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HINDUSTAN INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY AND SCIENCE DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRONICS AND INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERING

B.E. - ELECTRONICS & INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERING

CURRICULUM & SYLLABUS

2009 - 2013
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HINDUSTAN INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY AND SCIENCE ELECTRONICS AND INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERING B.E. CURRICULUM 2009-2013 SEMESTER I Course S.No Code Theory 1. EL 1101 2. MA1101 3. PH 1101 4. CY 1101 5. ME 1101 6. CS 1101 Practical 7. CS 1131 GE 1101 8.# GE 1102 9. GE 1103

Course Title English I* Engineering Mathematics- I* Engineering Physics- I* Engineering Chemistry- I* Engineering Graphics* Computer Programming* Computer Programming Laboratory* Engineering Practice Laboratory*(OR) Physical Sciences Laboratory* NSS/NCC/NSO/YRC* Total

L 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 0 0 0

T 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0

P 1 0 0 0 3 0 3 3 3 2

C 3 4 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 0 25

TCH 4 4 4 4 6 4 3 3 3 2 34

# To be decided by the department * Common to all branches SEMESTER II Course S.No Code Theory 1. EL 1102 2. MA 1102 3. PH 1102 4. CY 1102 5. ME 1102 6. EE 1101 Practical GE 1101 7.# GE 1102 8. EE 1131

Course Title English -II* Engineering Mathematics II* Engineering Physics II$ Engineering Chemistry-II$$ Engineering Mechanics** Circuit Theory***

L 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 0 0

T 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0

P 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 3

C 3 4 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 25

TCH 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 30

Engineering Practice Laboratory*(OR) Physical Sciences Laboratory* Electric Circuits Laboratory*** Total # To be decided based on Semester I * Common to all branches ** Common to EIE & EEE *** Common to EIE, ECE, EEE $ Common to all branches Except IT $$ Common to all branches Except MECH

SEMESTER III Course S.No Code Theory 1. MA 1203 2. CY 1203 3. EC 1209 4. CS 1211 5. ME 1210 6. EI 1201 Practical 7. EI 1231 8. 9. CS 1235 ME 1211

Course Title Engineering Mathematics-III* Environmental Science & Engineering** Electronic Devices*** Data Structures & Algorithm*** Applied Thermodynamics*** Electronic Instrumentation Electronic Devices Laboratory Data Structures & Algorithm Laboratory*** Thermal and Fluid Mechanics Laboratory Total

L 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 0 0

T 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0

P 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 3

C 4 3 3 4 4 4 1 1 1 25

TCH 4 3 3 4 4 4 3 3 3 31

* Common to all branches ** Common to EIE , ECE, EEE *** Common to EIE & EEE SEMESTER IV Course S.No Code Theory 1. EC1210 2. EI 1202 3. EI 1203 4. EI 1204 5. EI 1205 6. EE1211 Practical 7. 8. 9. EI 1232 EI 1233 EE1235

Course Title Electronic Circuits* Linear Integrated Circuits Digital Electronics Transducer Engineering Electrical and Electronic Measurements Electrical Machines Electronic Measurements Laboratory Linear & Digital Integrated Circuits Laboratory Electrical Machines Laboratory Total

L 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 0 0

T 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

P 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 3

C 4 4 4 3 3 3 1 1 1 24

TCH 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 30

* Common to EIE & EEE

SEMESTER V Course S.No Code Theory 1. EI 1301 2. EI 1302 3. EC 1311 4. EC 1312 5. 6. Practical 7.

Course Title

L 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 0 2

T 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

P 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 2

C 3 4 3 4 3 3 1 1 3 25

TCH 3 4 3 4 3 3 3 3 4 30

Industrial Instrumentation Control Engineering Communication Engineering Microprocessor and Microcontroller Professional Ethics & Human GE 1401 Values* EI 1304 Analytical Instruments EI 1331

Sensors and Instrumentation Laboratory Microprocessor and Microcontroller 8. EC 1337 Laboratory 9. EL 1331 Communication Skills Laboratory # Total # Common to all branches * Common to MECH, CSE, EIE SEMESTER VI Course S.No Code Theory 1. MG1302 2. EI 1305 3. EI 1306 4. EC 1313 5. EE 1306 6. IT 1310 Practical 7. 8. 9. EI 1332 EI 1333 IT 1335

Course Title Engineering Economics & Management Biomedical Instrumentation Process Control Digital Signal Processing Power Electronics* Object Oriented Programming Instrumentation System Design Laboratory I Process control Laboratory Object Oriented Programming Laboratory Total

L 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 0 0

T 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0

P 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 3

C 3 3 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 25

TCH 3 3 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 29

* Common to EEE & EIE

SEMESTER VII Course S.No Code Theory 1. EC 1423 2. EI 1401 3. EI 1402 4. EI 1403 5. EI xxx 6. EI xxx Practical 7. 8. 9. EI 1431 EC 1436 EI 1432

Course Title VLSI Design Computer Control of Process Neural Networks and Fuzzy Logic Control Robotics and Automation Elective I Elective II

L 3 3 3 3 3 3

T 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 3

C 3 4 3 3 3 3 1 1 1 22

TCH 3 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 28

Instrumentation System Design 0 Laboratory II VLSI Laboratory 0 Computer Control of Process 0 Laboratory Total

* Common to all branches SEMESTER VIII Course S.No Code Theory 1. MG 1401 2. EI xxx 3. EI xxx Practical 4. EI 1433

Course Title Total Quality Management* Elective III Elective IV Project Total

L 3 3 3 0

T 0 0 0 0

P 0 0 0 24

C 3 3 3 6 15

TCH 3 3 3 24 33

* Common to all branches

Total Credits = 186

Elective Courses Semester VII ELECTIVE I Course S.No Code 1. 2. 3. 4. EI 1404

Course Title

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C 3 3 3 3

TCH 3 3 3 3

Instrumentation in Power Plant & Paper Industry CS 1481 Data Communication and Networks EI 1405 Virtual Instrumentation EI 1406 Instrumentation in Petrochemical Industries

ELECTIVE II Course S.No Code 1. EI 1407 2. EC 1424 3. 4. EI 1408 EI 1409

Course Title Process Control System Components Microprocessor Based System Design Instrumentation & Control for Aero Space & Navigation Instrumentation & Control in Automobile Industry

L T P 3 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 0

C 3 3 3 3

TCH 3 3 3 3

Elective Courses Semester VIII ELECTIVE III Course S.No Code 1. EI 1410 2. 3. 4. EC 1416 EI 1411 EI 1412

Course Title Fiber Optics & Laser Instruments* Telecommunication Switching and Networks** Advanced Control System Mechatronics

L T P 3 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 0

C 3 3 3 3

TCH 3 3 3 3

ELECTIVE IV Course S.No Code 1. MG 1402 2. EI 1413 3. EC1425 4. EI 1414 5. EI 1415

Course Title Entrepreneurship Development*** Embedded Systems Digital Image Processing Adaptive Control System* Nanotechnology for Instrumentation Engineers

L T P 3 3 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

C 3 3 3 3 3

TCH 3 3 3 3 3

3 0 0

* Common to EIE, EEE ** Common to EIE, ECE, EEE *** Common to all branches

SEMESTER I
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EL 1101

ENGLISH LANGUAGE 1

3 0 1

OBJECTIVES i. To help students learn some important grammar components and express themselves in flawless English. ii. iii. iv. v. To help students to equip themselves with a sound vocabulary. To help students develop listening skill for academic and professional purpose. To help students to speak English fluently. To enable students to develop effective reading skills and develop reading habit. 9

UNIT - I: - GRAMMAR

Countable and uncountable nouns, The plural number, Genitive and possessive forms, Pronouns, Determiners, definite and indefinite articles, Adjectives, Main and auxiliary verbs, Transitive and intransitive , Finite and non finite verbs, Linking verbs, Regular and irregular verbs, Phrasal verbs, Infinitives and gerunds, Participles, Adverbs, Model Verbs, Comparisons, Tenses, Concord, Active and Passive voices, Direct and Indirect speeches, Conditionals, Question types, Prepositions, Conjunctions, Prefixes and Suffixes, Compound Nouns, Synonyms, Super: Ordinates and hyponyms, Expressing causal relation , Comparative adjectives, Punctuation, Use of reference words Statements, Questions, SUGGESTED ACTIVITIES: Providing different contexts for using tenses Changing the grammatical functions of words using prefixes and suffixes Changing Voices Rewriting sentences in impersonal passive forms Use of If Conditionals in sentences Use of reference words in reading texts Expansion of compound nouns Using appropriate comparative adjectives Rewriting expressions using numerical adjectives Use of model verbs in sentences Correction of sentences Use of appropriate reporting verbs in indirect speech Gap filling activity using relative pronouns Fill in the blanks with suitable prepositions, prepositional phrases, phrasal verbs Framing Wh questions Yes/No types and question tags Rewriting imperative sentences using Should UNIT II: - LISTENING 6

Listening for general content, Listening for specific information, Listening for note making, Listening to speeches by great people and some poems. SUGGESTED ACTIVITIES: Listening to the text and answering questions (multiple choices, gap filling) - Listening and identifying specific information guided and unguided note-taking Making inferences while listening. UNIT III:-SPEAKING 6

Self and peer introduction, Conversational practice in different situations, Oral presentations on various topics, Reciting speeches and poems SUGGESTED ACTIVITIES: Listening to English sounds and words and repeating them Introducing self and others Role play activities Making presentation on given topics describing people,objects,processes. UNIT - IV: - READING 12

Predicting content, Skimming text for gist, scanning for specific information, Study reading, Extensive reading. SUGGESTED ACTIVITIES: Taking a quick glance at the text (Skimming) and predicting the content - Reading to identify the main ideas (scanning for specific information, analyzing and interpreting data from tables and charts - sequencing of jumbled sentences using linguistics clues. Note: Extensive reading: Students may be asked to read the books suggested for extra reading and submit assignments. Assignments can be in the form of review-criticism, appreciation etc. UNIT V: - WRITING 12

Definition, Extended definition Transcoding from non-verbal form to verbal form of writing. Paragraph writing, Discourse markers, Cohesion and Coherence, writing general essays, Social correspondence. SUGGESTED ACTIVITIES: Using appropriate expressions of defining Writing a paragraph based on information provided in a flow charts / bar charts / tables Writing letters of different types Writing recommendations, Letter to Editor, Invitation, Expressing thanks etc. L = 45 P = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. Chellammal.V. Learning to communicate a Resources book for scientist and technologists English II Chennai Allied publishers private ltd: 2004 2, Farhathullah.T.M. English practice book for Engineering Students. Chennai, Emerald publishers 2000. 3. Marigold. A text prepared by the Department of English June 2008 4. A P J ABDUL KALAM with Arun Thivari Wings of Fire an Auto Biography. University Press (India) P ltd 1999 30th impression 2007 REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Joseph KV. A Text Book of English Grammar and Usage. Chennai; Vijay Nicole Imprints Pvt ltd 2006.

MA 1101

ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS I (Common to all branches)

3 1 0

OBJECTIVES: i. To identify algebraic eigen value problems from practical areas and obtain the eigen solutions in certain cases. ii. iii. iv. To diagonalize a matrix which would render the eigen solution procedure very simple. To understand effectively the geometrical aspects of curvature, maxima and minima concept as elegant applications of differential calculus. To solve differential equations of certain type, that they might encounter in the same or higher semesters. 7

UNIT - I: - MATRICES

Characteristic equations Properties of Eigen values Eigen values and Eigenvectors Cayley Hamilton theorem (without proof) Verification and inverse by Cayley Hamilton theorem. Diagonalisation of a matrices Orthogonal matrices- Matrix forms of Quadratic and canonical form Reduction to canonical form of the given Quadratic by orthogonal transformation. UNIT - II: - DIFFERENTIAL CALCULUS 8

Curvature - Radius of curvature Centre of curvature Circle of curvature Cartesian coordinates Geometrical application of differential calculus Evolute, Envelope Properties of Envelope UNIT - III: - ORDINARY DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS 11

Second order differential equations with constant coefficients Particular integrals Exponential - Trigonometric Algebraic functions- e x Cos ax e x Sin ax- Variation parameters Homogeneous linear second order differential equations Simultaneous first order linear equation with constant coefficient UNIT - IV: - PARTIAL DIFFERENTIATION 10

Differentiation of functions of two and three variables Total differential coefficient Taylors series Maxima and minima of functions of two and three variables Constrained maxima and minima Lagranges method of multiplier Jacobians. UNIT- V:- ANALYTICAL GEOMETRY OF THREE DIMENSIONS 9

Direction cosines and ratios Angle between two lines Equations of a plane Equations of a straight line Coplanar lines Shortest distance between skew lines Sphere Tangent plane Plane section of a sphere Orthogonal Spheres.

L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. Erwin Kreyzig, A Text book of Engineering Mathematics ,John Wiley, 2002. 2. Grewal B.S., Higher Engineering Mathematics, Delhi, Thirty Eighth Edition, Khanna Publisher, 2004. 3. Chandrasekaran A. A Text book of Engineering Mathematics I, Chennai, Dhanam Publications, 2008 REFERENCES 1. Venkataraman.M.K. , Engineering Mathematics ,Volume I, Chennai, The National Publishing Company, 2001. 2. Kandaswamy.P, Thilagavathy, K. and Gunavathy. K Engineering I & II, New Delhi, S.Chand and Company, 2005. Mathematics ,Volume

3. Bali. N.P. and Narayana Iyengar. N.Ch., Engineering Mathematics, New Delhi, Laxmi Publications Pvt. Ltd, 2003. 4. Veerarajan. T., Engineering Mathematics (for first year), Fourth Edition, New Delhi, Tata McGraw Hill Publishing Company Limited, 2005.

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PH 1101

ENGINEERING PHYSICS I (Common to all branches)

3 1 0

OBJECTIVES: i. To enhance theoretical and modern technological aspects in physics. ii. iii. To enable the students to correlate the theoretical principles with application oriented studies. To impart fundamental knowledge in various engineering subjects and applications 9

UNIT I: - PROPERTIES OF MATTER

Elasticity types of moduli of elasticity stress-strain diagram Youngs modulus of elasticity rigidity modulus bulk modulus Factors affecting elasticity twisting couple on a wire Torsional pendulum determination of rigidity modulus of a wire depression of a cantilever Youngs modulus of cantilever uniform and non-uniform bending viscosity Ostwalds viscometer comparison of viscosities. UNIT II: - ACOUSTICS AND ULTRASONICS 9

Classification of sound characteristics of musical sound intensity loudness Weber Fechner law Decibel reverberation reverberation time, derivation of Sabines formula for reverberation time (Jagers method) absorption coefficient and its determination factors affecting acoustics of building (Optimum reverberation time, loudness, focusing, echo, echelon effect, resonance and noise) and their remedies. Ultrasonic production Magnetostriction and piezoelectric methods properties, - applications of ultrasonics with particular reference to detection of flaws in metal (Non Destructive testing NDT) SONAR. UNIT III: - HEAT AND THERMODYNAMICS 9

Thermal conductivity experimental determination of thermal conductivities of good and bad conductors Forbes method theory and experiment Lees disc method for bad conductors Isothermal process adiabatic process reversible process irreversible process Carnots cycle heat engines Otto engine diesel engine. UNIT IV: - OPTICS 9

Air wedge theory and experiment testing of flat surfaces anti-reflection coating Michelson interferometer types of fringes, determination of wavelength of monochromatic source and thickness of a thin transparent sheet Double refraction Photo elasticity Photoelastic effect Photoelastic analysis Photo elastic material Block diagram of Photoelastic bench.

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UNIT V: - LASER AND FIBER OPTICS

Principle of lasers Stimulated absorption spontaneous emission, stimulated emission population inversion pumping action active medium laser characteristics Nd-Yag laser CO2 laser Semiconductor laser applications. Optical fiber principle and propagation of light in optical fibers Numerical aperture and acceptance angle types of optical fibers single and multimode, step index and graded index fibers applications fiber optic communication system. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. Gaur R.K. and Gupta S.L., Engineering physics, 8th edition, Dhanpat rai publications (P) Ltd., New Delhi 2003. 2. P. Mani, Engineering Physics, Vol-I, Dhanam Publications, Chennai 2005. REFERENCES 1. Uma Mukherji, Engineering physics, Narosa publishing house, New Delhi, 2003. 2. Rajendran V. and Marikani A., Applied physics for engineers, 3rd edition, Tata McGraw Hill publishing company Ltd., New Delhi, 2003. 3. Arumugam M., Engineering physics, Anuradha agencies, 2007. 4. Palanisamy P.K., Engineering Physics, SciTech publications, Chennai 2007

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CY 1101

ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY - I (Common to all branches)

3 1 0

OBJECTIVES: i. To provide a sound fundamental knowledge of chemistry. ii. To instill the scientific temper and the spirit of enquiry in students. iii. To encourage students to understand and apply the physical laws to the development of their fields of study OUTCOME By being well grounded in both the basic and applied sciences the student, upon graduation will be well prepared to assume responsibilities in his/her field of specialization or continue his/her professional development through graduate studies UNIT - I: - WATER TECHNOLOGY 9

Water Quality Parameter-Hardness( Definition, Types, Units) Simple problems for calculation of Hardness- Estimation of Hardness (EDTA Method)- Water Softening(Lime Soda Process)- Demineralization(Ion-Exchange Method)- Boiler Feed Water( Requisites, Associated Problems)-Internal Conditioning- Municipal Water Treatment-Desalination (Reverse Osmosis, Electrodialysis) UNIT- II: - POLYMER CHEMISTRY 9

Related Terminology-Types of Polymers-Polymerization Types- Mechanism of Polymerization (Free Radical Mechanism/Ionic/ Co-ordination)-Thermoplastics & Thermosetting Plastics-Effect of Polymer Structure on Properties- Compounding of Plastics-Molding MethodsPolymer Composites, Blends, LCPs -Definition, Examples with preparation, properties and uses UNIT - III:- ELECTROCHEMISTRY 9

Technical Terms (Definition, expressions, simple problems)-Kohlrausch law- Conductometric Titrations (four types) - Electrochemical Series- Applications-EMF Measurement (Experimental determination)-Nernst Equation (simple problems)-Types of electrodes and cells-Decomposition Potential Over-voltage UNIT - IV:- CHEMICAL THERMODYNAMICS 9

Thermodynamic terminology- Laws of Thermodynamics(Zeroth, 1st & 2nd various statements with expressions) True Thermodynamic Properties(E,H,S,G)-E, H, S, G- Work Function & Free Energy Function-Maxwells Relations-Gibbs Helmholtz equation- Vant Hoff IsothermVant Hoff Isochore (Problems)

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UNIT - V:- BASIC ANALYTICAL TECHNIQUES

Electromagnetic spectrum-Transitions (electronic, vibrational ,rotational) Beer-Lamberts Law-Principle, Instrumentation with diagram, Working, Block diagram and application of Flame Photometry, IR, UV- Gravimetry with a specific example-Electro-analytical TechniquesChromatography(Column)-Mass Spectrometry L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. P. C. Jain and Monika Jain, Engineering Chemistry, Dhanpat Rai Publishing Company(P) Ltd., New Delhi 2006 2. S. S. Dara, Text Book of Engineering Chemistry, S. Chand & Company Ltd., New Delhi, 2003 3. Murthy, Agarwal & Naidu, Text Book of Engineering Chemistry, BSP, 2003 REFERENCES 1. B. K. Sharma, Engineering chemistry, Krishna Prakasam Media (P) Ltd., 2003 2. A I. Vogel, A text book of Qualitative Inorganic Analysis, ELBS, London, 2004 3. AGowarikar, Text Book of Polymer Science, 2002 4. Kuriacose & Rajaram, Vols. 1 & 2, Chemistry in Engineering and Technology, 2004

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ME 1101 OBJECTIVES:

ENGINEERING GRAPHICS (Common to all branches)

To develop graphic skills for communicating concepts, ideas and designs of engineering products and to give exposure to national standards relating to technical drawings. BASICS OF ENGINEERING GRAPHICS 3

Importance of graphics Use of Drawing instruments BIS conventions and specifications drawing sheet sizes, layout and folding lettering Dimensioning Geometrical constructions Scales. Construction of curves like ellipse, parabola, cycloids and involutes. UNIT - I: - PROJECTIONS OF POINTS 9

General principles of presentation of technical drawings as per BIS Introduction to Orthographic projection Naming views as per BIS First angle projection. Projections of points. Projections of straight lines located in first quadrant only. Projections of plane surfaces like polygonal lamina and circular lamina. Drawing views when the surface of the lamina is inclined to one reference plane. UNIT -II: - PROJECTIONS OF SOLIDS 7

Projections of simple solids like prism, cylinder and cone Drawing views when the axis of the solid in inclined to one reference plane. UNIT- III: - SECTION OF SOLIDS AND DEVELOPMENT 7

Sectioning of simple solids like prisms, pyramids, cylinder and cone. Obtaining sectional views and true shape when the axis of the solid is vertical and cutting plane inclined to one reference plane. Development of lateral surfaces of truncated prisms, pyramids, cylinders and cones. UNIT -IV: - ORTHOGRAPHIC PROJECTIONS 7

Orthographic projections Conversion of orthographic views from given pictorial views of objects, including dimensioning. Free hand sketching of Orthographic views from Pictorial views. UNIT- V: - PICTORIAL PROJECTIONS 9

Isometric projection Isometric scale Isometric views of simple solids like prisms, pyramids, cylinders and cones. Perspective projection of simple solids like cube, prisms and pyramids. COMPUTER AIDED DRAFTING (Demonstration Only) 3

Introduction to computer aided drafting and dimensioning using appropriate software. 2D drawing commands Zoom, Picture editing commands, Dimensioning, Isometric drawing, Iso-Planes and 3D drafting. Plotting of drawing. Practice includes drawing the projections of lines and solids. Prepare isometric view of sample solids like prisms, pyramids, cylinder and cone.

