics3
CIV ENG 130NMechanics of Structures3
COMPSCI 61AThe Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs4
COMPSCI 61BData Structures4
or COMPSCI 61BL Data Structures and Programming Methodology
COMPSCI 170Efficient Algorithms and Intractable Problems4
COMPSCI 186Introduction to Database Systems4
COMPSCI/PHYSICS C191Quantum Information Science and Technology3
ENGIN 7Introduction to Computer Programming for Scientists and Engineers4
ENGIN 45Properties of Materials3
ENGIN 115Engineering Thermodynamics4
ENGIN 170Course Not Available4
ENGIN 190Course Not Available4
EL ENG 20NCourse Not Available4
EL ENG 40Introduction to Microelectronic Circuits4
EL ENG 100Electronic Techniques for Engineering4
EL ENG 105Microelectronic Devices and Circuits4
EL ENG 120Signals and Systems4
EL ENG 117Electromagnetic Fields and Waves4
EL ENG 120Signals and Systems4
EL ENG 126Probability and Random Processes4
EL ENG 129Neural and Nonlinear Information Processing3
EL ENG 142Integrated Circuits for Communications4
EL ENG 143Microfabrication Technology4
EL ENG 192Mechatronic Design Laboratory4
IND ENG 162Linear Programming3
MEC ENG C85/CIV ENG C30Introduction to Solid Mechanics3
MEC ENG 102BMechatronics Design4
MEC ENG 104Engineering Mechanics II3
MEC ENG 106Fluid Mechanics3
MEC ENG 109Heat Transfer3
MEC ENG 118Introduction to Nanotechnology and Nanoscience3
MEC ENG 119Introduction to MEMS (Microelectromechanical Systems)3
MEC ENG 128Computer-Aided Mechanical Design3
MEC ENG 132Dynamic Systems and Feedback3
MEC ENG 133Mechanical Vibrations3
MEC ENG 167Microscale Fluid Mechanics3
MEC ENG 185Introduction to Continuum Mechanics3
MAT SCI 102Bonding, Crystallography, and Crystal Defects3
MAT SCI 104Materials Characterization4
MAT SCI 111Properties of Electronic Materials4
MAT SCI 113Mechanical Behavior of Engineering Materials3
MAT SCI 151Polymeric Materials3
NUC ENG 101Nuclear Reactions and Radiation4
NUC ENG 107Introduction to Imaging3
NUC ENG 170BNuclear Design: Design in Bionuclear, Nuclear Medicine, and Radiation Therapy3
PHYSICS/COMPSCI C191Quantum Information Science and Technology3
Any Bioengineering Topics Course

Bioengineering Topics

BIO ENG 101Instrumentation in Biology and Medicine4
BIO ENG 102Biomechanics: Analysis and Design4
BIO ENG 104Biological Transport Phenomena4
BIO ENG 110Biomedical Physiology for Engineers4
BIO ENG 111Functional Biomaterials Development and Characterization4
BIO ENG 112Molecular Cell Biomechanics4
BIO ENG 113Stem Cells and Technologies4
BIO ENG 115Cell Biology for Engineers4
BIO ENG 116Cell and Tissue Engineering4
BIO ENG C117Structural Aspects of Biomaterials4
BIO ENG C118Biological Performance of Materials4
BIO ENG C119Orthopedic Biomechanics4
BIO ENG 121BioMEMS and Medical Devices4
BIO ENG 121LBioMems and BioNanotechnology Laboratory4
BIO ENG C125Introduction to Robotics4
BIO ENG 131Introduction to Computational Molecular and Cell Biology4
BIO ENG 132Genetic Devices4
BIO ENG 135Frontiers in Microbial Systems Biology4
BIO ENG C136LLaboratory in the Mechanics of Organisms3
BIO ENG 140LSynthetic Biology Laboratory4
BIO ENG C144Introduction to Protein Informatics4
BIO ENG C144LProtein Informatics Laboratory2
BIO ENG C145LIntroductory Electronic Transducers Laboratory3
BIO ENG C145MIntroductory Microcomputer Interfacing Laboratory3
BIO ENG C146Course Not Available3
BIO ENG 147Principles of Synthetic Biology4
BIO ENG 148Bioenergy and Sustainable Chemical Synthesis: Metabolic Engineering and Synthetic Biology Approaches3
BIO ENG 150Introduction of Bionanoscience and Bionanotechnology4
BIO ENG 151Micro/Nanofluidics for Bioengineering and Lab-On-A-Chip4
BIO ENG 163Principles of Molecular and Cellular Biophotonics4
BIO ENG 163LMolecular and Cellular Biophotonics Laboratory4
BIO ENG 164Optics and Microscopy4
BIO ENG C165Medical Imaging Signals and Systems4
BIO ENG 168LPractical Light Microscopy3
BIO ENG C181The Berkeley Lectures on Energy: Energy from Biomass3
Courses numbered BIO ENG 190A-BIO ENG 190H (courses of 3 units or more)
 

College Requirements

Students in the College of Engineering must complete 120 semester units with the following provisions: 

1.        Completion of the requirements of one Engineering major program  of study. 

2.        A minimum overall grade point average of 2.000 (C average) and a minimum 2.000 grade point average in upper division technical course work required of the major. 

