Chemistry, Ph.D.

The Department of Chemistry has research programs in each of the five traditional areas of chemistry, with a bioinformatics option available in each:

Our students have the opportunity to conduct research at the interface of chemistry and biology under the guidance of our dynamic research faculty, many of whom are distinguished and noted scholars. The department’s goal is to deliver high-quality instructional programs at the graduate level to prepare students for productive careers in academia, industry and government. The emphasis of the graduate program is the training of scientists.

Program Highlights

Many of our faculty are highly regarded leading experts in their own field and serve on panels and study sections at agencies such as the National Institutes of Health and National Science Foundation, on the editorial board of various journals and as officers in professional societies such as the American Chemical Society and Heterocyclic Communications.

The Department has two Regents’ Professors, Drs. David Boykin and W. David Wilson, two Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholars, Dr. Binghe Wang and Dr. George Wang, and five Georgia Cancer Coalition Distinguished Cancer Scientists, Drs. Irene Weber, Markus Germann, Binghe Wang, Zhen Huang and Donald Hamelberg.

The department awards more than 25 prestigious fellowships and assistantships to outstanding Ph.D. students, including the Ambrose Pendergrast, the David Withers Boykin, the Al Baumstark and the Harry P. Hopkins Jr. Scholarship in Physical Chemistry, Graduate Fellowship in Medicinal Chemistry and the Solvay Fellowship.

In addition, about 10 graduate assistantships at $22,000 are offered in Molecular Basis of Disease and Brains and Behavior areas.

Program Details

In addition to the online graduate application, the program has the following requirements:

For more information about applying to the Ph.D. program in Chemistry, please see our Frequency Asked Questions (FAQs) page.

Program Requirements

Coursework
A minimum of 30 credit hours of graduate coursework within the core curriculum
A minimum of 40 semester hours of research of which at least 20 semester hours must be dissertation research
An additional 10 hours of graduate course electives or research

General Examination
Students must pass a General Examination consisting of written and oral portions covering the core area representing the student’s major interest.

For degree requirements, including teaching requirements, refer to the Graduate Student’s Guide to Department Requirements and Policies.

Admitted Ph.D. students are offered a tuition waiver and stipend.