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L = 45 P = 45 TOTAL = 90 TEXT BOOKS Jeyapoovan T, Engineering Graphics Using AutoCAD, Vikas Publishing House Pvt Ltd., New Delhi, 2002. 2. Warren J.Luzadder and Jon.M.Duff, Fundamentals of Engineering Drawing, Prentice Hall of India Pvt. Ltd., Eleventh Edition, 2001 REFERENCES BOOKS 1. N.D. Bhatt Engineering Drawing Charotar publishing House 46th Edition,2003. 2. Bertoline and Wiebe, Fundamentals of Grphics Communication, Third edition, McGraw-Hill, 2002. 3. Thomas E.French, Charles J.Vierck and Robert J.Foster, Engineering Drawing and Graphic Technology , McGraw-Hill international Edition.1987. 4. Gopalakrishnana K.R. Engineering Drawing (Vol. I & II) Subhas Publications 1998. 5. Venugopal .K Engineering Graphics, New Age International (P) Limited, 2002. 6. IS 10711 2001 Technical product Documentation Sizes of drawing sheets. 7. IS 10714 1983 Lettering on technical drawings. 8. IS 10712 1983 General Principles of presentation of technical drawings. 9. IS 11669 1986 General Principles of dimensioning of technical drawings

1.

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CS 1101 OBJECTIVES: i. ii. iii. iv. v.

COMPUTER PROGRAMMING (Common to all branches)

To enable the student to learn the major components of a Computer System. To learn the basic concepts of computing. To know the methodology of problem solving. To develop skills in programming using C and C + + languages. To learn the object oriented concepts. 9

UNIT- I: - INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTING

Introduction and Characteristics of Computers The Evolution of Computers The Computer Generations Classification of Computers Basic Computer Organization- Number SystemsComputer Arithmetic Types of Software Logical System Architecture Software Development Steps Planning the program. UNIT -II: - INTRODUCTION TO C 9

Overview of C Constants, Variables and Data Types Operators and Expression Managing Input and Output operators Decision Making and Branching Decision Making and Looping. UNIT -III: - ARRAYS, STRUCTURES AND FUNCTIONS 9

Arrays Handling of Character Strings User-Defined data types and user defined functions Structures- Union Nested structure, passing structures to functions self referential structures. UNIT- IV :- POINTERS AND FILE HANDLING 9

Pointer conceptDeclarationAccessing variable through pointerInitializing pointer variable Pointers and FunctionsPointers and ArraysPointers and StructuresExample programs using pointers with function, arrays and structuresCommand line arguments Dynamic memory allocationOperations on pointers. File pointerHigh level File operationsOpening and closing of fileCreating, Processing and Updating on filesRandom access file-Simple file handling programs. UNIT- V: - INTRODUCTION TO OBJECT ORIENTED PROGRAMMING IN C + + 9

Introduction to object oriented paradigm Merits and demerits of OO Methodology - Classes and Objects - Virtual Functions and Polymorphism and Inheritance - Introduction to Class Access or Methods - Constructors and Destructors - Function overloading and operator overloading - Arrays and String Classes Inheritance. Simple programs using C++. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60

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TEXT BOOKS: 1. ITL Education Solutions Limited, Introduction to Information Technology, Pearson Education Inc. (2005) 2. Byron Gottfried, Programming with C, II edition, TMH Pub., 2006. 3. K.RVenugopal, T.Ravishankar, Rajkumar, Mastering C++, TMH Pub, (1997) (Unit IV,V) REFERENCE BOOKS: 1. T.Jeyapoovan, Computer Programming Theory and Practice, Vikas Pub, 2007.
2. Herbert Schildt, The Complete Reference C++, McGraw-Hill Pub, 2005.

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CS1131

COMPUTER PROGRAMMING LAB (Common to all branches)

OBJECTIVE To provide an awareness to develop the programming skills using computer languages. LIST OF EXPERIMENTS a. Programming in C : 1. Write a C program to prepare the electricity bill. 2. Functions : (a) Call by value (b) Call by reference. 3. To write a C program to print the Fibonacci series. 4. To write a C program to find the factorial of a number using recursion. 5. To write a C program to implement the basic arithmetic operations using Switch Case statement. 6. To write a C program to check whether the given number is an Armstrong number. 7. To write a C program to check whether the given string is a Palindrome. 8. To write a C program to create students details using Structures. 9. To write a C program to demonstrate the Command Line Arguments. 10. To write a C program to implement the Random Access in Files. 11. To write C programs to solve some of the Engineering applications. b. Programming in C++ : 12. To write a C++ program to explain the Stack operation. 13. To write a C++ program to implement the Queue operation. 14. Templates : (a) Function templates. (b) Class templates. (b) Function overloading 15. Overloading : (a) Operator overloading

16. To write a C++ program using Inheritance concepts. P= 45 TOTAL = 45

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GE 1101

ENGINEERING PRACTICE LABORATORY (Common to all branches) List of Experiments

0 0 3

OBJECTIVE To have an idea of basic engineering disciplines. 1. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING 1. Welding Preparation of arc welding of built joints and lap joints. 2. Basic Machining Simple Turning and Drilling practice. 3. Machine assembly practice. Source of centrifugal pump. 4. Demonstration on a. Smith Operations Production of hexagonal headed bolt. b. Foundry operations mould preparation for gear and step cone pulley. 2. CIVIL ENGINEERING 1. Basic pipe connection using valves, taps, couplings, unions, reducers, elbows in household fitting. 2. Practice in mixed pipe connections: Metal, plastic and flexible pipes used in household appliances. 3. Wood Work: Sawing, planning and making common joints. 4. Study of joints in door panels, wooden furniture. 3. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 1. Wiring for a tube light. 2. Wiring for a lamp and fan. 3. Staircase wiring. 4. Study of i)Iron box and ii) Fan with Regulator. 4. ELECTRONICS ENGINEERING 1. (a) Study of electronic components and Equipments. (b) Soldering and checking continuity. 2. Characteristics of PN Junction diode & Measurement of Ripple factor for Half Wave and Full Wave Rectifier. 3. Applications of OP-AMP-Inverter, Adder and Subtractor. 4. Study and Verification of Logic Gates. P = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOK 1. T.Jeyapoovan, M.Saravanapandian and S.Pranitha, Engineering Practices Lab Manual, 3rd Edition 2006, Vikas Publishing house (P) Ltd., New Delhi. 20

GE 1102

PHYSICAL SCIENCES LABORATORY (Common to all branches)

0 0 3

OBJECTIVES To learn basic concepts in Physics and Chemistry. PHYSICS LABORATORY List of Experiments 1. Torsional Pendulum-Determination of rigidity Modulus of the material of a wire. 2. Non Uniform Bending Determination of Youngs modulus. 3. Viscosity Determination of co-efficient of Viscosity of a liquid by Poiseuilles flow. 4. Lees disc- Determination of thermal conductivity of a bad conductor. 5. Air wedge Determination of thickness of a thin wire. 6. Spectrometer Refractive index of a prism. 7. Semiconductor laser Determination of wavelength of Laser using Grating. REFERENCES 1. P.Mani, Engineering Physics Practicals, Dhanam Publications, 2008 CHEMISTRY LABORATORY List of Experiments (any five experiments) 1. Weighing and preparation of standard solutions-Preparation of molar and normal solutions of the following substances oxalic acid, sodium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid. 2. Estimation of Commercial soda by acid-base titration. 3. Determination of percentage of nickel in an alloy. 4. Determination of Temporary, permanent and total hardness of water by EDTA method. 5. Determination of chloride content in a water sample. 6. Potentiometer Estimation of iron. 7. Conductometric Titration of strong acid with a strong base. 8. Determination of Degree of polymerization of a polymer by Viscometry. P = 45 TOTAL = 45 References: 1. J.Mendham, R.C. Denny, J.D. Barenes and N.J.K.Thomas, Vogels, Textbook of Quantitative Chemical Analysis, 6th Edition, Pearson Education, 2004 2. D.P.Shoemaker and C.W. Garland, Experiments in Physical Chemistry, McGraw Hill London, 2000. 3. S.Sumathi, Jayalatha, S.Vidya and R.Balaji, Laboratory work book for Engineering Chemistry Practicals, 2007.

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EL 1102 1 OBJECTIVES: 3

SEMESTER II ENGLISH II (Common to all branches)

To help learners improve their English language skills through a variety of participative learning activities. UNIT- I :9 Vocabulary Development Use of reference words, cohesion and coherence Adjectives Using present participle and past participle Punctuation Antonyms Single line definition and extended definition Listening for specific information non-verbal presentation of ideas preposition Expressing suggestions Informal letters formal and social letters ACTIVITIES SUGGESTED: Guessing meaning for contexts while reading Pick out reference words from paragraphs Order jumbled sentences Order jumbled paragraphs Punctuating passages Fill in blanks using prepositions Writing letters expressing thanks Writing complement letters to editor of a newspaper Writing one sentence definition Writing extended definition UNIT - II: 9 Vocabulary Development scanning and study reading Use of numerical expressions as adjectives Expressing suggestions Expressing explanation Yes/no question formations and discussion Listening comprehension Description of things and events. ACTIVITIES SUGGESTED: Matching words with meanings Formation of words using prefixes and suffixes Read and answer comprehension questions Hold short group discussions Expand numerical expression Write description of objects and events Write letters expressing suggestions Role-plays UNIT - III: 9 Expression of cause and effect Prepositional phrases Describing a process Giving instructions Design advertisements Job application with resume Arguments Stating a problem and expressing solutions Listening and making notes Summary writing. ACTIVITIES SUGGESTED:

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Making summary of a passage Listen to instructions and write a description Combine sentences using connectives to show cause and effect (e.g., so as to, because of, as result of etc) Design an advertisement for promotion of sale of a particular item Write an application letter Prepare a resume Writing an argument for a cause Stating solution for a problem

UNIT- IV: -

Present perfect continuous Use of should, ought Listening to a talk to know the gist Describing a scenery Use of as soon as, no sooner than, though, in spite of Expressing certainty, probability, possibility, impossibility Use of modal verbs Use of phrases and idioms simple past and past perfect Use of infinitives Writing memos and circulars- Report writing. ACTIVITIES SUGGESTED: Changing instructions to suggestions Listening to a talk and write summary Preparing a travel itinerary Writing a travelogue Rewriting sentences using modal verbs Rewrite sentences using as soon as, no sooner than, though, in spite of etc Prepare memos and circulars Hold discussions and write reports based on the discussions

UNIT- V: -

Meanings of words Use of conditionals Expressing futurity Direct and Indirect speech Essay writing ACTIVITIES SUGGESTED: Holding interviews Role-plays Complete sentences using conditionals Expressing fears and hopes Write short essays for given topics L = 45 P = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. Learning to Communicate, A Resource book for Scientists and Technologists Dr. V. Chellamal., Allied Publishers., 2003. (Units 5 to 10) Extensive Reading: 1. Robin Sharma., The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari, Jaico Publishers. 2001. Note: Extensive reading is not for testing. Regular assignments have to be submitted by the students.

23

REFERENCES: 1. Farhatullah. T.M. English Practice Book for Engineering Students. Chennai, Emerald Publishers 2000. 2. Joseph KV. A Text Book of English Grammar and Usage. Chennai; Vijay Nickole Imprints Pvt Ltd 2006.

24

MA 1102 OBJECTIVES:

ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS II (Common to all branches)

1 0

Objective of this course is to train the students in additional areas of Engineering Mathematics, necessary for grooming them into successful engineers the topics introduced will serve as basic tools for specialized studies in many fields, significantly in Field theory, control systems, signal processing etc., UNIT - I: -MULTIPLE INTEGRALS 9 Double integration Cartesian and Polar co ordinates Change of order of integration Area as a double integral Change of variables between Cartesian and Polar Co-ordinates Triple integration Volume as a triple integral. UNIT - II: -VECTOR CALCULUS 9 Gradient, Divergence and Curl Directional derivative Irrotational and solenoidal vector fields Vector integration Greens theorem in a plane, Gauss divergence theorem and Stokes theorem (excluding proof) Simple applications. UNIT- III: -ANALYTIC FUNCTIONS 9 Functions of a complex variable Analytic function Necessary conditions Cauchy Riemann equations Sufficient conditions (excluding proof) Properties of analytic function Harmonic conjugate Construction of Analytic functions Conformal mapping : - w = z + a, az, 1/z and bilinear transformation. UNIT-IV: -COMPLEX INTEGRATION 9 Statement and application of Cauchys integral theorem and integral formula Taylor and Laurentz expansions Isolated singularities Residues Cauchys residue theorem. Contour integration over unit circle and semicircular contours (excluding poles on boundaries). UNIT - V: -LAPLACE TRANSFORM 9 Laplace transform Conditions of existence Transform of elementary functions Basic properties - Derivatives and integrals of transforms Transforms of derivatives and integrals Initial and final value theorems Transforms of unit step function and impulse function transform of periodic functions. Inverse Laplace transform Convolution theorem Solution of linear ODE of second order with constant coefficient and first order simultaneous equations with constant coefficient using Laplace transform. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS: 1. M.K. Venkatraman, Mathematics, Vol II, National Publishing Company, Chennai, 2004. 2. Chandrasekaran. A, Engineering Mathematics, Vol II, Dhanam Publication, 2008. REFERENCE: 1. Kandasamy. Engineering Mathematics Volume II, S. Chand & Co., New Delhi, 2006. 2. B.S. Grewal, Engineering Maths II, Sultem Chand, New Delhi, 2006. 3. Bali N.P & Manish Goyal, Text book of Engg. Maths, 3rd Edition, Lakshmi Publications, 2005.

25

PH 1102

ENGINEERING PHYSICS II
(Common to all branches except IT)

OBJECTIVES: To enhance students knowledge of theoretical and modern technological aspects in physics. To introduce fundamentals of Science for engineering applications. UNIT- I: - CRYSTAL PHYSICS AND NON-DESTRUCTIVE TESTING 9

Crystal Physics: Lattice Unit cell Bravais lattice Lattice planes Miller indices dspacing in cubic lattice Calculation of number of atoms per unit cell Atomic radius coordination number Packing factor for SC, BCC, FCC and HCP structures. Non Destructive Testing: Liquid penetrate method Ultrasonic flaw detection Ultrasonic flaw detector (block diagram) X ray Radiography; displacement method Merits and Demerits of each method. UNIT - II: -QUANTUM PHYSICS 9

Black body radiation Plancks theory (derivation) Deduction of Wiens displacement law and Raleigh Jeans law from Plancks theory Compton effect Theory and experimental verification Schrdingers wave equation Time independent and time dependent equations Physical significance of wave function Particle in a one dimensional box Extension to 3 dimension (no derivation). UNIT - III: -CONDUCTING MATERIALS 9

Conduction in metals Mobility and conductivity Classical free electron theory of metals Electrical conductivity Thermal conductivity Wiedmann Franz law Lorentz number Drawbacks of classical theory. Energy Bands in Solids: Band theory of solids (qualitative) Classification of solids into metals, semiconductors and insulators on the basis of band theory Fermi distribution function Effect of temperature on Fermi function Density of energy states Carrier concentration in metals. UNIT - IV: - SEMI-CONDUCTING MATERIALS 9

Intrinsic Semi-conductors: Carrier concentration in an intrinsic semiconductor Calculation of density of holes and electrons Fermi level and its variation with temperature Mobility and conductivity Determination of band gap. Extrinsic Semiconductors: Expression for carrier concentration in n-type and p-type semiconductors Variation of Fermi level with temperature and impurity concentration Hall Effect determination of Hall coefficient.

26

UNIT - V: - MODERN ENGINEERING MATERIALS AND SUPERCONDUCTING MATERIALS

Modern Engineering Materials: Metallic glasses: Preparation properties and applications. Shape memory alloys (SMA): Characteristics, applications, advantages and disadvantages of SMA. Nano Materials: Synthesis Properties and applications Superconducting Material: Superconducting phenomena Properties of superconductors Meissner effect Type I and Type II superconductors High Tc superconductors (qualitative) use of superconductors. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS: 1. R. K. Gaur and S. L. Gupta Engineering Physics Dhanpat Rai Publications, New Delhi, 2003. 2. P. Mani, Engineering Physics, Dhanam Publication, Latest Edition, 2008. 3. P. Charles, Poople and Frank J. Owens, Introduction to Nanotechnology, Wiley India, 2007 for Unit V. REFERENCES: 1. Arthur Beiser, Concepts of Modern Physics, Tata McGraw-Hill Publications, 2007. 2. Palanisamy P.K., Physics for Engineers, SciTech Publications (India) Pvt. Ltd, Chennai, Second Edition, 2006.

27

CY 1102

ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY II (Common to all branches)

OBJECTIVES: To gain a sound knowledge of latest technological applications of photochemistry polymers, corrosion, energy storing devices and electro metallurgy as required for electrical and electronics engineering students. UNIT - I:- CORROSION AND ITS CONTROL 9

Definition Examples Driving Force Types of Corrosion Dry Corrosion and Wet(Electrochemical) Corrosion mechanism Galvanic Corrosion Concentration Cell Corrosion Different Types Galvanic Series Factors Influencing Corrosion Metal Environment Corrosion Control Design Sacrificial Anodic Protection Impressed Current Cathodic Protection Protective Coatings Metallic Coatings Diffusion Coatings Non-Metallic Coatings Paints Varnish Lacquers Enamels UNIT - II:- ENGINEERING MATERIALS 9

Iron and steel Alloys Effects of Alloying Heat Treatment of Steel Iron / Carbon Phase Diagram Properties of Steel Applications Polymer Composites Ceramics Metal Matrix Composites Properties Applications Lubricants Mechanism of Lubrication Classification of Lubricants Properties Lubricating Oils Greases Semi Solid Lubricants Solid Lubricants Mos2 And Graphite Adhesives Examples Properties Applications Refractories Properties Classification General Manufacture Applications Abrasives Classification Properties Uses. UNIT - III:- FUELS AND COMBUSTION 9

Fuels Sources Calorific Value Characteristics Solid, Liquid and Gaseous Fuels Determination of Calorific Value Solid and Liquid Fuels Bomb Calorimeter Gaseous Fuels Boys Calorimeter Dulongs Formula Problems Coal Different Types Ranking of Coal Proximate and Ultimate Analysis Carbonization Manufacture of Metallurgical Coke Refining of Petroleum Cracking Different Methods Refining of Gasoline Reforming Knocking Octane Number Cetane Number Diesel Index Natural Gas Coal Gas Bio Gas Producer Gas Water Gas Preparation, Properties and Uses Combustion Theoretical Calculation of Air Requirements Problems Flue Gas Analysis Orsat Apparatus. UNIT- IV:- SPECIALITY MATERIALS 9

Liquid Crystals Smectic Liquid Crystals Nematic Liquid Crystals Cholesteric Liquid Crystals Disc shaped Liquid Crystal Polymer Liquid Crystal Polymorphism in Thermo tropic Liquid Crystal Molecular arrangement in various states of Liquid Crystal Super Conductivity Nanomaterials Ionic Crystals Metallic Crystals Dielectric, Ferro electric, Piezo electric materials Preparation, Properties and Uses. .

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UNIT - V:- ENERGY SOURCES

Batteries Primary Cells Laclanch Cell Alkaline Battery Secondary Cell Nickel Cadmium Battery Fuel Cells Hydrogen Oxygen Fuel Cell Aluminium Air Battery Solar Battery Lead Acid Storage Cell Nuclear Energy Mass Defect Binding Energy Nuclear Fission Nuclear Fusion Breeder Reactors Advantages, Limitations And Hazards Of Nuclear Reaction Radiation Dosimetry. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. P.C. Jain and Monicka Jain, Engineering Chemistry, Dhanpat Raj Publishing Company (P) Ltd, New Delhi 2000. 2. S.S. Dara. A Text book of Engineering Chemistry, S. Chand & Company Ltd, New Delhi 2003. 3. Puri, Sharma and Pathania, Principles of Physical Chemistry, Vishal Publishing Co. Jalandar, 2004. REFERENCES 1. B.K. Sharma, Engineering Chemistry, Krishna Prakasam Media (P) Ltd., Meerut, 2001. 2. Mars G. Fontana, Corrosion Engineering, Tata McGraw Hill Publishing 2005. Co., New Delhi,

3. Daniel Yesudian, Engineering Chemistry, Hi-Tech Publications, Mayiladuthurai, 2002

29

ME1102 ENGINEERING MECHANICS (COMMON TO MECH,AERO,AUTO,CIVIL,EEE & EIE) L 3 OBJECTIVE At the end of this course the student should be able to understand the vectorial and scalar representation of forces and moments, static equilibrium of particles and rigid bodies both in two dimensions and also in three dimensions. Further, he should understand the principle of work and energy. He should be able to comprehend the effect of friction on equilibrium. He should be able to understand the laws of motion, the kinematics of motion and the interrelationship. He should also be able to write the dynamic equilibrium equation. All these should be achieved both conceptually and through solved examples. UNIT I : BASICS & STATICS OF PARTICLES 12 Introduction Units and Dimensions Laws of Mechanics Lames theorem, Parallelogram and triangular Law of forces Vectors Vectorial representation of forces and moments Vector operations : addition, subtraction, dot product, cross product Coplanar Forces Resolution and Composition of forces Equilibrium of a particle Forces in space Equilibrium of a particle in space Equivalent systems of forces Principle of transmissibility Single equivalent force. UNIT II : EQUILIBRIUM OF RIGID BODIES 12 Free body diagram Types of supports and their reactions Requirements of stable equilibrium Static determinacy Moments and Couples Moment of a force about a point and about an axis Vectorial representation of moments and couples Scalar components of a moment Varignons theorem Equilibrium of Rigid bodies in two dimensions Equilibrium of Rigid bodies in three dimensions Examples. UNIT III : FRICTION 12 Frictional force Laws of Coulomb friction Simple contact friction Belt friction Transmission of power through belts Wedge Friction Screw Jack Rolling resistance. UNIT IV : PROPERTIES OF SURFACES AND SOLIDS 12 Determination of Areas and Volumes Determination of first moment of area , Centroid of sections, Second and product moments of plane area - Rectangle, circle, triangle, T section, I section, Angle section, Hollow section Parallel axis theorem and perpendicular axis theorem Polar moment of inertia Product moment of inertia. T 1 P 0 C 4

UNIT V: DYNAMICS OF PARTICLES 12 Displacements, Velocity and acceleration, their relationship Relative motion Curvilinear motion Newtons law Work Energy Equation of particles Impulse and Momentum Impact of elastic bodies. TOTAL : 60

30

TEXT BOOK: Beer, F.P and Johnson Jr. E.R, Vector Mechanics for Engineers, Vol. 1 Statics and vol. 2 Dynamics, McGraw-Hill International Edition, 1997. Rajasekaran, S, Sankarasubramanian, G., Fundamentals of Engineering Mechanics, Vikas Publishing House Pvt., Ltd., 2003. REFERENCES : Hibbeller, R.C., Engineering Mechanics, Vol. 1 Statics, Vol. 2 Dynamics, Pearson Education Asia Pvt. Ltd., 2000. Ashok Gupta, Interactive Engineering Mechanics Statics A Virtual Tutor (CDROM), Pearson Education Asia Pvt., Ltd., 2002. Palanichamy, M.S., Nagan, S., Engineering Mechanics Statics & Dynamics, Tata McGraw-Hill, 2001. Irving H. Shames, Engineering Mechanics Statics and Dynamics, IV Edition Pearson Education Asia Pvt., Ltd., 2003.

