Materials Science · California
Materials Science colleges in California
Materials Science program coverage in California is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.
Materials Science studies why solids behave as they do, training you to relate the atomic and microstructural makeup of metals, ceramics, polymers, and composites to their properties.
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What you'll study in a Materials Science program
- Crystallography and crystal structures, defects, and how atomic arrangement governs the properties of solids
- Phase diagrams, phase transformations, diffusion, and the thermodynamics and kinetics of microstructure formation
- Mechanical behavior of materials: elasticity, plasticity, fracture, fatigue, and creep, with tensile and hardness testing
- Characterization using X-ray diffraction, optical and scanning electron microscopy, and spectroscopy
- Thermal analysis methods such as differential scanning calorimetry and thermogravimetric analysis
- Structure and behavior of metals, ceramics, polymers, semiconductors, and composite materials
- Electronic, magnetic, and optical properties of solids and the underlying solid-state physics
- Failure analysis, fractography, and the interpretation of degradation, corrosion, and wear in service
- Computational materials methods and laboratory practice in sample preparation and reporting
Where a Materials Science degree can lead
- Materials Scientist
- Materials Characterization Specialist
- Research and Development Scientist
- Failure Analysis Analyst
- Laboratory Technician (Materials Testing)
- Quality and Reliability Analyst
Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 materials scientists median $104,160).
A materials science program treats the solid itself as the object of study, asking why a metal yields, why a ceramic cracks, and why a polymer creeps. Coursework grounds you in crystallography, phase diagrams, diffusion, and the thermodynamics and kinetics that govern how microstructure forms, then connects those structures to mechanical, electrical, thermal, and optical behavior. You learn to read and interpret characterization data from tools such as optical and scanning electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, differential scanning calorimetry, and tensile and hardness testing. Where materials engineering centers on selecting and processing materials so a given part performs and lasts, and where chemistry focuses on molecules and reactions and physics on fundamental laws, this field sits between them: the science of structure-property relationships across whole classes of solids, often pursued through laboratory experiments and modeling.
Most students enter through a bachelor's degree, and many roles in research and development favor a master's or doctorate, so plan early if a research path interests you. Undergraduate study usually includes laboratory sequences, and capstone or research projects that build experience with sample preparation, failure analysis, and instrumentation. There is no single license for materials scientists, though those working in product development alongside engineers may later pursue engineering credentials, and labs that run regulated testing may follow ASTM or ISO standards and seek accreditation. Graduate study, internships, and time in industry, national laboratories, or academic groups shape where careers go. Pay, demand, and the mix of bench, modeling, and analysis work vary by sector and region; a degree is preparation for the field, not a guarantee of a specific role or salary.
In federal data for the closely related occupation of materials scientists, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $104,160 and projects employment to grow about 4.9% from 2024 to 2034; a bachelor's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.
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