B.Tech ECE Syllabus in SRM
B.Tech ECE Syllabus in SRM
B.Tech ECE Syllabus in SRM
CATEGORY
G
PD1001
MA1001
PY1001
PY1002
CY1001
CY1002
CE1001
B
E
ME1001/
ME1005
E
EC1001
E
EC1002
E
NC1001/
NS1001/SP1001/
YG1001
COURSE NAME
VALUE
EDUCATION
SOFT SKILLS - I
CALCULUS AND
SOLID GEOMETRY
PHYSICS
PHYSICS
LABORATORY
CHEMISTRY
CHEMISTRY
LABORATORY
BASIC CIVIL
ENGINEERING
BASIC
MECHANICAL
ENGINEERING/
ENGINEERING
GRAPHICS
BASIC
ELECTRONICS
ENGINEERING
ELECTRONICS
ENGINEERING
PRACTICES
2/1
0/4 2/3
NCC/NSS/NSO/YOGA
17/ 2
16
TOTAL CONTACT
HOURS
8/ 22/
12 23
27/30
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
SRM(E&T)
SEMESTER II
COURSE
CODE
LE1001
CS1001
ENGLISH
PROGRAMMING
USING MATLAB
SOFT SKILLS - II
ADVANCED
CALCULUS AND
COMPLEX ANALYSIS
MATERIAL SCIENCE
1
1
0
0
2
2
2
2
1
3
0
2
1
0
1
4
PRINCIPLES OF
ENVIRONMENTAL
SCIENCE
BIOLOGY FOR
ENGINEERS
BASIC ELECTRICAL
ENGINEERING
ENGINEERING
GRAPHICS /BASIC
MECHANICAL
ENGINEERING
ELECTRICAL
ENGINEERING
PRACTICES
ELECTRIC CIRCUITS
1/2
4/0
3/2
ELECTRIC CIRCUITS
LAB
18/ 2
19
15/
11
26/
25
MA1002
PY1003
CY1003
ME1005/
ME1001
EE1001
COURSE NAME
PD1002
BT1001
CATEGORY
B
E
EE1002
E
EC1003
EC1004
TOTAL
TOTAL CONTACT
HOURS
ECE-2013
35/32
SRM(E&T)
SEMESTER III
COURSE
CATEGORY
CODE
LE1003/
LE1004/
LE1005/
LE1006/
LE1007
G
PD1003
MA1003
B
EC1005
P
EC1006
EC1007
EC1008
EC1009
EC1010
COURSE NAME
GERMAN LANGUAGE
PHASE I /
FRENCH LANGUAGE
PHASE I/
JAPANESE LANGUAGE
PHASE I /
KOREAN LANGUAGE
PHASE I /
CHINESE LANGUAGE
PHASE I
APTITUDE - I
TRANSFORMS AND
BOUNDARY VALUE
PROBLEMS
ELECTROMAGNETIC
THEORY AND
WAVEGUIDES
ELECTRON DEVICES
DIGITAL SYSTEMS
ELECTRON DEVICES
LAB
TOTAL
19
24
ECE-2013
SRM(E&T)
27
SEMESTER IV
COURSE
CATEGORY
CODE
LE1008/
LE1009/
LE1010/
LE1011/
LE1012
G
PD1004
MA1024
EC1011
EC1012
EC1013
EC1014
EC1015
P
P
ECE-2013
COURSE NAME
GERMAN LANGUAGE
PHASE II /
FRENCH LANGUAGE
PHASE II/
JAPANESE LANGUAGE
PHASE II /
0 2
KOREAN LANGUAGE
PHASE II /
CHINESE LANGUAGE
PHASE II
APTITUDE - II
1 1
0 4
0 3
0 3
0 3
3 2
3 2
0 3
PROBABILITY AND
4
RANDOM PROCESS
TRANSMISSION LINES
3
AND NETWORKS
ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS 3
LINEAR INTEGRATED
3
CIRCUITS
ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS
0
LAB
LINEAR INTEGRATED
0
CIRCUITS LAB
DEPARTMENT ELECTIVE
3
-I
19
TOTAL
Total contact hours
SRM(E&T)
26
23
SEMESTER V
COURSE
CODE
PD1005
CATEGORY
G
MA1015
EC1016*
EC1017
EC1018
EC1019*
EC1020
EC1047
P
P
P
OPEN ELECTIVE - I
TOTAL
20
26
COURSE NAME
APTITUDE - III
DISCRETE
MATHEMATICS
MICROPROCESSORS
AND
MICROCONTROLLERS
DIGITAL SIGNAL
PROCESSING
COMMUNICATION
THEORY
PROCESSOR LAB
COMMUNICATION
ENGINEERING LAB
INDUSTRIAL TRAINING
I (training to be undergone
after IV semester)