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32

EE 1101

CIRCUIT THEORY (Common to EIE, ECE, EEE)

OBJECTIVES: To expose both theoretical and practical knowledge in basic circuit concepts, circuit modeling and methods of circuit analysis in time domain and frequency domain for solving simple and multidimensional circuits including coupled circuits and 3 phase circuits. UNIT- I: -BASIC CIRCUITS ANALYSIS 9

Ohms Law Kirchoffs laws DC and AC Circuits Resistors in series and parallel circuits Mesh current and node voltage method of analysis for D.C and A.C. circuits. UNIT - II: -NETWORK REDUCTION AND NETWORK THEOREMS FOR DC AND AC CIRCUITS: 9 Network reduction: voltage and current division, source transformation star delta conversion. Thevenins and Norton & Theorem Superposition Theorem Maximum power transfer theorem Reciprocity Theorem. UNIT- III: -RESONANCE AND COUPLED CIRCUITS 9

Series and parallel resonance their frequency response Quality factor and Bandwidth - Self and mutual inductance Coefficient of coupling Tuned circuits Single tuned circuits. UNIT - IV: -TRANSIENT RESPONSE FOR DC CIRCUITS 9

Transient response of RL, RC and RLC Circuits using Laplace transform for DC input and A.C. with sinusoidal input. UNIT - V: -ANALYSING THREE PHASE CIRCUITS 9

Three phase balanced / unbalanced voltage sources analysis of three phase 3-wire and 4-wire circuits with star and delta connected loads, balanced & un balanced phasor diagram of voltages and currents power and power factor measurements in three phase circuits. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS: 1. William H. Hayt Jr, Jack E. Kemmerly and Steven M. Durbin, Engineering Circuits Analysis, Tata McGraw Hill publishers, 6th edition, New Delhi, 2002. 2. Sudhakar A and Shyam Mohan SP, Circuits and Network Analysis and Synthesis,Tata McGraw Hill, 2007. REFERENCES:

33

1. Paranjothi SR, Electric Circuits Analysis, New Age International Ltd., New Delhi, 2006. 2. Joseph A. Edminister, Mahmood Nahri, Electric circuits, Schaums series, Tata McGrawHill, New Delhi 2001. 3. Chakrabati A, Circuits Theory (Analysis and synthesis), Dhanpath Rai & Sons, New Delhi, 2007. 4. Charles K. Alexander, Mathew N.O. Sadik, Fundamentals of Electric Circuits, Second Edition, McGraw Hill, 2003.

34

EE1131

ELECTRIC CIRCUITS LABORATORY (Common to EIE, ECE, EEE)

0 0 3

OBJECTIVE To provide practical knowledge in Electric Circuits. LIST OF EXPERIMENTS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1. Verification of ohms laws and Kirchoffs laws. 2. Verification of Thevenins and Nortons Theorem 3. Verification of superposition Theorem 4. Verification of maximum power transfer theorem. 5. Verification of reciprocity theorem 6. Measurement of self inductance of a coil 7. Verification of mesh and nodal analysis. 8. Transient response of RL and RC circuits for DC input. 9. Frequency response of series and parallel resonance circuits. P = 45 TOTAL = 45

10 10. Frequency response of single tuned coupled circuits.

35

SEMESTER III MA 1203 OBJECTIVES At the end of the course the students would i. Be capable of mathematically formulating certain practical problems in terms of partial differential equations , solve them and physically interpret the results. ii. 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. iii. 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. iv. Have grasped the concept of expression of a function, under certain conditions, as a double integral leading to identification of transform pair, and specialization to Fourier transform pair, their properties, and possible special cases with attention to their applications. v. 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. UNIT - I: -PARTIAL DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS 9 Formation of partial differential equation, differential equations by elimination of arbitrary constant and arbitrary functions Solution of standard types of first order partial differential equations Lagranges linear equation Linear partial differential equations of second and higher order with constant coefficients. UNIT- II: -FOURIER SERIES 9 ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS III
(Common to all Branches)

Drichlets Conditions General Fourier Series Odd and even functions Half range sine series Half range cosine series Complex form of Fourier Series Parsevals identity - Harmonic Analysis. UNIT - III: -BOUNDARY VALUE PROBLEMS 9 Classification of second order linear partial differential equations Solutions of one dimensional wave equation One dimensional heat equation Steady state solution of two dimensional heat equations (Insulated edges excluded) Fourier series solutions in Cartesian coordinates.

36

UNIT- IV: -FOURIER TRANSFORM

Fourier Integral Theorem (without proof) Fourier transform pair Sine and Cosine transforms Properties Transforms of Simple functions Convolution theorem. UNIT- V: -Z TRANSFORM AND DIFFERENCE EQUATIONS 9

Z transform Elementary Properties Inverse Z transform Convolution theorem Formation of Difference equations Solution of difference equations using Z transform

L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS: 1.M.K. Venkatraman, Mathematics, Vol II, National Publishing Company, Chennai, 2004. 2.Chandrasekaran. A, Engineering Mathematics, Vol II, Dhanam Publication, 2008. REFERENCE: 1.Kandasamy. Engineering Mathematics Volume II, S. Chand & Co., New Delhi, 2005. 2.B.S. Grewal , Engineering Maths II, Sultem Chand, New Delhi, 2006. 3.Bali N.P & Manish Goyal, Text book of Engg. Maths, 3rd Edition, Lakshmi Publications, 2006.

37

CY 1203 OBJECTIVE

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & ENGINEERING (Common to EIE, ECE, EEE)

3 0

At the end of this course the student is expected to understand what constitutes the environment, what are precious resources in the environment, how to conserve these resources, what is the role of a human being in maintaining a clean environment and useful environment for the future generations and how to maintain ecological balance and preserve bio-diversity. UNIT- I: - NATURAL RESOURCES 9

Definition, scope and importance Need for public awareness Forest resources: Use and over-exploitation, deforestation, case studies. Timber extraction, mining, dams and their effects on forests and tribal people Water resources: Use and over-utilization of surface and ground water, floods, drought, conflicts over water, dams-benefits and problems Mineral resources: Use and exploitation, environmental effects of extracting and using mineral resources, case studies Food resources: World food problems, changes caused by agriculture and overgrazing, effects of modern agriculture, fertilizer-pesticide problems, water logging, salinity, case studies Energy resources: Growing energy needs, renewable and non renewable energy sources, use of alternate energy sources. case studies Land resources: Land as a resource, land degradation, man induced landslides, soil erosion and desertification Role of an individual in conservation of natural resources Equitable use of resources for sustainable lifestyles. Field study of local area to document environmental assets river / forest / grassland / hill / mountain. UNIT -II: -ECOSYSTEMS AND BIODIVERSITY 9

Concept of an ecosystem Structure and function of an ecosystem Producers, consumers and decomposers Energy flow in the ecosystem Ecological succession Food chains, food webs and ecological pyramids Introduction, types, characteristic features, structure and function of the (a) Forest ecosystem (b) Grassland ecosystem (c) Desert ecosystem (d) Aquatic ecosystems (ponds, streams, lakes, rivers, oceans, estuaries) Introduction to biodiversity Definition: genetic, species and ecosystem diversity Biogeographical classification of India Value of biodiversity: consumptive use, productive use, social, ethical, aesthetic and option values Biodiversity at global, National and local levels India as a mega-diversity nation Hot-spots of biodiversity Threats to biodiversity: habitat loss, poaching of wildlife, man-wildlife conflicts Endangered and endemic species of India Conservation of biodiversity: In-situ and Ex-situ conservation of biodiversity. Field study of common plants, insects, birds Field study of simple ecosystems pond, river, hill slopes, etc. UNIT -III: -ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION 9

Definition Causes, effects and control measures of: (a) Air pollution (b) Water pollution (c) Soil pollution (d) Marine pollution (e) Noise pollution (f) Thermal pollution (g) Nuclear hazards Soil waste management: Causes, effects and control measures of urban and industrial wastes Role of an individual in prevention of pollution Pollution case studies Disaster management: floods, earthquake, cyclone and landslides. Field study of local polluted site Urban / Rural / Industrial / Agricultural. 38

UNIT- IV: -SOCIAL ISSUES AND THE ENVIRONMENT

From unsustainable to sustainable development Urban problems related to energy Water conservation, rain water harvesting, watershed management Resettlement and rehabilitation of people; its problems and concerns, case studies Environmental ethics: Issues and possible solutions Climate change, global warming, acid rain, ozone layer depletion, nuclear accidents and holocaust, case studies. Wasteland reclamation Consumerism and waste products Environment production act Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) act Water (Prevention and control of Pollution) act Wildlife protection act Forest conservation act Issues involved in enforcement of environmental legislation Public awareness. UNIT- V: -HUMAN POPULATION AND THE ENVIRONMENT 9

Population growth, variation among nations Population explosion Family welfare Programme Environment and human health Human rights Value education HIV / AIDS Women and child welfare Role of information technology in environment and human health Case studies. L = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Gilbert M.Masters, Introduction to Environmental Engineering and Science, 2/ed, Pearson Education, 2004. 2. T.G.Miller Jr., Environmental Science, Wadsworth Publishing Co, 2005. 3. C.Townsend, J .Harper and Michael Begon, Essentials of Ecology, Blackwell Science, 2004. 4. R.K.Trivedi and P.K. Goel, Introduction to Air Pollution, Techno-Science Publications, 2006. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Bharucha Erach, The Biodiversity of India, Mapin Publishing Pvt. Ltd., Ahmedabad India, Email: mapin@icenet.net. 2. R.K.Trivedi, Handbook of Environmental Laws, Rules, Guidelines, Compliances and Standards, Vol. I and II, Enviro Media. 3. Cunningham, W.P.Cooper, T.H.Gorhani, Environmental Encyclopedia, Jaico Publ., House, Mumbai, 2001. 4. K.D.Wager, Environmental Management, W.B. Saunders Co., Philadelphia, USA, 1998. TOTAL = 45

39

EC 1209

ELECTRONIC DEVICES (Common to EIE & EEE)

3 0 0 3

OBJECTIVES: To acquaint the students with construction, theory and characteristics of the following electronic devices i. p-n junction diode ii. Bipolar transistor iii. Field effect transistor iv. LED,LCD and other photo electronic devices. v. Power control/regulator devices. UNIT - I: -SEMICONDUCTOR DIODE 9

Theory of p-n junction p-n junction as diode p-n diode currents Volt-amp characteristics Diode resistance Temperature effect of p-n junction Transition and diffusion capacitance of p-n diode Diode switching times. UNIT - II: -BI-POLAR TRANSISTOR 9

Junction transistor Transistor construction Detailed study of currents in transistor Input and output characteristics of CE, CB and CC configurations Transistor hybrid model for CE configuration Analytical expressions for transistor characteristics Transistor switching times Voltage rating Power transistors. UNIT- III: -FIELD EFFECT TRANSITORS 9

Junction field effect transistor Pinch off voltage JFET volt-ampere characteristics JFET small signal model MOSFETS and their characteristics FET as a variable resistor Unijunction transistor. UNIT- IV: -OPTO ELECTRONIC DEVICES 9

Photo emissivity and photo electric theory Theory, construction and characteristics. Light emitting diodes, liquid crystal cell, seven segment display, photo conductive cell, photodiode, solar cell, photo transistor, opto couplers and laser diode. UNIT - V: -MISCELLANEOUS DEVICES 9

Theory, characteristics and application: SCR, TRIAC, PUT, tunnel diode, thermistors, piezo electric devices, zener diode, charge coupled devices, varactor diode and LDR. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Jacob. Millman, Christos C.Halkias, Electronic Devices and Circuits, Tata McGraw Hill Publishing Limited, New Delhi, 2003. 2. David A. Bell, Electronic Devices and Circuits, Prentice Hall of India Private Limited, New Delhi, 2003.

40

REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Theodre. F. Boghert, Electronic Devices & Circuits, Pearson Education, VI Edition, 2003. 2. Ben G. Streetman and Sanjay Banerjee, Solid State Electronic Devices, Pearson Education, 2002 / PHI 3. Allen Mottershead, Electronic Devices and Circuits An Introduction, Prentice Hall of India Private Limited, New Delhi, 2003.

41

CS 1211 OBJECTIVES

DATA STRUCTURES AND ALGORITHM (Common to EIE & EEE)

i. ii. iii. iv. v.

To introduce the concept of arrays, structures, pointers and recursion. To study stack, queue and linked list concepts. To study trees, representation of trees, tree traversal and basic operations on trees. To study some of the sorting and searching techniques. To study the concept of graphs, traversal techniques and minimum spanning tree. 9

UNIT- I:-INTRODUCTION TO DATA STRUCTURES

Abstract data types - Sequences as value definitions - Data types in C - Pointers in C -Data structures and C - Arrays in C - Array as ADT - One dimensional array -Implementing one dimensional array - Array as parameters - Two dimensional array -Structures in C Implementing structures - Unions in C - Implementation of unions -Structure parameters Allocation of storage and scope of variables. Recursive definition and processes: Factorial function - Fibonacci sequence - Recursion in C Efficiency of recursion. UNIT- II:-STACK, QUEUE AND LINKED LIST 9

Stack definition and examples Primitive operations Example - Representing stacks in C Push and pop operation implementation. Queue as ADT - C Implementation of queues - Insert operation - Priority queue - Array implementation of priority queue. Inserting and removing nodes from a list-linked implementation of stack, queue and priority queue - Other list structures - Circular lists: Stack and queue as circular list -Primitive operations on circular lists. Header nodes - Doubly linked lists - Addition of long positive integers on circular and doubly linked list. UNIT - III:- TREES 9

Binary trees: Operations on binary trees - Applications of binary trees - Binary tree representation - Node representation of binary trees - Implicit array representation of binary tree Binary tree traversal in C - Threaded binary tree - Representing list as binary tree Finding the Kth element - Deleting an element. Trees and their applications: C representation of trees - Tree traversals - Evaluating an expression tree - Constructing a tree. UNIT- IV:-SORTING AND SEARCHING 9

General background of sorting: Efficiency considerations, Notations, Efficiency of sorting. Exchange sorts; Bubble sort; Quick sort; Selection sort; Binary tree sort; Heap sort. Heap as a priority queue - Sorting using a heap-heap sort procedure - Insertion sorts: Simple insertion Shell sort - Address calculation sort - Merge sort -Radix sort. Sequential search: Indexed sequential search - Binary search - Interpolation search.

42

UNIT - V:-GRAPHS

Application of graph - C representation of graphs - Transitive closure - Warshalls algorithm Shortest path algorithm - Linked representation of graphs - Dijkstras algorithm - Graph traversal - Traversal methods for graphs - Spanning forests - Undirected graph and their traversals - Depth first traversal - Application of depth first traversal - Efficiency of depth first traversal - Breadth first traversal - Minimum spanning tree - Kruskals algorithm - Round robin algorithm. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60

TEXT BOOK 1. Aaron M. Tenenbaum, Yeedidyah Langsam, Moshe J. Augenstein, Data Structures Using C, Pearson Education, 2004 / PHI. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. E.Balagurusamy, Programming in Ansi C, Second Edition, Tata McGraw Hill Publication, 2003. 2. Robert L. Kruse, Bruce P. Leung Clovis L.Tondo, Data Structures and Program Design in C, Pearson Education, 2000 / PHI.

43

ME1210

APPLIED THERMODYNAMICS (Common to EIE & EEE)

OBJECTIVES i. To expose the fundamentals of thermodynamics and to be able to use it in accounting for the bulk behaviour of the sample physical systems. ii. To integrate the basic concepts into various thermal applications like IC engines, gas turbines, steam boiler, steam turbine, compressors, refrigeration and air conditioning. iii. To enlighten the various modes of heat transfer and their engineering applications. (Use of standard steam tables, refrigeration tables and heat transfer data book are permitted) UNIT -I: - BASIC CONCEPTS AND LAWS OF THERMODYNAMICS 9

Classical approach: Thermodynamic systems Boundary - Control volume - System and surroundings Universe Properties - State-process Cycle Equilibrium - Work and heat transfer Point and path functions - First law of thermodynamics for open and closed systems - First law applied to a control volume - SFEE equations [steady flow energy equation] Second law of thermodynamics - Heat engines - Refrigerators and heat pumps - Carnot cycle Carnot theorem - Clausius inequality - Concept of entropy - Principle of increase of entropy Basic thermodynamic relations. UNIT-II: -IC ENGINES AND GAS TURBINES 9

Air standard cycles: Otto, diesel and dual cycles and comparison of efficiency - Working Principle of four stroke and two stroke engines - Working principle of spark ignition and compression ignition engines - Applications of IC engines - Normal and abnormal combustion - Working principle of four stroke and two stroke engines - Working principle of spark ignition and compression ignition engines - Applications of IC engines. Open and closed cycle gas turbines Ideal and actual cycles - Brayton cycle - Cycle with reheat, intercooling and regeneration Applications of gas turbines for aviation and power generation. UNIT- III: -STEAM BOILERS AND TURBINES 9

Formation of steam - Properties of steam Use of steam tables and charts Steam power cycle (Rankine) - Modern features of high-pressure boilers Mountings and accessories Testing of boilers. Steam turbines: Impulse and reaction principle Velocity diagrams Compounding and governing methods of steam turbines (qualitative treatment only) - Layout diagram and working principle of a steam power plant.

44

UNIT- IV: -COMPRESSORS, REFRIGERATION AND AIR CONDITIONING

Positive displacement compressors Reciprocating compressors Indicated power Clearance volume Various efficiencies Clearance ratio - Volume rate - Conditions for perfect and imperfect intercooling - Multi stage with intercooling Rotary positive displacement compressors Construction and working principle of centrifugal and axial flow compressors. Unit of refrigeration - Basic functional difference between refrigeration and air conditioning Various methods of producing refrigerating effects (RE) Vapour compression cycle: P-H and T-S diagram - Saturation cycles - Effect of subcooling and super heating - (qualitative treatment only) - Air-conditioning systems Basic psychrometry - Simple psychrometric processes - Types of air-conditioning systems -Selection criteria for a particular application (qualitative treatment only). UNIT- V: -HEAT TRANSFER 9

One-dimensional Heat Conduction: Plane wall Cylinder Sphere - Composite walls Critical thickness of insulation Heat transfer through extended surfaces (simple fins). Convection: Free convection and forced convection - Internal and external flow -Empirical relations - Determination of convection heat transfer co-efficient by using DittusBaetter equation. Radiation: BlackGray bodies - Radiation Shape Factor (RSF) - Cooling of electronic components: Thermoelectric cooling Chip cooling. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS 1.P.K. Nag, Basic and Applied Engineering Thermodynamics, Tata McGraw Hill, New Delhi, 2002. 2.B.K. Sachdeva, Fundamentals of Engineering Heat and Mass Transfer (SI Units), New Age International (P) Limited, Chennai, 2003. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Rogers and Mayhew, Engineering Thermodynamics Work and Heat Transfer, Addision Wesley, New Delhi, 1999. 2. Eastop and McConkey, Applied Thermodynamics, Addison Wesley, New Delhi. 1999. 3. M.L. Mathur and F.S. Metha, Thermal Engineering, Jain Brothers, New Delhi, 1997. 4. B.K. Sankaar, Thermal Engineering, Tata McGraw Hill, New Delhi, 1998.

