Professional Documents
Culture Documents
FINAL REPORT
PHASE 2 - SYLLABUS
SEMESTER SYSTEM
Mathematics
English
Information Technology
Civil Engineering
Electrical, Electronics and Telecommunication Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
Example.
CE2113 Offered by the Civil Engineering Department (Code is CE)
Second Year (First Digit = 2)
First Semester (Second Digit = 1)
13th Module out of the Total number of Modules offered by the Civil
Engineering Department during total of 06 Semesters (03 Academic
Years) [Third & Fourth Digit = 13]
3. Guide to the Remarks Column
C,E,M Common Module for all three Disciplines (i.e. Civil, Electrical, Mechanical)
C, E Common to Civil and Electrical
C, M Common to Civil and Mechanical
E, M Common to Electrical and Mechanical
C Civil only
E Electrical only
M Mechanical only
4. Other Abbreviations
Pro Production
R & A Refrigeration and Air Conditioning
Auto Automobile
MR Marine
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Title
Engineering Mathematics
English
Information Technology I
Workshop Engineering I
Engineering Drawing
Fluid Mechanics
Electrical Principles A
Engineering Mechanics
Item
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Title
Applied Engineering Mathematics
Workshop Engineering II
Engineering Graphics and AutoCAD
Electrical Principles B
Electronic Circuits and Systems I
Microelectronic Systems I
Telecommunication Principles
Introduction to Computer Systems
English for Professionals
Item
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Code
MA 1202
EN 1202
ME 1205
EE 1208
EE 1209
EE 1210
EE 1211
EE 1212
EN 1202
Semester II
First Year
Code
MA 1101
EN 1101
IT 1101
ME 1101
ME 1102
CE 1102
EE 1107
ME 1103
Semester I
None
Weekly
GPA
Total Distribution GPA
Hours L T
Remarks
P Credits Credits
C,E,M
30 2
2
C,E,M
60 1
3
2
C,E,M
60 1
3
3
C,E,M
60 2
2
3
E
90 4
2
4
E
75 2
3
3
E
90 2
1 3
3
E
60 2
2
2
C,E,M
60 2
2
3
585 18
1 20
22
3
Total Hrs per Week
39
Credits per Semester
25
None
Weekly
GPA
Total Distribution GPA
Credits
Credits
Hours
Remarks
L T
P
C,E,M
30 2
2
C,E,M
60 2
2
4
C,E,M
75 2
3
3
C,E,M
60 1
3
2
C,E,M
60 1
3
2
C,M
90 2
1 3
3
E
90 2
1 3
3
C,E,M
90 2
1 3
3
555 14
3 20
18
4
Total Hrs per Week
37
Credits per Semester
22
First Year
Curriculum
Page
Number
36
39
43
46
50
54
59
63
66
Page
Number
3
6
9
12
20
23
27
31
MA1101
First Year
30
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
Engineering Mathematics
01
02
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
Knowledge on the use matrix algebra techniques in practical engineering
applications.
Student will be knowledgeable in the area of infinite series and their convergence
so that he/ she will be familiar with limitations of using infinite series
approximations for solutions arising in mathematical modeling
Familiar with the functions of several variables which is needed in many branches
of engineering
Possession of the concepts of improper integrals, Gamma, Beta and Error
functions which are needed in engineering applications
Acquaint with the mathematical tools needed in evaluating multiple integrals and
their usage
Syllabus
1. Matrices
Characteristic equation Eigen values and Eigenvectors of a real matrix Properties of
Eigen values and eigenvectors Cayley-Hamilton Theorem Diagonalization of
matrices Reduction of a quadratic form to canonical form by orthogonal transformation
Nature of quadratic forms.
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2. Infinite Series
Sequences Convergence of series General properties Series of positive terms
Tests of convergence (Comparison test, Integral test, Comparison of ratios and
DAlemberts ratio test) Alternating series Series of positive and negative terms
Absolute and conditional convergence Power Series Convergence of exponential,
logarithmic and Binomial Series.
4. Improper Integrals
Improper integrals of the first and second kind and their convergence Evaluation of
integrals involving a parameter by Leibnitz rule Beta and Gamma functions
Properties Evaluation of integrals using Beta and Gamma functions Error
functions.
5. Multiple Integrals
Double integrals Change of order of integration Double integrals in polar
coordinates Area enclosed by plane curves Triple integrals Volume of Solids
Change of variables in double and triple integrals Area of a curved surface. Mass
center of gravity and moment of inertia of two and three-dimensional bodies
.
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Recommended Textbooks
1. Grewal B.S., Higher Engineering Mathematics (40th Edition), Khanna Publishers,
Delhi (2007).
2. Ramana B.V., Higher Engineering Mathematics, Tata McGraw Hill Co. Ltd.,
New Delhi (2007).
3. Jain R.K. and Iyengar S.R.K., Advanced Engineering Mathematics (3rd Edition),
Narosa Publications, Delhi (2007).
4. Bali N., Goyal M. and Watkins C., Advanced Engineering Mathematics (7th
Edition), Firewall Media, New Delhi (2007).
5. Greenberg M.D., Advanced Engineering Mathematics (2nd Edition), Pearson
Education, New Delhi (1998).
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
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EN 1101
First Year
60
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
English
01
04
GPA
None GPA
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
To enable learners of English as an additional language to increase phonological
accuracy by developing an awareness of the features of English pronunciation, by
comparing learner language with the target language using real world and digital
media.
To extend and apply English language learning strategies to improve listening and
speaking skills in a range of task-focused situations.
Syllabus
1. Further Development of Grammar from the Intensive Program
Review of tenses, conditional statements, question tags, use of time expressions, time
expressions- past of present perfect.
2. Focus on Pronunciation
- Strategies for improving accuracy in pronunciation
- Articulation of sounds
- Phonological patterning
- Pitch and intonation patterns
- Features of connected speech
3. Spoken English in Practice
- Strategies for autonomous language learning
- Vocabulary acquisition strategies
- Word formation principles
- Listening to and reading transcriptions of spoken material in a range of contexts
- Strategies and skills related to practical speaking tasks- Social and cultural contacts with
speakers of English on campus and in the community
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4. Writing sentences
Sentence level accuracy, types of sentences and clauses; sentence structure issues, use
of appropriate vocabulary, narration/description, note making, formal and informal
letter writing, editing a passage
Recommended Software:
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
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IT1101
First Year
75
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
03
Information Technology I
01
03
GPA
None GPA
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
On completion of this module the students will be able to acquire a fundamental
knowledge of computer systems and database handling, create professional quality
spreadsheets and technical drawings.
Syllabus
1. Introduction to Computers
2hrs
Types of computers , Main Components of a Computer, Central Processing Unit, Main
Memory, Input and Output Devices, Ergonomics of computer construction
2. Data Representation in the Computer
4hrs
Numerical Data Representation, Character Representation, Memory Capacity, Information
storage in the main memory.
3. Secondary Storage Devices
3hrs
Use of secondary storage devices., Hard Disks, Floppy Disks, Optical Disks and Magnetic
Tapes
4. Categories of Software
3hrs
Hardware, Software and Firmware, System Software and Application Software., Types of
system software, Packaged Software and Custom-Written Software
5. Database Systems
6hrs
Database Management Systems, Hierarchical Database, Network Database, Relational
Database, Object-Oriented Database
6. System Software
4hrs
The Operating System, CPU Management, File Management, Task Management, Operating
Systems: Linux, DOS, Windows and its applications and Network Operating Systems
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7. Spreadsheet Applications
4 hrs
Work sheet, work book, row number, column letter, cell and an active cell, reference area.,
Numbers, Label and Formulae, Copying data, moving data, inserting, deleting, moving
columns and rows, formatting cells, Functions., Macros., Multiple work sheets., Charts.
4 hrs
The Web and how it works, Browser, Web Portals, Multimedia on the Web, FTP, Telnet,
Newsgroup,
Recommended Textbooks/Reading
1. Computer and Information Processing,
D D Spencer.
2. Using the World Wide Web
D A Wall
3. Microsoft Office 97 Professional Edition, M L Swanson
4. Information Technology; A practical course
Harriet.Hraper
Practical List
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
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ME 1101
First Year
60
Title
Semester
Credit Hours
Practical
03
Workshop Engineering I
01
02
GPA
None GPA
Filed Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
Knowledge on Workshop safety, operations, procedures, tools
Knowledge and skills on handling of machine tools and accessories
Knowledge and skills on Material processing for product design and manufacture
Syllabus
1. Introduction to workshop processes, tools and safety
a. The need for studying workshop technology, illustrations of different types of
workshops (i.e. mechanical, electrical, electronics, etc.) types of workshop processes,
overview of the tools/machinery/equipment, accepted operational procedures in different
workshops.
b. workmans trade; craftsmanship, the working of materials, economics of production
c. Standards; purpose, creation of standards, advantages, SI units, ISO
d. Machine Tools; general, lathe, mill, shaper, bench and column drills, hand drills,
electric hand drills, saws, welding equipment.
e. Safety and accident prevention; causes of accidents, behavior, hygiene, housekeeping,
clothing, proper protective gear, harmful substances, start-stop controls, precautions,
lifting appliances, storage, electrical safety, lubrication and coolants,
f. Fire Fighting; Legal provisions, the fire fighting triangle, inflammable substance,
oxygen, heat(ignition temperatures), preventive fire protection, structural fire protection,
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preventive measures, conduct in case of fire, portable and other fire extinguishers,
testing, operational status and maintenance of protocols.
g. supply and handling of material.
2. Measuring
Methods of Measuring; direct measuring instruments, indirect measuring instruments
Accuracy of Measuring
Types of Instrument
o Rule; types of rule; metric, precision steel rule, folding rule
o Straight edge
o Calipers
o Vernier caliper gauge; external measuring, internal and depth measurements
o Graduation of the vernier scale; reading the vernier scale
o Vernier depth gauge
o Vernier protractor
o External micrometer caliper; reading the micrometer scale
o Dial gauge
Fits
Terminology
o Mating surfaces
o Sizes; design size, tolerance, deviation, limits, actual size, clearance fit, interference
fit, transition fit
o Free dimensions
o Tolerance grades
o Limit gauges; Go- not go gap gauge, Go-not go plug gauge, taper gauges, Feeler
gauges, Radius gauges
Marking out Tools
Scriber, center punch, surface plates and tables, surface gauge, scribing block, try square,
protector, dividers, vernier height gauge, rule stand, box square, center finder, odd-leg
calipers, trammels, Parallel marking gauge, bubble level, templates.
3. Engineering Materials
a. Classification (different types);
Metals Ferrous & Non-Ferrous
Plastics Thermoplastics, Thermo sets, Elastromers
Ceramics & Other,
Composites
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Hammering;
Hammers; riveting, hand, sledge Tinsmmiths and other special purpose hammers
Hammer-like tools; flatter, fuller, convex set hammer, Smiths chisel
Hammer construction and use of hammers
Purpose of hammering
o Materials which are easily shaped
o Materials which are difficult to shape
Hammer handles
Accidents with the hammer
Straightening
Changes in dimension
Methods of straightening
o Straightening by hand; main tools used
o Straightening with a straightening machine
o Straightening by the application of heat
Bending
Changes in structure, effect of cross section
The bending radius; factors affecting the bending radius
Materials with good bending properties
Marking tools
Bending methods
Sawing
Definition
Handsaws for metal
o Hacksaw; hacksaw blades, tension file
o Coping saw
o Mechanics saw
o Sheet saw
The saw blade
o Material with design features
o Tooth spacing
Working with a saw
o Securing the blade
o Application
Power saws; jig saw, horizontal blade saw, circular saw, power hacksaw
Safety
Chiseling
The purpose of chiseling
Chisel manufacture
Common chisels; flat chisel, cross-cut chisel, drift punch, punching chisel, grooving
chisel, hole punch
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Chiseling
Chisel sharpening (Grinding)
Accident Prevention
Filing
The file;
o Classification
o Type of cut; single-cut file, double-cut file, Rasp-file
o Type of width of cut; single-cut (mill saw file, Double-cut file, Rasp
o File classification by grade
Standard file nomenclature
o Type of file
o File cross section
o Securing the work-piece for file
Filing work
o Body position
o Movement of the file
o Application
Securing the file handle
Care of the file
Scraping
Purpose
Scraper blade
Types of scraper
Scraping flat surfaces
Coating with marking paste
Grinding
Grinding Methods
o Flat surface grinding
o Cylindrical grinding (internal and external)
o Hand grinding
Tool Grinding; Grinding wheels, cup and dish wheels, different shapes of grinding
wheel
Wheel Construction
o Grinding wheels
types of bonding material; vitrified bonding, synthetic resin bonding, rubber
bonding
Types of abrasive; natural abrasive, artificial abrasive, fused alumina
Particle size; abrasive particles, size classification, wheel structure
Wheel hardness; grading
Factors in wheel selection; guide to wheel selection, material to be ground, type of
grinding, bonding agent, abrasive and colour
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Riveting
Definition, purpose,
examples of rivet types & shapes of rivet heads
types of joint; lap-joint and butt-joint
riveting classification; structural, machine and pressure vessel
Rivet materials; steel, brass, plastic, copper and aluminum
Rivet form, rivet proportion, rivet holes, margin
Riveting methods; cold forming, hot forming
Load capacity of a riveted joint; joint in single shear and joint in double shear
Riveting faults, safety precautions.
Shearing
Hand shears; curved shears, slitters, bench (hand operated) shears
Selection of shears
Bench shears
Safety precautions
Drilling
Types of drill; flat, twist
Drill construction; types of steel, point and clearance angles, helix angles; standard
helix drill, slow helix drill, quick helix drill
Securing the drill
Taper-shank drills; securing taper-shank drills, grades of taper
Deep-hole drills
Securing the work-piece
Factors affecting the drilling operation
Cutting speed
Feed rate; drill grinding drill grinding jig and grinding faults
Cutting fluids; soluble oil; straight cutting oils; mineral and fatty-oil mixtures
sulphurized oils
Safety and accident prevention
Countersinking and Counter-Boring
Countersink, cutting angle, counter-bore, spot-face cutter, center drill, three and four
groove (flute) twist drills
Reaming
Parallel reamers, hand reamers, adjustable reamers, taper reamers, shell reamers, material
allowance, reaming speed, lubricants, and safety precaution
Threads
Types of screw thread; V-thread, acme thread, round thread, buttress thread, square
thread
Screw thread terms
Thread types; ISO metric forms
Taps; types of tap wrench, tap set, bottoming taps, nut tap, Cutting external threads
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Dies
Pipe stocks
Ratchet die stock
Table of ISO metric threads
Lubricants
Nuts, Bolts and Accessories
Types of fastenings
Screw and bots as fasteners
o types of screw bolt; Machine screws and bolts, special purpose bolts, wood screws,
nuts examples of uses
o Marking; example of ISO markings
Screw Locking; locking devices, compression devices, mechanical devices, examples
of mechanical devices, permanent and semi-permanent devices, examples of
permanent and semi-permanent locking
Point design
Tightening; screwdrivers, spanners, examples of common types of spanner and their
application, proper use
Pins and dowels
o Pin fastening; dowel pins, securing pins, shear pins
o Types of pins and dowels; parallel dowels, fitting a parallel dowel, taper pin or
dowels
o Fitting tapered dowels
o Slotted dowels
o Fitted bolts.
Soldering
Soldering process,
Soft solder abbreviations, composition and melting point
Forms of soft solder; flux materials, flux material containing acid, acid-free flux
materials
Soldering irons; types, gals blowlamp
Soldering procedure; preparation, procedure, causes of defective soldered joints on
printed circuit boards
Safety
Hardening
Safety rules for hardening, heat treatment, the laws of structural change of unalloyed
steel, steel, hardening, tempering, annealing of steel, heat treatment of light metals,
devices for annealing and hardening, fault in heat treatment, hard metals (sintered
carbides), temperature measurement in hardening, hardness tests
7
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Recommended Textbooks/Reading
1. Workshop Technology Part I, Part II and Part III; W A Chapman
2. Production Technology, Processes Materials and Planning; W Bolton
Practical List
Lecture(s) has the choice of selecting workshop practical provided form the list provided
separately for different disciplines (i.e. Civil, Mechanical, Electrical) depending on the
machines, tools, raw material available and the depth of practice needed. However, it is
advised to conduct separate hands on session during the semester break of first two years
with at least for Mechanical Engineering students.