DEPARTMENT ELECTIVE
- II
29
ECE-2013
SRM(E&T)
SEMESTER VI
COURSE
CATEGORY
CODE
PD1006
G
COURSE NAME
APTITUDE - IV
ANTENNA AND WAVE
PROPAGATION
MICROWAVE AND
OPTICAL
COMMUNICATION
DIGITAL
COMMUNICATION
MICROWAVE AND
OPTICAL
COMMUNICATION LAB
DIGITAL
COMMUNICATION LAB
MINOR PROJECT
DEPARTMENT ELECTIVE
- III
OPEN ELECTIVE - II
TOTAL
Total contact hours
19
24
EC1021
EC1022
EC1023
EC1024
EC1025
EC1049
P
P
ECE-2013
28
SRM(E&T)
SEMESTER VII
COURSE
CODE
CATEGORY
EC1026
EC1027
EC1028
EC1029
EC1030
EC1031
EC1048
P
P
P
P
COURSE NAME
WIRELESS
3
COMMUNICATION
COMPUTER
3
COMMUNICATION
ELEMENTS OF
INFORMATION THEORY 3
AND CODING
VLSI DESIGN
3
NETWORK SIMULATION
0
LAB
VLSI DESIGN LAB
0
INDUSTRIAL TRAINING II
(Training to be undergone
0
after VI semester)
DEPARTMENT ELECTIVE
3
- IV
DEPARTMENT ELECTIVE
3
-V
TOTAL
18
23
ECE-2013
25
SRM(E&T)
SEMESTER VIII
COURSE
CODE
EC1050
CATEGORY
COURSE NAME
MAJOR PROJECT /
PRACTICE SCHOOL
Total
24 12
24 12
24
DEPARTMENTAL ELECTIVES
COURSE
CODE
CATEGORY
COURSE NAME
ELECTROMAGNETIC
INTERFERENCE
AND
ELECTROMAGNETIC
COMPATIBILITY
FUNDAMENTALS
OF
MEMS
FUNDAMENTALS
OF
NANOTECHNOLOGY
ELECTRONIC
MEASUREMENTS
&
INSTRUMENTATION
SENSORS
AND
TRANSDUCERS
BIOMEDICAL
INSTRUMENTATION
CONTROL ENGINEERING
EC1101
EC1102
EC1103
EC1104
EC1105
EC1106
EC1107
EC1108
COMPUTER
ARCHITECTURE
ORGANIZATION
EC1109
EMBEDDED SYSTEMS
EC1110
VIRTUAL
INSTRUMENTATION
USING LABVIEW
EC1111
DIGITAL TELEVISION
ECE-2013
AND
SRM(E&T)
EC1112
DIGITAL
PROCESSING
IMAGE
EC1113
RADAR
AND
NAVIGATIONAL AIDS
EC1114
EC1115
EC1116
EC1117
EC1118
EC1119
EC1120
EC1121
EC1122
EC1123
EC1124
EC1125
COMMUNICATION
SWITCHING TECHNIQUES
ASIC DESIGN
EMBEDDED
C
AND
MICRO CONTROLLER
CRYPTOGRAPHY
AND
NETWORK SECURITY
SATELLITE
COMMUNICATION AND
BROADCASTING
MOBILE COMPUTING
BLUETOOTH
TECHNOLOGY
COMMUNICATION
NETWROK PROTOCOLS
PHOTONICS
AND
OPTICAL NETWORKS
RF SYSTEM DESIGN FOR
WIRELESS
COMMUNICATIONS
NEURAL NETWORK AND
FUZZY LOGIC
DIGITAL LOGIC DESIGN
WITH PLDS AND VHDL
Not to
be
offere
d to
EEE /
ICE/
EIE /
ITCE
OPEN ELECTIVES
COURS
E CODE
CATEGORY
EC1201
P
ECE-2013
COURSE NAME
ELECTRONIC
CIRCUITS
SYSTEMS
10
&
SRM(E&T)
EC1202
EC1203
TELECOMMUNIC
ATION SYSTEMS
MODERN
WIRELESS
COMMUNICATIO
N SYSTEMS
/
ECSE
/ SWE
ITCE
/ CSE
/ SWE
ITCE
Summary of credits
Category
G
( Excluding
open and
departmental
electives)
B
( Excluding
open and
departmental
electives)
E
( Excluding
open and
departmental
electives)
P
( Excluding
open and
departmental
electives)
Open Elective
Dep. Elective
Total
III
IV
VI
VII
VIII
Total
16
8.9
23
35
19.4
13
13
7.2
17
13
15
14
17
12
92
51.8
15
8.3
23
26
24
23
180
100
II
--
-48
ECE-2013
24
11
12
SRM(E&T)
SEMESTER I
LE1002
VALUE EDUCATION