45

EI 1201

ELECTRONIC INSTRUMENTATION

OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v. vi. To provide adequate knowledge about the various principles involved in electronic measurements and operation of important electronic instruments. To provide the details of various analog electronic instruments which are used to measure voltage, current and power. An exposure is given to the student about signal generation and analysis. Indepth knowledge is given to the student about cathode ray oscilloscope. A clear idea has been given about digital electronic instruments which are used to measure voltage, frequency, period, total count etc. Emphasis is laid on display and recording devices. 9

UNIT -I: -ANALOG METERS

D.C, A.C voltmeters, ammeters, Multimeter, power meter, Q-meter, true RMS meter, vector impedance meter, vector voltmeter, component measuring instrument. UNIT- II: -SIGNAL GENERATORS AND ANALYZERS 9

Sine wave generator Frequency synthesized sine wave generator Sweep frequency generator, pulse and square wave generator Function generator Wave analyzer Applications Harmonic distortion analyzer Spectrum analyzer Applications Audio Frequency generator Noise generator. UNIT- III: -CATHODE RAY OSCILLOSCOPE 9

General purpose oscilloscope Screens for CRT graticules Vertical & horizontal deflection systems Delay line Multiple trace Dual beam & dual trace Probes Oscilloscope techniques Special oscilloscopes Storage oscilloscopes Sampling oscilloscope Digital CRO. UNIT- IV: -DIGITAL INSTRUMENTS 9

Digital method for measuring frequency, period, phase difference, pulse width, time interval, total count Digital voltmeter Types Automatic polarity indication, automatic ranging, auto zeroing DMM Microprocessor based DMM DPM IEEE 488 bus. UNIT- V: -DISPLAY AND RECORDING DEVICES 9

Bar graph display Segmental and dot matrix display X-Y recorders, magnetic tape recorders Digital recording Data loggers. Interference and screening Electrostatic and electromagnetic interference & earth loops. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 46

TEXT BOOKS 1. Albert D. Helfrick & William D. Cooper, Modern Electronic Instrumentation & Measurement Techniques, Prentice Hall of India, 2002. 2. A.J. Bouwens, Digital Instrumentation, Tata McGraw Hill, 2007. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. B.M.Oliver and J.M.cage, Electronic Measurements & Instrumentation, McGraw Hill International Edition, 2006. 2. Joseph. J. Carr, Elements of Electronic Instrumentation & Measurements, III edition, Pearson Education, 2003. 3. C.S. Rangan, G.R. Sarma, V.S.V. Mani, Instrumentation Devices & Systems, Tata McGraw Hill, 2002. 4. D. A. Bell, Electronic Instrumentation and Measurements, Prentice Hall of India, 2002. 5. Rajendra Prasad, Electronic Measurements and Instrumentation, Khanna Publishers, Delhi, 2003. 6. B.R. Gupta, Electronics and Instrumentation, S. Chand Co. (P) Ltd., Delhi, 2003.

47

EI1231

ELECTRONIC DEVICES LABORATORY

0 0

OBJECTIVE To study the characteristics and to determine the device parameters of various solid-state devices. List of Experiments 1. Static characteristics of transistor under CE, CB, CC and determination of hybrid parameters. 2. Static characteristics and parameter determination of JFET. 3. Static characteristics of semiconductor diode, zener diode and study of simple voltage regulator circuits. 4. Static characteristics of UJT and its application as a relaxation oscillator. 5. Photodiode, Phototransistor characteristics and study of light activated relay circuit. 6. Static characteristics of Thermistors. 7. Single phase half wave and full wave rectifiers with inductive and capacitive filters. 8. Phase shift oscillators. 9. Frequency response of common emitter amplifiers. 10. Differential amplifiers using FET. P = 45 TOTAL = 45

48

CS1235

DATA STRUCTURES AND ALGORITHM LABORATORY (Common to EIE & EEE)

0 0

3 1

OBJECTIVE To implement Queue, stack, linked lists and to implement search, sort and traversal technique. 1. Queue implmentation using arrays. 2. Stack implementation-using arrays. 3. Singly, doubly and circular liked list implementation and all possible operations on lists. 4. Queue and Stack implementation using linked list 5. Binary search tree implementation using linked list and possible operations on binary search trees. 6. In-order, preorder and post order traversals. 7. Quick sort implementation and its efficiency calculation. 8. Binary Search implementation. 9. Graph implementation using arrays and list structure. 10. Depth first and Breadth first traversal in graphs. P = 45 TOTAL = 45

49

ME 1211

THERMAL AND FLUID MECHANICS LABORATORY

0 0 3

OBJECTIVE To learn about various IC engines and heat transfer concepts. THERMAL LAB 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Valve timing and port timing diagrams for IC Engines. Performance test on a Petrol Engine. Performance test on a Diesel Engine. Heat Balance test on an IC Engine. Boiler performance and Heat Balance Test. Performance test on a Refrigerator (Determination of COP) Determination of heat transfer Coefficient (Free and forced convection)

List of Equipments Engine cut section models. Single cylinder petrol engine with Mechanical dynamometer. Multi cylinder petrol engine with hydraulic dynamometer. Multi cylinder diesel engine with Electrical dynamometer. Steam boilers with suitable mountings and accessories. Refrigeration Test Rig. Forced convection Heat transfer Test set up. Free convection Heat transfer test set up.
FLUID MECHANICS LABORATORY

OBJECTIVE At the end of this course the student shall be able to do hydraulic tests on pumps and turbines and should have developed the knowledge about the characteristics of hydraulic machines and their importance. 1. Flow measurements using venturi meter. 2. Test to estimate frictional losses in pipe flow. 3. Test on positive displacement pump for obtaining its characteristics curves and design flow parameters. 4. Test on centrifugal pump for obtaining its characteristics curves and design flow parameters. 5. Test on jet pump for obtaining its characteristics curves and design flow parameters. 6. Test on reaction turbine for obtaining the characteristics curves and to design values of specific speed, discharge, output and efficiency. 7. Test on impulse turbine to obtain its characteristics curves and hydraulic design values. P = 45 TOTAL = 45

50

SEMESTER IV EC 1210 ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS (Common to EIE & EEE) 3 1 0 4

OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v. . UNIT -I: -SMALL SIGNAL AND LARGE SIGNAL AMPLIFIERS 9 To expose the students to study the different biasing and configurations of the amplifier circuits. To study the characteristics of tuned amplifier. To expose the students to various amplifiers oscillator circuits with feedback concepts. To learn the wave shaping process and circuits. To learn and analyse the process of AC to DC conversion.

Fixed and self biasing of BJT & FET Small signal analysis of CE, CC & Common source amplifiers Cascade and Darlington connections, transformer coupled class A, B & AB amplifiers Push-pull amplifiers. UNIT- II: -DIFFERENTIAL AND TUNED AMPLIFIERS 9

Differential amplifiers Common mode and differential mode analysis - DC and AC analysis Characteristics of tuned amplifiers Single & double tuned amplifier. UNIT- III: -FEEDBACK AMPLIFIER AND OSCILLATORS 9

Characteristics of negative feedback amplifiers Voltage / current, series/shunt feedback Theory of sinusoidal oscillators Phase shift and Wien bridge oscillators Colpitts, Hartley and crystal oscillators. UNIT- IV: -PULSE CIRCUITS 9

RC wave shaping circuits Diode clampers and clippers Multivibrators Schmitt triggers UJT based saw tooth oscillators. UNIT - V: -RECTIFIERS AND POWER SUPPLY CIRCUITS 9

Half wave & full wave rectifier analysis - Inductor filter Capacitor filter - Series voltage regulator Switched mode power supply. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60

51

TEXT BOOKS 1. David A. Bell, Electronic Devices & Circuits, Prentice Hall of India/Pearson Education, IV Edition, Eighth printing, 2003. 2. Jacob Millman & Christos.C.Halkias, Integrated Electronics: Analog and Digital Circuits and System, Tata McGraw Hill, 2006. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Robert. L. Boylestad & Lo Nashelsky, Electronic Devices & Circuit Theory, 8th edition, Pearson Education, Third Indian Reprint, 2002 / PHI. 2. Jacob Millman & Herbert Taub, Pulse, Digital & Switching Waveforms, Tata McGraw Hill, Edition 2000, 24th reprint, 2003 3. Donald L.Schilling and Charles Belove, Electronic Circuits, Tata McGraw Hill, 3rd Edition, 2003.

52

EI 1202 OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv

LINEAR INTEGRATED CIRCUITS

To study the IC fabrication procedure. To study characteristics; realize circuits; design for signal analysis using Op-amp ICs. To study the applications of Op-amp. To study internal functional blocks and the applications of special ICs like Timers, PLL circuits, regulator Circuits, ADCs. 9

UNIT -I: -IC FABRICATION

IC classification, fundamental of monolithic IC technology, epitaxial growth, masking and etching, diffusion of impurities. Realization of monolithic ICs and packaging. UNIT- II: -CHARACTERISTICS OF OPAMP 9

Ideal OP-AMP characteristics, DC characteristics, AC characteristics, offset voltage and current: voltage series feedback and shunt feedback amplifiers, differential amplifier; frequency response of OP-AMP; Basic applications of op-amp summer, differentiator and integrator. UNIT- III: -APPLICATIONS OF OPAMP 9

Instrumentation amplifier, first and second order active filters, V/I & I/V converters, comparators, multivibrators, waveform generators, clippers, clampers, peak detector, S/H circuit, D/A converter (R-2R ladder and weighted resistor types), A/D converter - Dual slope, successive approximation and flash types. UNIT- IV: -SPECIAL ICs 9

555 Timer circuit Functional block, characteristics & applications; 566-voltage controlled oscillator circuit; 565-phase lock loop circuit functioning and applications, Analog multiplier ICs. UNIT- V: -APPLICATION ICs 9

IC voltage regulators - LM317, 723 regulators, switching regulator, MA 7840, LM 380 power amplifier, ICL 8038 function generator IC, isolation amplifiers, opto coupler, opto electronic ICs. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. Ramakant A.Gayakwad, Op-amps and Linear Integrated Circuits, IV edition, Pearson Education, 2003 / PHI. 2. D.Roy Choudhary, Sheil B.Jain, Linear Integrated Circuits, II edition, New Age, 2003.

53

REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Jacob Millman, Christos C.Halkias, Integrated Electronics - Analog and Digital circuits system, Tata McGraw Hill, 2003. 2. Robert F.Coughlin, Fredrick F.Driscoll, Op-amp and Linear ICs, Pearson Education, 4th edition, 2002 / PHI. 3. David A.Bell, Op-amp & Linear ICs, Prentice Hall of India, 2nd edition, 2006.

54

EI 1203 OBJECTIVES

DIGITAL ELECTRONICS

i. To study various number systems and to simplify the mathematical expressions using Boolean functions simple problems. ii. To study implementation of combinational circuits iii. iv. To study the design of various synchronous and asynchronous circuits. To expose the students to various memory devices 9

UNIT -I: -NUMBER SYSTEM & BOOLEAN ALGEBRA

Review of number system; types and conversion, types of codes. Boolean algebra: DeMorgans theorem, switching functions and simplification using K-maps & Quine McCluskey method implementation of Boolean function using logic gates. UNIT -II: -COMBINATIONAL CIRCUITS 9

Design of adder, subtractor, comparators, code converters, encoders, decoders, multiplexers and demultiplexers, parity generators and checkers UNIT- III: -SYNCHRONOUS SEQUENTIAL CIRCUITS 9

Flip flops - SR, D, JK and T. Analysis of synchronous sequential circuits; design of sequence detector, serial adder, Counters, state diagram; state reduction; state assignment., shift registers. UNIT- IV: -ASYNCHRONOUS SEQUENCTIAL CIRCUIT Analysis design, hazards. of asynchronous sequential machines, state assignment, 9 asynchronous 9

UNIT- V: -PROGRAMMABLE LOGIC DEVICES AND LOGIC FAMILIES

Memories: ROM, PROM, EPROM, PLA, PLD, digital logic families: TTL, ECL, CMOS. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. M. Morris Mano, Digital Design, Prentice Hall of India, 2002. 2. Charles H.Roth, Fundamentals Logic Design, Jaico Publishing, IV edition, 2002. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Floyd, Digital Fundamentals, 8th edition, Pearson Education, 2003. 2. John F.Wakerly, Digital Design Principles and Practice, 3rd edition, Pearson Education, 2002.

55

EI 1204 OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v.

TRANSDUCER ENGINEERING

3 0 0

To impart knowledge about the principles and analysis of sensors. Discussion of errors and error analysis. Emphasis on characteristics and response of transducers. To have an adequate knowledge in resistance transducers. Basic knowledge in inductance and capacitance transducers and exposure to other transducers. 9

UNIT- I: -SCIENCE OF MEASUREMENTS AND INSTRUMENTATION OF TRANSDUCERS

Units and standards Calibration methods Static calibration Classification of errors Error analysis Statistical methods Odds and uncertainty Classification of transducers Selection of transducers. UNIT -II: -CHARACTERISTICS OF TRANSDUCERS 9

Static characteristics Accuracy, precision, resolution, sensitivity, linearity etc. Dynamic characteristics Mathematical model of transducer Zero, I and II order transducers. Response to impulse, step, ramp and sinusoidal inputs. UNIT- III: -VARIABLE RESISTANCE TRANSDUCERS 9

Principle of operation, construction details, characteristics and application of resistance potentiometer, strain gauge, resistance thermometer, thermistor, hot-wire anemometer, piezoresistive sensor and humidity sensor. UNIT- IV: -VARIABLE INDUCTANCE AND VARIABLE CAPACITANCE TRANSDUCERS 9 Induction potentiometer Variable reluctance transducers EI pick up LVDT Capacitive transducer and types Capacitor microphone Frequency response. UNIT -V: -OTHER TRANSDUCERS 9

Piezoelectric transducer, magnetostrictive IC sensor Digital transducers Smart sensor Fiber optic transducer. L = 45 TOTAL = 45

56

TEXT BOOKS 1. E.A. Doebelin, Measurement Systems Applications and Design, Tata McGraw Hill, New York, 2003. 2. A.K. Sawhney, A course in Electrical & Electronic Measurement and Instrumentation, Dhanpat Rai and Co (P) Ltd., 2004. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. D. Patranabis, Sensors and Transducers, Prentice Hall of India, 2004. 2. John P. Bentley, Principles of Measurement Systems, III Edition, Pearson Education, 2000. 3. Hermann K.P. Neubert, Instrument Transducers, Oxford University Press, 2000. 4. D.V.S Murthy, Transducers and Instrumentation, Prentice Hall of India, 2001. 5. S. Ranganathan, Transducer Engineering, Allied Publishers Pvt. Ltd., 2003. 6. Al Sutko and J.D. Faulk, Industrial Instrumentation, Vikas Publications, Delhi, 2006.

57

EI 1205 OBJECTIVES

ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC MEASUREMENTS

3 0 0 3

i. To make the students to gain a clear knowledge of the basic laws governing the operation of electrical instruments and the measurement techniques. ii. iii. iv. v. vi. Emphasis is laid on the meters used to measure current & voltage. To have an adequate knowledge in the measurement techniques for power and energy. Elaborate discussion about Potentiometer & Instrument transformers. Detailed study of resistance measuring methods. Detailed study of inductance and capacitance measurement.

UNIT- I: -MEASUREMENT OF VOLTAGE AND CURRENT

Galvanometers Ballistic, DArsonval galvanometer Theory, calibration, application Principle, construction, operation and comparison of moving coil, moving iron meters, dynamometer, induction type & thermal type meter, rectifier type Extension of range and calibration of voltmeter and ammeter Errors and compensation. UNIT- II: -MEASUREMENT OF POWER AND ENERGY 9

Electrodynamometer type wattmeter Theory & its errors Methods of correction LPF wattmeter Phantom loading Induction type KWH meter Calibration of wattmeter, energy meter. UNIT -III: -POTENTIOMETERS & INSTRUMENT TRANSFORMERS 9

DC potentiometer Basic circuit, standardization Laboratory type (Cromptons) AC potentiometer Drysdale (polar type) type Gall-Tinsley (coordinate) type Limitations and applications C.T and V.T construction, theory, operation, phasor diagram, characteristics, testing, error elimination Applications. UNIT- IV: -RESISTANCE MEASUREMENT 9

Measurement of low, medium & high resistance Ammeter, voltmeter method Wheatstone bridge Kelvin double bridge Ductor ohmmeter Series and shunt type ohmmeter High resistance measurement Megger Direct deflection methods Prices guard-wire method Loss of charge method Earth resistance measurement. UNIT- V: -IMPEDANCE MEASUREMENT 9

A.C bridges Measurement of inductance, capacitance Q of coil Maxwell Bridge Weins bridge Hays bridge Schering bridge Anderson bridge Campbell bridge to measure mutual inductance Errors in A.C. bridge methods and their compensation Detectors Excited field A.C. galvanometer Vibration galvanometer Introduction to cable fault and eddy current measurement. 58

L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. E.W.Golding & F.C.Widdis, Electrical Measurements & Measuring Instruments, A.H.Wheeler & Co, 2004. 2. A.K. Sawhney, Electrical & Electronic Measurements and Instrumentation, Dhanpath Rai & Co (P) Ltd, 2004. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. J.B.Gupta, A Course in Electronic and Electrical Measurements and Instrumentation, S.K. Kataria & Sons, Delhi, 2003. 2. S.K.Singh, Industrial Instrumentation and control, Tata McGraw Hill, 2003. 3. H.S.Kalsi, Electronic Instrumentation, Tata McGraw Hill, 2004. 4. Martia U. Reissland, Electrical Measurement, New Age International (P) Ltd., 2001.

59

EE 1211 OBJECTIVES

ELECTRICAL MACHINES

3 0

0 3

To impart knowledge on i. ii. iii. iv. v. Constructional details, principle of operation, performance, starters and testing of D.C. machines. Constructional details, principle of operation and performance of transformers. Constructional details, principle of operation and performance of induction motors. Constructional details and principle of operation of alternators and special machines. Power System transmission and distribution. 9

UNIT -I: -D.C. MACHINES

Constructional details emf equation Methods of excitation Self and separately excited generators Characteristics of series, shunt and compound generators Principle of operation of D.C. motor Back emf and torque equation Characteristics of series, shunt and compound motors Starting of D.C. motors Types of starters - Testing, brake test and Swinburnes test Speed control of D.C. shunt motors. UNIT- II: -TRANSFORMERS 9

Constructional details Principle of operation emf equation Transformation ratio Transformer on no load Parameters referred to HV/LV windings Equivalent circuit Transformer on load Regulation - Testing Load test, open circuit and short circuit tests. UNIT- III: -INDUCTION MOTORS 9

Construction Types Principle of operation of three-phase induction motors Equivalent circuit Performance calculation Starting and speed control Single-phase induction motors (only qualitative treatment). UNIT- IV: -SYNCHRONOUS AND SPECIAL MACHINES 9

Construction of synchronous machines-types Induced emf Voltage regulation; emf and mmf methods Brushless alternators Reluctance motor Hysteresis motor Stepper motor. UNIT- V: -TRANSMISSION AND DISTRIBUTION 9

Structure of electric power systems Generation, transmission, sub-transmission and distribution systems - EHVAC and EHVDC transmission systems Substation layout Insulators cables. L = 45 TOTAL =45 60

TEXT BOOKS 1. D.P.Kothari and I.J.Nagrath, Basic Electrical Engineering, Tata McGraw Hill publishing company ltd, second edition, 2002. 2. C.L. Wadhwa, Electrical Power Systems, Wiley eastern ltd India, 2004. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. S.K.Bhattacharya, Electrical Machines, Tata McGraw Hill Publishing company ltd, second edition, 2004. 2. V.K.Mehta and Rohit Mehta, Principles of Power System, S.Chand and Company Ltd, third edition, 2003.

61

EI 1232

ELECTRONIC MEASUREMENTS LABORATORY

0 0 3 1

OBJECTIVE The aim of this lab is to impart to the students an adequate knowledge and work experience of the different types of AC and DC bridges, electronic measurement methods for different electronic instruments. List of Experiments 1. Measurement of medium resistance using Wheatstones bridge. 2. Kelvins Double Bridge. 3. Calibration of single-phase energy meter. 4. Calibration of wattmeter. 5. Schering and Anderson Bridges. 6. Calibration of ammeter, voltmeter. 7. Statistical analysis of random errors. 8. V / I, I / V converters. 9. Study of transients. 10. Design, Construction and Calibration of Series and Shunt type ohmmeters. 11. Regulated power Supply using Fixed Voltage IC Regulators and LM 723

62

EI 1233

LINEAR & DIGITAL INTEGRATED CIRCUITS LABORATORY

0 0 3 1

OBJECTIVE To study various digital & linear integrated circuits used in simple system configuration. List of Experiments 1. Study of Basic Digital ICs.(Verification of truth table for AND, OR, EXOR, NOT, NOR, NAND, JK FlipFlop, RS FlipFlop, D FlipFlop,T FlipFlop) 2. Implementation of Boolean Functions, Adder/ Subtractor circuits. 3. Code converters, Parity generator and parity checker, 4. Encoders and Decoders 5. 4-bit shift registers in 6. Counters: SISO,SIPO,PISO,PIPO modes using suitable ICs. Design and implementation of 4-bit modulo counters as synchronous and

asynchronous types using FF ICs and specific counter IC. 7. Shift Registers: Design and implementation of 4-bit shift registers in SISO, SIPO, PISO, PIPO modes using suitable ICs. 8. Multiplex/ De-multiplex:- Study of 4:1; 8:1 multiplexer and Study of 1:4; 1:8 demultiplexer 9. Timer IC application. :- Study of NE/SE 555 timer in Astable, Monostable operation. 10. Application of Op-Amp:-Slew rate verifications, inverting and non-inverting amplifier, Adder, comparator, Integrater and Differentiator. 11. Study of Analog to Digital Converter and Digital to Analog Converter 12. Wein bridge oscillator P = 45 TOTAL = 45

63

EE 1235

ELECTRICAL MACHINES LABORATORY

0 0 3 1

OBJECTIVE To expose the students to the basic operation of electrical machines and help them to develop experimental skills. List of Experiments 1. Open circuit and load characteristics of separately excited and self excited D.C. generator. 2. Load test on D.C. shunt motor. 3. Load test on D.C. series motor. 4. Swinburnes test and speed control of D.C. shunt motor. 5. Load test on single phase transformer and open circuit and short circuit test on single phase transformer 6. Regulation of three phase alternator by EMF and MMF methods. 7. Load test on three phase induction motor. 8. No load and blocked rotor tests on three phase induction motor (Determination of equivalent circuit parameters) 9. Load test on single-phase induction motor. 10. Study of D.C. motor and induction motor starters.

P = 45 TOTAL = 45

64

SEMESTER V EI 1301 INDUSTRIAL INSTRUMENTATION 3 0 0 3

OBJECTIVES
i.

To provide sound knowledge about various techniques used for the measurement of industrial parameters. Discussion of load cells, torque meter and various velocity pick-ups. Exposure to various accelerometer pick-ups, vibrometers, density and viscosity pick-ups. To have an adequate knowledge about pressure transducers. To have an idea about the temperature standards, calibration and signal conditioning used in RTDs. To have a sound knowledge about thermocouples and pyrometry techniques.

ii. iii. iv. v. vi.