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
8
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ME 1102
First Year
60
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
(Drawing)
03
Engineering Drawing
01
02
GPA
None GPA
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
Syllabus
1. Introduction
Basic Concepts, writing and reading, lines and lettering, method of expression,
methods of shape, description of Orthographic and Pictorial views, Units Sections,
Intersections, Developments
2. Description and use of Instruments
Selection and Use, Scales and use of scales, Preparation of Drawings, Lettering
3. The Alphabet of Lines
Types of lines, Line gauges, Geometry of Straight Lines, Parallels, Perpendiculars,
Tangents, Tangent Points, Circles, Curves, Bisections, Trisections, Divisions,
Angles,
4. Orthographic Projections and Sketching
Methods of Projection-Classification, Definition and views, Six Principal views,
Combination of views, Three Space Dimensions, Representation of Lines,
Freehand Sketching, Reading of Drawings.
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5. Auxiliary Views
Basic Concepts, Classification of Surfaces, Skew Surfaces.
6. Sectional Views
Definition, Classification, Auxiliary Sections, Sections Showing Arms, Ribs, Lugs,
Crosshatching, Aligned Sections, Conventional Breaks and Symbols.
7. Pictorial Drawing and Sketching
Comparison with orthographic drawings, Isometrics, Perspective Drawings,
Oblique Projection, Sketching the Axes.
8. Dimensions, Notes, Limits and Precision
Lines and Symbols, Selection of Distances, Placement of Dimensions, Standard
Features, Precision and Tolerances, Production Methods.
Drawing Practice
Nine, 03 Hour Drawing Sessions to give students the adequate practice to grasp
each of the above 08 topics
Recommended Textbooks/Software
1. Siddheshwar, Machine Drawing, Tata-McGraw Hill.
2. K. L. Narayana and P. Kannaiah, Machine Drawing,New Age International
Ltd
3. Textbook On Engineering Drawing Engineering Graphics, (Paperback -2005),
Narayana KI, Kannaiah P
4. Engineering Drawing, (Paperback 2008), Shah PJ.
2
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the
module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
22/206
CE1102
First Year
90
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
03
Fluid Mechanics
01
03
GPA
None GPA
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
understand the basic principles governing the dynamics of non-viscous fluids
be able to derive and deduce the consequences of the equation of conservation of
mass
be able solve kinematics problems such as finding particle paths and streamlines
be able to apply Bernoulli's theorem and the momentum integral to simple
problems including river flows
calculate velocity fields and forces on bodies for simple steady and unsteady
flows derived from potentials
Syllabus
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2. Viscosity
Viscosity: shear stress; shear rate; dynamic viscosity; kinematic viscosity
Viscosity measurement: operating principles and limitations of viscosity measuring
devices (e.g. falling sphere, capillary tube, rotational and orifice viscometers)
Real fluids: Newtonian fluids; non-Newtonian fluids including pseudoplastic,
Bingham plastic, Casson plastic and dilatent fluids
4. Fluid Dynamics
Introduction to Navier-Stokes Equation, Euler equation of motion along a stream line,
ernoullis equation, application of Bernoullis equation to Pitot tube, Venturi meter, Orifices,
Orifice meter, Triangular Notch & Rectangular Notch .(Without considering Velocity of
Approach)
5. Hydraulic machines
Impact of a jet: power of a jet; normal thrust on a moving flat vane; thrust on a
moving hemispherical cup; velocity diagrams to determine thrust on moving curved
vanes; fluid friction losses; system efficiency
Operating principles: operating principles, applications and typical system
efficiencies of common turbomachines including the Pelton wheel, Francis turbine
and Kaplan turbine
2
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Recommended Textbooks/Reading
1. Frank M.White, Fluid Mechanics, McGraw Hill Publication.
2. James A. Fay., Introduction to Fluid Mechanics
3. Cengel & Cimbla Fluid Mechanics, TATA McGraw-Hill
4. Kumar K. L., Engineering Fluid Mechanics, S.Chand & Company Ltd, Eurasia
Publishing House
5. R.K. Rajput Fluid Mechanics & Hydraulic Machines, S.Chand & Company Ltd.
Practical List
1. Study of Pressure Measuring devices.
2. Determination of viscosity of liquids and its variation with temperature.
3. Stability of floating bodies and optimum loading capacity
4. Drawing Flow Net by using Electrical Analogy method.
5. Verification of modified Bernoullis equation.
6. Calibration of Venturimeter / Orifice meter.
7. Determination of hydraulic coefficients of orifice.
8. Calibration of notch (Triangular / Rectangular).
9. Laminar and Turbulent flows by Reynoldss apparatus.
10. Flow around immersed bodies, point of stagnation, formation of wake etc by Haleshaw
apparatus.
11. Determination of Friction Factor for Laminar and Turbulent flow through pipes of
different materials.
12. Determination of minor losses due
3
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ScheduleofLectures(tobepreparedbytheLectureandapprovedbythemodulecoordinatorto
bedistributedtothestudentsonthedayofcommencementofthemodule):
Week
Topic
Hours
LecturerResource
Person/
Remarks
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
EndSemesterExam
4
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EE1107
First Year
90
Title
Electrical Principles A
Semester
Credit
Hours
01
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
On the completion of this module the student will be able to acquire the fundamental
knowledge of Basic Electricity, form a basis for advanced studies in Electrical
Engineering to be undertaken in the future
Syllabus
1. Kirchhoffs law
2 hrs
Kirchhoffs First Law, Kirchhoffs Second Law, Calculation of Mixed
Resistance Circuits by means of Ohms and Kirchhoffs Laws.
4. Electrical Heating
Joules law, Specific heat, Thermal efficiency
1 hr
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5. Electro chemistry
1 hr
Fundamentals-Dissociation of an Electrolyte, Electrolysis and its
application, Faradays law, Further examples of Electrolysis
Metalloplastic Plating, Eloxal Process (Anodizing), Production of Pure
Metals
Electrochemical Voltage Sources, - Primary Cells, Electrolytic
polarization
Carbon Zinc Cell(Manganese Dioxide or Lecianche Cell)-Secondary
Cells, Accumulators General Description, Lead Acid Accumulators,
Capacity of Accumulators, Efficiency of accumulators, Types of charge
Steel accumulators. Acid Prevention
6. Network theorems
2 hrs
7. Electric Fields
1 hr
8. Electron Ballistics
1 hr
1 hr
Charging & discharging current for series CR circuit. Time Constants, Stored
energy in a capacitor, Force between oppositely charged plates
2 hrs
11. Electromagnetism
1 hr
Right hand grip rule or cork screw rule, Solenoid, toroid and force on a
conductor carrying current in a magnetic field, Flemings left hand rule, Lenzs
law
1 hr
Mmf, magnetizing force, Magnetic flux, Permeability of free space &r magnetic
Materials, Relative permeability, absolute permeability, Reluctance of a
magnetic circuits, magnetic leakage and fringing, Kirchhoffs laws for the
magnetic circuits, B-H curve, Hysterisis.
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1 hr
1 hr
1 hr
Sine wave, Phase angle (lead/lag), frequency, speed and no. of pole pairs
Amplitude Alternating emf (single phase), Average, Peak and rms values of an
alternating current, rotating vector, Manipulations with AC quantities, vector
diagrams using rms values
1 hr
1 hr
Series resonance, parallel resonance, active power and reactive power, power
factor using phase diagrams
Bird J
Nilsson J
Johnson D
Glover J and Sarma M
List of Practices
1. Verification of Kirchhoffs laws
2. Verification of Norton's and Thevenins Theorem .
3. RLC network in AC.
4. Q - meter/ Transformer O/C and S/C test
3
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
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ME1104
First Year
90
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
03
Engineering Mechanics
01
03
GPA
None GPA
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
Understand the fundamentals of statics and dynamics.
Be proficient in using Statics and Dynamics to obtain solutions to engineering
problems.
Relate the fundamentals of Statics and Dynamics to practical applications.
Develop documentation skills and correct professional technique
Syllabus
1. Kinematics of a Particle
Units and Dimensions, Motion of Bodies, Rectilinear Motion of a Particle, Velocity of a
Particle in Rectilinear Motion; Velocity, Distance Traveled, Acceleration, 3-D motion of
a particle, Basic Properties of Vectors, Vectorial representation of forces and moments ,
Vector operations.
Velocity, acceleration in Plane motion, Centripetal Acceleration, Acceleration in 3-D
motion, Space, Time and Frames of Reference.
Law, Forces and Newtons Second and Third Laws, Motion of a Body under the action of
given forces, Constrained motion under a body, Law of Conservation of Momentum,
Transfer of Momentum from one body to another, Impulse of a Force, Motion of a Body
with Variable Mass.
4. Relative Motion
Inertial Reference Frames, Motion of a Body in a Non-inertial System of Reference,
Inertia Forces, Inertia Forces Acting on a Body in a Rotating Frame of Reference,
Weightelessness, The Relationship Between the Vectors of Angular and Linear Velocity
of a Paritcle, Inertia Forces Acting on a Body Moving in a Rotating Frame of Reference,
The Influence of the Earth Rotation on the Motion of Bodies
2
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4. Friction
Frictional Force, Laws of Coloumb friction, coefficient of static and kinetic friction
Simple Contact friction, Rolling and slipping,, Belt Friction. Introduction, dry friction,
fluid friction, semi lubricated friction, Screw friction, Simple clutches, Bearings,
List of Practicals
1. Rotating Beams Apparatus
2. Inclined Plane
3. Compound Pendulum
4. Worm and Wheel Drive
5. Belt and Rope Friction
6. Screw Jack
3
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
34/206
35/206
Title
Engineering Mathematics
English
Information Technology I
Workshop Engineering I
Engineering Drawing
Fluid Mechanics
Electrical Principles A
Engineering Mechanics
Item
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Title
Applied Engineering Mathematics
Workshop Engineering II
Engineering Graphics and AutoCAD
Electrical Principles B
Electronic Circuits and Systems I
Microelectronic Systems I
Telecommunication Principles
Introduction to Computer Systems
English for Professionals
Item
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Code
MA 1202
EN 1202
ME 1205
EE 1208
EE 1209
EE 1210
EE 1211
EE 1212
EN 1202
Semester II
First Year
Code
MA 1101
EN 1101
IT 1101
ME 1101
ME 1102
CE 1102
EE 1107
ME 1103
Semester I
None
Weekly
GPA
Total Distribution GPA
Hours L T
Remarks
P Credits Credits
C,E,M
30 2
2
C,E,M
60 1
3
2
C,E,M
60 1
3
3
C,E,M
60 2
2
3
E
90 4
2
4
E
75 2
3
3
E
90 2
1 3
3
E
60 2
2
2
C,E,M
60 2
2
3
585 18
1 20
22
3
Total Hrs per Week
39
Credits per Semester
25
None
Weekly
Total Distribution GPA
GPA
Hours
Credits
Credits
Remarks
L T
P
C,E,M
30 2
2
C,E,M
60 2
2
4
C,E,M
75 2
3
3
C,E,M
60 1
3
2
C,E,M
60 1
3
2
C,M
90 2
1 3
3
E
90 2
1 3
3
C,E,M
90 2
1 3
3
555 14
3 20
18
4
Total Hrs per Week
37
Credits per Semester
22
First Year
Curriculum
Page
Number
36
39
43
46
50
54
59
63
66
Page
Number
3
6
9
12
20
23
27
31
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
First Year
30
Title
Semester
Credit Hours
Practical
Applied Engineering
Mathematics
02
02
GPA
None GPA
Filed Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
acquaint with the concepts of vector calculus, needed for problems in all engineering
disciplines
sound knowledge of techniques in solving ordinary differential equations that model
engineering problems
grasp the concepts of complex variables and relevance of complex functions in
engineering problem analysis
understanding of the standard techniques of numerical solutions to engineering
problems.
knowledge of basic probability theory and will extend this into the real world of
applied statistics.
Syllabus
1. Vector Calculus
Vector notations, Scalar and vector products, Triple products, Differentiation of vectors,
Level surfaces, Directional derivatives, gradient, divergence and curl and their physical
meaning, vector operators and expansion formulae, Line, surface and volume integrations,
Theorems of Green, Stokes and Gauss, Application of vector calculus in engineering
problems, orthogonal curvilinear coordinates, expression of gradient, divergence
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2. Differential Equations
Differential equations of first order and higher degree, Higher order differential equations
with constant coefficient, Rules for finding C.F. and P.I., Method of variation of
parameter, Cauchy and Legendres linear equations.
Simultaneous linear equations with constant coefficients: Linear dependence of solution,
Removal of the first derivative-normal form, change of independent variable, single
integral differential equation. Various applications of higher order differential equations
in solution of engineering problem simple harmonic motion, free forced and damped
oscillations of springs and electrical circuits.
4. Numerical Methods
Solution of equations in one variable, Successive substitution method, Method of false
position, Simple iterative method, Newton-Raphson method, Solution of simultaneous
linear equations; Jacobi method, Gauss Seidal method, Finite differences and
interpolation, Numerical differentiation, Numerical integration: Trapezoidal and
Simpsons rules, Runga-Kutta Method
2
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Recommended Textbooks/Reading
1. Grewal B.S., Higher Engineering Mathematics (40th Edition), Khanna Publishers,
Delhi (2007).
2. Ramana B.V., Higher Engineering Mathematics, Tata McGraw Hill Co. Ltd.,
New Delhi (2007).
3. Greenberg M.D., Advanced Engineering Mathematics (2nd Edition), Pearson
Education, New Delhi (1998).
4. Ronald. E. Walpole, & Raymond. H. Myers. Macmillan, Probability and Statistics
for Engineers and Scientists (6th Edition). ISBN 0-02-424210-1.
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
38/206
ME 1204
First Year
60
Title
Semester
Credit Hours
Practical
03
Workshop Engineering II
02
02
GPA
None GPA
Filed Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
Knowledge on Workshop safety, operations, procedures, tools
Knowledge and skills on handling of machine tools and accessories
Knowledge and skills on Material processing for product design and
manufacture
Syllabus
1. Sheet Metal work
Flat sheets, sheet metal used for covering, material characteristics (steel, Aluminium,
Duralumin, Copper, Zinc, Brass, Lead, Tin, Corrosion and corrosion protection;
coating with oil and grease, painting and varnishing, enamel, plastic covering, metal
covering, dipping, electro-plating, spraying, chemically produced coatings, browning,
bonderising or Parkerizing, anodizing).
Marking with tools, templates, material usage
Cutting out (had shears, hand lever shear, machine shear, cutting with a chisel)
Making holes; punching machines.
Drilling of sheet metal, sawing and filling.
1
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Shaping
o Straightening of sheets
o Bending by hand; turning edges (folding), bending
o Bending and folding with machines; using folding machine, bending formula
(general), press brakes, tolling and bending machine
2. Turning
General; tidiness and the guidelines for tidiness and orderliness in order to prevent
accidents, safety on the lathe, turning, turning operation
Construction of the lathe; base, lathe bed, headstock (main spindle noses, external
screw and internal taper, steep Morse taper with slotted nut, cam lock design and
bayonet mounting with taper), tool carriage (principal components, the apron, lathe
with reversing shaft, bathe with drag cable 10), tail stock, steadies (fixed steady,
traveling steady)
Devices for clamping the work pieces; purpose of the clamping devices, different
methods
o Locating between centers; different types of centre drilling as per DIN 332, center
drilling R48.5 DIN 332, centre drilling A48.5 DIN 332, centre drilling
B48.5 DIN 332.
o Tailstock centre; dead centre, live centre, revolving live centre, work piece driven
by lathe carrier, work piece driven with faceplate.
o Clamping in a chuck; three-jaw chucks, four-jaw chuck
o Clamping on mandrels; simple mandrels.
The turning tool
o Tool angles; tool in the middle of the work piece, tool below the centerline,
greater clearance angle, smaller rake angle, tool above centerline
Turning tools; right-hand square nose tool; right cranked side tool, sintered carbides,
tool holder (multi-tool holders, quick release holder, clamping the tool, setting tool
height.