3.        The final 30 units must be completed in residence in the College of Engineering on the Berkeley campus in two consecutive semesters. 

4.        All technical courses (math, science & engineering), required of the major or not, must be taken on a letter graded basis (unless they are only offered P/NP). 

5.        Entering freshman are allowed a maximum of eight semesters to complete their degree requirements.  Entering junior transfers are allowed a maximum of four semesters to complete their degree requirements. Summer terms are optional and do not count toward the maximum. Students are responsible for planning and satisfactorily completing all graduation requirements within the maximum allowable semesters. 

Humanities and Social Science Requirement
To promote a rich and varied educational experience outside of the technical requirements for each major, the College of Engineering has a Humanities and Social Sciences breadth requirement, which must be completed to graduate. This requirement is built into all the Engineering programs of study. The requirement includes two approved reading and composition courses and four additional approved courses, within which a number of specific conditions must be satisfied. 

1.        Complete a minimum of six courses (3 units or more) from the approved Humanities/Social Sciences (H/SS) lists

2.        Two of the six courses must fulfill the  Reading and Composition Requirement. These courses must be taken for a letter grade (C- or better required), and MUST be completed by no later than the end of the sophomore year (4th semester of enrollment). The first half of R&C, the “A” course, must be completed by the end of the freshman year; the second half of R&C, the “B “course, by no later than the end of the sophomore year. For detailed lists of courses that fulfill Reading and Composition requirements, please see the Reading and Composition page in this bulletin. 

3.        The four additional courses must be chosen from the H/SS comprehensive list. These courses may be taken on a Pass/Not Passed Basis (P/NP).

4.        At least two of the six courses must be upper division (courses numbered 100-196).

5.        At least two courses must be from the same department and at least one of the two must be upper division. This is called the *Series requirement. AP tests can be combined with a course to complete the series requirement. For example, AP History (any) combined with an upper division History course would satisfy the series requirement

6.        One of the six courses must satisfy the campus American Cultures Requirement. For detailed lists of courses that fulfill American Cultures requirements, please see the American Cultures page in this bulletin. 

7.        A maximum of two exams (Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate, or A-Level) may be used toward completion of the H/SS requirement. Visit this link

8.        No courses offered by an Engineering department (IEOR, CE, etc.) other than BIOE 100, CS C79, ENGIN 125, ENGIN 130AC, 157AC, ME 191K and ME 191AC may be used to complete H/SS requirements.

9.        Courses may fulfill multiple categories. For example, if you complete City and Regional Planning 115 and 118AC that would satisfy the series requirement, the two upper division courses requirement and the American Cultures Requirement.

10.     The College of Engineering (COE) uses modified versions of five of the College of Letters and Science (L&S) breadth requirements lists to provide options to our students for completing the Humanities and Social Science requirement. Our requirement is different than that of L & S, so the guidelines posted on the top of each L & S breadth list do NOT apply to COE students.

11.     Foreign language courses MAY be used to complete H/SS requirements. L & S does not allow students to use many language courses, so their lists will not include all options open to Engineering students. For a list of language options, visit http://coe.berkeley.edu/FL

*NOTE: for the Series Requirement: The purpose of the series requirement is to provide depth of knowledge in a certain area. Therefore, a two-course sequence not in the same department may be approved by petition, in cases in which there is a clear and logical connection between the courses involved. 

Plan of Study

For more detailed information regarding the courses listed below (e.g., elective information, GPA requirements, etc.), please see the Major Requirements tab.

Freshman
FallUnitsSpringUnits
Chemistry: CHEM 1A & CHEM 1AL, or CHEM 4A4MATH 1B4
BIO ENG 104CHEM 3A
  & 3AL
5
Reading and Composition course from List A4ENGIN 74
MATH 1A4BIO ENG 24 or 25 (this requirement can be fulfilled any time)1
BIO ENG 24 or 25 (this requirement can be fulfilled any time)1PHYSICS 7A4
 17 18
Sophomore
FallUnitsSpringUnits
Engineering/Biology Preparation course3BIOLOGY 1A
  & 1AL
5
MATH 534Engineering/Biology Preparation course3
PHYSICS 7B4MATH 544
Reading and Composition course from List B4 
 15 12
Junior
FallUnitsSpringUnits
Bioengineering Fundamentals course4Biongineering Fundamentals course4
Humanities/Social Sciences course3-4Technical Elective3
Engineering Topics course3Upper-division Biology elctive3
Technical Elective4BIO ENG 100 or Humanities/Social Sciences course w/ethics content3-4
 14-15 13-14
Senior
FallUnitsSpringUnits
Bioengineering Lab course4Bioengineering Topics course4
Bioengineering Topics course4Engineering Topics course4
Technical Elective3Bioengineering Design Project or Research4
Humanities/Social Sciences course3-4Humanities/Social Sciences course3-4
 14-15 15-16
Total Units: 118-122

Student Learning Goals

Mission

The guiding principles of curriculum development in Bioengineering (BioE) are defined in our workload policy as follows: “The Department of Bioengineering will expand the knowledge base in bioengineering through teaching and cross-disciplinary research. Department faculty will be encouraged to develop and teach a modern bioengineering curriculum, to provide hands-on research opportunities for students, and to provide one-on-one mentor advising to ensure that students select the best combination of coursework to meet their academic goals.”