UNIT- I: -SPEED, FORCE, TORQUE & DENSITY MEASURUMENTS

Measurement of Speed- Revolution Counter, Drag-cup tachometer, Stroboscope, AC & DC tacho generators, Capacitive tachometer- Speed measurement using reluctance pick-up, phototransducer. Measurement of Force: Load cell Strain gauges- LVDT load Cells Pneumatic load cell hydraulic load cell. Torque measurements using strain gauges and magneto elastic principle Density measurements for liquids and gases. UNIT- II: -PRESSURE MEASUREMENT 9

Manometers, Bourdon gauges, Diaphragm gauges, Bellows, Bell gauges, Electrical types Vacuum gauges, McLeod gauge, Knudsen gauge, Pirani gauge, thermo couple gauge, ionization gauge, Differential Pressure transmitter Pneumatic and electrical types- Calibration of pressure gauges. UNIT- III: -TEMPERATURE MEASUREMENT 9

Temperature Scales, Temperature Standard , Bimetallic thermometer, filled in thermometers, Vapour pressure thermometers, resistance thermometers, 3-lead and 4-lead arrangement-Thermistorthermocouples types and ranges-characteristics, law of thermocouples, cold junction compensation, thermowell, installation of thermocouples-radiation pyrometer, optical pyrometer.

65

UNIT- IV: -FLOW MEASUREMENTS

Variable head flow meters, Orifice plate, Venturi tube, dall tube, flow nozzle, pilot tube, rotameter, mass flowmeter, positive displacement meter, turbine flow meter, electromagnetic flow meter, ultrasonic flow meter, Solid flow measurement, flow meter calibration. UNIT- V: -LEVEL, HUMIDITY, MOISTURE, VISCOSITY MEASUREMENTS 9

Measurement of level: Sight glass, float gauges, displacer torque tube, bubbler tube, Differential pressure methods Hydra step systems- Electrical types of level gauges using resistance, Capacitance, Nuclear radiation and ultrasonic sensors. Humidity: dew point, psychrometers Hydrometers Moisture measurement in Granular materials, solid penetrable materials like wood paper. Viscosity terms- Say bolt viscometer Rota meter Type viscometer Consistency Industrial Consistency meters. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. D. Patranabis, Principles of Industrial Instrumentation, Tata McGraw Hill Publishing Company Ltd, 2003. 2. R.K. Jain, Mechanical and Industrial Measurements, Khanna Publishers, New Delhi, 2005. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. E.O. Doebelin, Measurement Systems Application and Design, Tata McGraw Hill publishing company, 2003. 2. A.K. Sawhney and P. Sawhney, A Course on Mechanical Measurements, Instrumentation and Control, Dhanpath Rai and Co, 2004. 3. D.P. Eckman, Industrial Instrumentation, Wiley Eastern Ltd., 2002.

66

EI 1302 . OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v.

CONTROL ENGINEERING

To understand the methods of representation of systems and getting their transfer function models. To provide adequate knowledge in the time response of systems and steady state error analysis. To give basic knowledge is obtaining the open loop and closedloop frequency responses of systems. To understand the concept of stability of control system and methods of stability analysis. To study the three ways of designing compensation for a control system. 9

UNIT- I: -SYSTEMS AND THEIR REPRESENTATION

Basic elements in control systems Open and closed loop systems Electrical analogy of mechanical and thermal systems Transfer function Synchros AC and DC servomotors Block diagram reduction techniques Signal flow graphs. UNIT - II: -TIME RESPONSE 9

Time response Time domain specifications Types of test input I and II order system response Error coefficients Generalized error series Steady state error P, PI, PID modes of feed back control. UNIT- III: -FREQUENCY RESPONSE 9

Frequency response Bode plot Polar plot Constant M and N circles Nichols chart Determination of closed loop response from open loop response Correlation between frequency domain and time domain specifications. UNIT- IV: -STABILITY OF CONTROL SYSTEM 9

Characteristics equation Location of roots in S plane for stability Routh Hurwitz criterion Root locus construction Effect of pole, zero addition Gain margin and phase margin Nyquist stability criterion. UNIT - V: -COMPENSATOR DESIGN plots. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 9

Performance criteria Lag, lead and lag-lead networks Compensator design using bode

67

TEXT BOOKS 1. Ogata.K, Modern Control System Engineering Fourth Edition Wiley And Sons, 2004. 2. I.J. Nagrath & M. Gopal, Control Systems Engineering, New Age International Publishers, 2003. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. B.C. Kuo, Automatic Control Systems, Prentice Hall of India Ltd., New Delhi, 2007. 2. M. Gopal, Control Systems, Principles & Design, Tata McGraw Hill, New Delhi, 2002. 3. M.N. Bandyopadhyay, Control Engineering Theory and Practice, Prentice Hall of India, 2003.

68

EC 1311

COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING

3 0 0 3

OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v. To understand basic signals, analog modulation, demodulation and radio receivers. To explain the characteristics and model of transmission medium. To understand source digitization, digital multiplexing and modulation. To understand data communication system and techniques. To learn the basics of satellite and optical fiber communication systems. 9

UNIT - I: -MODULATION SYSTEMS

Time and frequency domain representation of signals, amplitude modulation and demodulation, frequency modulation and demodulation, super heterodyne radio receiver. Frequency division multiplexing. Pulse width modulation. UNIT- II: -TRANSMISSION MEDIUM 9

Transmission lines Types, equivalent circuit, losses, standing waves, impedance matching, bandwidth; radio propagation Ground wave and space wave propagation, critical frequency, maximum usable frequency, path loss, white Gaussian noise. UNIT - III: -DIGITAL COMMUNICATION 9

Pulse code modulation, time division multiplexing, digital T-carrier system. Digital radio system. Digital modulation: Frequency and phase shift keying Modulator and demodulator, bit error rate calculation. UNIT- IV: -DATA COMMUNICATION AND NETWORK PROTOCOL 9

Data Communication codes, error control. Serial and parallel interface, telephone network, data modem, ISDN, LAN, ISO-OSI seven layer architecture for WAN. UNIT - V: -SATELLITE AND OPTICAL FIBER COMMUNICATIONS 9

Orbital satellites, geostationary satellites, look angles, satellite system link models, satellite system link equations; advantages of optical fiber communication - Light propagation through fiber, fiber loss, light sources and detectors. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Wayne Tomasi, Electronic Communication Systems, Pearson Education, 3rd Edition, 2001. 69

2. Roy Blake, Electronic Communication Systems, Thomson Delmar, 2nd Edition, 2002. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. William Schweber, Electronic Communication Systems, Prentice Hall of India, 2002. 2. G. Kennedy, Electronic Communication Systems, McGraw Hill, 4th edition, 2002. 3. Miller, Modern Electronic Communication, Prentice Hall of India, 2003.

70

EC 1312

MICROPROCESSOR AND MICROCONTROLLER

3 1

OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v. To study the Architecture of 8086 & 8051. To study the addressing modes & instruction set of 8086 & 8051. To introduce the need & use of Interrupt structure. To develop skill in simple program writing. To introduce commonly used peripheral / interfacing ICs To study simple applications. 9

UNIT- I: -8086 PROCESSOR

Functional block diagram - Signals Memory interfacing I/O ports and data transfer concepts Timing Diagram Interrupt structure Multiprocessor configurations. UNIT -II: -PROGRAMMING OF 8086 PROCESSOR 9

Instruction format and addressing modes Assembly language format Data transfer, data manipulation, control and string instructions Programming: Loop structure with counting & Indexing - Look up table - Subroutine instructions stack. UNIT- III: -PERIPHERAL INTERFACING 9

Study of Architecture and programming of ICs: 8255 PPI, 8259 PIC, 8257 DMA 8251 USART, 8279 Key board display controller and 8253 Timer/ Counter Interfacing with 8085 - A/D and D/A converter interfacing. UNIT- IV: -MICROCONTROLLER 8051 9

Functional block diagram - Instruction format and addressing modes Interrupt structure Timer I/O ports Serial communication. UNIT- V: -MICROCONTROLLER PROGRAMMING & APPLICATIONS 9

Data Transfer, Manipulation, Control & I/O instructions Simple programming exercises, PID control algorithm wave form generation:- square, triangular and sine, key board and display interface Closed loop control of servo motor- stepper motor control. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 71

TEXT BOOKS 1. A K Ray and K M Burchandi Advanced Microprocessor and Peripherals Tata McGraw Hill 2004 2. Muhammad Ali Mazidi & Janice Gilli Mazidi, The 8051 Microcontroller and Embedded Systems, Pearson Education, 5th Indian reprint, 2003. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. William Kleitz, Microprocessor and Microcontroller Fundamental of 8085 and 8051 Hardware and Software, Pearson Education, 1998. 2. Yu-Cheng Liu and Glenn A.Gibson, Microcomputer Systems: The 8086/8088 family, Second Edition, Prentice Hall of India.

72

GE 1401

PROFESSIONAL ETHICS & HUMAN VALUES (Common to MECH, CSE and EIE)

3 0

OBJECTIVE
(i)
(ii)

To create an awareness on Engineering Ethics and Human Values. To instil Moral and Social Values and Loyalty To appreciate the rights of Others

(iii)

UNIT- I:-HUMAN VALUES 9 Morals, Values and Ethics Integrity Work Ethic Service Learning Civic Virtue Respect for Others Living Peacefully caring Sharing Honesty Courage Valuing Time Co-operation Commitment Empathy Self-Confidence Character Spirituality UNIT- II:-ENGINEERING ETHICS 9

Senses of 'Engineering Ethics' - variety of moral issued - types of inquiry - moral dilemmas moral autonomy - Kohlberg's theory - Gilligan's theory - consensus and controversy Models of Professional Roles - theories about right action - Self-interest - customs and religion - uses of ethical theories. UNIT- III:-ENGINEERING AS SOCIAL EXPERIMENTATION 9

Engineering as experimentation - engineers as responsible experimenters - codes of ethics - a balanced outlook on law - the challenger case study UNIT- IV:-SAFETY, RESPONSIBILITIES AND RIGHTS 9

Safety and risk - assessment of safety and risk - risk benefit analysis and reducing risk - the three mile island and chernobyl case studies. Collegiality and loyalty - respect for authority - collective bargaining - confidentiality conflicts of interest - occupational crime - professional rights - employee rights - Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) - discrimination.

UNIT- V:-GLOBAL ISSUES

Multinational corporations - Environmental ethics - computer ethics - weapons development engineers as managers-consulting engineers-engineers as expert witnesses and advisors -moral leadership-sample code of Ethics ( Specific to a particular Engineering Discipline ). L = 45 TOTAL = 45

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TEXT BOOKS 1. 2. Mike Martin and Roland Schinzinger, "Ethics in engineering", McGraw Hill, New York 2006. Govindarajan M, Natarajan S, Senthil Kumar V. S, Engineering Ethics, Prentice Hall of India,New Delhi, 2004.

REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Charles D. Fleddermann, "Engineering Ethics", Pearson Education/ Prentice Hall, New Jersey, 2004. 2. Charles E Harris, Michael S. Protchard and Michael J Rabins, Engineering Ethics Concepts and Cases, Wadsworth Thompson Leatning, United States, 2000. 3. John R Boatright, Ethics and the Conduct of Business, Pearson Education, New Delhi, 2003.
4. Edmund G Seebauer and Robert L Barry, Fundamentals of Ethics for Scientists and Engineers,

Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2001 .

74

EI 1304 OBJECTIVES i.

ANALYTICAL INSTRUMENTS

To provide various techniques and methods of analysis which occur in the various regions of the spectrum. These are the powerful tools used in clinical and research laboratories. To give unique methods of separation of closely similar materials, the most powerful being gas chromatography. To study important methods of analysis of industrial gases. Awareness and control of pollution in the environment is of vital importance. To bring out the latest ideas on ion-selective electrodes as well as biosensors which have potential applications in medical field, food and beverage industries. To provide the important radio chemical methods of analysis. Further they are both sensitive and specific and often are characterized by good accuracy. NMR & ESR techniques are useful in structure determination. 9

ii. iii. iv. v.

UNIT -I: -COLORIMETRY AND SPECTROPHOTOMETRY

Special methods of analysis Beer-Lambert law UV- spectrophotometers Single and double beam instruments Sources and detectors IR spectrophotometers Flame photometers Atomic absorption spectrophotometers Sources and detectors FTIR spectrophotometers Flame emission photometers. UNIT -II: - CHROMATOGRAPHY 9

Different techniques Gas chromatography Detectors Liquid chromatographs Applications High-pressure liquid chromatographs Applications. UNIT- III: -INDUSTRIAL INSTRUMENTS GAS ANALYZERS AND POLLUTION MONITORING 9

Types of gas analyzers Oxygen, NO2 and H2S types, IR analyzers, thermal conductivity analyzers, analysis based on ionization of gases. Air pollution due to carbon monoxide, hydrocarbons, nitrogen oxides, sulphur dioxide estimation - Dust and smoke measurements.

75

UNIT- IV: -pH METERS AND DISSOLVED COMPONENT ANALYZERS

Principle of pH measurement, glass electrodes, hydrogen electrodes, reference electrodes, selective ion electrodes, ammonia electrodes, biosensors, dissolved oxygen analyzer Sodium analyzer Silicon analyzer. UNIT- V: -RADIO CHEMICAL AND MAGNETIC RESONANCE TECHNIQUES 9

Nuclear radiations Detectors GM counter Proportional counter Solid state detectors X-ray spectroscopy Detectors. NMR Basic principles NMR spectrometer - Applications. Mass spectrometers Applications. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. R.S. Khandpur, Handbook of Analytical Instruments, Tata McGraw Hill publishing Co. Ltd., 2003. 2. H.H.Willard, L.L.Merritt, J.A.Dean, F.A.Settle, Instrumental methods of analysis, CBS publishing & distribution, 2006. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Robert D. Braun, Introduction to Instrumental Analysis, McGraw Hill, Singapore, 2003. 2. G.W.Ewing, Instrumental Methods of Analysis, McGraw Hill, 2003. 3. DA Skoog and D.M.West, Principles of Instrumental Analysis, Holt, Saunders Publishing, 2005. 4. C.K. Mann, T.J Vickers & W.H. Gullick, Instrumental Analysis, Harper and Row publishers, 2002.

76

EI 1331

SENSORS AND INSTRUMENTATION LABORATORY

3 1

OBJECTIVE: To give exposure to various sensors and devices used in Process industries. List of Experiments 1. Flow Measurement using orifice meter and DPT. 2. Viscosity measurement. 3. Level measurement using Differential Pressure transmitter. 4. Characteristics of strain gauge and Torque measurement using strain gauge. 5. Calibration of Pressure gauge using dead weight tester. 6. Absorption and Transmittance using UV Spectrophotometer. 7. PH meter Standardisation and Measurements. 8. Measurement of pulse, respiration and ECG signals. 9. Characteristics of Load cell. 10. Characteristics of LDR and Photo Electric Tachometer. 11. Hall Effect transducer. 12. Response of thermal sensors (Thermistor, Thermocouple, RTD and AD590) to various time signals 13. Characteristics of I/P Convertors and P/I Converter 14. Flapper Nozzle Systems. P = 45 TOTAL = 45

77

EC 1337 MICROPROCESSOR AND MICROCONTROLLER LABORATORY OBJECTIVE: To understand programming using instruction sets of processors. LIST OF EXPERIMENTS : 16-BIT MICROPROCESSOR 1. Simple arithmetic operations: 2. Multi precision addition / subtraction / multiplication / division. 3. Programming with control instructions: Increment / Decrement. Ascending / Descending order. Maximum / Minimum of numbers. Rotate instructions. String Manipulations Hex / ASCII / BCD code conversions. 4. Interface Experiments: A/D Interfacing. D/A Interfacing. Traffic light controller. Interface Experiments: 5. Simple experiments using 8251, 8279, 8254,8257,8259 6. Programming practice on assembler and simulator tools. 8-bit Micro controller

0 0 3 1

7. Demonstration of basic instructions with 8051 Microcontroller execution, including: Conditional jumps, looping Calling subroutines. Stack parameter testing 8. Parallel port programming with 8051 using port 1 facility: Stepper motor and D / A converter. 9. Programming Exercise on RAM direct addressing Bit addressing 10. Programming practice using simulation tools and C - compiler Initialize timer Enable interrupts. 11. Study of Microcontrollers with flash memory. P = 45 TOTAL = 45

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EL 1331 OBJECTIVES:

COMMUNICATION SKILLS LABORATORY (Common to all branches)

2 3

To equip students of engineering and technology with effective speaking and listening skills in English. To help them develop their soft skills and people skill, which will make the transition from college to workplace smoother and help them to excel in their jobs. To enhance students performance at placement interviews, Group Discussions and other recruitment exercises. I. PC based session A. English Language Lab (weightage -40%) 24 periods (18 Periods)

1. Listening Comprehension (6) Listening and typing Listening and sequencing of sentences Filling in the blanks Listening and answering the questions 2. Reading Comprehension and Vocabulary (6) Filling in the blanks Cloze Exercises Vocabulary building Reading and answering questions. 3. Speaking : (6) Phonetics : Intonation Ear Training Correct Pronunciation Sound recognition exercises Common Errors in English. Conversations : Face to Face Conversation Telephone conversation Role play activities (Students take on roles and engage in conversation) B. Career Lab (Samples are 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 Skills Time Management Articulateness Assertiveness Psychometrics Innovation and Creativity Stress Management & Poise Video Samples. (6 Periods) (1)

79

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 5. Interview Skills Kinds of Interviews Required Key Skills Corporate culture Mock Interviews Video Samples II. Class Room session (weightage -60%) 24 periods

1. Resume / Report Preparation / Letter writing : Students prepare their own resume and report 2. Presentation Skills : Students make presentation on given topics. 3. Group Discussion : Students participate in group discussions. 4. Interview Skills : Students participate in Mock interviews Note : Classroom session are practice sessions REFERENCES BOOK : 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). CDs: 1.Communication Skills Software by Globarina 2.Train2success series: 1. Telephone Skills 2. Interviewing Skills 3. Negotiation Skills by Zenith Global Consultants Ltd, Mumbai. 3.21 Steps to Personality Development by SP software (P) Ltd, Hyderabad. 4.Rosetta Stone Level 2.

80

SEMESTER VI MG 1302 ENGINEERING ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT 3 0 0 3

OBJECTIVES: To impart the concepts & functions of Engineering Economics & management & to understand its role & important in all aspects of life. UNIT- I:-ECONOMICS AND COST ANALYSIS 9

Basic economic concept- importance of economics in Engineering- Demand and supplyfactors influencing demand-elasticity of demand- Demand Forecasting. Actual cost and opportunity cost-Marginal cost- incremental cost and sunk cost-fixed and variable cost- short run and long run cost- cost output relationship-price fixation pricing policies-pricing methods-break even analysis UNIT -II:-INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING-BASICS 9

Plant location factors-decision, Plant layout types, procedures and techniques material handling-principles, equipments and selection, Plant maintenance-objective, types and techniques. Role of work study- Human factor method study- objective and procedure. Principles of Motion economy-work measurement stop watch time study- work allowances-work sampling. UNIT- III:-BASIC CONCEPT OF MANAGEMENT & PLANNING 9

Definition of Management Science or Art Management and Administration Contribution of Taylor and Fayol Functions of Management Nature & Purpose Steps involved in Planning Objectives Setting Objectives Process of Managing by Objectives Strategies, Policies & Planning Premises- Forecasting Decision-making. UNIT- IV:-ORGANISING AND DIRECTING 9

Nature and Purpose Formal and informal organization Organization Chart Structure and Process Departmentation by difference strategies Line and Staff authority Benefits and Limitations De-Centralization and Delegation of Authority Staffing Selection Process Techniques HRD Managerial Effectiveness. Scope Human Factors Creativity and Innovation Harmonizing Objectives Leadership Types of Leadership Motivation Hierarchy of needs Motivation theories Motivational Techniques Job Enrichment Communication Process of Communication Barriers and Breakdown Effective Communication Electronic media in Communication. UNIT- V:-COMMUNICATION AND CONTROLLING 9

Process of Communication Barriers and Breakdown Effective Communication Electronic media in Communication. System and process of Controlling Requirements for effective control The Budget as Control Technique Information Technology in Controlling Use of computers in handling the information Productivity Problems and Management Control of Overall

81

Performance Direct and Preventive Control Reporting The Global Environment Globalization and Liberalization International Management and Global theory of Management. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Harold Koontz & Heinz Weihrich Essentials of Management, Tata McGraw Hill,1998. 2. 3. 4. Joseph L Massie Essentials of Management, Prentice Hall of India, (Pearson) Fourth Edition, 2003. Varshney and Maheswari: Managerial Economics, S.Chand & Company, 2005 Dewett: Modern Economic Theory S.Chand & Co, 2003.

REFERENCE BOOKS 1 Tripathy PC And Reddy PN, Principles of Management, Tata McGraw Hill, 2003. 2. Decenzo David, Robbin Stephen A, Personnel and Human Reasons Management, Prentice Hall of India, 1996. 3. JAF Stomer, Freeman R. E and Daniel R Gilbert Management, Pearson Education, Sixth Edition, 2004. 4. 5. 6. Fraidoon Mazda, Engineering Management, Addison Wesley,-2000. B.Kumar, Industrial Engineering, Khanna Publishers, 2007. E.S.Buffa: Modern Production/Operation Management, VII Edition, Wiley Eastern, 2005.

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EI 1305 OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v.

BIOMEDICAL INSTRUMENTATION

To provide an acquaintance of the physiology of the heart, lung, blood circulation and circulation respiration. Methods of different transducers used. To introduce the student to the various sensing and measurement devices of electrical origin. To provide the latest ideas on devices of non-electrical devices. To bring out the important and modern methods of imaging techniques. To provide latest knowledge of medical assistance / techniques and therapeutic equipments.