Tool materials
Cutting speeds
Knurling
Thread cutting
2
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3. Milling
General housekeeping principals, care of tools and equipment, prevention of accidents,
Classification and design of milling machines, types of drives used in milling machines,
mounting work pieces, mounting milling attachments, Milling techniques, operating
procedures, operating parameters, cutting tools used for milling.
4. Gas Welding
Fusion welding, production of gases, safety precautions for gas welding and torch
cutting, physics of handling gas cylinders, classification of touches according to
construction, flames, accident prevention in gas welding, soldering brazing, torch
cutting, simple testing methods, welding symbols, measuring welds, measures applied to
reduce deformation in gas-fusion welding,
5. Electric Welding
Safety regulations for arc welding, electric welding, welding electrodes, setting the
welding current, striking the arc, welding positions, are welding, common welds, welding
defects, weld testing methods
Recommended Textbooks/Reading
1. Workshop Technology Part I, Part II and Part III; W A Chapman
2. Production Technology, Processes Materials and Planning; W Bolton
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Practical List
Lecture(s) has the choice of selecting workshop practical provided form the list provided
separately for different disciplines (i.e. civil, Mechanical, Electrical) depending on the
machines, tools, raw material available and the depth of practice needed. However, it is
advised to conduct separate hands on session during the semester break of first two years
with at least for Mechanical Engineering students.
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
42/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
First Year
60
Title
Semester
Credit Hours
02
03
Practical
(Drawing)
03
GPA
None GPA
Filed Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
Visualize 3-D shapes, there developments and intersection of 1-D, 2-D, and 3-D
objects with plane(s) or 3-D space.
Use of AutoCAD to produce engineering drawings with respective application in
Civil, Mechanical and Electrical.
Syllabus
Part I Graphics
1. Graphic Geometry
Geometric Shapes, The Ellipse, Noncircular Curves, Parabola, Hyperbola, Cycloids,
Involutes, Spirals, Helices, Tangents to Curves, Development of Plane-faced Surface,
Cone Locus of Points, Lines and Planes (projections)
2. Surface Intersections
Intersections of Lines and Planes, Prisms, Pyramids, Curved Surfaces, Cylinders and
Cones with Lines and Planes, Intersection of Cylinders and Cones.
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3. Developed Views
Development of Prisms, Pyramids, Triangulation, Development of Connectors and
Transition Pieces, Development of Spheres, Joints, Connectors
Drawing Practice
Five, 03 Hour Drawing Sessions to give students the adequate practice to grasp each
of the above 03 topics.
Part II AutoCAD
Conduct of the 15 Lessons (under the Help menu) provided by the software during
the remaining 33 hours.
Through these 15 lessons it is envisaged to repeat the concepts covered in all the 08
topics of the Module ME 1102 Engineering Drawing conducted in the First Semester.
The advanced 3-D modeling will have to be covered under ME2111 Assembly
Drawing and Solid Modeling to be conducted in the Third Semester of second year.
(not relevant to Electrical Students)
Recommended Textbooks/Software
1. David I. Cook and Robert N. McDonnal, Engineering Graphics and Design with
Computer Applications, Holt-Sounders International Editors.
2. Textbook On Engineering Drawing Engineering Graphics, (Paperback -2005),
Narayana KI, Kannaiah P
3. Textbook on Engineering Drawing with CAD, (Paperback 2008), Shah, B.M.
4. AutoCAD (latest or available version)
2
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
45/206
EE 1208
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
First Year
60
Title
Electrical Principles B
Semester
Credit
Hours
02
Practical
02
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
On the completion of this module the student will be able to acquire further knowledge of
Basic Electricity, form a basis for advanced studies in Electrical Engineering to be
undertaken in the future
Syllabus
1. Circuit analysis
5 hrs
Circuit topology: circuit graph; tree; co-tree; Eulers equations and relationship to
mesh/nodal analysis (e.g. Meshes =B-N+1 and Nodal = N-1, non-planar circuits, etc)
Mesh and nodal analysis: methodical application of circuit laws (e.g. direct formulation
in matrix form, formulation as a set of simultaneous equations, Maxwells cyclic loop
currents, etc)
2. Filters
3 hrs
Passive low and high pass filters: filter design (e.g. normalized filter, de-normalized
filter,
Prototypes, Butterworth, Chebyshev) Second order active filters: e.g. Sallen and Key, biquad, voltage control voltage source (VCVS), etc
Frequency response test: use of test equipment (e.g. transfer function analyzer, signal
generator, oscilloscope); frequency response of a filter (e.g. cut-off frequency, pass band
gain, stop band roll-off) l; use of computer simulation methods (e.g. frequency sweep,
Bode plots, etc)
1
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3. Transmission lines
5 hrs
4. Transients
3 hrs
transients are associated with changes of stored energy in inductors and
capacitors, response in an RLC at; under damped, over damped, critically
damped, response obtained in an RLC circuit when step and sinusoidal voltage
function is applied, energy stored in the circuit, currents and voltages at t=o.
3 hrs
Surges: origin (e.g. lightning and switching operations); propagation and effects of
surges
(E.g. surge impedance, surge velocity, basic impulse level (BIL)); voltage and current
surges; reflection coefficient; propagation and reflection of surges at junctions of lines
and cables.
Bewley lattice diagram; circuit breaker transients. Control methods: components (e.g.
surge diverter, rod gap, expulsion tube)
4 hrs
2
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9. Fiber Optics
2 hrs
The principles involved in optical fiber communication. Light source and as a
light detector, bandwidth of optical fiber transmission systems.
Bird J
Nilsson J
Johnson D
Glover J and Sarma M
List of Practicles
1. Efficiency of Energy Conversion
2. Determination of RC Time Constants
3. Study of Simple AC Circuits
4. Study of MCBs & Fuses
5. Study of 2-wire DC line Model
3
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
49/206
EE1209
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
First Year
90
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
02
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
On the completion of this module the student will be able to acquire the fundamental
knowledge of Basic Electronics, form a basis for advanced studies in Electrical &
Electronics to be undertaken in the future
Syllabus
1. Semiconductor Materials
5 hrs
The structure of semiconductor crystals, The silicon atom, Intrinsic conductivity,
Doping of semiconductors, The construction of an N-type semiconductor, Nsilicon, The construction of a P-type semiconductor, P-silicon, PN-junction,
Reverse biased, Forward biased
2. Semiconductor Diodes
5 hrs
Characteristic curve of a semiconductor diode, Testing semiconductor diodes,
Nominal values, limiting values and characteristic values for diodes, Examples
of limiting values for diodes, Examples of characteristics
1
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3. Special Diodes
5 hrs
Zener diodes, General, Characteristic curve and circuit symbols for a Zener diode,
The Zener effect, The avalanche effect, Application of Zener diodes, Capacitance
diodes or varactor diode
5. Smoothing Circuits
C filter, LC Filter Section
4 hrs
6. Transistor Basics
5 hrs
Layer sequence, connecting electrodes, diode connections and circuit symbols, for
NPN and PNP-transistors, The principle of operation of a PNP-transistor, Reverse
bias (base-collector diode), Increasing the voltage between emitter and base
7. Transistor Circuits
5 hrs
Basic transistor circuits, Common emitter circuits (connections), Common
collector circuits (connections), Common base circuits (connections),
Characteristic curve of transistors in a common emitter circuit, Measurement
circuits, Control characteristics, Input Output & Four-quadrant characteristics,
Transistor with collector load resistance, Transistor power loss (Ptot) , BJT
Symbols & codes to identify BJTs, Transistor parameters, Leakage currents in
BJTs
8. Transistor Biasing
5 hrs
Biasing arrangement in C-B and C-E circuits of BJT, Load line equation for
transistor circuits, Q-point analysis
9.
2
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Recommended Texts:
1. Electronics Engineering;
2. Electronic Engineering;
3. Electronic Principles;
4. Electronic Circuits;
5. Principles of Electronics;
6. Digital Systems;
7. Pulse & Digital circuits
6 hrs
Schaum Series
Schelling & Belove
Gray & Searle, Wily International
Milman & Haukias
J E Holding & M R Garvin
R J Tocci,
Milman & Taub, Mcgraw Hill
List of Practicles
1.
2.
3.
4.
3
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
53/206
Module Number
GC
EE1210
First Year
Year
75
Number of Hours
Hours Per Week:
Theory 02
Tutorial
Title
Microelectronic Systems I
Semester
Credit Hours
02
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to gain the basic knowledge in Microprocessors and how instructions
execute in Microprocessors. Also the knowledge of Bus Mechanisms and basic low level
programming.
Syllabus
1. States and carrier distribution
Density of states, Fermi-Direct distribution and Fermi-Level
1 hr
3. Carrier action
1 hr
Drift, Diffusion, Recombination-generation, Equations of state, Thermodynamic
equilibrium versus steady state, Drift velocity versus electric field in Si, Hole and
Electron drift current density
1
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7. Continuity equitation
1-D Case, Minority carrier diffusion equations, Minority carrier diffusion length
1 hr
8. PN-Junction electrostatics
1 hr
PN-junction fabrication, Examples, Quantative electrostatic relationships, Quantative
analysis, Electrostatic potential
1 hr
1 hr
1 hr
2
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18. MOSFET
1 hr
General, NMOS, Threshold voltage for NMOS and PMOS, Shockley Model, Example,
MOSFET small-signal equivalent circuit, MOSFET ac response, Characteristics MOSC versus MOSFET
20. CCD-DRAM
Charge coupled devices,
transistor DRAM cell
Semiconductor memories,
1 hr
hr
Concept of CCD-Imager, One
21. Fabrication
General, Photographic process, Doping, Defects line break, Industrial issues
hr
1 hr
2 hrs
2 hrs
3
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1 hr
1 hr
The main types. Data Transfer Group, Arithmetic and Logic Group, Test and
Branch Group, the type of addressing, more complicated programs make use of
other forms of addressing.
2 hrs
1 hr
Operation & storage characteristics of a store , Chip Select /Enable, Read/ Write
Control, Data and Address Lines, storing of data or instruction or garbage.
1 hr
Data address and control bus. Bidirectional data flow, `actively' connected
information at any one time, a tri-state device, usage a truth table, providing
signals from a control device and control actions; read, write, store or input/output
routs.
Rec. Readings
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
M. Morris Mano
Ramesh S. Goanker
Andrew S. Tanenbaum
Winn L. Rosch
Aho/Hopcroft/Ullman
John J. Donovan
List of Practicals
1. Input/Output and Data Transfer
2. Micro Computer Hardware Configuration
4
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
5
58/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
GC EE1211
First Year
90
Title
Telecommunications
Principles
Semester
Credit
Hours
02
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
On the completion of this module the student will be able to acquire the fundamental
knowledge of Telecommunications, form a basis for advanced studies in Electrical &
Electronics to be undertaken in the future
Syllabus
1. Communication systems
7 hrs
Elements of analogue and digital communication systems: the transmitter
(information source), the channel and the receiver (eg wired and wireless
systems; simplex, duplex and half-duplex methods)
Characteristics of electro-magnetic waves: frequency (f), wavelength () and
velocity (v) and their interrelationship; the electro-magnetic spectrum and
frequency/wavelength allocations
Signal spectra: time and frequency domains; fundamental and harmonic
frequencies; complex waveforms; digital signals (eg unipolar, bipolar, return-tozero (RTZ), non-return to-zero (NRZ))
1
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8 hrs
8 hrs
2
60/206
4. Telecommunication traffic
7 hrs
List of Practicals
1. AM and FM signal generation
2. Generator - Oscilloscope data transmission
3. Multiplexed - Data transmission
4. Study of communication channel characteristics
3
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
62/206
GC EE 1212
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
First Year
60
Title
Introduction to Computer
Systems
Semester
Credit
Hours
02
Practical
02
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
On the completion of this module the student will be able to acquire the fundamental
knowledge of Computer Systems, form a basis for further advanced studies to be
undertaken in the future
Syllabus
1. Introduction To Computers
Hardware and Software, How Computers Work, Inside a Computer, Parts
2 hrs
3. Processing
Memory, Central Processing Unit, Memory Cache, Bus
4 hrs
1
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4. Storage Devices
2 hrs
Hard Drive, Floppy Drive, CD-ROM Drive, DVD-ROM Drive, DVD +/-RW
Drive, Memory Card Reader, Flash Drive
5. Software
3 hrs
Introduction to Software, Word Processor, Spreadsheet, Database, Application
Suite, Image Editor, Web Design Software
6. Operating Systems
3 hrs
Introduction to Operating Systems, MS-DOS, Windows 3.1, Windows 95, 98 and
Me, Windows NT, Windows 2000 and Windows XP 6.7. UNIX, Linux, Mac
OSX
7. Networks
4 hrs
Introduction to Networks, Network Hardware, How Information is Stored on a
Network, Home Networks, Protecting Data on a Network, Wireless Networking
8. The Internet
3 hrs
Introduction to the Internet, Capabilities and Limitations of the Internet, Getting
Connected, Web Browser, Creating and Publishing Web Pages, Message Boards,
Web-Based Chat and Blogs, Spy ware, Voice over IP
D D Spencer.
D A Wall
M L Swanson
Harriet.Hraper
List of Practicals
1. . Micro Computer Hardware Configuration
2
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
65/206
EN 1202
First Year
60
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
02
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
Skills of formal writing; components of different forms of writing, strategies to
successfully complete the writing component of English medium tertiary courses.
Knowledge in a range of written business communications within the context of a
global trading environment.
Skill of silent reading and comprehension and awareness and significance on
silent reading.
Ability to guess the meanings of words from context and grasp the overall
message of the text, draw inferences etc.
Improved listening skills so that it helps improve their pronunciation.
Necessary training in listening so that they can comprehend the speech of people
of different accents.
Awareness on the role of ability to speak fluent English and its contribution to
their success.
Express themselves fluently and appropriately in social and professional contexts.
Syllabus
1. Writing Skills
a. The writing process
Research skills and sources of information; direct quoting, paraphrasing and
summarizing,
b. Referencing;
Main academic genres, structuring a range of short and extended academic genres,
Academic text cohesion and coherence; Academic style and conventions; Strategies
for autonomous language learning.
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2. Reading Skills
Skimming the text, Understanding the gist of an argument, identifying the topic sentence,
Inferring lexical and contextual meaning, Understanding discourse features, recognizing
coherence/sequencing of sentences
The students shall be trained in reading skills using the prescribed text/material for
detailed study. They shall be,
examined in reading and answering questions using unseen passages which
may be taken from the
non-detailed text or other authentic texts, such as articles from
magazines/newspapers
Use of the internet for academics purposes to improve the speed of the use of
computers.
3. Listening Skills
Listening for general content, Listening to fill up information, Intensive listening,
Listening for specific information
Students should be given practice in listening and identifying the sounds of English
language and to mark stress, right intonation in connected speech. Use of the language
Lab
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4. Speaking Skills
Oral practice, Describing objects/situations/people, Role play; Individual/Group activities,
Just a Minute (JAM) Sessions.
Recommended Textbooks/Reading/Material
1. K. R. Lakshmi Narayanan, English for Technical Communication, Vol. 1 & 2, Sci
tech. Publications.
2. Andrea J Ruthurford, Basic Communication Skills for Technology, Pearson
Education, Asia.
3. Meenakshi Raman and Sangita Sharma, Technical Communication , Principle
and Practice, , OUP, 2009
4. Essential Grammar in Use, (with CD), 3/e, Cambridge University Press, 2009
5. M.Ashraf Rizvi, Tata Resumes and Interviews, McGraw Hill, 2009
6. Robert J. Dixson, Everyday Dialogues in English, Prentice-Hall of India Ltd.,
2006.
7. Farhathullah, T.M., Orient Blackswan, Communication Skills for Technical
Students, , 2008
8. Krishna Mohan & Meera Banerji , Macmillan, Developing Communication Skills,
2/e., 2009
9. Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English with DVD, Pearson Longman.