Since our founding in 1998, the BioE faculty have been working to create an integrated, comprehensive program. Much thought has been put into the question: “what does every bioengineer need to know?” The faculty have been engaged in considerable dialog over the years about what needs to be included, in what order, and how to do so in a reasonable time frame. Balancing depth with breadth has been the key challenge, and we have now reached a turning point where the pieces are coming together to form a coherent bioengineering discipline.

Learning Goals for the Major

  1. Describe the fundamental principles and methods of engineering
  2. Understand the physical, chemical, and mathematical basis of biology
  3. Appreciate the different scales of biological systems
  4. Apply the physical sciences and mathematics in an engineering approach to biological systems
  5. Effectively communicate scientific and engineering data and ideas, both orally and in writing
  6. Demonstrate the values of cooperation, teamwork, social responsibility and lifelong learning necessary for success in the field
  7. Design a bioengineering solution to a problem of technical, scientific or societal importance
  8. Demonstrate advanced knowledge in a specialized field of bioengineering

Advising

Bioengineering provides an array of programmatic and individual advising services. Each student is required to consult with a faculty adviser each semester. Our dedicated Bioengineering Undergraduate Affairs Officer is available through appointments or drop-in times to consult on topics such as course selection, degree requirements, concentration selection, and achieving personal and academic goals. Further advising support is available from staff in the Engineering Student Services Office.

Advising Staff and Hours

Undergraduate Adviser:
Cindy Manly-Fields
Phone: 510-642-5860
cmanly@berkeley.edu
306C Stanley Hall
Monday: 9:00am-11:45am
Tuesday-Friday: 9:00am-11:45am; Drop-ins 1:15pm-4:00pm

Academic Opportunities

Summer Biodesign Immersion Experience

UC Berkeley Bioengineering offers an NIH-sponsored summer program using clinical immersion to identify areas where BioE innovation is needed. Summer payroll is provided for the 8-week program which includes intensive needs-finding training and clinical immersion, guest speakers from industry and non-profits, hands-on development and use of biomedical technology, and both oral and written technical communication.

Current UC Berkeley Bioengineering Juniors and Seniors are eligible to apply, with preference given to individuals who either will be enrolled in BIO ENG 192 or who have just completed BIO ENG 192 .

For further information, please see the program's website .

Courses

Bioengineering

BIO ENG 10 Introduction to Biomedicine for Engineers 4 Units

This course is intended for lower division students interested in acquiring a foundation in biomedicine with topics ranging from evolutionary biology to human physiology. The emphasis is on the integration of engineering applications to biology and health. The goal is for undergraduate engineering students to gain sufficient biology and human physiology fundamentals so that they are better prepared to study specialized topics, e.g., biomechanics, imaging, computational biology, tissue engineering, biomonitoring, drug development, robotics, and other topics covered by upper division and graduate courses in UC Berkeley departments of Molecular and Cell Biology, Integrative Biology, Bioengineering, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Mechanical Engineering, and courses in the UC San Francisco Division of Bioengineering. The specific lecture topics and exercises will include the key aspects of genomics and proteomics as well as topics on plant and animal evolution, stem cell biomedicine, and tissue regeneration and replacement. Medical physiology topics include relevant engineering aspects of human brain, heart, musculoskeletal, and other systems.

BIO ENG 24 Aspects of Bioengineering 1 Unit

This introductory seminar is designed to give freshmen and sophomores a glimpse of a broad selection of bioengineering research that is currently underway at Berkeley and UCSF. Students will become familiar with bioengineering applications in the various concentration areas and see how engineering principles can be applied to biological and medical problems.

BIO ENG 25 Careers in Biotechnology 1 Unit

This introductory seminar is designed to give freshmen and sophomores an opportunity to explore specialties related to engineering in the pharmaceutical/biotech field. A series of one-hour seminars will be presented by industry professionals, professors, and researchers. Topics may include biotechnology and pharmaceutical manufacturing; process and control engineering; drug inspection process; research and development; compliance and validation; construction process for a GMP facility; project management; and engineered solutions to environmental challenges. This course is of interest to students in all areas of engineering and biology, including industrial engineering and manufacturing, chemical engineering, and bioengineering.

BIO ENG 84 Sophomore Seminar 1 or 2 Units

Sophomore seminars are small interactive courses offered by faculty members in departments all across the campus. Sophomore seminars offer opportunity for close, regular intellectual contact between faculty members and students in the crucial second year. The topics vary from department to department and semester to semester. Enrollment limited to 15 sophomores.