UNIT -I: -ANATOMY, PHYSIOLOGY AND TRANSDUCERS 9 Anatomy, Whole System, Subsystem-Structure-Shape, Size-Cell and its structure Action and resting Potential propagation of action potential Sodium pump Nervous system CNS PNS Nerve cell Synapse Cardio pulmonary system Physiology of heart and lungs Circulation and respiration Transducers Different types Piezoelectric, ultrasonic, resistive, capacitive, inductive transducers Selection criteria. Basic components of a biomedical system Electrodes Micro, needle and surface electrodes Amplifiers Preamplifiers, differential amplifiers, chopper amplifiers Isolation amplifier. UNIT- II:-ELECTRO-PHYSIOLOGICAL MEASUREMENTS ECG EEG EMG ERG Lead systems and recording methods Typical waveforms. UNIT- III: -NON-ELECTRICAL PARAMETER MEASUREMENTS 9 9

Measurement of blood pressure Cardiac output Cardiac rate Heart sound Respiratory rate Flow rate of CO2, O2 in exhaust air - pH of blood, ESR, GSR measurements. UNIT- IV:-MEDICAL IMAGING AND PMS 9

X-ray machine - Radio graphic and fluoroscopic techniques Computer tomography MRI Ultrasonography Endoscopy Thermography Different types of biotelemetry systems and patient monitoring Electrical safety. UNIT- V: -ASSISTING AND THERAPEUTIC EQUIPMENTS 9

Pacemakers Defibrillators Ventilators Nerve and muscle stimulators Diathermy Heart Lung machine Audio meters Dialyzers. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS

83

1. Leslie Cromwell, Fred J.Weibell, Erich A.Pfeiffer, Bio-Medical Instrumentation and Measurements, II edition, Pearson Education, 2002 / PHI. 2. R.S.Khandpur, Hand book of Bio-Medical instrumentation, Tata McGraw Hill Publishing Co Ltd., 2003. 3. Anatomy, Physiology for Nurses by Pearce, Faber And Faber Ltd., 1995 REFERENCE BOOKS 1. L.A. Geddes and L.E.Baker, Principles of Applied Bio-Medical Instrumentation, John Wiley & Sons, 1989. 2. J.Webster, Medical Instrumentation, John Wiley & Sons, 1995. 3. C.Rajarao and S.K. Guha, Principles of Medical Electronics and Bio-medical Instrumentation, Universities press (India) Ltd, Orient Longman ltd, 2000. 4.S.K. Gupta, Introduction to Medical Electronics, Bharathi Bhavan, Patna,

84

EI 1306 OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v.

PROCESS CONTROL

To study the basic characteristics of first order and higher order processes. To get adequate knowledge about the characteristics of various controller modes and methods of tuning of controller. To study about various complex control schemes. To study about the construction, characteristics and application of control valves. To study the five selected unit operations and a case study of distillation column control. 9

UNIT- I: MATHEMATICAL MODELLING OF PROCESSES

Need for process control Mathematical model of first order liquid level and thermal processes Higher order process Process with dead time, process with inverse response Interacting and non-interacting systems Continuous and batch process Servo and regulator operation. UNIT- II: CONTROLLER CHARACTERISTICS & TUNING 9

Basic control action Characteristics of ON-OFF, proportional, integral and derivative control modes Composite control modes P+I, P+D and P+I+D control modes Electronic controllers to realize various control actions Evaluation criteria IAE, ISE, ITAE and decay ratio Tuning of controllers Ziegler-Nichols method and Cohencoon method Damped oscillation method. UNIT- III: CONTROL SYSTEMS WITH MULTIPLE LOOPS 9

Cascade control Feed forward control Ratio control Selective control systems Split range control Adaptive and inferential control. UNIT- IV: FINAL CONTROL ELEMENT 9

I/P converter Pneumatic and electric actuators Valve positioner Control valves characteristics Classification of control valves Control valve sizing Cavitations and flashing Selection of control valves. UNIT- V: SELECTED UNIT OPERATIONS 9

Mixing Evaporation Drying Heat exchanger Distillation process Case study of control schemes of binary distillation column. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60

85

TEXT BOOKS 1. Donald P. Eckman, Automatic Process Control, Wiley Eastern Ltd., New Delhi, 1993. 2. G.Stephanopoulis, Chemical Process Control, Prentice Hall of India, New Delhi, 2005. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. B.G.Liptak, Process Control, Chilton Book Company, 2003. 2. Curtis D. Johnson, Process Control Instrumentation Technology, 7th Edition, Pearson Education, New Delhi, 2002 / PHI. 3. J.G.Balchen and K.J.Mumme, Process Control structures and Application, Van Nostrand Reinhold Co., New York, 2000.

86

EC 1313

DIGITAL SIGNAL PROCESSING

3 1

0 4

OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v. To classify signals and systems & their mathematical representation. To analyse the discrete time systems. To study various transformation techniques & their computation. To study about filters and their design for digital implementation. To study about a programmable digital signal processor & quantization effects. 9

UNIT- I:- INTRODUCTION

Classification of systems: Continuous, discrete, linear, causal, stable, dynamic, recursive, time variance; classification of signals: continuous and discrete, energy and power; mathematical representation of signals; spectral density; sampling techniques, quantization, quantization error, Nyquist rate, aliasing effect. Digital signal representation, analog to digital conversion. UNIT- II:- DISCRETE TIME SYSTEM ANALYSIS 9

Z-transform and its properties, inverse z-transforms; difference equation Solution by ztransform, application to discrete systems - Stability analysis, frequency response Convolution Fourier transform of discrete sequence Discrete Fourier series. UNIT- III:-DISCRETE FOURIER TRANSFORM & COMPUTATION 9

DFT properties, magnitude and phase representation - Computation of DFT using FFT algorithm DIT & DIF - FFT using radix 2 Butterfly structure. UNIT- IV:-DESIGN OF DIGITAL FILTERS 9

FIR & IIR filter realization Parallel & cascade forms. FIR design: Windowing Techniques Need and choice of windows Linear phase characteristics. IIR design: Analog filter design - Butterworth and Chebyshev approximations; digital design using impulse invariant and bilinear transformation - Warping, prewarping - Frequency transformation. UNIT -V:-PROGRAMMABLE DSP CHIPS 9

Architecture and features of TMS 320C54 signal processing chip Quantisation effects in designing digital filters. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60

87

TEXT BOOKS 1. J.G Proakis and D.G.Manolakis, Digital Signal Processing Principles, Algorithms and Applications, Pearson Education, New Delhi, 2003 / PHI. 2. S.K. Mitra, Digital Signal Processing A Computer Based Approach, Tata McGraw Hill, New Delhi, 2001. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Alan V. Oppenheim, Ronald W. Schafer and John R. Buck, Discrete Time Signal Processing, Pearson Education, New Delhi, 2003. 2. B.Venkataramani, M.Bhaskar, Digital Signal Processors, Architecture, Programming and Applications, Tata McGraw Hill, New Delhi, 2003. 3. S.Salivahanan, A.Vallavaraj, C.Gnanapriya, Digital Signal Processing, Tata McGraw Hill, New Delhi, 2003. 4. Texas TMS 320C54X user manual (website).

88

EE 1306
OBJECTIVES

POWER ELECTRONICS (Common to EEE & EIE)

3 1

0 4

i. ii. iii. iv. v.

To get an overview of different types of power semi-conductor devices and their switching characteristics. To understand the operation, characteristics and performance parameters of controlled rectifiers. To study the operation, switching techniques and basic topologies of DC-DC switching regulators. To learn the different modulation techniques of pulse width modulated inverters and to understand the harmonic reduction methods. To know the practical application for power electronics converters in conditioning the power supply. 9

UNIT- I:-POWER SEMI-CONDUCTOR DEVICES

Structure, operation and characteristics of SCR, TRIAC, power transistor, MOSFET and IGBT. Driver and snubber circuits for MOSFET - Turn-on and turn-off characteristics and switching losses. UNIT- II:- PHASE-CONTROLLED CONVERTERS 9

2-pulse, 3-pulse and 6-pulse converters Inverter operation of fully controlled converter Effect of source inductance - Distortion and displacement factor Ripple factor - Single phase AC voltage controllers. UNIT- III:- DC TO DC CONVERTERS 9

Step-down and step-up choppers - Time ratio control and current limit control - Switching mode regulators: Buck, boost, buck-boost converter - Resonant switching based SMPS. UNIT -IV:-INVERTERS 9

Single phase and three phase (both 120 mode and 180 mode) inverters - PWM techniques: Sinusoidal PWM, modified sinusoidal PWM and multiple PWM - Voltage and harmonic control Series resonant inverter - Current source inverters. UNIT- V:-APPLICATIONS 9

Uninterrupted power supply topologies - Flexible AC transmission systems - Shunt and series static VAR compensator - Unified power flow controller- HVDC Transmission. 89

L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. Muhammad H. Rashid, Power Electronics: Circuits, Devices and Applications, Prentice Hall of India/Pearson Education, Third edition, 2004. 2. Ned Mohan, Tore.M.Undeland, William.P.Robbins, Power Electronics: Converters, applications and design, John Wiley and sons, third edition, 2003. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Cyril.W.Lander, Power Electronics, McGraw Hill International, Third edition, 1993. 2. Bimal K. Bose, Modern Power Electronics and AC Drives, Pearson Education, 2003. 3. Mr. Jaganathan, Introduction to Power Electronics, Prentice Hall of India, 2004.

90

IT 1310 OBJECTIVES

OBJECT ORIENTED PROGRAMMING

3 1

0 4

ii.

v.

i. To study the object oriented programming principles, tokens, expressions, control structures and functions. To introduce the classes, objects, constructors and destructors. iii. To introduce the operator overloading, inheritance and polymorphism concepts in C++. iv. To introduce constants, variables, data types, operators, classes, objects, methods, arrays and strings in Java. To introduce the programming approach in Java, interfaces and packages, multithreading, managing errors and exceptions and Applet programming. 9

UNIT -I:-OBJECT ORIENTED PROGRAMMING AND C++

Basic concepts of object oriented programming Benefits of OOP - Applications of OOP Basics of C++ - Data types-Operators-Statements-Functions-Classes and Objects Constructors Destructors Overloading . Defining derived classes Single inheritance Multilevel inheritance Multiple inheritance Hierarchical inheritance Hybrid inheritance Virtual base classes Abstract classes - Introduction to pointers to objects: This pointer Pointers to derived classes Virtual functions Pure virtual function UNIT- II:- JAVA EVOLUTION, CONSTANTS,VARIABLES, DATATYPES, OPERATORS, CLASSES, OBJECTS, METHODS, ARRAYS AND STRINGS 9 Java features: How Java differs from C and C++ - Simple Java program Java program structures Java tokens Java statements Implementing a Java program Java virtual machine Command line arguments - Constants Variables Data types Scope of variables Operators in Java. Defining a class Adding variables and methods Creating objects Accessing class members Constructors Method overloading Static members Arrays One dimensional array Creating an array Two-dimensional arrays Strings Vectors. UNIT -III:- INHERITANCE, INTERFACES, PACKAGES, 9

Inheritance: Extending a class Overriding methods Final variables and methods Final classes Abstract methods and classes Visibility control. Defining interfaces Extending interfaces Implementing interfaces Accessing interface variables Java API packages Using system packages Creating, accessing and using a package Adding a class to a package UNIT- IV:-MULTITHREADING, MANAGING ERRORS AND EXCEPTIONS 9

91

Creating threads Extending the thread class Stopping and blocking a thread Thread exceptions Thread priority Synchronization Life cycle of a thread Using thread methods. Types of errors: Exceptions Syntax of exception handling code Multiple catch statements Using finally statements Throwing our own exceptions Using exceptions for debugging. UNIT- V:-APPLETS, GRAPHICS PROGRAMMING ,I/O STREAMS AND FILES 9

Preparing to write applets Applet lifecycle Creating an executable applet Designing a web page Applet tag Adding applet to HTML file Running the Applet. Graphics Class- Lines Rectangles Circles Ellipses - Arcs- Polygon Line Graphs Barcharts Control loops in Applets. Concept of Streams Stream Classes Byte Stream Classes Character Stream Classes File Class Reading/Writing Characters Reading/Writing Bytes Interactive Input and Output L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. E.Balagurusamy, Object Oriented Programming with C++, Second edition, Tata McGraw Hill, 2003. 2. E.Balagurusamy, Programming with JAVA A primer, Second edition, Tata McGraw Hill, 2003. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Herbert Schildt, C++ - The Complete Reference, Tata McGraw Hill, 2004. 2. Bjarne Stroustrup, The C++ Programming Language, Addison Wesley, 2000. 3. John .R .Hubbard, Schaums Outline Programming with C++, Tata McGraw Hill, 2003. 4. Kris Jasma, Java Programming A Complete Reference, Galgotia publication, 2002.

92

EI 1332

INSTRUMENTATION SYSTEM DESIGN LABORATORY-I

0 0

OBJECTIVE To Design and Develop Instrumentation Systems List of Experiments 1.Design of Instrumentation amplifier 2.Design of Active filters 3.Design of signal conditioning circuit for Strain gauge. 4.Design of signal conditioning circuit for Load cell. 5.Design of signal conditioning circuit for Photo Electric Transducer--LDR. 6.Design of signal conditioning circuit for Hall effect transducer. 7.Design of signal conditioning circuit for Thermistor 8.Design of signal conditioning circuit and cold junction compensation for Thermocouple. 9.Design of signal conditioning circuit for RTD 10.Design of signal conditioning circuit for Capacitive Transducers 11.Design of digital display devices for sensors P = 45 TOTAL = 45

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EI 1333

PROCESS CONTROL LABORATORY

0 0

OBJECTIVE To experimentally verify the process control concepts on the selected process control loops. List of Experiments 1. Study of interacting and non-interacting systems. 2. Response of different order processes with and without transportation lag. 3. Response of P+I+D controller. 4. Characteristics of Control Valve with and without positioner. 5. Closed loop response of flow control loop. 6. Closed loop response of level control loop. 7. Closed loop response of temperature control loop. 8. Closed loop response of pressure control loop. 9. Tuning of PID controller. 10. Response of Cascade Control System.

P = 45 TOTAL = 45

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IT 1335

OBJECT ORIENTED PROGRAMMING LABORATORY

0 0

OBJECTIVE To implement dynamic memory allocation, constructors, destructors, friend function, inheritance and interfaces. List of Experiments 1. String concatenation using dynamic memory allocation concept. 2. Implementation of arithmetic operations on complex numbers using constructor overloading. 3. To read a value of distance from one object and add with a value in another object using friend function. 4. Implementation of + and - operator overloading and implementation of addition operation of octal object with integer using operator overloading. 5. Implementation of addition and subtraction of two polynomial objects using operator overloading. 6. Managing bank account using inheritance concept. 7. To compute the area of triangle and rectangle using inheritance and virtual function. 8. Writing simple programs in Java. 9. Use of interfaces in Java. 10. Developing packages in Java.

P = 45 Total = 45

95

SEMESTER -VII EC 1423 OBJECTIVES i.


ii.

VLSI DESIGN

To introduce MOS theory / Manufacturing Technology. To study inverter / counter logic / stick / machine diagram / sequential / address /

memory / arithmetic circuits. iii.


iv.

To introduce FPGA architecture / principles / system design. To get familiarised with VHDL programming behavioural/Structural/concurrent/ 9

process. UNIT- I: -BASIC MOS TRANSISTOR

Enhancement mode & Depletion mode Fabrication (NMOS, PMOS, CMOS, BiCMOS) Technology NMOS transistor current equation Second order effects MOS Transistor Model. UNIT-II:-NMOS & CMOS INVERTER AND GATES 9

NMOS & CMOS inverter Determination of pull up / pull down ratios Stickdiagram lambda based rules Super buffers BiCMOS & steering logic. UNIT- III:-SUB SYSTEM DESIGN & LAYOUT 9

Structured design of combinational circuits Dynamic CMOS & clocking Tally circuits (NAND-NAND, NOR-NOR and AOI logic) EXOR structure Multiplexer structures Barrel shifter. UNIT- IV:- DESIGN OF COMBINATIONAL & REGULAR ARRAY LOGIC FPGA. UNIT- V:-VHDL PROGRAMMING 9 9

NMOS PLA Programmable Logic Devices - Finite State Machine PLA Introduction to

RTL Design Combinational logic Types Operators Packages Sequential circuit Subprograms Test benches. (Examples: address, counters, flip-flops, FSM, Multiplexers / Demultiplexers). L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. D.A.Pucknell, K.Eshraghian, Basic VLSI Design, 3rd Edition, Prentice Hall of India, New Delhi, 2003. 2. Eugene D.Fabricius, Introduction to VLSI Design, Tata McGraw Hill, 2000. REFERENCE BOOKS

96

1. N.H.Weste, Principles of CMOS VLSI Design, Pearson Education, India, 2002. 2. Charles H.Roth, Fundamentals of Logic Design, Jaico Publishing House, 2003. 3. Zainalatsedin Navabi, VHDL Analysis and Modeling of Digital Systems, 2nd Edition, Tata McGraw Hill, 2006. 4. Douglas Perry, VHDL Programming by example, Tata McGraw Hill, 3rd Edition, 2003.

97

EI 1401 OBJECTIVES i. system. ii.

COMPUTER CONTROL OF PROCESS

To study the importance of state-space representation and stability analysis of discrete data To develop different types of algorithm for digital controllers.

iii. To provide adequate knowledge about the various ways of using computers for control. iv. v. To give an introductory knowledge about PLC and the programming languages. To give adequate knowledge about of application of PLC. 9

UNIT- I:- ANALYSIS OF DISCRETE DATA SYSTEM

State-space representation of discrete data systems Selection of sampling process Selection of sampling period Review of z-transform Pulse transfer function Modified z-transform Stability of discrete data system. UNIT II: DESIGN OF DIGITAL CONTROLLER 9 Digital PID Position and velocity form Deadbeats algorithm Dahlins algorithm Kalmans algorithm - Pole placement controller Predictive controller. UNIT- III:-COMPUTER AS A CONTROLLER 9

Basic building blocks of computer control system Data acquisition systems SCADA Direct digital control Introduction to AI and expert control system Case study - Design of computerized multi loop controller. UNIT- IV:- PROGRAMMABLE LOGIC CONTROLLER 9

Evolution of PLCs Components of PLC Advantages over relay logic - PLC programming languages Ladder diagram Programming timers and counters Design of PLC. UNIT -V:-APPLICATIONS OF PLC 9

Instructions in PLC Program control instructions, math instructions, sequencer instructions Use of PC as PLC Application of PLC Case study of bottle filling system. L = 45 T = 15 TOTAL = 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. P.B. Deshpande, and R.H.Ash, Computer Process Control, ISA Publication, USA, 1995. 2. Petruzella, Programmable Controllers, McGraw Hill, 2004.

98

REFERENCE BOOKS 1. C.M. Houpis, G.B. Lamount, Digital Control Systems Theory, Hardware and Software, International Student Edition, McGraw Hill Book Co., 1991. 2. G. Stephanoupoulis, Chemical Process Control, Prentice Hall of India, New Delhi, 2005. 3. T. Hughes, Programmable Logic Controllers, ISA press, 2000. 4. Singh, Computer Aided Process Control, Prentice Hall of India, 2004.

99

EI 1402 OBJECTIVES

NEURAL NETWORKS AND FUZZY LOGIC CONTROL

3 0 0 3

i. To expose the students to the concepts of feed forward neural networks. ii. To provide adequate knowledge about feed back neural networks. iii. To teach about the concept of fuzziness involved in various systems. To provide adequate knowledge about fuzzy set theory. iv. To provide comprehensive knowledge of fuzzy logic control and adaptive fuzzy logic and to design the fuzzy control using genetic algorithm. v. To provide adequate knowledge of application of fuzzy logic control to real time systems. UNIT- I:-ARCHITECTURES 9

Introduction Biological neuron Artificial neuron Neuron modeling Learning rules Single layer Multi layer feed forward network Back propagation Learning factors. UNIT- II:-NEURAL NETWORKS FOR CONTROL 9

Feed back networks Discrete time hop field networks Transient response of continuous time networks Applications of artificial neural network - Process identification Neuro controller for inverted pendulum. UNIT -III:-FUZZY SYSTEMS 9

Classical sets Fuzzy sets Fuzzy relations Fuzzification Defuzzification Fuzzy rules. UNIT- IV:-FUZZY LOGIC CONTROL 9

Membership function Knowledge base Decision-making logic Optimizations of membership function using neural networks Adaptive fuzzy system Introduction to genetic algorithm. UNIT- V:-APPLICATION OF FLC 9

Fuzzy logic control Inverted pendulum Image processing Home heating system Blood pressure during anesthesia Introduction to neuro fuzzy controller. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Jacek M. Zurada, Introduction to Artificial Neural Systems, Jaico Publishing home, 2002. 2. Timothy J. Ross, Fuzzy Logic with Engineering Applications, Tata McGraw Hill, 2005. REFERENCE BOOKS

100

1. Laurance Fausett, Englewood cliffs, N.J., Fundamentals of Neural Networks, Pearson Education, 2004. 2. H.J. Zimmermann, Fuzzy Set Theory & its Applications, Allied Publication Ltd., 2002. 3. Simon Haykin, Neural Networks, Pearson Education, 2003. 4. John Yen & Reza Langari, Fuzzy Logic Intelligence Control & Information, Pearson Education, New Delhi, 2003.

101

EI 1403 OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v.

ROBOTICS AND AUTOMATION

To study the various parts of robots and fields of robotics. To study the various kinematics and inverse kinematics of robots. To study the Euler, Lagrangian formulation of Robot dynamics. To study the trajectory planning for robot. To study the control of robots for some specific applications.