3
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
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Title
Advanced Engineering Mathematics
Technical Communication Skills
Information Technology II B
Electrical Machines B
Power Electronics
Electronic Circuits and Systems II B
Microelectronic Systems II
Option 2
Electrical Power Transmission
Telecommunication Access Technologies
Programming Principles
Code
MA 2204
EN 2204
IT 2203
EE 2204
EE 2206
EE 2207
EE 2208
EE 2211
EE 2212
EE 2213
Item
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
EE 2110
EE 2111
EE 2112
8
9
10
Semester II
Title
Engineering Mathematics with Matlab
Essentials of Communication Skills
Information Technology II A
Electrical Machines A
Electrical Installation Practice
Electronic Circuits and Systems II A
Computer Hardware
Option 1
Electrical Power Generation
Telecommunication Networks
Data & Computer Communication
Code
MA 2101
EN 2103
IT 2103
EE 2104
EE 2105
EE 2107
EE 2109
Item
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Second Year
Semester I
E
E
E
5
5
5
21
23
105 4
3
105 4
3
105 4
3
555 16
2 19
Total Hrs per Week
37
Credits per Semester
5
5
5
21
23
None
Weekly
GPA
Total Distribution GPA
Hours L T
P Credits Credits
30 2
2
45 1
2
2
45 1
2
2
90 2
1 3
3
75 2
3
3
90 2
1 3
3
75 2
3
3
105 4
3
105 4
3
105 4
3
555 16
2 19
Total Hrs per Week
37
Credits per Semester
Remarks
C,E,M
C,E,M
C,E,M
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
Remarks
C,E,M
C,E,M
C,E,M
E
E
E
E
None
Weekly
GPA
Total Distribution GPA
Hours L T
P Credits Credits
30 2
2
45 1
2
2
45 1
2
2
75 2
3
3
90 2
1 3
3
75 2
3
3
90 2
1 3
3
Second Year
Curriculum
129
132
136
Page
Number
105
109
112
115
118
122
125
93
97
100
Page
Number
71
74
78
80
82
86
90
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
Second Year
30
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
Engineering Mathematics
with Matlab
01
02
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
Skills of solving engineering mathematics problems with Matlab.
Syllabus
1. Application of Algebra
Application of Algebra in Engineering - Linear Equations
Application of Algebra in Engineering - Quadratic Equations
Lab #1: Application of Algebra in Engineering: The One-Loop Circuit
2. Trigonometry
Trigonometry - One-Link Planar Robot
Trigonometry - One and Two-Link Planar Robots
Lab #2: Trigonometric Relationships in One and Two-Link Planar Robots
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3.
Vectors
2-D Vectors in Engineering
Complex Numbers in Engineering
Introduction and Meet the Lab GTAs
Lab #3: Measurement and Analysis of Harmonic Signals
5. Derivatives
Introduction to Derivatives in Engineering
Application of Derivatives - Velocity and Acceleration
Application of Derivatives - Electric Circuits
Application of Derivatives - Deflection of Beams
Lab #5: Derivatives in Engineering: Velocity and Acceleration in Free-Fall
6. Integrals
Introduction to Integrals in Engineering
Application of Integrals in Statics
Application of Integrals in Dynamics
Application of Integrals in Electric Circuits
Lab #6: Integrals in Engineering: Work and Stored Energy in a Spring
7. Differential Equations
Introduction to Differential Equations - The Leaking Bucket
Application of Differential Equations - Mechanical Systems
Lab #7: Differential Equations in Engineering: The Leaking Bucket
Application of Differential Equations - Electrical Systems
Lab #8: Differential Equations in Engineering: Spring-Mass Vibration
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Textbook:
Gilat, A., Matlab: An Introduction with Applications, 2nd ed., John Wiley & Sons, 2004.
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
73/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
Second Year
45
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
02
Essentials of
Communication Skills
01
02
GPA
None GPA
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
Recognize different perspectives and assumptions in communication.
Ability to explain the principles of good interpersonal communication and its
applications.
Skills of persuasion and negotiation in communication.
Ability to review and practice strategies for giving and receiving feedback.
Setting attainable goals to improve personal communication skills.
Improved soft skills and people skills, which will make the transition from student
to workplace smoother and help them to excel in their jobs.
Enhanced students performance at Placement Interviews, Group Discussions and
other recruitment exercises.
Syllabus
Part I
PC Based
(40 %)
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3. Speaking:
Phonetics: Intonation Ear Training Correct Pronunciation
Sound recognition exercises -Common Errors in English
Conversations: Face to Face Conversation - Telephone conversation
Role plays activities (Students take on roles and engage in conversation)
B. Career Lab
(Samples should be made available to learn and practice in the class room session)
1. Resume / Report Preparation / Letter Writing
Structuring the resume / report Letter writing / E-mail communication
Samples
2. Presentation Skills
Elements of an effective presentation Structure of a presentation
Presentation tools Voice Modulation Audience analysis Body
Language Video Samples
3. Soft Skill
Time Management Articulateness Assertiveness Psychometrics
Innovation and Creativity Stress Management & Poise Video Samples
4. Group Discussion
Why is GD part of selection process? Structure of a GD Moderator-led
and other GDs Strategies in GD Team work Body Language Mock
GD Video Samples
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5. Interview Skills
Kinds of Interviews Required Key Skills Corporate culture Mock
Interviews Video Samples
Part II
Class Room Sessions (Practice Sessions)
60%
Recommended Textbooks/Reading/Material
1. Meenakshi Raman and Sangeetha Sharma, Technical Communication
Principles and Practice, Oxford University Press, New Delhi (2004)
2. Barker. A - Improve your communication skills Kogan Page India Pvt Ltd, New
Delhi (2006)
3. Adrian Doff and Christopher Jones Language in Use (Upper-Intermediate),
Cambridge University Press, First South Asian Edition (2004)
4. John Seely, The Oxford Guide to writing and speaking, Oxford University Press,
New Delhi (2004)
5. Orey, Maureen and Prisk, Jenni. Communication Skills Training. ASTD Press.
Current edition.
6. Instructor designed handouts, Video clips, WORKPLACE COMMUNICATION
SKILLS, BUSN-0156
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
77/206
IT 2103
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
2nd year
45
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
02
Information Technology
IIA
01
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Understanding of fundamentals of programming and start programming in Visual Basic
Syllabus
1.
2 hrs
Visual development environment, Event driven programming, Variables and variable types.,
Input and Output , Sequence control structure, Selection control structure and Loop control
structure, Arrays., Modular programming.
2.
Visual Basic
13 hrs
P R Reed JR,
G Perry.
Tanenbaum, S Andrew
List of Particles
1. As done presently
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
2
79/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Second Year
75
Title
Electrical Machines A
Semester
Credit
Hours
01
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are able to understand the construction, behavior and the optimal operation of
DC machines, AC machines, Transformers and Rectifiers.
Syllabus
1. Direct-Current Machines
7 hrs
Essential components (of D.C. machines) & their functions, D.C. Armature
Windings. Open-circuit characteristic and load characteristics of D.C. generators,
Torque/Armature Current; Speed/Armature Current; Torque/Speed characteristics
of D.C. motors. Starting of D.C. motors. Speed control methods.
2. Alternating Current Machines
8 hrs
Construction, operation, characteristics, relative performance and methods of
starting three-phase squirrel cage and wound rotor and, single-phase induction
motors. Construction, operation, characteristics and methods of starting
synchronous motors and synchronous induction motors. Speed, torque and power,
and the shape of the torque speed characteristic for a three-phase induction motor.
3. Transformers,
7 hrs
Construction, operation, BS terminal markings and connection and phasor
diagrams for star and delta methods of connection. Losses, efficiency, power
factors and load factor of transformers. Measuring techniques of losses and no
load & load tests. Voltage-ratio; current-ratio. Equivalent-circuit. Parallel
operation of transformers.
1
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t
4. Rectifiers
8 hrs
Understanding of methods of connection, the performance, the causes of ripple
and filters for smoothing in three-phase rectifiers
List of Particles
1. Motor Controls
2. Phase controlled rectifiers
3. Inverter
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
2
81/206
t
Module Number
EE2105
Year
Number of Hours
Second Year
90
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
03
Electrical Installation
Practice
01
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are able to understand the essentials of electrical wiring and installation and
expected to gain the knowledge of problem solving in electrical installations
Syllabus
1. IEE regulations and safety of Electrical Installations
2 h rs
IEE wiring regulations, safety and Electrical shock, earthing, distribution
systems,
2. Symbols
2 hrs
Cables, number of conductors and cable crossovers, Voltage sources, types of
current, Lamps, domestic equipment, Fuses, switches, Two way switch, Sockets
and socket outlets, Other equipment, Telecommunications equipment
1
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t
6.
Selection of Cables
3 hrs
Different type of cables, price differences and other advantages/disadvantages,
Short circuit rating of a cable Cables & Tables, Selection of cables for different
types of applications, Methods of laying, bending, jointing, glanding, termination
and earthing of cables
8. Electrical Installation
2 hrs
Main feeding system (bus bar risers or cables) for commercial buildings & highrisers. Bus bar risers: advantages, different ratings, installation, tapings and other
connection accessories (elbows, flanges, caps etc.), difficulties encountered in
installation (e.g. insufficient space for tap off units, piece to piece connection
problems) Cable risers: Installation (cable pulling, cable safety), tappings.
Factory installations, electrical installation for motor control centers, DOL,
delta/star, soft starter wiring
2
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t
3
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t
List of Particles
1. Lamp Control using a single switch
Lamp control using 2 lamps & 2 switches
Lamp control 2 lamps, 2 switches & ceiling rose
Two way switch system
2.
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
85/206
t
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
Second Year
75
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are able to gain the knowledge of basic electronic circuits, their construction &
operational characteristics and behavior of power supplies.
Syllabus
1. Transistors
3 hrs
Fundamentals of transistor characteristics. Analysis of the action of a field effect
transistor (FET). Analysis of the circuit applications of FETs.
2. Amplifiers
3 hrs
Analysis of the performance of voltage amplifiers. Function of power amplifiers.
1
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5. Feedback
2 hrs
Analyses the general principles of feedback. Gain; gain stability, bandwidth,
distortion and noise, input and output impedances. In terms of negative
feedback.
Block diagrams of voltage-series, voltage-shunt, current-series, and currentshunt. Analysis of problems concerning stability in feedback amplifiers and
overcoming them it. Understands and analyses problems concerning stability in
feedback amplifiers
6. Sinusoidal oscillators
3 hrs
Characteristics of sinusoidal oscillators, Wien Bridge oscillator, and phase shift
oscillator, Hartley and Colpitt's transistor oscillator. The operational ccts and
their maintenance aspects.
7. Operational amplifiers
3 hrs
Characteristics of an ideal operational amplifier, configurations of inverting
amplifier, non-inverting amplifier, differential amplifier. Circuits for summer,
8. Electronic noise
3 hrs
The basic concepts of electrical noise and its relation to signal strength.
Electronic noise and its different forms, power density spectrum, thermal noise
voltage in a resistor and in a diode, noise equivalent circuit of an amplifier,
noise figures, noise temperature, Derivation of expressions for noise figure of a
resistor and multi-stage amplifier, noise properties of bipolar and field effect
transistors.
Measurement of noise, white noise, pink noise, the p.d.s. of white and pink
noise, noise characteristics of active and passive networks, a noise generator
2
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2 hrs
Recommended Texts:
1. Electronic Engineering
2. Electronic Principles
3. Electronic Circuits
4. Principles of Electronics
5. Pulse & Digital circuits
List of Particles
1. Transistor at low frequency
2. Transistor at high frequency
3. Active filter analysis
4. Non-liner application of OP-AMP
3
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
89/206
EE 2109
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Second Year
90
Title
Computer Hardware
Semester
Credit
Hours
01
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
On the completion of this module the student will be able to acquire further
knowledge of Computer Hardware Components and its behaviors form a basis for
advanced studies in Electrical Engineering to be undertaken in the future
Syllabus
1. Introduction to Computers
2 hrs
3. Computer Memory
5 hrs
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5 hrs
4 hrs
4 hrs
MP3 Player, Digital Camera, Digital Camcorder, Digital Media Player, Cell
Phone, Personal Digital Assistant, Blackberry
3 hrs
Characteristic cable values:, Capacitance per unit length C', Inductance per unit
length L', Resistance per unit length R' , Leakage per unit length G',
Characteristic impedance Z, Attenuation per unit length , General Design
principles, Connection systems, Connection technique, Pin and socket
connections,
4 hrs
Characteristic values at 20 C, Colour coding, Usual ribbon cables with crosssections of 0.09 mm and 0.14 mm, Application examples:, Illustration of various
connections, Dual-in-line connector, Preparation of a ribbon cable
2
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
92/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
Second Year
105
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
03
Electrical Power
Generation
01
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to get the knowledge of Electrical Power Generation with
conventional methods, Renewable energy, Power station & Switch Yard equipments, and
Auxiliary systems in power houses, Boilers, Power Station Economics and how to design
a small micro hydro station.
Syllabus
3 hrs
1. Power Stations
Essential elements of a Power Station, Block diagram for a typical power station,
function of each element. Current global trends for power generation.
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t
6 hrs
5. Renewable Energy
Why adapting to renewable energy, concept of green energy, clean energy. Global
trends for harnessing green energy. Tariffs for green energy and promotions.
Techniques and technologies used in harnessing solar power, Wind power, Tidal
Power, Garbage Power, Hydro Cells etc.
6. Turbines
4 hrs
Selection factors of Hydro turbine, Francis, Kaplan, Pelton wheel etc. turbine
efficiency and the applications. Gas and Steam turbines. Applications and
operating efficiencies. Turbines Vs Prime movers. Cost of electrical energy
produced by each system.
7. Synchronous Generator
5 hrs
Construction of synchronous generators including salient pole and cylindrical rotor
machines. Method of excitation, equivalent circuit to investigate the performance,
condition required for synchronizing two synchronous generators. Effect of
change in excitation of synchronous generators in parallel. Effect of loading on the
synch generators connected parallel.
10. Boilers
Boilers and its principal operations, Boiler operators, boiler certificates.
3 hrs
6 hrs
11. Power Station Economics
Advantages and disadvantages, comparison of power plants. Economic load
curves, diversity factor, tariff systems, cost of power generation Station
2
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t
auxiliaries, cost of starting, cost of running, capacity costs, spinning reserves and
cost of spinning reserves.
8 hrs
12. Design of a Micro Hydro Station.
Basic features governing, calculation of head, selection of pipes, selection of
turbine, governor, power output, energy output vs. rainfall, operating tariffs and
economics.
Nasar
Dr. S L Uppal
Glover J and Sarma M
Sheperd J, Morton A and
Spence L
H Cotton, H Barber
List of Particles
1. Parallel operation of transformers
2. Starting methods of 3 phase Induction motors
3. . Study of DC machines
4. Test on a single phase transformer
5. Single phase induction motors
6. Test on a DC series motor
7. Speed control of DC machines
3
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t
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
96/206
t
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Second Year
105
Title
Telecom Networks
Semester
Credit
Hours
01
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to get the knowledge of telecom networks, benefits of networks,
evaluation & management of networks and networking software.
Syllabus
1.
4 hrs
PSTN: historical aspects (eg deregulation, service providers); the analogue local loop;
digital exchanges (local and trunk eg class 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5); hardware and software systems
(eg digital switching subsystems (DSS), management statistics subsystem (MSS), man
machine interface subsystem (MMIS), digital subscriber switching subsystem (DSSS),
maintenance control subsystem (MCS) processor utility subsystem (PUS), test network
subsystem (TNS) call processing subsystem (CPS), message transmission subsystem (MTS),
network synchronization subsystem (NSS), automatic announcement subsystem (AAS) etc);
digital trunk backbone (eg optical fiber, coaxial cables and microwave radio links)
ISDN: principles and architecture (eg B, D and H channels, system connections and
interfaces (R, S, T, U and V reference points), protocols); services (eg basic rate and primary
rate access, services and applications, circuit-switched and packet-switched data services);
hardware and software requirements; the European memorandum of understanding
Numbering schemes: national and international numbering schemes, ITU-T (CCITT)
Recommendations (eg E.164 and X.121); number portability issues
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2.
4 hrs
3.