BIO ENG 98 Supervised Independent Group Studies 1 - 4 Units

Organized group study on various topics under the sponsorship of a member of the Bioengineering faculty.

BIO ENG 99 Supervised Independent Study and Research 1 - 4 Units

Supervised independent study for lower division students.

BIO ENG 100 Ethics in Science and Engineering 3 Units

The goal of this semester course is to present the issues of professional conduct in the practice of engineering, research, publication, public and private disclosures, and in managing professional and financial conflicts. The method is through historical didactic presentations, case studies, presentations of methods for problem solving in ethical matters, and classroom debates on contemporary ethical issues. The faculty will be drawn from national experts and faculty from religious studies, journalism, and law from the UC Berkeley campus.

BIO ENG 101 Instrumentation in Biology and Medicine 4 Units

This course teaches the fundamental principles underlying modern sensing and control instrumentation used in biology and medicine. The course takes an integrative analytic and hands-on approach to measurement theory and practice by presenting and analyzing example instruments currently used for biology and medical research, including EEG, ECG, pulsed oximeters, Complete Blood Count (CBC), etc.

BIO ENG 102 Biomechanics: Analysis and Design 4 Units

This course introduces, develops and applies the methods of continuum mechanics to biomechanical phenomena abundant in biology and medicine. It is intended for upper level undergraduate students who have been exposed to vectors, differential equations, and undergraduate course(s) in physics and certain aspects of modern biology.

BIO ENG 104 Biological Transport Phenomena 4 Units

The transport of mass, momentum, and energy are critical to the function of living systems and the design of medical devices. Biological transport phenomena are present at a wide range of length scales: molecular, cellular, organ (whole and by functional unit), and organism. This course develops and applies scaling laws and the methods of continuum mechanics to biological transport phenomena over a range of length and time scales. The course is intended for undergraduate students who have taken a course in differential equations and an introductory course in physics. Students should be familiar with basic biology; an understanding of physiology is useful, but not assumed.

BIO ENG 110 Biomedical Physiology for Engineers 4 Units

This course introduces students to the physiology of human organ systems, with an emphasis on quantitative problem solving, engineering-style modeling, and applications to clinical medicine. The course will begin with a review of basic principles of cellular physiology, including membrane transport and electrophysiology, and then take a system-by-system approach to the physiology of various organ systems, including the cardiovascular, pulmonary, renal, and endocrine systems. Throughout, the course will feature extensive discussions of clinical conditions associated with dysfunction in specific physiological processes as well as the role of medical devices and prostheses. This course is geared towards upper-division bioengineering students who wish to solidify their foundation in physiology, especially in preparation for a career in clinical medicine or the biomedical device industry.

BIO ENG 111 Functional Biomaterials Development and Characterization 4 Units

This course is intended for upper level engineering undergraduate students interested in the development of novel functional proteins and peptide motifs and characterization of their physical and biological properties using various instrumentation tools in quantitative manners.

BIO ENG 112 Molecular Cell Biomechanics 4 Units

This course develops and applies scaling laws and the methods of continuum and statistical mechanics to biomechanical phenomena over a range of length scales, from molecular to cellular levels. It is intended for senior undergraduate students who have been exposed to differential equations, mechanics, and certain aspects of modern biology.

BIO ENG C112 Molecular Biomechanics and Mechanobiology of the Cell 4 Units

This course applies methods of statistical continuum mechanics to subcellar biomechanical phenomena ranging from nanoscale (molecular) to microscale (whole cell and cell population) biological processes at the interface of mechanics, biology, and chemistry.

BIO ENG 113 Stem Cells and Technologies 4 Units

This course will teach the main concepts and current views on key attributes of embryonic stem cells (ESC), will introduce theory of their function in embryonic development, methods of ESC derivation, propagation, and characterization, and will discuss currently developing stem cell technologies.

BIO ENG 115 Cell Biology for Engineers 4 Units

This course aims to provide a practical understanding of the nature of cell and tissue biology research. Students will be introduced to cell biology techniques as applied to cells and tissues including immunofluorescence, image analysis, protein quantification, protein expression, gene expression, and cell culture. The course culminates with a group project which synthesizes literature review, experimental design, implementation, troubleshooting, and analysis of results.

BIO ENG 116 Cell and Tissue Engineering 4 Units

The goal of tissue engineering is to fabricate substitutes to restore tissue structure and functions. Understanding cell function in response to environmental cues will help us to establish design criteria and develop engineering tools for tissue fabrication. This course will introduce the basic concepts and approaches in the field, and train students to design and engineer biological substitutes. Lectures will be based on the textbook, the reference books and recent literature. Discussion sections will include the discussion of current literature and issues related to course content, homework, exams, and projects. Homework includes quantitative analysis, essay questions, and literature research. There will be a midterm exam, final exam, and a design project (presentation and paper). The final project will be a group project (three to four students) or independent project (required for graduate students). The topic will be chosen by each group and approved by instructor/GSIs.