UNIT- I:-INTRODUCTION TO ROBOTICS 9 History of Robots Classifications Various fields of Robotics Actuators Sensors Manipulators End effectors Application Areas Robot Programming Languages. UNIT- II:-ROBOT KINEMATICS 9

Matrix representation Homogeneous Transformation- DH representation of standard robots Inverse Kinematics. UNIT- III:- ROBOT DYNAMICS 9

Velocity Kinematics- Jacobian and inverse Jacobian-lagrangian formulation Eulers lagrangian formulation- Robot equation of motion UNIT- IV:-TRAJECTORY PLANNING 9

Introduction- Path Vs trajectory Joint space Vs Cartesian Space descriptions Basics of trajectory planning Joint space trajectory planning Cartesian Space Trajectories. UNIT- V:-APPLICATION OF ROBOTS 9

Industrial robots for welding, painting and assembly Remote Controlled robots Robots for nuclear thermal Automotive & Chemical Plants Industrial automation Typical example of automated industries. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Saced B. Niku, Introduction to Robotics Analysis, Systems, Applications, Prentice Hall of India/Pearson Education, Asia, 2001. 2. Craig, Introduction to Robotics Mechanics and Control, Second edition, Pearson Education, Asia, 2004. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. K.S. Fu & Co., Robotics Control, Sensing, Vision and Intelligence, McGraw Hill International Editions, Industrial Engineering Series, 2002.

102

2. R.D.Klafter, T.A. Chimielewski and M.Negin, Robotic Engineering An integrated Approach, Prentice Hall of India, New Delhi, 2005. 3. Mikell P. Groover, Mitchell Weiss, Roger N. Nagel, Nicholas G. Odrey, Industrial Robotics Technology Programming and Application, McGraw Hill book company, 2003. 4. Deb. S.R. Robotics Technology and flexible Automation, John Wiley, USA, 2004. 5. Yoren Koren, Robotics for Engineers, McGraw Hill, 2003.

103

EI ****

ELECTIVE I (Refer Elective list) L = 45

3 0 0 3 TOTAL = 45 3 0 0 3 L = 45 TOTAL = 45

EI ****

ELECTIVE II (Refer Elective list)

104

EI 1431

INSTRUMENTATION SYSTEM DESIGN LABORATORY-II

3 2

OBJECTIVE To give exposure to designing of various systems using LabVIEW, Keil-C and FPGA.. List of Experiments Lab view Experiments 1. Design of smith predictor Controller using LabVIEW. 2. Design of Neural Network Based Controller using LabVIEW. 3. Design of Fuzzy Controller using LabVIEW. 4. Motor Control Using LabVIEW DAQ Card. RTOS -Keil-C, FPGA 5. Real time interfacing of Digital inputs to Atmel 89C51 using keil-C Software. 6. Real time interfacing of Analog inputs to Atmel 89C51 using keil-C Software. 7. Temperature Control System development using keil-C Software. 8. Real time Interfacing Control of Digital Inputs with FPGA. 9. Real time interfacing and Control of Analog Inputs using FPGA / CPLD. 10. Introduction to ARM Processor Case study.

P = 45 TOTAL = 45

105

EC 1436

VLSI LABORATORY

OBJECTIVE: To Design and Develop simple applications using VHDL. List of Experiments Design exercises: 1. Half adder, Full adder, Subtractor Flip Flops, 4bit comparator. 2 .Parity generator 3. Bit up / down counter with load able count 4. Decoder and encoder 5. 8 bit shift register 6. 8:1 multiplexer 7 .Test bench for a full adder 8. Barrel shifter 9. N by m binary multiplier 10. RISC CPU (3 bit op-code, 5 bit address) TOOLS : Xilinx Tools, Cadence Tools, Model SIM, Leonardo Spectrum Tools shall be used.

P = 45 TOTAL = 45

106

EI 1432

COMPUTER CONTROL OF PROCESS LABORATORY

0 0

OBJECTIVE: To study the concept of controlling the different continuous / discrete process using computers, DCS / PLC. LIST F EXPERIMENTS: 1. Simulation of systems with and without dead time using Discretization method and Runge Kutta method 2. Design of Discrete P+I+D controller for a first order system 3. Study of Programmable logic controller. 4. Control of Bottle filling process using PLC. 5. PC based Data Acquisition. 6. Simulation of complex control systems using MATLAB package. 7. Design of Lead Compensator using Bode plot technique in MATLAB Package. 8. Design of Lag Compensator using Bode plot Locus technique in MATLAB Package. 9. Study of Distributed Control System. 10. Design of Dead Beat / Dahlins algorithms. P = 45 TOTAL = 45

107

MG 1401 OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii.

SEMESTER VIII TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT (Common to all branches)

3 0

To understand the Total Quality Management concept and principles and the various tools available to achieve Total Quality Management. To understand the statistical approach for quality control. To create an awareness about the ISO and QS certification process and its need for the industries. 9

UNIT- I:-INTRODUCTION

Definition of Quality, Dimensions of Quality, Quality Planning, Quality costs Analysis Techniques for Quality Costs, Basic concepts of Total Quality Management, Historical Review, Principles of TQM, Leadership Concepts, Role of Senior Management, Quality Council, Quality Statements, Strategic Planning, Deming Philosophy, Barriers to TQM Implementation. UNIT -II:-TQM PRINCIPLES 9

Customer satisfaction Customer Perception of Quality, Customer Complaints, Service Quality, Customer Retention, Employee Involvement Motivation, Empowerment, Teams, Recognition and Reward, Performance Appraisal, Benefits, Continuous Process Improvement Juran Trilogy, PDSA Cycle, 5S, Kaizen, Supplier Partnership Partnering, sourcing, Supplier Selection, Supplier Rating, Relationship Development, Performance Measures Basic Concepts, Strategy, Performance Measure. UNIT- III:-STATISTICAL PROCESS CONTROL (SPC) 9 The seven tools of quality, Statistical Fundamentals Measures of central Tendency and Dispersion, Population and Sample, Normal Curve, Control Charts for variables and attributes, Process capability, Concept of six sigma, New seven Management tools. UNIT- IV:-TQM TOOLS 9

Benchmarking Reasons to Benchmark, Benchmarking Process, Quality Function Deployment (QFD) House of Quality, QFD Process, Benefits, Taguchi Quality Loss Function, Total Productive Maintenance (TPM) Concept, Improvement Needs, FMEA Stages of FMEA. UNIT- V:-QUALITY SYSTEMS 9 Need for ISO 9000 and Other Quality Systems, ISO 9000:2000 Quality System Elements, Implementation of Quality System, Documentation, Quality Auditing, QS 9000, ISO 14000 Concept, Requirements and Benefits. L = 45 TOTAL = 45

108

TEXT BOOK 1.Dale H.Besterfiled, et al., Total Quality Management, Pearson Education, Inc. 2004.

REFERENCE BOOKS 1.James R.Evans & William M.Lidsay, The Management and Control of Quality, (5th Edition), South-Western (Thomson Learning), 2002. 2.Feigenbaum.A.V. Total Quality Management, McGraw Hill, 2004. 3.Oakland.J.S. Total Quality Management Butterworth, Heinemann Ltd., Oxford. 2005. 4. Narayana V. and Sreenivasan, N.S. Quality Management Concepts and Tasks, New Age International 2006. 5. Zeiri. Total Quality Management for Engineers Wood Head Publishers, 2004.

109

EI ****

ELECTIVE III (Refer Elective list) L = 45

3 0 0 3 TOTAL = 45 3 0 0 3 L = 45 TOTAL = 45

EI ****

ELECTIVE IV (Refer Elective list)

110

ELECTIVE COURSES SEMESTER VII ELECTIVE I EI 1404 INSTRUMENTATION IN POWER PLANT & PAPER INDUSTRY 3 0 0 3

OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v. To provide an overview of different methods of power generation with a particular stress on thermal power generation. To bring out the various measurements involved in power generation plants. To provide knowledge about the different types of devices used for analysis. To impart knowledge about the different types of controls and control loops. To familiarize the student with the methods of monitoring different parameters like speed, vibration of turbines and their control. 9

UNIT- I:-OVERVIEW OF POWER GENERATION

Brief Survey of Methods of power generation; Hydro; Thermal; Nuclear; Solar & wind power; Importance of Instrumentation in power generation; Thermal Power Plants-Block Diagram- Details of Boiler Processes; P & I diagram of Boilers; Cogeneration in both power Plant & paper Mills. UNIT- II:-MEASUREMENTS IN POWER PLANTS & PAPER MILLS 9

Measurements of Electrical parameters-Current, Voltage, power, both Active & Reactive, Frequency, Power factor, Non Electrical parameters. Flows of feed water, fuel, Air, Steams with Corrections-factor for temperature, Steam pressure & Steam Temperature. Boiler Drum level Measurement, Radiations Detector, Smoke density measurement-Dust particles Monitor & Control. UNIT- III :- ANALYZERS IN POWER & PAPER PLANTS 9

Flue gas,O2 Analyzers, Analysis of impurities in feed water & steam, Dissolved O2 Analyzer, Chromatography, PH meter, turbidity meter, Fuel Analyzer-Pollution Monitoring Equipments. UNIT -IV:-CONTROL LOOPS IN BOILERS FOR POWER PLANTS & PAPER MILLS 9

Combustion Control-Air/fuel Ratio Control-Furnace Draft Control, Drum level Control-Main Heat & Reheat Steam temperature Control-Super Heater Control-Air temperature-Deaerator ControlDistributed Control Systems- Interlocks in Power Plants & paper mills in Boilers, Calendars, & Dryers UNIT -V:-TURBINE MONITORING & CONTROL 9

Speed, Vibration, Shell Temperature, Monitoring & Control-Steam pressure ControlLubricating oil Temperature & Pressure Control- Cooling Systems, Interlocks. 111

L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Control of Boilers Sam G. Dukelow ISA, 2003. 2. Shreves Chemical Process Industries Georget T.Avstin - McGraw Hill International Edition, 1998. 3. Power Plant Engineering- P.K.Nag- Tata McGraw Hill, 2001 REFERENCE BOOKS. 1. Standard Boiler Operation- S.M.Elonka & A.L.Kohal Tata McGraw Hill 2006. 2. Mechanical & Industrial Measurements R.K.Jain Khanna Publishers, 2007. 3. Power Plant Engineering E.AI.Wakil Tata McGraw Hill 2004.

112

CS 1481

DATA COMMUNICATION AND NETWORKS

3 0 0 3

OBJECTIVES i. To study about the physical arrangement of networks, types and modes of networks, data conversions and transmission medium. ii. To study the detection and correction of errors, link control and link protocols of data link layer. iii. To study the access method, electrical specification and implementation of different networks, types of switching. iv. To study about the standardized data interface and its working principle.

v. To study the logic of link mechanisms used in networks and different layers of TCP/IP. UNIT- I: -DATA COMMUNICATION 9

Introduction: Networks Protocols and standards Standards organizations Line configurations Topology Transmission mode Categories of networks Inter networks. OSI model: Functions of the layers. Encoding and modulating: Digital-to-digital conversion Analog-to-digital conversion Digital-to-analog conversion Analog-to-analog conversion. Transmission media: Guided media Unguided media Transmission impairment Performance. UNIT-II: -ERROR CONTROL AND DATA LINK PROTOCOLS 9

Error detection and correction: Types of errors Detection Vertical Redundancy Check (VRC) Longitudinal Redundancy Check (LRC) Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) Check sum Error correction. Data link control: Line discipline Flow control Error control. Data link protocols: Asynchronous protocols Synchronous protocols Character oriented protocols BIT oriented protocols Link access procedures. UNIT- III: -NETWORKS AND SWITCHING 9

LAN: Project 802 Ethernet Token bus Token ring FDDI. MAN: IEEE 802.6 (DQDB) SMDS. Switching: Circuit switching Packet switching Message switching. UNIT- IV: -X.25, FRAME RELAY, ATM AND SONET/ SDH 9

X.25: X.25 Layers, Frame relay: Introduction Frame relay operation Frame relay layers Congestion control Leaky bucket algorithm Traffic control. ATM: Design goals ATM architecture ATM layers ATM applications. SONET / SDH: Synchronous transport signals Physical configuration SONET layers Applications.

113

UNIT- V: - NETWORKING DEVICES AND TCP / IP PROTOCOL SUITE

Networking and internetworking devices: Repeaters Bridges Gateways Other devices Routing algorithms Distance vector routing Link state routing. TCP / IP protocol suite: Overview of TCP/IP. Network layers: Addressing Subnetting Other protocols and network layers. Application layer: Domain Name System (DNS) Telnet File Transfer Protocol (FTP) Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP). L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOK 1. Behrouz A.Forouzan, Data Communication and Networking, Second Edition, Tata McGraw Hill, 2000. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. William Stallings, Data and Computer Communication, 8th Edition, Pearson Education, 2003 / PHI. 2. S. Andrew Tannenbaum, Computer Networks, Pearson Education, 4th Edition, 2003 / PHI.

114

EI 1405

VIRTUAL INSTRUMENTATION

3 0

OBJECTIVES i. To review background information required for studying virtual instrumentation. ii. To study the basic building blocks of virtual instrumentation. iii. To study the various techniques of interfacing of external instruments of PC. iv. To study the various graphical programming environment in virtual instrumentation. v. To study a few applications in virtual instrumentation. UNIT -I:-REVIEW OF DIGITAL INSTRUMENTATION 9

Representation of analog signals in the digital domain Review of quantization in amplitude and time axes, sample and hold, sampling theorem, ADC and DAC. UNIT- II:-FUNDAMENTALS OF VIRTUAL INSTRUMENTATION 9

Concept of virtual instrumentation PC based data acquisition Typical on board DAQ card Resolution and sampling frequency - Multiplexing of analog inputs Singleended and differential inputs Different strategies for sampling of multi-channel analog inputs. Concept of universal DAQ card - Use of timer-counter and analog outputs on the universal DAQ card. UNIT -III:-CLUSTER OF INSTRUMENTS IN VI SYSTEM 9

Interfacing of external instruments to a PC RS232, RS 422, RS 485 and USB standards - IEEE 488 standard ISO-OSI model for serial bus Introduction to bus protocols of MOD bus and CAN bus. UNIT- IV:-GRAPHICAL PROGRAMMING ENVIRONMENT IN VI 9

Concepts of graphical programming Lab-view software Concept of VIs and sub VI - Display types Digital Analog Chart Oscilloscopic types Loops Case and sequence structures - Types of data Arrays Formulae nodes Local and global variables String and file I/O. UNIT-V:-ANALYSIS TOOLS AND SIMPLE APPLICATIONS IN VI 9

Fourier transform - Power spectrum - Correlation Windowing and filtering tools Simple temperature indicator ON/OFF controller P-I-D controller - CRO emulation Simulation of a simple second order system Generation of HTML page. L = 45 TOTAL = 45

TEXT BOOKS

115

1. S. Gupta and J.P Gupta, PC Interfacing for Data Acquisition and Process Control, Instrument society of America, 2006. 2. Peter W. Gofton, Mastering Serial Communications, Sybex International, 2003. 3. Robert H. Bishop, Learning with Lab-view, Prentice Hall, 2003.

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Kevin James, PC Interfacing and Data Acquisition: Techniques for Measurement, Instrumentation and Control, Newness, 2000. 2. Gary W. Johnson, Richard Jennings, Lab-view Graphical Programming, McGraw Hill Professional Publishing, 2001. Note: To offer this elective, multi-user licensed copy of Lab-view software should be available.

116

EI 1406

INSTRUMENTATION IN PETRO CHEMICAL INDUSTRIES

3 0 0

OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v. To expose the students to the basic processing in petroleum industry. To provide adequate knowledge about the unit operations. To impart knowledge pertaining to the petroleum products and the chemicals obtained from them. To provide adequate knowledge about the measurement of various parameters in petrochemical industry. To expose the students to the various control loops in Petrochemical Industry.

UNIT- I:- PETROLEUM & NATURAL GAS PROCESSING 9 Exploration, Recovery & Processing techniques for Hydrocarbons/Petroleum ON SHORT & OFF SHORT oil-Gas separations. Processing of wet gases Refining of Crude oil. UNIT-II:-ENGINEERING & CHEMICAL OPERATIONS IN PETROCHEMICAL INDUSTRY 9

Thermal Cracking- Catalytic Cracking - Catalytic Reforming-Polymerization Alkylation Isomerization - Productions of Ethylene, Acetylene & Propylene from Petroleum as stocks. UNIT- III:- DOWN STREAM PRODUCTS/CHEMICALS FROM PETROLEUM 9

Chemicals from petroleum- Derivatives of Methane, Derivatives of Acetylene, Derivatives of Ethylene, Derivatives of Propylene & other down stream products. UNIT- IV:-MEASUREMENTS IN PETROCHEMICAL INDUSTRY 9

Parameters to be measured in a Refinery & in a Petrochemical Industry, Selection, Installation & Maintenance of Measuring Instruments, Intrinsic safety of Instruments. UNIT -V:- CONTROL LOOPS IN PETROCHEMICAL INDUSTRY. 9

Process Control in Refinery & Petrochemical Industry, Distillation Columns & their Control, Catalytic Crackers, Pyrolysis Units & their Control, Production of Polyethylene & its Automatic Control, Vinyl Chloride- Polyvinyl (PVC) Production & Control. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Chemicals from Petroleum- A.L.Waddams - Butter & Janner Ltd. 2000. 2. Process Control Structures & Applications- J.G.Balchan & K.I. Mumme- Van Nustrand Reinhold Co., 2002. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Shreves Chemical Process Industries Georget T.Avstin - McGraw Hill International Edition, 1998. 117

2. Instrumentation Process Industries-B.G.Liptak- Chilton Book Co.2003. 3. Standard Hand Book, Petroleum & Natural Gas Engineering-Offshore Engineer Bookstore, Houston Texas, 2002.

118

EI 1407

ELECTIVE II PROCESS CONTROL SYSTEM COMPONENTS

3 0 0 3

OBJECTIVES To provide adequate knowledge to design instrumentation systems UNIT- I:- DESIGN OF FLOW AND TEMPERATURE SENSORS 9 Orifice meter Design of Orifice for given flow conditions Design of Rota meter Design of RTD measuring circuit Design of cold junction compensation circuit for thermocouple using RTD Transmitters Zero and span adjustment in D/P transmitters and temperature transmitters. UNIT- II: - DESIGN OF PRESSURE SENSORS 9 Bourdon gauges factors affecting sensitivity design of Bourdon tube Design of air purge system for level measurement. Design of pressure measuring Electrical methods strain gauges. UNIT- III:- PUMPS 9 Type of pumps Pump performance pipe work calculation characteristics of different pumps-pump operation maintenance instruments used in pumping practice pump noise and vibration selection of pumps. UNIT- IV:- MICROPROCESSOR BASED CONTROLLERS 9 Design of microprocessor based system for data acquisition Design of microprocessor based P+I+D controller D.C motor speed control Temperature control. UNIT- V:- COMPUTER BASED CONTROLLERS 9 Design of computer controlled system Software design, Single program approach, Multi Testing Approach, Structured development for real time systems, distributed computerized control; Merits and demerits, requirements and topologies of distributed control system. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS: 1. N.A. Anderson Instrumentation for process measurement and control Chilton Company, 2004. 2. D.M. Considine Process Instruments and controls Handbook McGraw Hill Book Co., 2005. REFERENCE BOOKS: 1. R.H. Wearring Pumping Manual Gulg Publishing Co., 2001. 2. J.P. Bentley Principles of measurement systems Longman Inc., 2002. 3. C.D. Johnson, Process control instrumentation Technology Prentice Hall Inc., 2007.

119

EC 1424
OBJECTIVE:

MICROPROCESSOR BASED SYSTEM DESIGN

i. ii. iii.

To provide experience to design digital and analog hardware interface for microcontrollerbased systems. To provide experience to integrate hardware and software for microcontroller applications systems To provide experience to debug a microcontroller-based system and to analyze its performance using advanced debug tools and electronic test instrumentation. 9

UNIT-I:- DESIGN AND STRUCTURE

Need for microprocessor based system design design cycle dimensions of the design problem hardware design and software design system integration. Structure and characteristics: 88253 Timer/counter 8259 interrupt controller 8279 key board / display controller 6845 CRT controller 8237 DMA controller 8272 diskette controller. UNIT -II:- INPUT-OUTPUT CONTROL 9 I/O Control I/O timing data buffering with FIFOS Keyboards and switches remote instrument control self test hardware. Keyboard parsing real time programming self test algorithm. Multiplication and division algorithms. UNIT III:- SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT 9

Troubleshooting systems Logic analyzers: Logic state analyzers, logic timing analyzers, display modes, logic analyzer features signature analysis, error detection using signature analysis. Development systems: Basic features Software development aids-mass storage devices development system architecture emulators, system software assembler, linker, loader. UNIT IV:- 8086, 8087, 8088 & 8089 PROCESSORS 9

Review of architecture and instruction set of 8086 processor 8086/8088 based multiprocessing systems: Coprocessor configuration, closely coupled configurations, loosely coupled configurations 8087 coprocessor; architecture, instruction set 8089 I/O processor. UNIT V:- APPLICATIONS 9

System design applications: LCR meter PID controller D.C Motor speed control digital weighing machine temperature control controller for a washing true RMS meter. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS: 1. John B.Peatman, Microcomputer Based Design, McGraw Hill, 2004. 2. Douglass V.Hall, Microprocessor and Interfacing, McGraw Hill, 2007. REFERENCE BOOKS: 1. G.B. Williams, Troubleshooting on Microprocessor Based Systems, Pergamon Press, 2002. 2.Yu-Cheng Liu and Glenn A.Gibson, Microcomputer Systems: The 8086/8088

120

family, Second Edition, Prentice Hall of India, 2000.

121

EI 1408

INSTRUMENTATION AND CONTROL FOR AEROSPACE AND NAVIGATION 3 0 0 3 OBJECTIVE:


Objective of this course is to train the students in additional areas of Instrumentation and control in Aerospace and Navigation for grooming them into successful engineers .