5 hrs
Switching techniques: circuit, message and packet switching; switching in space and time;
Multiplexing techniques; stored program control (SPC)
Control of telephone calls: the four phases of call control (eg pre-selection, call completion,
conversation, release); network functions (eg scanning, signaling, routing, operation
charging); signaling systems (eg user signals, line signals, routing signals); common
channel signaling
Signaling: signaling systems (eg user signals, line signals, routing signals); common
channel signaling
4.
4 hrs
Digital transmission: advantages and features of digital techniques (eg efficiency, cost
factors, noise performance, multiplexing etc); analogue to digital conversion process; digital
to analogue conversion process
Pulse code modulation (PCM): the four stages (eg sampling, pulse amplitude modulation,
quantization, encoding); minimum sampling frequency; aliasing; quantization error (noise);
dynamic range; companding; non-linear quantization for voice (A law and _ law);
demodulation; synchronization; digital to analogue conversion
CEPT 30 channel PCM system: multiplex arrangement; frame and multi-frame alignment;
Synchronization; common channel signaling information
5.
3 hrs
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6.
Benefit of networks
2 hrs
7.
Network software
3 hrs
User factors: design and definition of users and groups; the definition of directory structures
on the file server; file and directory attributes; trustee rights, IRM ( Inherited Rights
Management), and setting up security
Login scripts: definition of the user environment; menu systems Hardware and software
factors: printing set-up; understanding of printing options; installation and configuration of
applications on the network (including operating system constraints); file server installation
and utilities
8.
Network management
3 hrs
Parnell T
Sybex Inc
Tanenbaum A
3
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List of Particles
1. Analysis of four terminal networks
2. High pass RC filter/ Low pass RC filter / Compensation attenuator
3 Wave propagation and signal attenuation in transmission lines
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
100/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Second Year
105
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
01
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
The aim of this unit is to develop an understanding of the architecture, operation and major
design issues relating to Data and Computer communication. It also covers the networking
devices required for network operation and interconnection. Also focused on internetwork
Syllabus
1. Data Communications and Networking Overview
2 hrs
2. Protocol Architecture
3 hrs
3. Data Transmission
4 hrs
3 hrs
4 hrs
Digital Data, Digital Signals, Digital Data, Analog Signals, Analog Data,
Digital Signals, Analog Data, Analog Signals
4 hrs
8. Multiplexing
4 hrs
Frequency Division Multiplexing, Synchronous Time Division
Multiplexing, Statistical Time Division Multiplexing, Asymmetric
Digital Subscriber Line, xDSL
9. Spread Spectrum
3 hrs
The Concept of Spread Spectrum, Frequency-Hopping Spread Spectrum,
Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum, Code-Division Multiple Access
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Protocols,
Integrated
Services
3hrs
Architecture,
Recommended readings
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
List of Particles
1. Characteristic impedance
2. Attenuation Vs Frequency
3. Impedance in transmission line
3
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
104/206
105/206
Title
Advanced Engineering Mathematics
Technical Communication Skills
Information Technology II B
Electrical Machines B
Power Electronics
Electronic Circuits and Systems II B
Microelectronic Systems II
Option 2
Electrical Power Transmission
Telecommunication Access Technologies
Programming Principles
Code
MA 2204
EN 2204
IT 2203
EE 2204
EE 2206
EE 2207
EE 2208
EE 2211
EE 2212
EE 2213
Item
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
EE 2110
EE 2111
EE 2112
8
9
10
Semester II
Title
Engineering Mathematics with Matlab
Essentials of Communication Skills
Information Technology II A
Electrical Machines A
Electrical Installation Practice
Electronic Circuits and Systems II A
Computer Hardware
Option 1
Electrical Power Generation
Telecommunication Networks
Data & Computer Communication
Code
MA 2101
EN 2103
IT 2103
EE 2104
EE 2105
EE 2107
EE 2109
Item
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Second Year
Semester I
E
E
E
5
5
5
21
23
105 4
3
105 4
3
105 4
3
555 16
2 19
Total Hrs per Week
37
Credits per Semester
5
5
5
21
23
None
Weekly
GPA
Total Distribution GPA
Hours L T
P Credits Credits
30 2
2
45 1
2
2
45 1
2
2
90 2
1 3
3
75 2
3
3
90 2
1 3
3
75 2
3
3
105 4
3
105 4
3
105 4
3
555 16
2 19
Total Hrs per Week
37
Credits per Semester
Remarks
C,E,M
C,E,M
C,E,M
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
Remarks
C,E,M
C,E,M
C,E,M
E
E
E
E
None
Weekly
GPA
Total Distribution GPA
Hours L T
P Credits Credits
30 2
2
45 1
2
2
45 1
2
2
75 2
3
3
90 2
1 3
3
75 2
3
3
90 2
1 3
3
Second Year
Curriculum
129
132
136
Page
Number
105
109
112
115
118
122
125
93
97
100
Page
Number
71
74
78
80
82
86
90
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Second Year
30
Title
Semester
Credit Hours
Practical
Advanced Engineering
Mathematics
02
02
GPA
None GPA
Filed Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
At the end of the course the students would
Be capable of mathematically formulating certain practical problems in terms of
partial differential equations, solve them and physically interpret the results.
Have gained a well founded knowledge of Fourier series, their different possible
forms and the frequently needed practical harmonic analysis that an engineer may
have to make from discrete data.
Have obtained capacity to formulate and identify certain boundary value problems
encountered in engineering practices, decide on applicability of the Fourier series
method of solution, solve them and interpret the results.
Have grasped the concept of expression of a function, under certain conditions, as
a double integral leading to identification of transform pair, and specialization on
Fourier transform pair, their properties, the possible special cases with attention to
their applications.
Have learnt the basics of Z transform in its applicability to discretely varying
functions, gained the skill to formulate certain problems in terms of difference
equations and solve them using the Z transform technique bringing out the
elegance of the procedure involved.
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Syllabus
1. Special Functions
Frobenious method solution in series of ordinary differential equations, singular points.
Solution of Bessel and Legendre equations, Bessel functions, recurrence relations for Jn
(x) and generating function for Jn (x).
Legendre polynomial, Rodrigues formula, orthogonality properties, generating function
for Pn (x). Elliptic integrals and properties.
3. Fourier Series
Dirichlets conditions General Fourier series Odd and even functions Half range
sine series Half range cosine series Complex form of Fourier Series Parsevals
identify Harmonic Analysis.
4. Fourier Transform
Fourier integral theorem (without proof) Fourier transform pair Sine and
Cosine transforms Properties Transforms of simple functions Convolution theorem
Parsevals identity.
5. Laplace Transform
Laplace transforms of simple functions, first and second shifting theorems, multiplication
and t- division theorems; Laplace transforms of derivatives, integrals and periodic
functions.
Inverse of Laplace transform and convolution property. Use of Laplace transform in
evaluating complicated and improper integrals and solution of differential equations
related to engineering problems.
2
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Recommended Textbooks/Reading
1. Grewal, B.S., Higher Engineering Mathematics, Thirty Sixth Edition, Khanna
Publishers, Delhi, 2001.
2. Kandasamy, P., Thilagavathy, K., and Gunavathy, K., Engineering Mathematics
Volume III, S. Chand & Company ltd., New Delhi, 1996.
3. Wylie C. Ray and Barrett Louis, C., Advanced Engineering Mathematics, Sixth
Edition, McGraw-Hill, Inc., New York, 1995.
4. Andrews, L.A., and Shivamoggi B.K., Integral Transforms for Engineers and
Applied Mathematicians, Macmillen , New York ,1988.
5. Narayanan, S., Manicavachagom Pillay, T.K. and Ramaniah, G., Advanced
Mathematics for Engineering Students, Volumes II and III, S. Viswanathan (Printers
and Publishers) Pvt. Ltd. Chennai, 2002.
6. Churchill, R.V. and Brown, J.W., Fourier Series and Boundary Value Problems,
Fourth Edition, McGraw-Hill Book Co., Singapore, 1987.
3
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
109/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
Second Year
45
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
02
Technical Communication
Skills
02
02
GPA
None GPA
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
1
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Syllabus
Part I - Theory
1. Review of essentials of communication
2. Introduction to public speaking and communication anxiety, communication and the
self.
3. Communication with credibility and confidence.
4. Organizing and outlining for persuasive speaking.
5. Communication climate, introduction to managing conflicts.
6. Introduction to interpersonal communication, Impression management, perception.
Part II Practical/Laboratory
7. Employ the principles of invention by devising creative speech topics, exercise ethical
considerations in the development and presentation of ideas. Select verbal and
audio/visual supporting material according to the needs of the speech subject and
situation. Adapt ideas to listeners' attitudes, values and beliefs. Conduct library research,
personal interviews, and other information-gathering activities. Develop effective speech
introductions and conclusions. Listening, none verbal communication, relational stages;
intimacy and distance.
8. Delivering effective speeches; Language, perception, emotions, Present three speeches
including informative, epideictic (speech of tribute), and forensic (speech of argument).
9. Evaluate classroom speeches, their own presentations, and messages to which students
are exposed in everyday life. Attraction and self-disclosure, Gain control and command
over speech anxiety.
10. Listening and paraphrasing.
2
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Recommended Texts/Material
1.
2.
Adler, R., Proctor, R. and Towne, N. (2005), Looking Out/Looking In, 11th Ed.
Belmont, A: Wadsworth.
3.
Wiemann, M. (1996), Activities Manual for Looking Out/Looking In, 8th ed.
Ft. Worth, Texas: Harcourt Brace.
4.
Jaffe, C.I. (2004). Public Speaking: Concepts and Skills for a Diverse Society
4th edition. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
112/206
IT2203
Second Year
60
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
Further programming in Visual Basic and students are able to understand the database
management systems, 4GL & SQL programming and dynamic programming techniques.
Syllabus
1. Visual Basic 11 Contd..,
10 hrs
1 hr
2 hrs
Data management and data mining and the concept of a data warehouse, the role
of a database administrator, multi user relational database product including; data
management, application development techniques,
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1 hr
Database user interface including; menu design, use of color, use of graphics
5. Assess programming
1 hr
Form activations using 4GL code, embedded SQL, event procedures, static and
dynamic programming techniques.
List of Particles
1. VB exercises as done presently3.
2
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
115/206
Module Number
EE2204
Year
Number of Hours
Second Year
90
Title
Electrical Machines B
Semester
Credit
Hours
02
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are able to understand the construction, behavior and the optimal operation of
Induction machines, Industrial Drives and operational & maintenance aspects of
electrical machines. At the end students are expected to get the ideas of control systems
and their practical applications.
Syllabus
1. Fractional Horse-power Motor
4 hrs
Single-phase induction motors. Single phase repulsion, reluctance, hysterics,
universal motors.
8 hrs
Understanding of application and limitations of instruments in the testing of
electrical equipment. Dc potentiometer, commercial form of Dc Bridge, Megger
tester. Errors in measurements; limitations of the instrument, operator, circuit
disturbance
2. Measurements
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5 hrs
Understanding of the suitability of ac and dc motors for various industrial
applications; conveyors, pumps, fans and compressors. Effect of environmental,
economic, torque, speed, and power output in selection of drives.
4. Industrial drives
6 hrs
Understanding of basic operation and applications of control system and
elements. Open and closed loop control system, transfer function for a control
system, Improvement of output linearity and negative feedback, block diagram
of temperature control system, speed control system, regulator/system and
process control system.
5. Control systems
List of Particles
1. Single phase in duct ion motors
2. Test on a DC series motor
3. Speed control of DC machines
4. AC motor speed control
2
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
118/206
Module Number
EE 2206
Second Year
Year
75
Number of Hours
Hours Per Week:
Theory 04
Tutorial
Title
Power Electronics
Semester
Credit Hours
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to obtain the knowledge of understanding and usages of power
electronics, protection of usages and applications such as power supplies, Heating, HV DC links
and CFL etc.
Syllabus
1. Single phase power control
7 hrs
Major characteristics of operation of a half controlled bridge with resistive and inductive
load. Waveform characteristics, single phase control applications using phase
controlled triacs, triac controlled loads: Oven, Cookers, Series a.c. motor, Lamps,
Heaters
8 hrs
concepts of half and full-wave three phase controlled rectification with resistive
load, the points of natural commutation, the mean output voltages, peak off-state
thyristor (diode) voltage, r.m.s. current rating.
7 hrs
1
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8 hrs
Understanding of a.c./d.c. converters and their usage for controlling of the speed
and torque of d.c. motors. Two quadrant and four quadrant operation of a D.C.
motor drive. Block diagrams for incorporating feedback loop for automatic current
limitation.
5. AC Power controls
8 hrs
Automatic temperature control and regulation circuits using triacs and diacs,
Induction and industrial Heat control circuits, Light dimmer control and
emergency light system, AC motor speed control
8 hrs
7 hrs
Samir K Datta
R M Marston
R K Khadse
2
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List of Particles
1. SCR Characteristics
2. TRIAC Characteristics
3. AC Power Control Using SCR
4. AC Power Control Using TRIAC
5. DC Motor Control (Speed) using PWM technique
6. Single phase power control by half controlled bridge (Resistive, Inductive loads
7. Poly phase controlled Rectification 3-phase Half wave controlled rectifier
8. DC Motor speed control using SCR
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
121/206
EE 2207
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
Second Year
90
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are able to gain the further knowledge electronic circuits, their construction &
operational characteristics and Data conversion and Digital storages
Syllabus
1. Combinational Circuits & Sequential Circuits
Operation of combinational circuits used for coding and multiplexing.
4 hrs
2. Flip-Flops
The operation of the various types of flip-flop available together with their
applications.
4 hrs
3. Counters
4 hrs
Analysis and designs of simple binary counting circuits. Compares synchronous
and asynchronous counters
4 hrs
4. Registers
Usage of flip-flops and design & analysis of the operation and applications of
such devices, performance of TTL and CMOS
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6 hrs
6. Data Conversion
Principles and circuits used in data conversion; A/D &D/A. operation of; parallel
or flash, integration, single and dual slope, voltage-to-frequency, successive
approximation
Recommended Texts:
1. Electronic Engineering
2. Electronic Principles
3. Electronic Circuits
4. Principles of Electronics
5. Pulse & Digital circuits
List of Particles
1. Transistor amplifier Testing
2. RC & LC Oscillators
3. Feedback Systems
4. Filter Circuits
5. Frequency Modulations
2
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
124/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Second Year
75
Title
Microelectronic Systems II
Semester
Credit
Hours
02
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to gain further knowledge in Microprocessor Systems with further
programming. Also the knowledge of interfacing, microelectronic stores, memory handling.
Timers and interrupts.
Syllabus
1. Semiconductor Memories
3 hrs
3 hrs
4 hrs
Types of input output, I/O and memory data transfer, DMA, polling, external
interrupts, I/O processor
4. Memory Organization
4 hrs
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5. Interfacing
6 hrs
6. Input/output timing
4 hrs
Principles and reasons for input/output timing, speeds of the peripheral devices,
speed of operation of a microcomputer and its peripherals,
Principals and communication techniques between peripherals and
microcomputer; software polling, interrupts initiated by peripherals
7. Decoding
5 hrs
Principles and need of decoding, decoding of three lines to one of eight store
locations.
8. Sub-routines
4 hrs
principles & basic mechanisms, important features; shorten the object code,
improvement of the program structure, readability, running time and
alternations, examples to illustrate ;timing delay, defined mathematical
function and performing of an input or output routine.
9. Stack
4 hrs
10. Interrupts
4 hrs
4 hrs
4 hrs
2
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13. TIMERS
4 hrs
4 hrs
Writing prgs include; the use of I/O routines, subroutines, an, interrupt service
routine
M. Morris Mano
Ramesh S. Goanker
Andrew S. Tanenbaum
Winn L. Rosch
Aho/Hopcroft/Ullman
Andrew S. Tanenbaum
John J. Donovan
R.G. Anderson
James Martin
List of Particles
1. Identification of basic components of EMMA-II micro computer and learn to operate the system
2.
3.
3
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
128/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
Second Year
105
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
03
Electrical Power
Transmission
02
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to obtain the knowledge about electrical power transmission
systems, basics of transmission line design, and economic operations of Power systems.
Syllabus
8 hrs
1. Power Systems
The arrangement of power systems; sketch. The voltage levels for generation,
transmission and distribution and explain the reasons for adopting these voltage
levels. A.C and D.C transmission.