BIO ENG C117 Structural Aspects of Biomaterials 4 Units

This course covers the structure and mechanical functions of load bearing tissues and their replacements. Natural and synthetic load-bearing biomaterials for clinical applications are reviewed. Biocompatibility of biomaterials and host response to structural implants are examined. Quantitative treatment of biomechanical issues and constitutive relationships of tissues are covered in order to design biomaterial replacements for structural function. Material selection for load bearing applications including reconstructive surgery, orthopedics, dentistry, and cardiology are addressed. Mechanical design for longevity including topics of fatigue, wear, and fracture are reviewed. Case studies that examine failures of devices are presented. This course includes a teaching/design laboratory component that involves design analysis of medical devices and outreach teaching to the public community. Several problem-based projects are utilized throughout the semester for design analysis. In addition to technical content, this course involves rigorous technical writing assignments, oral communication skill development and teamwork.

BIO ENG C118 Biological Performance of Materials 4 Units

This course is intended to give students the opportunity to expand their knowledge of topics related to biomedical materials selection and design. Structure-property relationships of biomedical materials and their interaction with biological systems will be addressed. Applications of the concepts developed include blood-materials compatibility, biomimetic materials, hard and soft tissue-materials interactions, drug delivery, tissue engineering, and biotechnology.

BIO ENG C119 Orthopedic Biomechanics 4 Units

Statics, dynamics, optimization theory, composite beam theory, beam-on-elastic foundation theory, Hertz contact theory, and materials behavior. Forces and moments acting on human joints; composition and mechanical behavior of orthopedic biomaterials; design/analysis of artificial joint, spine, and fracture fixation prostheses; musculoskeletal tissues including bone, cartilage, tendon, ligament, and muscle; osteoporosis and fracture-risk predication of bones; and bone adaptation. MATLAB-based project to integrate the course material.

BIO ENG 121 BioMEMS and Medical Devices 4 Units

Biophysical and chemical principles of biomedical devices, bionanotechnology, bionanophotonics, and biomedical microelectromechanical systems (BioMEMS). Topics include basics of nano- and microfabrication, soft-lithography, DNA arrays, protein arrays, electrokinetics, electrochemical, transducers, microfluidic devices, biosensor, point of care diagnostics, lab-on-a-chip, drug delivery microsystems, clinical lab-on-a-chip, advanced biomolecular probes, etc.

BIO ENG 121L BioMems and BioNanotechnology Laboratory 4 Units

Students will become familiar with BioMEMS and Lab-on-a-Chip research. Students will design and fabricate their own novel micro- or nano-scale device to address a specific problem in biotechnology using the latest micro- and nano-technological tools and fabrication techniques. This will involve an intensive primary literature review, experimental design, and quantitative data analysis. Results will be presented during class presentations and at a final poster symposium.

BIO ENG 124 Basic Principles of Drug Delivery 3 Units

This course focuses on providing students with the foundations needed to understand contemporary literature in drug delivery. Concepts in organic chemistry, biochemistry, and physical chemistry needed to understand current problems in drug delivery are emphasized.

BIO ENG 125B Robotic Manipulation and Interaction 4 Units

This course is a sequel to Electrical Engineering C106A/Bioengineering C125, which covers kinematics, dynamics and control of a single robot. This course will cover dynamics and control of groups of robotic manipulators coordinating with each other and interacting with the environment. Concepts will include an introduction to grasping and the constrained manipulation, contacts and force control for interaction with the environment. We will also cover active perception guided manipulation, as well as the manipulation of non-rigid objects. Throughout, we will emphasize design and human-robot interactions, and applications to applications in manufacturing, service robotics, tele-surgery, and locomotion.

BIO ENG C125 Introduction to Robotics 4 Units

An introduction to the kinematics, dynamics, and control of robot manipulators, robotic vision, and sensing. The course covers forward and inverse kinematics of serial chain manipulators, the manipulator Jacobian, force relations, dynamics, and control. It presents elementary principles on proximity, tactile, and force sensing, vision sensors, camera calibration, stereo construction, and motion detection. The course concludes with current applications of robotics in active perception, medical robotics, and other areas.

BIO ENG 131 Introduction to Computational Molecular and Cell Biology 4 Units

Topics include computational approaches and techniques to gene structure and genome annotation, sequence alignment using dynamic programming, protein domain analysis, RNA folding and structure prediction, RNA sequence design for synthetic biology, genetic and biochemical pathways and networks, UNIX and scripting languages, basic probability and information theory. Various "case studies" in these areas are reviewed; web-based computational biology tools will be used by students and programming projects will be given. Computational biology research connections to biotechnology will be explored.

BIO ENG 132 Genetic Devices 4 Units

This senior-level course is a comprehensive survey of genetic devices. These DNA-based constructs are comprised of multiple "parts" that together encode a higher-level biological behavior and perform useful human-defined functions. Such constructs are the engineering target for most projects in synthetic biology. Included within this class of constructs are genetic circuits, sensors, biosynthetic pathways, and microbiological functions.