UNIT- I: - AIR CRAFT AND AEROSPACE VEHICLE INSTRUMENTATION 9 Air data instruments: altimeter, air speed rate of climb-gyroscopic instruments turn and back indicator artificial horizon-directional Gyro Schuler Tuning, stable platform- automatic pilotsintegrated flight instruments magnetic composers. UNIT- II: - RADIO NAVIGATION AIDS 9 Automatic direction finder instrument landing system visual omni range distance measuring equipments radar optical instruments engine instruments and control pressure measurements thermal meters control pressure measurements thermal meters tachometers accelerometers smoke and fire detection propeller controls cabin pressure and temperature. UNIT- III:9 Satellite and space vehicle instrumentation propulsion controls stabilization stabilization sensors gyros sun sensors horizon scanner star tracker stabilization controls. UNIT- IV: - AIR CRAFT FLIGHT SIMULATION INSTRUMENTATION 9 Basic description of a flight simulator - solutions of aerodynamics equations simulation of abnormal conditions. Jet engine power plant troubles - fuel system troubles flight controls and auto pilot troubles. UNIT- V: - ELECTRICAL TROUBLES 9 Hydraulic systems troubles landing gear troubles cabin conditioning troubles, indication of unsafe canopy being conditions radio troubles separate generator system troubles trouble indicator lights other functions advantages of instrumentated flight simulation simulation of difficult conditions weapons system trainer need for realism instrumentation. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 REFERENCE BOOK 1. Douglas M.Considine and S.D.Ross Handbook of Applied Instrumentation McGraw Hill 2003.

122

EI 1409

INSTRUMENTATION & CONTROL IN AUTOMOBILE INDUSTRY

3 0 0 3

OBJECTIVE: i. ii. To provide basic knowledge in Instrumentation& control in Automotive Industries. To provide knowledge in communication protocols and Automation in Manufacturing Industries 9

UNIT- I:- MEASUREMENTS IN LMV & HMV 1. Pressure. 2. Level 3. Temperature 4. Density 5. Viscosity 6. Torque 7. Vibration. 8. Luminosity. UNIT- II:- INSTRUMENTATION APPLICATION IN VEHICLES. Analysis of Fuel and Emitted particles Co2, Nox, Hydro carbons UNIT- III:- EMBEDDED APPLICATION IN MV Microprocessor based front panel Indicators Ignition Systems Engine Controls RTOS applications. UNIT- IV:- COMMUNICATION PROTOCOLS Serial bus, CAN bus, GPS tracking Systems. UNIT -V:- AUTOMATION IN MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY. Assembly line applications, PLC and DCS implementation Robotic Controls.

L = 45 TOTAL = 45 REFERENCE BOOK Instrumentation Process Industries-B.G.Liptak- Chilton Book Co.2003

123

ELECTIVE COURSES- SEMESTER VIII ELECTIVE III EI 1410 OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v. To expose the students to the basic concepts of optical fibers and their properties. To provide adequate knowledge about the Industrial applications of optical fibers. To expose the students to the Laser fundamentals. To provide adequate knowledge about Industrial application of lasers. To provide adequate knowledge about holography & Medical applications of Lasers. 9 FIBER OPTICS & LASER INSTRUMENTS (Common to EIE & EEE ) 3 0 0 3

UNIT- I:-OPTICAL FIBERS AND THEIR PROPERTIES

Principles of light propagation through a fiber - Different types of fibers and their properties, fiber characteristics Absorption losses Scattering losses Dispersion Connectors & splicers Fiber termination Optical sources Optical detectors. UNIT- II:-INDUSTRIAL APPLICATION OF OPTICAL FIBERS 9

Fiber optic sensors Fiber optic instrumentation system Different types of modulators Interferometric method of measurement of length Moire fringes Measurement of pressure, temperature, current, voltage, liquid level and strain. UNIT- III:-LASER FUNDAMENTALS 9

Fundamental characteristics of lasers Three level and four level lasers Properties of laser Laser modes Resonator configuration Q-switching and mode locking Types of lasers Gas lasers, solid lasers, liquid lasers, semiconductor lasers. UNIT- IV:-INDUSTRIAL APPLICATION OF LASERS 9

Laser for measurement of distance, length, velocity, acceleration, current, voltage and Atmospheric effect Material processing Laser heating, welding, melting and trimming of material Removal and vaporization. UNIT- V:-HOLOGRAM AND MEDICAL APPLICATIONS 9

Holography Basic principle - Methods Holographic interferometry and application, Holographic components Medical applications of lasers, laser and tissue interactive Laser instruments for surgery, removal of tumors of vocal cards, brain surgery, plastic surgery, rigid and flexible endoscopes, gynecology and oncology. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS

124

1. J.M. Senior, Optical Fiber Communication Principles and Practice, Prentice Hall of India, 2005. 2. J. Wilson and J.F.B. Hawkes, Introduction to Opto Electronics, Prentice Hall of India, 2001. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. Donald J.Sterling Jr, Technicians Guide to Fiber Optics, 3rd Edition, Vikas Publishing House, 2000. 2. M. Arumugam, Optical Fiber Communication and Sensors, Anuradha Agencies, 2002. 3. John F. Read, Industrial Applications of Lasers, Academic Press, 2004. 4. Monte Ross, Laser Applications, McGraw Hill, 2004. 5. G. Keiser, Optical Fiber Communication, McGraw Hill, 2006. 6. Mr. Gupta, Fiber Optics Communication, Prentice Hall of India, 2004.

125

EC 1416

TELECOMMUNICATION SWITCHING AND NETWORKS (Common to EIE, ECE, EEE)

3 0 0 3

OBJECTIVES To introduce the concepts of Frequency and Time division multiplexing and digital hierarchy namely SONET / SDH ii. To introduce the concepts of space switching, time switching and combination switching, example of a switch namely No.4 ESS Toll switch. iii. To introduce the need for network synchronization and study synchronization issues. To outline network control and management issues. iv. To study the enhanced local loop systems in digital environment. To introduce ISDN, DSL / ADSL, and fiber optic systems in subscriber loop. v. To introduce statistical modeling of telephone traffic. To study blocking system characteristics and queuing system characteristics. UNIT -I :- MULTIPLEXING 9 i.

Transmission Systems, FDM Multiplexing and modulation, Time Division Multiplexing, Digital Transmission and Multiplexing : Pulse Transmission, Line Coding, Binary N-Zero Substitution, Digital Biphase, Differential Encoding, Time Division Multiplexing, Time Division Multiplex Loops and Rings. SONET/SDH: SONET Multiplexing Overview, SONET Frame Formats, SONET Operations, Administration and Maintenance, Payload Framing and Frequency Justification, Virtual Tributaries, DS3 Payload Mapping, E4 Payload Mapping, SONET Optical Standards, SONET Networks. SONET Rings: Unidirectional Path-Switched Ring, Bidirectional Line-Switched Ring. UNIT -II :- DIGITAL SWITCHING 9

Switching Functions, Space Division Switching, Time Division Switching, two-dimensional Switching: STS Switching, TST Switching, No.4 ESS Toll Switch, Digital Cross-Connect Systems, Digital Switching in an Analog Environment. Elements of SSN07 signaling. UNIT- III :- NETWORK SYNCHRONIZATION CONTROL AND MANAGEMENT 9

Timing: Timing Recovery: Phase-Locked Loop, Clock Instability, Jitter Measurements, Systematic Jitter. Timing Inaccuracies: Slips, Asynchronous Multiplexing, Network Synchronization, U.S. Network Synchronization, Network Control, Network Management. UNIT- IV :- DIGITAL SUBSCRIBER ACCESS 9

ISDN: ISDN Basic Rate Access Architecture, ISDN U Interface, ISDN D Channel Protocol. High-Data-Rate Digital Subscriber Loops: Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line, VDSL. Digital Loop Carrier Systems: Universal Digital Loop Carrier Systems, Integrated Digital Loop Carrier Systems, Next-Generation Digital Loop Carrier, Fiber in the Loop, Hybrid Fiber Coax Systems, Voice band Modems: PCM Modems, Local Microwave Distribution Service, Digital Satellite Services.

126

UNIT- V :- TRAFFIC ANALYSIS

Traffic Characterization: Arrival Distributions, Holding Time Distributions, Loss Systems, Network Blocking Probabilities: End-to-End Blocking Probabilities, Overflow Traffic, Delay Systems: Exponential service Times, Constant Service Times, Finite Queues. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOK 1. Bellamy John, Digital Telephony, John Wily & Sons, Inc. 3rd edn. 2000. REFERENCES BOOKS 1. Viswanathan. T., Telecommunication Switching System and Networks, Prentice Hall of India Ltd., 2004.

127

EI 1411 OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v. system.

ADVANCED CONTROL SYSTEM

To study the description and stability of non-linear system. To study the conventional technique of non-linear system analysis. To study the analysis discrete time systems using conventional techniques. To study the analysis of digital control system using state-space formulation. To study the formulation and analysis of multi input multi output (MIMO)

UNIT- I:-NON-LINEAR SYSTEM DESCRIPTION & STABILITY

Linear vs. non-linear Examples Incidental and Intentional Mathematical description Equilibrium and linearization - Stability Lyapunov function Construction of Lyapunov function. UNIT- II:- PHASE PLANE AND DESCRIBING FUNCTION ANALYSIS Construction of phase trajectory Isocline method Direct or numerical integration Describing function definition Computation of amplitude and frequency of oscillation. UNIT- III:- Z-TRANSFORM AND DIGITAL CONTROL SYSTEM 9 9

Z transfer function Block diagram Signal flow graph Discrete root locus Bode plot. UNIT- IV:-STATE-SPACE DESIGN OF DIGITAL CONTROL SYSTEM State equation Solutions Realization Controllability Observability Stability Jurys test. UNIT- V:-MUTLI INPUT MULTI OUTPUT (MIMO) SYSTEM 9 9

Models of MIMO system Matrix representation Transfer function representation Poles and Zeros Decoupling Introduction to multivariable Nyquist plot and singular values analysis Model predictive control. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Benjamin C. Kuo, Digital Control Systems, Oxford University Press, 2000. 2. George J. Thaler, Automatic Control Systems, Jaico Publishers, 2006. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. I.J. Nagrath and M. Gopal, Control Systems Engineering, New Age International Publishers, 2003. 128

2. Raymond T. Stefani & Co., Design of Feed back Control systems, Oxford University, 2002. 3. William L. Luyben and Michael L. Luyben, Essentials of Process Control, McGraw Hill International Editions, Chemical Engineering Series, 1997.

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EI 1412

MECHATRONICS

OBJECTIVES: To understand the interdisciplinary applications of Electronics, Electrical, Mechanical and Computer Systems for the Control of Mechanical and Electronic Systems. UNIT- I:-INTRODUCTION 9

Mechatronics definition and key issues evolution elements Mechatronics approach to modern engineering design. UNIT- II:-SENSORS AND TRANSDUCERS 9

Types displacement, position, proximity and velocity sensors signal processing data display. UNIY- III:-ACTUATION SYSTEMS 9

Introduction electrical types applications pneumatic and hydraulic systems applications selection of actuators UNIT- IV:-CONTROL SYSTEMS 9

Types of controllers programmable logic controllers applications ladder diagrams microprocessor applications in Mechatronics programming interfacing computer applications UNIT V:-RECENT ADVANCES Manufacturing Mechatronics automobile Mechatronics - medical Mechatronics office automation case studies. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1 . Bulton, N., Mechatronics : Electronic Control system for Mechanical and Electrical Engineering, Longman, 2005. 2. Dradly, D.A. Dawson., D, Burd, N.C., and Loader, A.J., Mechatronics: Electronics in products and processes, Chapman & Hall, 1993. REFERENCES 1. HMT Mechatronics, Tata McGraw Hill, New Delhi, 2004. 2. Galip Ulsoy, A., and Devires, W.R. microcomputer Applications in manufacturing John wiley, USA 2006. 3. James Harter, Electro mechanics : Principles, concepts and devices Prentice Hall New Jersey 2006. 9

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ELECTIVE IV

MG 1402

ENTREPRENEURSHIP DEVELOPMENT (Common to all branches)

3 0 0 3

OBJECTIVE Study of this subject provides an understanding of the scope of an entrepreneur, key areas of development, financial assistance by the institutions, methods of taxation and tax benefits, etc. UNIT- I:-ENTREPRENEURSHIP 9 Entrepreneur Types of Entrepreneurs Difference between Entrepreneur and Intrapreneur Entrepreneurship in Economic Growth, Factors Affecting Entrepreneurical Growth. UNIT -II:-MOTIVATION 9 Major Motives Influencing an Entrepreneur Achievement Motivation Training, self Rating, Business Game, Thematic Apperception Test Stress management, Entrepreneurship Development Programs Need, Objectives. UNIT- III:-BUSINESS 9 Small Enterprises Definition, Classification Characteristics, Ownership Structures Project Formulation Steps involved in setting up a Business identifying, selecting a Good Business opportunity, Market Survey and Research, Techno Economic Feasibility Assessment Preparation of Preliminary Project Reports Project Appraisal Sources of Information Classification of Needs and Agencies. UNIT- IV:-FINANCING AND ACCOUNTING 9 Need Sources of Finance, Term Loans, Capital Structure, Financial Institution, management of working Capital, Costing, Break Even Analysis, Network Analysis Techniques of PERT/CPM Taxation Income Tax, Excise Duty Sales Tax. UNIT- V:-SUPPORT TO ENTREPRENEURS 9 Sickness in small Business Concept, Magnitude, causes and consequences, Corrective Measures Government Policy for Small Scale Enterprises Growth Strategies in small industry Expansion, Diversification, Joint Venture, Merger and Sub Contracting. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. S.S.Khanka Entrepreneurial Development S.Chand & Co. Ltd. Ram Nagar New Delhi, 1999. 2. Hisrich R D and Peters M P, Entrepreneurship 5th Edition Tata McGraw-Hill, 2002. REFERENCES 1. Rabindra N. Kanungo Entrepreneurship and innovation, Sage Publications, New Delhi, 2002. 2. EDII Faulty and External Experts A Hand Book for New Entrepreneurs Publishers: Entrepreneurship Development Institute of India, Ahmadabad, 2003.

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EI 1413 OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v.

EMBEDDED SYSTEM DESIGN

3 0 0 3

Introduce to features that build an embedded system. To help the understanding of the interaction that the various components within an embedded system have with each other. Techniques of inter facing between processors & peripheral device related to embedded processing. To enable writing of efficient programs on any dedicated processor. To present in lucid manner the basic concepts of systems programming like operating system, assembler compliers etc and to understand the management task needed for developing embedded system. 9

UNIT -I:-INTRODUCTION TO EMBEDDED SYSTEM

Introduction to functional building blocks of embedded systems Register, memory devices, ports, timer, interrupt controllers using circuit block diagram representation for each categories. UNIT- II:-PROCESSOR AND MEMORY ORGANIZATION 9

Structural units in a processor; selection of processor & memory devices; shared memory; DMA; interfacing processor, memory and I/O units; memory management Cache mapping techniques, dynamic allocation - Fragmentation. UNIT- III:-DEVICES & BUSES FOR DEVICES NETWORK 9

I/O devices; timer & counting devices; serial communication using I2C, CAN, USB buses; parallel communication using ISA, PCI, PCI/X buses, arm bus; interfacing with devices/ports, device drivers in a system Serial port & parallel port. UNIT- IV:-I/O PROGRAMMING SCHEDULE MECHANISM 9

Intel I/O instruction Transfer rate, latency; interrupt driven I/O - Non-maskable interrupts; software interrupts, writing interrupt service routine in C & assembly languages; preventing interrupt overrun; disability interrupts. Multi threaded programming Context switching, premature & nonpremature multitasking, semaphores. Scheduling Thread states, pending threads, context switching, round robin scheduling, priority based scheduling, assigning priorities, deadlock, watch dog timers. UNIT-V:-REAL TIME OPERATING SYSTEM (RTOS) 9

Introduction to basic concepts of RTOS, Basics of real time & embedded system operating systems, RTOS Interrupt handling, task scheduling; embedded system design issues in system development process Action plan, use of target system, emulator, use of software tools. 132

L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Rajkamal, Embedded System Architecture, Programming, Design, Tata McGraw Hill, 2003. 2. Daniel W. Lewis Fundamentals of Embedded Software, Prentice Hall of India, 2004. REFERENCE BOOKS 1. David E. Simon, An Embedded Software Primer, Pearson Education, 2004. 2. Frank Vahid, Embedded System Design A Unified hardware & Software Introduction, John Wiley, 2002. 3. Sriram V. Iyer, Pankaj Gupta, Embedded Real Time Systems Programming, Tata McGraw Hill, 2004. 4. Steve Heath, Embedded System Design, II edition, Elsevier, 2003.

133

EC 1425 OBJECTIVES i.

DIGITAL IMAGE PROCESSING

3 0 0 3

To study the fundamentals of digital image processing and the various discrete image transforms. ii. To study the techniques of image enhancement & restoration.. iii. To study the techniques for extracting information from an image (called image analysis). iv. To study the techniques for image recognition and interpretation. v. To study about image compression which addressed the problem of reducing the amount of date required to represent an image. UNIT- I:-DIGITAL IMAGE FUNDAMENTALS 9

Image acquisition Storage Digital image representation, quantization and sampling, Imaging geometry, discrete image transforms Properties and applications. UNIT- II:-ENHANCEMENT AND RESTORATION 9

Image enhancement techniques Spatial domain methods histogram modification techniques, spatial filtering, enhancement in the frequency domain, image restoration Degradation model Inverse filter Wiener filter constraint Least squares restoration, restoration in spatial domain. UNIT -III:-SEGMENTATION & REPRESENTATION 9

Edge linking, boundary detection, threshold, region oriented, segmentation, representation schemes UNIT- IV:-RECOGNITION & INTERPRETATION 9

Decision theoretic methods, structural methods, interpretation Knowledge based systems, logical systems, expert systems. UNIT- V:-IMAGE COMPRESSION 9

Image compression models, elements of information theory, transform coding Video coding, coding standards. L = 45 TOTAL = 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. R.C. Gonzalez, & R.E. Woods, Digital Image Processing, Prentice Hall, 2007. 2. A.K. Jain, Fundamentals of Digital Image Processing, Pearson Education, 1997 .

134

REFERENCE BOOKS 1. A. Rosenfield & A.C. Kak, Digital Picture Processing, II edition, Academic Press New York 2003. 2. W.K. Pratt, Digital Image Processing, II Edition, John Wiley 2007. 3. K.R. Rao, J.J.Hwang, Techniques and Standards for Image Video and Audio Coding, Prentice Hall, N.J. 1996.

135

EI 1414

ADAPTIVE CONTROL SYSTEM (Common to EIE & EEE)

3 0 0 3

OBJECTIVES i. ii. iii. iv. v. To study the definition of adaptive control and methods of adaptation. To study the parameter identification of systems. To study the self-tuning of PID controllers based on parameter identification. To study the model reference adaptive control. To study the practical application through case studies. 9

UNIT I:-INTRODUCTION

Introduction to adaptive control - Effects of process variations Adaptive control schemes Adaptive control problem Non-parametric identification Step response method Impulse response method Frequency response method. UNIT II:-PARAMETRIC IDENTIFICATION 9

Linear in parameter models - ARX ARMAX ARIMAX Least square estimation Recursive least square estimation Extended least square estimation Maximum likelihood estimation Introduction to non-linear systems identification - Pseudo random binary sequence. UNIT III:-SELF-TUNING REGULATOR 9

Deterministic in-direct self-tuning regulators Deterministic direct self-tuning regulators Introduction to Stochastic self-tuning regulators Stochastic indirect self-tuning regulator. UNIT IV:-MODEL REFERENCE ADAPTIVE CONTROLLER 9

The MIT rule Lyapunov theory Design of model reference adaptive controller using MIT rule and Lyapunov theory Relation between model reference adaptive controller and self-tuning regulator. UNIT V:-TUNING OF CONTROLLERS AND CASE STUDIES 9

Design of gain scheduling controller - Auto-tuning of PID regulator Stability analysis of adaptive controllers Application of adaptive control in chemical reactor, distillation column and variable area tank system. TEXT BOOK 1.Karl J. Astrom & Bjorn Wittenmark, Adaptive Control, Pearson Education (Singapore), Second Edition, 2003.

136

REFERENCE BOOKS 1. T. C.H.A. Hsia, System Identification, Lexington books, 2001. 2. Stephanopoulis G. Chemical Process Control, Prentice Hall of India, New Delhi, 2005.

137

EI 1415

NANOTECHNOLOGY FOR INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERS 3 0 0 3

OBJECTIVES: Nanotechnology deals with atoms with only a few nanometers in dimensions. As the size of objects is scaled down to the nanometer regime. The material properties undergo a transformation, presenting a great potential for promising applications. UNIT I:- INTRODUCTION 9

Nanomaterials -Quantum Mechanics -Review of classical mechanics - de Broglie's hypothesis - Heisenberg uncertainty principle -Pauli exclusion principle - Schrdinger's equation - Properties of the wave function application: quantum well, wire, dot - Quantum cryptography UNIT II:- SOLID STATE PHYSICS 9

Structure and bonding - Application: carbon nanotube - Electronic band structure - Electron statistics - Application: Optical transitions in solids -Nanomaterials: Fabrication -Bottom-up vs. topdown - Epitaxial growth Selfassembly UNIT III:- NANOMATERIALS 9

Characterization:- Structural - XRD, TEM, SEM, STM, AFM - Chemical - Optical Transport - Electronic Nanodevices - Background - Quantization of resistance - Single-electron transistors - Esaki and resonant tunneling diodes UNIT IV:- MAGNETIC NANODEVICES 9

Magnetoresistance - Spintronics - MEMS and NEMS - Fabrication - Modeling -Applications Photonic Nanodevices - Semiconductor quantum dots - Photonic crystals, natural sensors, electromagnetic sensors, biosensors. UNIT V:- BIO-MEDICAL APPLICATIONS 9

Drugs, drug delivery, photodynamic therapy, molecular motors, neuro- electronics interfaces, protein engineering, nanobusiness, nanoethics. Metamaterials -Societal, Health and Environmental Impacts L = 45 TOTAL = 45 REFERENCE: 1. MarkRatner and Daniel Ratner, Nanotechnology Pearson Education, 2007

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