2. Interconnected systems,
8 hrs
The need and disadvantages of interconnected systems. Advantages of such
systems, operational policies and limiting factors for interconnections.
3.
10 hrs
System earthing and sub-stations
The need and methods of system earthing. Grounding methods of power system
Earthing, methods for generator neutral and transformer neutral. Earthing
equipments; earthing resistors, earthing transformers and Peterson coil.
1
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4. Transmission lines
10 hrs
A.C and D.C transmission lines, the function, construction and materials of
transmission towers, lines,
insulator strings, Dampers and insulators,
Transmission towers, sag and span, . Function and practical installation of earth
conductor
Resistance, Inductance and Capacitance of transmission lines, normal T and
representations, concept of long lines. Economic of transmission, voltage
regulation, corona
10 hrs
5. Switch Gears
Metal clad, open indoor and open outdoor types. Low oil, bulk oil, air blast and
SF6 circuit breakers, Arc control. Switch gear rating.
6. Grid Substation
9 hrs
Types of substation, Factors that influence the layout and choice of site of gird
substation, the layout of typical transmission/ distribution substations. Grid
substations equipments, location, mounting and maintenance of transformers.
7. Fundamentals of Overhead Transmission Line Designing
10 hrs
Mechanical and Electrical considerations, Conductor Selection, sag, and
vibration. Structure placement, spacing, loading considerations, insulation
design, corona and fields
8. System Analysis
10 hrs
The principles that control power flow in an inter-connected system during
steady-steady-state, fault & transient conditions and how high voltage
transients may be produced and their damaging effects be minimized.
9. Systems Operation
12 hrs
How voltage, frequency, active and reactive power may be controlled, and
economical operation of a power system. Simple calculations for mixed systems
(hydro, coal, oil, nuclear, pumped storage) to determine the most economic
operational scheme.
V K Mehta
H Cotton, H Barber
Nasar
Weedy Cary
Stephenson,
List of Particles
2
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1. Transmission Line 1
2. Peterson Coil
3. Measurement of earth Resistance
4. Synchronization Procedure
5. Differential relay
6. A study of over current relay
7. Study of Corona
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
131/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
Second Year
105
Telecommunication
Access Technologies
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
03
02
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to understand the Radio Wave Propagation & techniques, Mobile
Radio & Cordless communication, Fiber Optics and Satellite communication techniques
Syllabus
1. Radio Wave Propagation VHF And Above
6 hrs
8 hrs
Digital modulation: waveforms and spectra; Frequency Shift Keying (FSK); Binary
Phase Shift Keying (BPSK) (including Gaussian Minimum Shift Keying (GMSK));
Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (QPSK) (including _/4QPSK)
Multiple access schemes: Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA); Time Division
Multiple Access (TDMA); Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA)
1
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7 hrs
7 hrs
Operation of optical fibres: the physics of light (eg light as a wave, ray and a particle
(photon), the electromagnetic spectrum, frequency and wavelength of light visible and
infra-red); behaviors of light (eg reflection, refraction, dispersion, diffraction, absorption
and scattering); refractive index (eg refractive indices of typical materials used for
opticalfibres, calculations involving Snells law; total internal reflection, critical angle,
acceptance angle, numerical aperture, dispersion and attenuation); fibre termination
techniques (eg splicing and connectors); polishing; typical losses
Advantages of optical fibres: bandwidth; security; lack of interference; cost
5.
6 hrs
Photo detectors: photo detector requirements (eg sensitivity, response times, linearity,
noise); principles of photo detection (eg electron-hole generation, energy gap, spectral
response); operation and characteristics of photo diodes (eg PN junction, PIN, APD,
PINFET); design and construction of photo diodes (eg PN junction, PIN, APD,
PINFET); calculations to determine values for the responsivity of photo detectors
Optical receivers: detector circuits; receivers (eg trans-impedance, integrating, APD,
high impedance, detectability, noise, and bandwidth)
2
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8 hrs
6 hrs
9. More on Wireless
4 hrs
3
134/206
Hayes J
Hecht J
Dunlop, Girma and Irvine
Calcutt D and Tetley L
Evans B
Gerakoulis D and Geraniotis
Maral G
Maral G and Bousquet M
Pratt T
List of Particles
1. Optoelectronics - dimmer
2. optical waveguides - Introduction
3. Combinational Logic Circuits
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
135/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
Second Year
105
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
03
Programming
Principles
02
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Aim of this module is to give students knowledge of programming principles
including SQ programming, Modularization, program documentation and Test
schedules prior to enter into Java and C++ programming
Syllabus
1.
Structured Programming
10 hrs
Storage: the concepts of data storage within a computer program, using variables,
constants and literals; for a third generation language, the pre-defined data types,
integers, floating point, character, Boolean (logical), strings, 1D and 2D arrays of
simple types, and simple, files, consequences of using these types, and the available
operators within the supplied, language,
Control structures: identify and select appropriate iterative and selection structures
when writing simple programs
Programming language syntax: the facilities and rules of the language (operators,
I/0 commands etc)
Program design: employment of an algorithmic approach for the development of a
solution to a problem (structure charts, pseudo code etc); producing tested
programs to meet given specifications,
Programming standards and practice: use of comments; code layout eg consistent
indentation and descriptive identifiers
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2.
Modularization
15 hrs
3. Documentation
15 hrs
Presentation of documentation: software applications (word processor or graphics);
analysis, design and implementation documentation; professional standards; needs
of industry
User documentation: user documentation for specified programming applications;
purpose and operation of the program developed
Program documentation: documentation that covers technical aspects of a given
programming application including algorithms implemented, data table, syntax
(selection, iteration) structures used, user interface methods adapted
4.
Test schedules
Error types: semantic, syntax and run-time
20 hrs
Test documentation: test plan and related evidence of testing (may include reading
sample inputs from a file and/or writing test results to a file)
Test data and schedules: black box, white box and dry testing
Error detection techniques: compiler and linker error messages, debugging tools
and structured walk-through
Rec Readings
1. C++ Programming for the Absolute Beginner
Henkmans D
2. Sams Teach Yourself Beginning Programming in 24 Hours
Perry G
3. Sams Teach Yourself Shell Programming in 24 Hours
Veeraraghavan S
2
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
138/206
139/206
Title
Industrial Engineering Management
Electrical Energy Management
Robotics and Automation
Project 2
Option 3
Electrical Machines-Control & Protection
Broadcast Technologies
Network Management
Option 4
Construction & Protection of Electrical Systems
Broadband Communication
Internet Technologies
Code
ME 3227
EE 3204
EE 3206
EE 3207
EE 3211
EE 3212
EE 3213
EE 3214
EE 3215
EE 3216
5
6
7
8
9
10
EE 3112
EE 3113
EE 3114
8
9
10
Item
1
2
3
4
EE 3109
EE 3110
EE 3111
5
6
7
Semester II
Title
Essentials of Professional Communication Skills
Information Technology III
Microelectronic Systems III
Project 1
Option 1
Electrical Power Distribution
Electronic Circuits and Systems III
Programming in Java & C#
Option 2
Electrical Power Utilization
Industrial Electronics
Computer Networking
Code
EN 3105
IT 3104
EE 3105
EE 3107
Item
1
2
3
4
Third Year
Semester I
E
E
E
Total
E
E
E
120
120
120
4
4
4
4
4
4
5
5
5
22
5
5
5
22
4
4
4
3
3
3
105 4
3
105 4
3
105 4
3
540 20
0 15
Total Hrs per Week
35
Credits per Semester
105
105
105
5
5
5
31
5
5
5
31
None
Weekly
GPA
Total Distribution GPA
Credits
Hours L T
Credits
P
60 4
4
60 4
4
105 4
3
5
105
6
8
120 4
4
120 4
4
120 4
4
510 14
0 22
Total Hrs per Week
36
Credits per Semester
Remarks
C,E,M
C,E,M
E,M
E
E
E
E
Total
E
E
E
Remarks
C,E,M
C,E,M
E
E
None
Weekly
Total Distribution GPA
GPA
Hours L T
P Credits Credits
45 2
4
3
75 2
3
3
75 2
3
3
75
4
6
Third Year
Curriculum
188
196
203
185
191
199
Page
Remarks
Number
172
177
181
152
158
167
149
155
162
Page
Remarks
Number
140
143
146
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
Third Year
45
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
02
Essentials of Professional
Communication Skills
01
02
GPA
None GPA
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
Students will be able to demonstrate following skills in a professional environment and
become effective communicators.
Syllabus
1. Basic Concepts and Communication Systems, Nature of Communication definitions
and variables
2. Interviewing Principles, Employment Interviewing, Language and listening,
Negotiating and Problem Solving
3. Group Communication, Communication Competence in Groups/Teams, Group
Development, Developing Group Climate, Roles and Leadership in Groups/Teams,
1
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Recommended Textbooks/Reading
1. Adler, R. and Elmhorst, J. (2004), Communicating at Work: Principles and
Practices for Business and the Professions, eight edition, New York: McGraw-Hill.
2. Griffin, E. (2003). A first look at communication theory (5th Ed.). Boston:
McGraw-Hill.
3. Reinard, J. C. (2001). Introduction to communication research (3rd Ed.). Boston:
McGraw-Hill.
4. Rothwell, J.D. (2004) In Mixed Company: Communicating in Small Groups and
Teams, fifth edition, Belmont, Ca: Thomson/Wadsworth.
2
141/206
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
142/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
75
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
01
03
Practical
03
GPA
None GPA
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
Aim of this module is to give common ideas of PC Networks and Internet, Database
systems, Implementation of database Systems and World Wide Web based information
systems
Syllabus
1. Introduction to PC Networks and Internet
5 hrs
Introduction to a PC Network, Types of networks, Network based applications and
advantages of networks, Hardware requirements and software requirements. Internet its
resources.
2. Database systems
10 hrs
8 hrs
Compare and evaluate different approaches, utilize relational modeling and data
analysis, functional dependency theory and normalization, Boyce Codd Normal
Form rule to a relational data set, mapping an ER model to form a relational data
set (Schema), coding a schema in SQL, indexes, keys and clusters, entity and referential
integrity
1
143/206
Data centered approach with the file based approach, data integrity and quality control,
transaction processing, use a data dictionary, data independence and physical views of
data, distributed information systems and database architectures, understand relational
calculus and algebra, understand theoretical foundations of SQL, the operators available
in single and multiple (Join) table queries use embedded SQL
4.
Recommended Textbooks/Reading
1.
2.
3.
4.
Date Addison-Wesley
Howe Oxford University Press
D A Wa ll
Harriet.Hraper
2
144/206
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
145/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
75
Title
Microelectronic
Systems III
Semester
Credit
Hours
01
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to gain further knowledge in Microprocessor Systems with further
programming. Operating systems, Fault location, File System Management, Practical aspects
of programmable memory and Programmable Devices
Syllabus
1. General System Architecture
5 hrs
2. Pipelining
7 hrs
3. Microprocessor systems
6 hrs
Characteristics of current microprocessor systems and manufacturer's data., word
length, speed of operation of a typical instruction, size and facility of instruction
set (including available addressing modes), width of address bus and data bus,
power requirements, I/O facilities
1
146/206
System devices; CPU, Memory, I/O devices, clock, bus buffer, bus
demultiplexers, decoders. Systems of small dedicated, semi dedicated and general
purpose. Development with reference, appropriate device technology, average
chip count, total cost, predicted production volume, bench marking.
4. Fault location
8 hrs
5. System development
7 hrs
6. Operating Systems
6 hrs
4 hrs
4 hrs
7 hrs
6 hrs
Fixed function devices, Logic families, Characteristics and use of PLCs, PLDs
and PLAs Logic cell array, PLA, Field programmable Gate array
2
147/206
List of Particles
1. Strain measurement using Micro computer
2. Fault Diagnosis in Microprocessor Based systems
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
148/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
120
Title
Electrical Power
Distribution
Semester
Credit
Hours
01
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to get the knowledge of Underground and overhead distribution
systems, Distribution System Economics, Distribution system Planning and Design,
Energy Metering Power Quality etc. at the end of this subject.
Syllabus
1.
5 hrs
Low Voltage Distribution systems
Main characteristics of distribution systems; system integrity; radial feeders;
parallel feeders; open and closed rings; interconnector, Constructional features,
operational features, Types of distribution systems.
2.
5 hrs
Underground and overhead distribution
Advantages, disadvantages, reasons for two different systems, Types of
materials used for each system. Operating parameters: load distribution; radial,
ring, parallel feeders, voltage and current profiles, permissible, voltage drop, power
losses, power efficiency
3.
Domestic Installations
4 hrs
The service connection and wiring systems of Domestic systems, installation
of consumers service connection, means of control, distribution, Over current
protection , Over voltage protection , earth leakage protection, control of
lighting circuits, lightning protection. safety precautions and the need for
wiring regulations.
1
149/206
t
4.
Industrial installations
8 hrs
The service connection ,wiring systems and the earthing system, factory
earthing, equipment earthing, human safety measures, installation
requirements of service connection, means of control, Over current
protection , Over voltage protection , loss of phases and controls, lightning
protection., safety precautions and the need for wiring regulations
5.
6.
7.
5 hrs
Equipments in Distribution systems
Selection of transformers and earthing of distribution transformers,
Capacitors and capacitor application in system and industry, Isolators, Air
Break Switches, Load Break Switches, Auto reclosers, Fault locators
8.
9.
6 hrs
Energy Metering
Utility tariffs, Methods of metering and their advantages & disadvantages, net
energy metering.
8 hrs
10. Power Quality
Introduction to power quality, power quality parameters, availability and
measurement of transients and harmonics.
Sources of harmonics: transformer magnetizing current; direct current power supply
units; general non-linear loads
Effects of harmonic: increased root-mean-square currents; zero sequence; triple-n
neutral currents in star systems; triple-n currents trapped in delta transformers;
overheating in neutral; overheating in motors and transformers; failure of power
factor correction capacitors; harmonic resonance; skin effect losses
Mitigation of harmonics: methods of mitigation such as oversized neutral, de-rating,
circuit separation, K factor and factor K, isolation transformers, passive and active
filters, total harmonic distortion, standards G5/4
2
150/206
t
Rec. Readings
1.
2.
3.
4.
Bosela T
Dugan R
Hughes A
Wildi T
List of Particles
1. Distribution System
2. Load and Diversity Factor
3. A.C. energy meter
4. Power and power factor in an AC single phase circuit
5. Utilization of electrical energy / power factor correction
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
151/206
t
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
120
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
01
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are able to gain the further knowledge electronic circuits, their construction &
operational characteristics mainly of analogue electronics
Syllabus
1. D.C. Amplifiers
7 hrs
Stability of the D.C. amplifiers and the problems encountered the operation of the
long-tail pair, Evaluates the chopper amplifier.
2. Operational Amplifiers
8 hrs
Imperfections of operational amplifiers, analysis of improved forms of operational
amplifiers, stability and application of operational amplifiers.
3. A.C. Amplifiers
7 hrs
Analysis of wideband amplifiers, stability of wideband amplifiers and analysis of
tuned amplifiers.
1
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4. Active Filters
8 hrs
Understanding of active filters using operational amplifiers, guidelines for the
design of active filters
5. Noise
8 hrs
Understanding of the effects of noise in electronic systems. Noise in particular
circuits, sources of noise in operational amplifiers and the techniques of its
minimization.
6. Power Supplies
7 hrs
Understanding of the action of a linear series regulator. Switched mode power
supplies, output voltage, speed of response and stability.