BIO ENG 135 Frontiers in Microbial Systems Biology 4 Units

This course is aimed at graduate and advanced undergraduate students from the (bio) engineering and chemo-physical sciences interested in a research-oriented introduction to current topics in systems biology. Focusing mainly on two well studied microbiological model systems--the chemotaxis network and Lambda bacteriophage infection--the class systematically introduces key concepts and techniques for biological network deduction, modelling, analysis, evolution, and synthetic network design. Students analyze the impact of approaches from the quantitative sciences--such as deterministic modelling, stochastic processes, statistics, non-linear dynamics, control theory, information theory, graph theory, etc.--on understanding biological processes, including (stochastic) gene regulation, signalling, network evolution, and synthetic network design. The course aims to identify unsolved problems and discusses possible novel approaches while encouraging students to develop ideas to explore new directions in their own research.

BIO ENG C136L Laboratory in the Mechanics of Organisms 3 Units

Introduction to laboratory and field study of the biomechanics of animals and plants using fundamental biomechanical techniques and equipment. Course has a series of rotations involving students in experiments demonstrating how solid and fluid mechanics can be used to discover the way in which diverse organisms move and interact with their physical environment. The laboratories emphasize sampling methodology, experimental design, and statistical interpretation of results. Latter third of course devoted to independent research projects. Written reports and class presentation of project results are required.

BIO ENG 140L Synthetic Biology Laboratory 4 Units

This laboratory course is designed as an introduction to research in synthetic biology, a ground-up approach to genetic engineering with applications in bioenergy, heathcare, materials science, and chemical production. In this course, we will design and execute a real research project. Each student will be responsible for designing and constructing components for the group project and then performing experiments to analyze the system. In addition to laboratory work, we will have lectures on methods and design concepts in synthetic biology including an introduction to Biobricks, gene synthesis, computer modeling, directed evolution, practical molecular biology, and biochemistry.

BIO ENG 143 Computational Methods in Biology 4 Units

An introduction to biophysical simulation methods and algorithms, including molecular dynamics, Monte Carlo, mathematical optimization, and "non-algorithmic" computation such as neural networks. Various case studies in applying these areas in the areas of protein folding, protein structure prediction, drug docking, and enzymatics will be covered. Core Specialization: Core B (Informatics and Genomics); Core D (Computational Biology); BioE Content: Biological.

BIO ENG C144 Introduction to Protein Informatics 4 Units

This course will introduce students to the fundamentals of molecular biology, and to the bioinformatics tools and databases used for the prediction of protein function and structure. It is designed to impart both a theoretical understanding of popular computational methods, as well as some experience with protein sequence analysis methods applied to real data. This class includes no programming, and no programming background is required.

BIO ENG C144L Protein Informatics Laboratory 3 Units

This course is intended to introduce students to a variety of bioinformatics techniques that are used to predict protein function and structure. It is designed to be taken concurrently with C144 (which provides the theoretical foundations for the methods used in the laboratory class), although students can petition to take this laboratory course separately. No programming is performed in this class, and no prior programming experience is required.

BIO ENG C145L Introductory Electronic Transducers Laboratory 3 Units

Laboratory exercises exploring a variety of electronic transducers for measuring physical quantities such as temperature, force, displacement, sound, light, ionic potential; the use of circuits for low-level differential amplification and analog signal processing; and the use of microcomputers for digital sampling and display. Lectures cover principles explored in the laboratory exercises; construction, response and signal to noise of electronic transducers and actuators; and design of circuits for sensing and controlling physical quantities.

BIO ENG C145M Introductory Microcomputer Interfacing Laboratory 3 Units

Laboratory exercises constructing basic interfacing circuits and writing 20-100 line C programs for data acquisition, storage, analysis, display, and control. Use of the IBM PC with microprogrammable digital counter/timer, parallel I/O port. Circuit components include anti-aliasing filters, the S/H amplifier, A/D and D/A converters. Exercises include effects of aliasing in periodic sampling, fast Fourier transforms of basic waveforms, the use of the Hanning filter for leakage reduction, Fourier analysis of the human voice, digital filters, and control using Fourier deconvolution. Lectures cover principles explored in the lab exercises and design of microcomputer-based systems for data acquisitions, analysis and control.

BIO ENG 147 Principles of Synthetic Biology 4 Units

The field of synthetic biology is quickly emerging as potentially one of the most important and profound ways by which we can understand and manipulate our physical world for desired purposes. In this course, the field and its natural scientific and engineering basis are introduced. Relevant topics in cellular and molecular biology and biophysics, dynamical and engineering systems, and design and operation of natural and synthetic circuits are covered in a concise manner that then allows the student to begin to design new biology-based systems.

BIO ENG 148 Bioenergy and Sustainable Chemical Synthesis: Metabolic Engineering and Synthetic Biology Approaches 3 Units

This course will cover metabolic engineering and the various synthetic biology approaches for optimizing pathway performance. Use of metabolic engineering to produce biofuels and general "green technology" will be emphasized since these aims are currently pushing these fields. The course is meant to be a practical guide for metabolic engineering and the related advances in synthetic biology as well the related industrial research and opportunities.

BIO ENG 150 Introduction of Bionanoscience and Bionanotechnology 4 Units

This course is intended for the bioengineering or engineering undergraduate students interested in acquiring a background in recent development of bio-nanomaterials and bio-nanotechnology. The emphasis of the class is to understand the properties of biological basis building blocks, their assembly principles in nature, and their application to build functional materials and devices. The goal is for the bioengineering students to gain sufficient chemical and physical aspects of biological materials through the case study of spider webs, silks, sea shells, diatoms, bones, and teeth, as well as recently developed self-assembled nanostructures inspired by nature. The course covers the structures and properties of amino acids, DNAs, sugars, lipids, and their natural and artifical assembly structures. It also covers nanoscale inorganic materials used to develop nano medicines, bio-imaging, bio-sensors, bioelectronics, and machinery.

BIO ENG 151 Micro/Nanofluidics for Bioengineering and Lab-On-A-Chip 4 Units

Introduction and in-depth treatment of theory relevant to fluid flow in microfluidic and nanofluidic systems supplemented by critical assessment of recent applications drawn from the literature. Topics include low Reynolds Number flow, mass transport including diffusion phenomena, and emphasis on electrokinetic systems and bioanalytical applications of said phenomena.

BIO ENG 163 Principles of Molecular and Cellular Biophotonics 4 Units

This course provides undergraduate and graduate bioengineering students with an opportunity to increase their knowledge of topics in the emerging field of biophotonics with an emphasis on fluorescence spectroscopy, biosensors and devices for optical imaging and detection of biomolecules. This course will cover the photophysics and photochemistry of organic molecules, the design and characterization of biosensors and their applications within diverse environments.

BIO ENG 163L Molecular and Cellular Biophotonics Laboratory 4 Units

This course provides undergraduate and graduate bioengineering students with an opportunity to acquire essential experimental skills in fluorescence spectroscopy and the design, evaluation, and optimization of optical biosensors for quantitative measurements of proteins and their targets. Groups of students will be responsible for the research, design, and development of a biosensor or diagnostic device for the detection, diagnosis, and monitoring of a specific biomarker(s).

BIO ENG 164 Optics and Microscopy 4 Units

This course teaches fundamental principles of optics and examines contemporary methods of optical microscopy for cells and molecules. Students will learn how to design simple optical systems, calculate system performance, and apply imaging techniques including transmission, reflection, phase, and fluorescence microscopy to investigate biological samples. The capabilities of optical microscopy will be compared with complementary techniques including electron microscopy, coherence tomography, and atomic force microscopy. Students will also be responsible for researching their final project outside of class and presenting a specific application of modern microscopy to biological research as part of an end-of-semester project.

BIO ENG C165 Medical Imaging Signals and Systems 4 Units

Biomedical imaging is a clinically important application of engineering, applied mathematics, physics, and medicine. In this course, we apply linear systems theory and basic physics to analyze X-ray imaging, computerized tomography, nuclear medicine, and MRI. We cover the basic physics and instrumentation that characterizes medical image as an ideal perfect-resolution image blurred by an impulse response. This material could prepare the student for a career in designing new medical imaging systems that reliably detect small tumors or infarcts.

BIO ENG 168L Practical Light Microscopy 3 Units

This laboratory course is designed for students interested in obtaining practical hands-on training in optical imaging and instrumentation. Using a combination of lenses, cameras, and data acquisition equipment, students will construct simple light microscopes that introduce basic concepts and limitations important in biomedical optical imaging. Topics include compound microscopes, Kohler illumination, Rayleigh two-point resolution, image contrast including dark-field and fluorescence microscopy, and specialized techniques such as fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP). Intended for students in both engineering and the sciences, this course will emphasize applied aspects of optical imaging and provide a base of practical skill and reference material that students can leverage in their own research or in industry.

BIO ENG C181 The Berkeley Lectures on Energy: Energy from Biomass 3 Units

After an introduction to the different aspects of our global energy consumption, the course will focus on the role of biomass. The course will illustrate how the global scale of energy guides the biomass research. Emphasis will be placed on the integration of the biological aspects (crop selection, harvesting, storage and distribution, and chemical composition of biomass) with the chemical aspects to convert biomass to energy. The course aims to engage students in state-of-the-art research.

BIO ENG 190 Special Topics in Bioengineering 1 - 4 Units

This course covers current topics of research interest in bioengineering. The course content may vary from semester to semester.

BIO ENG 192 Senior Design Projects 4 Units

This semester-long course introduces students to bioengineering project-based learning in small teams, with a strong emphasis on need-based solutions for real medical and research problems through prototype solution selection, design, and testing. The course is designed to provide a "capstone" design experience for bioengineering seniors. The course is structured around didactic lectures, and a textbook, from which assigned readings will be drawn, and supplemented by additional handouts, readings, and lecture material. Where appropriate, the syllabus includes guest lectures from clinicians and practicing engineers from academia and industry. The course includes active learning through organized activities, during which teams will participate in exercises meant to reinforce lecture material through direct application to the team design project.