7 hrs
8. Systems
Application of analogue integrated circuits in systems, operation of phase-locked
loops, capture range, lock range for PLL's to the loop parameters, reading of data
sheets for specialized I,C.'s
List of Particles
1. Cathode ray Oscilloscope
2. Bipolar junction transistors
3. Field effect transistors
4. Op-Amp Application in industrial measurements
5. Semiconductor diode and its application
6. Smoothing and regulating circuits
7. Trouble shooting of a single transistor circuit
2
153/206
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
154/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
120
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
01
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Aim of this module is to give students knowledge of Java and C++ programming in
deeper manner
Syllabus
1
3 hrs
First steps in JAVA
What is JavaScript; JavaScript is not Java, Running JavaScript, Embedding
JavaScript into a HTML-page, Non-JavaScript browsers, Events, Functions
The HTML-document
2 hrs
JavaScript hierarchy, the location-object, Frames - PDF-version, Creating
frames and JavaScript, Navigation bars,
1
155/206
Forms - PDF-version
2 hrs
Validating form input, checking for certain characters, submitting form input
How to set the focus to a certain element
Layers I - PDF-version
2 hrs
What are layers? , Creating layers, Layers and JavaScript, Moving layers
Layers II - PDF-version
Clipping, Nested layers, Effects with transparent layers
2 hrs
2 hrs
12 C# Variables
2 hrs
String Variables in C#, Assigning Text to a String Variable, C# Comments,
Numbers Variables, Double and Float Variables, Double Variables, Addition
in C# , Adding up with float Variables, Subtraction, Mixing Subtraction and
Addition, Operator Precedence, Multiplication and Division, Getting
Numbers from Text Boxes , C# Calculator - Design , C# Calculator - The
Code, The Plus Button ,The Equals Button
4 hrs
2
156/206
14 C# Loops
4 hrs
C# and For Loops, Loop Start and End Values, A Times Table Program, Do
loops and While Loops, Checking for Blank Text Boxes in C#
3 hrs
16 C# Debugging Applications
Errors at Design Time, Run Time Errors, Logic Errors, Breakpoints, the
Locals Window, Try...Catch Statements in C#
2 hrs
17 C# Methods
Understanding C# Methods, Passing values to your C# Methods, Getting
values back from C# Methods
18 C# Understanding Arrays
2 hrs
Arrays in C# , Arrays and Loops, Arrays at Run Time, Multi Dimensional
Arrays in C#, Arrays and Text, C# Collections - Array Lists, C# Collections
Hash Tables
19 C# String Manipulation
1 hr
C# String Variables, Trim Unwanted Characters, the Contains Method, the
Index of Method, the Insert Method, Pad Left and Pad Right, Remove and
Replace in C#, C# Substring, Split and Join in C#
20 C# Events
3 hrs
The Click Event, the Mouse down Event, Key Down, The Leave Event, C#
List Box and Combo Box Events, C# Custom Web Browser, The Tree View
Control, Adding Nodes to a Tree View, Add a Web Browser to a C#
Windows Form
2 hrs
21 C# Classes and Objects
Classes and Objects in C# .NET, A First Class, Create Objects from C#
Classes, Passing values to Classes, Adding Properties to C# Classes, Using
Class Properties, Class Constructors in C# Inheritance in C# , C# Method
Overloading, C# Static Methods
3
157/206
22 C# Manipulating Files
1 hr
How to open a Text File, Read a file line by line in C# .NET, Write to a Text
File, How to Copy, Move and Delete a File
23 C# Databases
3 hrs
SQL Server Express and C# .NET, Create a SQL Server Express Database,
Connect to a SQL Server Database, Connect to an Access Database, Datasets
and Data Adapters in C#, Display Data from a Dataset, Database Navigation
Buttons, Move Backwards through the Database, Move to the First and Last
Record, Add a New Record to a Database, Update and Delete Records,
Finding Records in a Database
24 C# Multiple Forms
2 hrs
Creating Multiple Forms, Modal Forms in C#, Getting at the values on other
Forms
1 hr
26 C# Graphics
Graphics in Visual C#, Drawing Rectangles in C#, Brushes, Drawing
Polygons in C#, Drawing Text
3 hrs
4
158/206
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
5
159/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
120
Title
Electrical Power
Utilization
Semester
Credit
Hours
01
Practical
04
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students will be able to understand the effective way utilization of Electrical Power,
selection of correct drives, design of illumination requirements, and power system
economics.
Syllabus
1. Industrial Distribution Systems
10 hrs
Factors to be considered when selecting an industrial distribution system-cost,
load centers, supply security, voltage regulation, future expansions.
Understanding the principles involved in the application of protective devices and
switchgear. The usage and the selection of a transformer, t/f cost, and replacement
cost. Behavior as a fault current limiter and a voltage regulator.
2. Economics
12 hrs
Types of loads; salient features of power requirements Electricity tariffs
applicable to industrial Sector and the terms associated with it; LOAD FACTOR,
KWH, KVA, KVAR, MAXIMUM DEMAND.
The benefits of maintaining a high power factor and the methods available for
improving the power factor of an industrial load
1
160/206
3. Electric Drives
12 hrs
Starting methods of electric motors. The speed control of electric motors. The
principles involved in selecting a motor to drive a load of known torque (M)
Speed (N) characteristic.
4. Electro-Heat
8 hrs
Aims of space heating, space heating methods, specifically those applicable to
industrial/commercial users. Heating systems including sensing devices,
temperature, and humidity controls. Heat requirements of a building
5. Illumination
10 hrs
The basic units and calculation methods adopted in designing lighting sources.
Using of the lumen method to calculate uniform lathing schemes. Use of a light
meter for lighting designing.
Dr. S L Uppal
N N Hancock, Allahabad: Wheeler
P P Ramlley & M P Mittal
Glover J and Sarma M
List of Particles
1. Different types of lights
2. Torque slip characteristics of a 3-phase squirrel case induction motor
2
161/206
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
162/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
120
Title
Industrial Electronics
Semester
Credit
Hours
01
Practical
04
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are able to gain knowledge of programmable logic controller concepts and their
applications in engineering. It focuses on the design characteristics and internal architecture of
programmable logic control systems, the signals which are used and the programming techniques,
giving students the opportunity to produce and demonstrate a programme for a programmable
logic device. Also investigates a range of Electronic Computer-Aided Design (ECAD) packages
and their implications on the design process.
Syllabus
1. Design and operational characteristics of PLCs
8 hrs
8 hrs
Forms of signal: analogue (0-10 v dc, 4-20 mA), digital, discrete. Resolution and
relationships: 9-bit, 10-bit, 12-bit. Protocols: RS232, IEE488, RS422, 20 mA.
Networking methods and standards: master to slave, peer to peer, ISO, IEE, and MAP
1
163/206
10 hrs
Methods of programming: ladder and logic diagrams, statement lists, Boolean algebra,
function diagrams, BASIC, C and Assembler, Graphical Programming language.
Advanced function: less than, greater than, binary to BCD, calculations, PID control
Producing and storing text: contact labels, rung labels, programming lists, crossreferencing. Testing and debugging: forcing inputs, forcing outputs, changing data,
comparing files (tapes, EPROM, disc), and displayed error analysis. Associated
elements: contacts, coils, timers, counters, override facilities, flip-flops, shift registers,
sequences
8 hrs
4. Numerical Controls
6 hrs
5. Transducers
14 hrs
6. ECAD systems
6 hrs
7. Software packages
Software: initialization of project environments, library control, part and symbol creation,
schematic capture, fault-free simulation, stimuli design and selection, fault simulation
techniques, error analysis and rectification, design rules and checking, printing and
plotting, manufacture design files, VHDL programming
2
164/206
Evaluate: user instruction summaries and guidelines, software bugs and fixes and
hardware incompatibility, comparison of simulation results with predictions and
manually calculated results
Rec. Readings
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
List of Particles
1. Power Electronic devices
2. Regulator circuits
3. Measurement of Polyphase power and familiarization of power analyzer instrument.
4. Power supplies
3
165/206
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
166/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
120
Title
Computer Networking
Semester
Credit
Hours
01
Practical
04
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
On the completion of this module the student will be able to acquire further
knowledge of Computer Networking, Hardware Components basics Transmission
control Protocol and maintaining a connection, Internet broadcasting, Network
standardization
Syllabus
1. Introduction
4 hrs
Why computer networks, Social Issues, Why people are interested in computer networks,
including brief history of networking. Basics to network technologies, TCP/IP, Protocol,
server/client, sockets, hardware
2 hrs
3. Type of Networks
4 hrs
Local Area Networks (LAN), Metropolitan Area Networks (MAN), Wide Area Networks
(WAN), Storage area network (SAN), Global Area Network, Virtual Private Networking
(VPN), Home Networks, Private Networks, Personal Area Network (PAN), Internet work ,
Intranet, Extranet, Internet
1
167/206
3 hrs
Network card, network adapter or NIC, Repeaters, Hubs, Bridges, Switches, Router, Access
Point
5. Networking terminology
4 hrs
What is data (Bits, bytes, costs)?, What is bandwidth?, What is latency, What is difference
LAN/Internet, Speed in LAN, Speed in internet, Ethernet (LN, WAN, PAN, WLAN),
Ethernet protocol, hub, switch
6. Networking software
4 hrs
7. Reference Models
3 hrs
8. Network Models
8 hrs
Internet, The Internet, The time before and brief history, TCP/IP introduction, Routers
connecting LAN, Introduction to standards, IP-Address, Subnet, host, DHCP, Packing and
sending data, IP-Datagram, routing standards, router protocol, IP Key hierarchy, IP becomes
standard, TCP/IP in detail, Name server, IP-addresses introduction, Governing Society
www.isoc.org, Institutions assigning IP-addresses and domain names, RIPE, AfriNIC,
APNIC, ARIN, LACNIC, Internet Service Providers, Internet connection, server farm, web
server, web space, Ethernet, Brief history of Ethernet, General description, Ethernet
repeaters and hubs, Bridging and switching, Variants of Ethernet, Wireless LAN, Brief
Introduction to WLAN, IEEE 802.11 Standard, Advantages disadvantages, Hotspot (Wi-Fi),
Security issues, Health issues, Hardware (router, gateway, antenna, wireless-cards)
9. Network programs
4 hrs
4 hrs
Establish connection, data transfer; terminate connections, Reliability & flow control,
User Datagram Protocol (UDP)
3 hrs
Broadcast (send to everyone), Address Resolution Protocol (ARP), Addressing, IP- Address,
Subnet Mask, Gateway, DNS Server
4 hrs
2
168/206
13. Sockets
2 hrs
14. Connections
3 hrs
5 hrs
3 hrs
Magnetic media, Twisted pair, Coaxial cable, Fibre optics, Wireless transmission,
Communication satellites, Phone systems, Mobile phone systems, Cable television
4 hrs
Hardware list, Connections, Security, firewall, Printer, Internet connection via WAN,
Testing
Bird J
Comer D and Droms R
Russell T
Stallings W
Tanenbaum A
Wetteroth D
List of Particles
1. Industrial Visits
3
169/206
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
170/206
171/206
Title
Industrial Engineering Management
Electrical Energy Management
Robotics and Automation
Project 2
Option 3
Electrical Machines-Control & Protection
Broadcast Technologies
Network Management
Option 4
Construction & Protection of Electrical Systems
Broadband Communication
Internet Technologies
Code
ME 3227
EE 3204
EE 3206
EE 3207
EE 3211
EE 3212
EE 3213
EE 3214
EE 3215
EE 3216
5
6
7
8
9
10
EE 3112
EE 3113
EE 3114
8
9
10
Item
1
2
3
4
EE 3109
EE 3110
EE 3111
5
6
7
Semester II
Title
Essentials of Professional Communication Skills
Information Technology III
Microelectronic Systems III
Project 1
Option 1
Electrical Power Distribution
Electronic Circuits and Systems III
Programming in Java & C#
Option 2
Electrical Power Utilization
Industrial Electronics
Computer Networking
Code
EN 3105
IT 3104
EE 3105
EE 3107
Item
1
2
3
4
Third Year
Semester I
E
E
E
Total
E
E
E
120
120
120
4
4
4
4
4
4
5
5
5
22
5
5
5
22
4
4
4
3
3
3
105 4
3
105 4
3
105 4
3
540 20
0 15
Total Hrs per Week
35
Credits per Semester
105
105
105
5
5
5
31
5
5
5
31
None
Weekly
GPA
Total Distribution GPA
Credits
Hours L T
Credits
P
60 4
4
60 4
4
105 4
3
5
105
6
8
120 4
4
120 4
4
120 4
4
510 14
0 22
Total Hrs per Week
36
Credits per Semester
Remarks
C,E,M
C,E,M
E,M
E
E
E
E
Total
E
E
E
Remarks
C,E,M
C,E,M
E
E
None
Weekly
Total Distribution GPA
GPA
Hours L T
P Credits Credits
45 2
4
3
75 2
3
3
75 2
3
3
75
4
6
Third Year
Curriculum
188
196
203
185
191
199
Page
Remarks
Number
172
177
181
152
158
167
149
155
162
Page
Remarks
Number
140
143
146
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
60
Title
Industrial Engineering
Management
Semester
Credit
Hours
02
04
Practical
GPA
None GPA
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes
Stochastic modeling relevant to problem solving in the area of industrial
engineering.
Facilities management, resource planning and optimizing
Human resource management
Project management
Financial management
Quality control
Marketing management, e- Business Design, entrepreneurship
Environment management
Syllabus
1. Operational Research
model and modeling process, introduction to operational research, principle of
optimization and the role of analytic solution for problem solving, linear programming:
problem formulation and solution algorithm, goal programming and integer programming:
formulation and its solution algorithms, stochastic analytic methods and network analysis
for solving problems in industrial engineering, reliability model, maintenance, inventory
and supply-chain.
1
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2. Industrial Statistics
Inferential and descriptive statistics, introduction to inferential statistics, sampling theory,
Central limit theorem, sampling distribution, estimation process, point and interval
estimation, basic of hypothesis test, process of hypothesis test including estimation of
mean, variance, proportion, and goodness of fit test, regression analysis and correlation,
variance analysis including block and observation analysis, one way classification,
fixed/random effects models, two ways classification and introduction of experimental
design, non-parametric statistics.
3. Industrial Psychology
definition of psychology, school of thought in psychology, research method and
measurement in psychology, work meaning for a human and evolution of working in an
industrial organization, individual differences.
4. Introduction to Economics
definition, terminology and the scope of science of economy, utility, supply and demand,
elasticity, production theory, cost of production, market structure, national income and
production, consumption, investment and saving, banking institution and money, fiscal
policy, international trade.
5. Engineering Economics
engineering economics, cash flow, concept of time value of money, present equivalent
value, annual value, internal rate of return, payback method, profitability index method,
sensitivity analysis, depreciation, inflation and deflation, replacement analysis, tax
analysis, public investment cost-benefit analysis.
6. Cost Analysis
accounting process, financial report, concept of cost, direct material cost, direct labour
cost, indirect factory cost, order costing, process costing, by product and joint product,
standard costing system and variance analysis, break event analysis.
2
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7. Financial Management
financial management overview, financial report analysis (statement of cash flow,
financial ratio), capital market, time value money, risk & return, portfolio, stock & bond
valuation, cost of capital, capital budgeting, operating leverage & financial leverage,
capital structure, working capital management.
8. Database System
basic of database, data base management system (DBMS), modeling method and design
process of database, data definition, data manipulation and implementation of database
system using SQL, issues related to utilization of database for improving business
performance.
3
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16. e-Business
introduction, e-business overview, e-business application, business to customer, business
to business, technical infrastructure of e-business system, strategy of e-business
development, supply chain management and e-business, risk management in e-business,
e-business policy and its social effect.
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Recommended textbooks/Reading
Same list given under Industrial Engineering
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
5
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EE 3204
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
60
Title
Electrical Energy
Management
Semester
Credit
Hours
02
Practical
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to get understanding of the underlying technology involved in the
utilization of electrical energy in some of the more important areas of electrical engineering. It
also contributes to a firm foundation of knowledge for work in engineering design, and forms a
basis for more advanced studies in this area.