BIO ENG H194 Honors Undergraduate Research 3 or 4 Units

Supervised research. Students who have completed 3 or more upper division courses may pursue original research under the direction of one of the members of the staff. May be taken a second time for credit only. A final report or presentation is required. A maximum of 4 units of this course may be used to fulfill the research or technical elective requirement or in the Bioengineering program.

BIO ENG 196 Undergraduate Design Research 4 Units

Supervised research. This course will satisfy the Senior Bioengineering Design project requirement. Students with junior or senior status may pursue research under the direction of one of the members of the staff. May be taken a second time for credit only. A final report or presentation is required.

BIO ENG 198 Directed Group Study for Advanced Undergraduates 1 - 4 Units

Group study of a selected topic or topics in bioengineering, usually relating to new developments.

BIO ENG 199 Supervised Independent Study 1 - 4 Units

Supervised independent study.

Faculty

Professors

Adam Paul Arkin, PhD, Professor. Systems and Synthetic Biology, Environmental Microbiology of Bacteria and Viruses, bioenergy, Biomedicine, Bioremediation.
Research Profile

Steven Michael Conolly, PhD, Professor. Instrumentation, medical imaging reconstruction, contrast, MRI.
Research Profile

Daniel Alden Fletcher, PhD, Professor. Bioengineering, optical and force microscopy, microfabrication, biophysics, mechanical properties of cells.
Research Profile

Kevin E. Healy, PhD, Professor. Bioengineering, biomaterials engineering, tissue engineering, bioinspired materials, tissue and organ regeneration, stem cell engineering, microphysiological systems, organs on a chip, drug screening and discovery, multivalent bioconjugate therapeutics.
Research Profile

Luke P Lee, PhD, Professor. Biophotonics, biophysics, bionanoscience, molecular imaging, single cell analysis, bio-nano interfaces, integrated microfluidic devices (iMD) for diagnostics and preventive personalized medicine.
Research Profile

Song Li, Professor. Bioengineering, vascular tissue engineering, stem cell engineering, mechano-chemical signal transduction, biomimetic matrix, molecules, bioinformatic applications in tissue engineering, molecular dynamics.
Research Profile

Dorian Liepmann, Professor. Bioengineering, mechanical engineering, bioMEMS, microfluid dynamics, experimental biofluid dynamics, hemodynamics, valvular heart disease, cardiac flows, arterial flows.
Research Profile

Gerard Marriott, Professor.

Phillip B Messersmith, Professor.

Mohammad R. K. Mofrad, PhD, Professor. Nuclear pore complex and nucleocytoplasmic transport, mechanobiology of disease, cellular mechanotransduction, integrin-mediated focal adhesions.
Research Profile

Niren Murthy, Professor.

David Rempel, Professor.

Kimmen Sjolander, PhD, Professor. Computational biology, algorithms, phylogenetic tree reconstruction, protein structure prediction, multiple sequence alignment, evolution, bioinformatics, hidden Markov models, metagenomics, statistical modeling, phylogenomics, emerging and neglected diseases, machine-learning, genome annotation, metagenome annotation, systems biology, functional site prediction, ortholog identification.
Research Profile

Associate Professors

Irina M Conboy, Associate Professor. Bioengineering, stem cell, tissue repair, tissue regeneration.
Research Profile

Amy E. Herr, Associate Professor. Microfluidics, nanofluidics, bioanalytical separations, disease diagnostics.
Research Profile

Ian Holmes, Associate Professor. Computational biology.
Research Profile

Sanjay Kumar, MD PhD, Associate Professor. Biomaterials, molecular and cellular bioengineering, stem cells, cancer biology, translational medicine.
Research Profile

Seung-Wuk Lee, PhD, Associate Professor. Nanotechnology, bio-inspired nanomaterials, synthetic viruses, regenerative tissue engineering materials, drug delivery vehicles.
Research Profile

Assistant Professors

John Christopher Anderson, PhD, Assistant Professor.

John Eugene Dueber, PhD, Assistant Professor.

Adjunct Faculty

Paul D. Adams, PhD, Adjunct Faculty. Biofuels, computational methods, Macromolecular Crystallography, Structural Biology, abra.
Research Profile

Howard L. Fields, Adjunct Faculty.

Lecturers

Terry D Johnson, Ms, Lecturer.

Hayley Lam, PhD, Lecturer.

Contact Information

Department of Bionegineering

306 Stanley Hall

Phone: 510-642-5833

Fax: 510-642-5835

Visit Department Website

Department Chair

Kevin Healy, PhD

Phone: 510-642-5833

kehealy@berkeley.edu

Academic Undergraduate Student Adviser

Cindy Manly-Fields

306C Stanley Hall

Phone: 510-642-5860

cmanly@berkeley.edu

College of Engineering Student Services

Advising

230 Bechtel Engineering Center

Phone: 510-643-7594

Fax: 510-643-8653

ess@ce.berkeley.edu

Engineering Student Services Adviser, Joint Major Adviser

Genie Foon

eugenia@berkeley.edu

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