Syllabus
1. Operation of power transformers
12 hrs
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10 hrs
Common lamp types: low pressure mercury, high pressure mercury, low pressure sodium,
high pressure sodium, fluorescent and halogen
Lighting design: quality of light, control of glare, luminance distribution, consistency of
lighting levels, interior lighting design codes, lighting for visual tasks, emergency
lighting
Light scheme: produce a scheme for one of the following developments or equivalent,
given the appropriate plans: small commercial development to involve roads, tunnel,
pedestrian areas and car parks; small supermarket; administration office of a college,
including computer stations
12 hrs
Tariff structures: domestic, Domestic Economy, Domestic Smart, business (eg Economy
all-purpose, Economy combined premises, evening and weekend), restricted
hour, methods of controlling maximum demand, metering arrangements
Energy consumption: load scheduling, power factor correction techniques, calculation of
apparent power rating of a capacitor to improve power factor of a load, location of power
factor correction capacitors, efficient control of heating and lighting systems, recycling
heat from heating and lighting systems
Cost of energy: cost of running a system using the different tariffs available, selection of
appropriate tariff for a given installation and set of circumstances
10 hrs
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5. Energy Auditing
16 hrs
Recommended Readings
1. Lamps and Lightings
2. Electric Motors and Drives
3. Higher Electrical Technology
4. Higher Electrical Engineering
Coaton , Marsden
Hughes A
McKenzie S
Shepard, Morton and Shaw
List of Practicals
1. Current ratings of fuses and MCBs
2. Study the operation of transformer
3. Test on a single-phase transformer
4. Load test on a single-phase transformer
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
180/206
EE3206
Module Number
Year
Number of H ours
Third Year
105
Title
Semester
Credit
Hours
02
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to obtain the knowledge of Electronic component design, Printed
Circuit Boards, Assembling electronic products, Key elements of industrial robots, Methods
of programming industrial robots design and implementation of a Robot cell
Syllabus
1. Electronic component technology
7 hrs
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8 hrs
Design rules: smallest obtainable transistor size gains and losses; wet and dry etching
minimum photo resist width, selectivity of etchants; effects of altering polysilicon gate
width on transistor speed
Failure modes: relationship with chip size; testing and prediction of failure modes
statistical methods, failure mechanisms; wafer manufacture effects of changes in chip
size, wafer size, process complexity
11 hrs
10 hrs
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6 hrs
Manipulator elements: electrical and fluid drive systems (harmonic, cycloidal, shaft, rod,
screw, belt, chain), sensors (absolute and incremental encoders, potentiometers, resolvers,
tachometers), brakes, counterbalance devices
Control elements: CPU, system and user memory, interface units, power units
Intelligence: relating to proximity, range, position, force, temperature, sound, gas
Sources of error or malfunction: environmental contamination (smoke, arc-flash, dirt,
fluids, heat), parallax, wear, data corruption, accessibility, sensitivity, accuracy, design
8 hrs
7. Robot cell
10 hrs
Design parameters: layout, cycle times, control, accessibility, error detection, component
specification, protection of the robot and peripherals, future developments, hazard
analysis (human, robot design, robot operation, workplace layout, hardware failure,
control system failure, control system malfunction, software failure, external equipment
failure, external sensor failure), guarding, fencing, intrusion monitoring, safe system of
work, restriction mechanisms
Selection criteria: accuracy, repeatability, velocity, range, operation cycle time, load
carrying capacity, life expectancy, reliability, maintenance requirements, control and
playback, cost, memory, fitness for purpose, working envelope
Design: station configuration, parts presentation, fixtures, parts recognition, sensors, cell
services, safety interlocks, end effectors design, flexibility
Implementation factors: company familiarization, planning, robot manufacturer back-up,
economic analysis, installations scheduling, training
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Craig J J
McKerrow P J
Williams J J
List of Particles
1. Opto-Electronic devices and their uses
2. Industrial application of thyristors
3. Programmable logic devices (PLA & PLC)
4. Transducers
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
184/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
105
Title
Electrical Machines
Control & Protection
Semester
Credit
Hours
02
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to get the knowledge of various machine controls and the
electrical, mechanical and other associated protection methods applicable to them
Syllabus
1.
7 hrs
Motor Starting
Principles and problems associated with starting a poly phase induction motor,
starting of a D.C. shunt (compound) motor, Operation of a solid-state
thyristor starter. The advantages of a solid-states starter with reference to:
Constant current soft start, Electronic protection, Energy saving.
2.
3.
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4.
5.
Industrial Drives
10 hrs
suitability of a particular type of a.c. or d.c. motor for an industrial drive such
as a conveyor, pump, fan, compressor considering, environment, capital cost,
running cost, duty cycle, starts per hour, cooling, ambient temperature,
supply authority capability, the stable operation, dynamic relationships, the
speed-time cures for a complete stat-to-stop run, speed-distance curves,
power-time curves and energy consumed motor rating for a known duty cycle
of operation
6.
8 hrs
Control Circuits and Protection
Electromagnetic overload relay. Applications and its disadvantages, a thermal
overload relay; ambient temperature compensation, phase failure and and/auto
resetting. back-up protection as applied to a motor starter, advantages of a
motor type HRC fuse and its selection, common causes of motor overheating,
temperature characteristics of thermistors and application to the motor
protection.
.
7.
Generation
7 hrs
Electrical characteristics of a cylindrical rotor alternator. Methods used to
synchronize an alternator to an existing live network. The principles of
alternators operating on infinite bus bars.
8.
Generator Protection
8 hrs
Generator faults; stator faults, rotor faults, close-up external faults and need
of protection. Protection vs. size and rating of a generator. Protection
provided for loss of excitation or field failure. States where protection is not
provided.
Rec Readings
1. Protection of Industrial Power Systems Davies T
2. Higher Electrical Engineering
Sheperd J, Morton A and Spence L
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List of Particles
1. Trigger circuit
2. Regulated power supplies
3. Series and parallel control of DC series motors
4. DC Motor speed control
5. Ward-Leonard method of speed control for DC Shunt motors
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
187/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
105
Title
Broadcast Technologies
Semester
Credit
Hours
02
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to understand the current broadcast technologies, television
principles, digital signal processing and speech and audio techniques.
Syllabus
3 hrs
1. Stereophonic Sound
Intercity difference, Time difference (phase lag), sound stage width, intensity
stereophony.
4 hrs
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3 hrs
6. Multiplexing of Signal
5 hrs
Introduction , Obtaining L and R signals for producing the multiplex signal,
graphical processes, ,frequency spectrum of the multiplex signal, waveforms
which exist at various points, multiplex signal over V.H.F. carrier, ,bandwidth
of frequency modulated signal. Instantaneous deviation of the main carrier, peak
deviation of sum & difference signals; pilot tone and residual sub-carrier
4 hrs
11. Colour Television Reception
Block diagram of a colour television receiver, monochrome receiver block
diagram, block diagram of an RGB receiver, luminance and chrominance signal
processing, blocks in chrominance decoder.
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3 hrs
3 hrs
14. Chrominance Stages
Chrominance amplifier, take-off point, burst blanking, the provision of colourkiller bias, colour control and bandwidth, A.C.C. circuitry
PAL delay- line, PAL phase error correction, limitations, burst planking, and
colour control circuitry, amplitude and phase setting up
Synchronous demodulator, demodulation process to modulation at the encoder,
burst phase discriminator, effect of the PAL swinging burst,
Sub carrier oscillator, the frequency control process, effects of loss of colour
synchronization.
Operation of IDENT, obtaining an I dent waveform, the action of a colour-killer
circuit and its purpose, usefulness of by-phasing the colour-killer in fault
diagnosis
5 hrs
Operation of DSP: filtering (eg Finite-duration Impulse Response (FIR) and Infinite
duration Impulse Response (IIR) filter structures); spectral analysis (eg the Discrete
Fourier Transform, Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) and Discrete Cosine Transform
3
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(DCT)); review the advantages and disadvantages of DSP systems; concepts of analogue
signals and noise; examples of bandwidth and dynamic range applicable to speech, audio
and video signals
DSP sub-systems: analogue-to-digital converters (eg binary word length, quantization
errors, sampling frequency, the Nyquist sampling rate, aliasing and the use of anti-alias
filters); DSP hardware (fixed and floating-point devices); application of specific DSPs
and dedicated devices (eg hardware coder-decoder (CODEC)); digital-to-analogue
converters; reconstruction filters
4 hrs
Audio waveform coding: eg principles and applications of companding (_-law and Alaw), Pulse Code Modulation (PCM), Delta Modulation (DM), Differential PCM
(DPCM), Adaptive DPCM (ADPCM), Adaptive DM (ADM) and Sub-Band Coding
(SBC)
Audio signal processing techniques: uncompressed high fidelity digital audio formats (eg
Compact Disc (CD) and Digital Audio Tape (DAT)); linear predictive coding; over
sampling and dithering
Compression standards: compressed high fidelity digital audio formats (eg NICAM,
Mini Disc (MD) and Digital Compact Cassette (DCC); psychoacoustic compression
Techniques; MPEG-Audio (Layers 1, 2 and 3); comparison of audio compression and
coding techniques and standards)
List of Particles
1.
Monochromatic TV receiver
4.
5.
6.
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
5
192/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
105
Title
Network Management
Semester
Credit
Hours
02
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Aim of this module is to give students deeper understanding of Networks and
Network Management including protocols and network accounting systems.
Syllabus
1. Benefit of networks
6 hrs
Evolution of network uses, from simple file and print networks through small office
computing, to client-server architectures; review of remote access, starting with email
through to intranets and the internet, LANs (Local Area Networks), WANs (Wide Area
Networks) and MANs, (Metropolitan Area Networks); networked applications;
cost/benefit analysis of network Use , an overview of network resources (hardware and
software); facilities of a network operating system; understanding of security
implications and software licensing issues; constraints on capacity and performance (such
as being asked to run video off a 10Mbit Ethernet connection)
2. Network software
7 hrs
design and definition of users and groups; the definition of directory, structures on the
file server; file and directory attributes; trustee rights, IRM (Inherited , Rights
Management), and setting up security, Login scripts: definition of the user environment;
menu systems, Hardware and software factors: printing set-up; understanding of printing
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3. Operating system
5 hrs
6 hrs
Install, upgrade and configure the operating system; configure hardware components;
edit user and system profiles; configure network services; troubleshooting
5. Network management
8 hrs
10 hrs
7 hrs
Configuration management: typical network configurations (eg the how, what and why
of network configuration) , Identification of critical devices: benefits of International
Standards to configuration management; prevention of network overload and strategies
to be employed; collecting data from network devices , Network efficiency: management
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system features and tools; monitoring network performance; testing of remote circuits;
collecting and analyzing data; setting thresholds; network simulation
6 hrs
4 hrs
Rec Readings
1. Computer Networks and Internets
Comer D
2. Data Communications, Computer Networks and Open Systems.
Halsall F
3. Teach Yourself MCSE Windows NT Server 4 in 14 Days
Schaer Detal
4. Windows NT TCP/IP Network Administration
Thompson R and Hunt C
5. Network Management
Leinwand A, Fang K and Stone T
6. Performance and Fault Management
Maggiora D
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
196/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Third Year
105
Title
Construction &
Protection of
Electrical Systems
Semester
Credit
Hours
02
Practical
03
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
Students are expected to understand the advance method of electrical protection systems,
fault calculation and coordination of equipments at fault conditions
Syllabus
10 hrs
1. Per Unit Systems
Introduction of p.u systems, importance and calculation of p.u. currents and p.u.
voltages and p.u. impedance. Fault limiting reactors, ring and tie bar reactors, per unit
values, fault level, fault current.
2. Fault Analysis
10 hrs
Balanced Fault, Unbalanced Fault, Open Circuit Fault, and Basic Fault
Calculations
3. Feeder protection
6 hrs
Non-Directional Over current and Earth fault Protection, Application and types of
Relays used,
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5. Transformer Protection
7 hrs
6. Motor Protection
4 hrs
Over temperature conditions due to; thermal over loading, stall/locked rotor,
phase unbalance and single phasing. Shot cct, Earth fault, under current, over
current, over speed, under voltage protection, types of Relays used
7. Generator Protection
5 hrs
Why generator protection, Urgent, Non Urgent and Alarming, Generator Faults;
Insulation of rotor or stator failure, Excitation system failure, Governor failure,
Prime mover failure, Bearing failure, Excessive vibration, low steam pressure ,
types of Relays used
9. Auto Reclosing
4 hrs
Auto Reclosing of Overhead Line Circuits, Principles and Application, AutoReclosing in Distribution Systems, Auto-Reclosing in Transmission Systems
4 hrs
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Rec Readings:
1. Protection of Industrial Power Systems
2. Higher Electrical Engineering
Davies T
Sheperd J, Morton A and Spence L
List of Particles
1. Study of Triac to control the power flow to the load
2. Earth testing and measuring the earth resistance
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
199/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
Third Year
105
Broadband
Communication
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
03
02
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
It is expected to develop the students awareness of the method of operation and how the
technology copes with transmission constraints of the Access Network. Also to raise the
students awareness of commercial factors associated with competing technologies.
Syllabus
1. Residential Broadband technologies family (xDSL)
14 hrs
Family: Rate Adaptive Digital Subscriber Line (RDSL); High-Speed Digital Subscriber
Line (HDSL); Asymmetrical Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL); Symmetric Digital
Subscriber Line (SDSL); Very-high speed Digital Subscriber Line (VDSL)
Communication differences: typical transmission distances; typical bit rates (upstream
and downstream)
Types of communications: eg broadcast, video on demand, voice, video conferencing,
computers, streaming, games and entertainment, interactive, multimedia, etc
1
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2.
16 hrs
14 hrs
2
201/206
4 hrs
Introduction and overview of WiMAX, and HSPA, and LTE. Characteristics and their
applications.
Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
3
202/206
Module Number
Year
Number of Hours
Title
Third Year
105
Internet Technologies
Semester
Credit
Hours
Practical
03
02
Filed
Visits(Other)
Day /Time/Hall
Learning Outcomes:
On the completion of this module the student will be able to acquire knowledge of
Internet Technologies from the beginning and the future of internet communication
and technologies.
Syllabus
5 hrs
1. Introduction
History of Internet i.e. Military, ARPA, DARPA, ARPANET in 1980ies, First Webpage
13.11.1990. Hypertext Mark-up Language HTML, lead to standards of W3C, Basics to
network technologies, TCP/IP , Protocol, server/client, sockets, Applications, Privacy and
legal matters, Security, Blogs, CMS, mail, Programming languages, static, dynamic contents,
Streaming and broadcasting technologies
4 hrs
Data (Bits, bytes, costs), Bandwidth, Latency, Difference between LAN & Internet, Speed in
LAN, Speed in Internet, Ethernet (LN, WAN, PAN, WLAN), Ethernet protocol, Hub, Switch,
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3 hrs
3. The Internet
The time before, TCP/IP introduction , Routers connecting LAN, Introduction to standards,
IP-Address, Subnet, host, DHCP, Packing and sending data, IP-Datagram, routing standards,
router protocol, IP Key Points, IP routing, hierarchy, IP becomes standard., TCP/IP in detail,
Name server, IP-addresses introduction
3 hrs
3 hrs
5. Network programs
Ping, NS-Lookup, Trace route
3 hrs
Establish connection, data transfer; terminate connections, Reliability & Flow Control, User
Datagram Protocol (UDP)
6 hrs
7. Internet broadcasting
3 hrs
2 hrs
9. Sockets
Basic introduction to socket, TCP byte stream, Protocol stack, Ports
2 hrs
10. Connections
FTP, Telnet, peer-to-peer, Protocol stack and levels
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2 hrs
11. Applications
Brief introduction to application, Traditional PC-Api vs. Client/server, thick clients vs. thin
clients, Servers, Hardware server, Software server, Email Mail server, SMTP, POP, Imap,
web mail, mail applications, Email security
6 hrs
Brief introduction, history, Client and server, Web browser types, Basic functionality of
HTTP server, HTML characteristics, HTML tags, Images, Tables, Comments, Special
HTML, HTML editors, Upload by FTP, Static and dynamic contents
4 hrs
2 hrs
4 hrs
How to publish media on the internet, Radio on the Web, Internet TV and Video on demand
2 hrs
16. Publishing
CMS Systems, Credentials of websites, Website structure and sitemaps, Intranet and
Extranet, Internet marketing search engine optimization
4 hrs
17. Internet security
Introduction to topic, Definition of security threats, (worms, virus, sniffing, abusing
passwords and credit card information), Measures of protection, Secure passwords,
Cryptography, Steganography, Encryption technologies, Secure Servers (HTPS)
2 hrs
3
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Schedule of Lectures (to be prepared by the Lecture and approved by the module
coordinator to be distributed to the students on the day of commencement of the module):
Week Topic
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Hours
Lecturer Resource
Person/
Remarks
4
206/206