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite: Nil
L
1
T
0
P
0
C
1
PURPOSE
To provide guiding principles and tools for the development of the whole
person recognizing that the individual is comprised of Physical, Intellectual,
Emotional and Spiritual dimensions
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To deepen understanding, motivation and responsibility with regard to
making personal and social choices and the practical implications of
expressing them in relation to themselves, others, the community and the
world at large.
2. To inspire individuals to choose their own personal, social, moral and
spiritual values and be aware of practical methods for developing and
deepening.
3.
UNIT I-INTRODUCTION
(6 hours)
Definition, Relevance, Types of values, changing concepts of values.
UNIT II-INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP BEHAVIOUR
(6 hours)
Personal values Self Strengths (self-confidence, self-assessment, selfreliance, self-discipline, determination, self-restraint, contentment, humility,
sympathy and compassion, gratitude, forgiveness) Weaknesses (Influences -Peer pressure, familial and societal expectations, media).
UNIT III-SOCIETIES IN PROGRESS
(6 hours)
Definition of society; Units of society; Communities ancient and modern
Agents of change Sense of survival, security, desire for comfort and ease
sense of belonging, social consciousness and responsibility.
UNIT IV-ENGINEERING ETHICS
(6 hours)
Definition Societies for engineers Code of Ethics Ethical Issues
involved in cross border research -- Ethical and Unethical practices case
studies situational decision making.
ECE-2013
12
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
13
Professional
Subjects (P)
Embedded
--
SRM(E&T)
PD1001
SOFT SKILLS-I
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite: Nil
PURPOSE
To enhance holistic development
of students and improve their
employability skills.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To develop inter personal skills and be an effective goal oriented team
player.
2.
To develop professionals with idealistic, practical and moral values.
3.
To develop communication and problem solving skills.
4.
To re-engineer attitude and understand its influence on behavior.
UNIT I-SELF ANALYSIS
(4 hours)
SWOT Analysis, Who am I, Attributes, Importance of Self Confidence, Self
Esteem
UNIT II-ATTITUDE
(4 hours)
Factors influencing Attitude, Challenges and lessons from Attitude.
Change Management
Exploring Challenges, Risking Comfort Zone, Managing Change.
UNIT III-MOTIVATION
Factors of motivation, self talk, Intrinsic & Extrinsic Motivators.
(6 hours)
ECE-2013
(10 hours)
14
SRM(E&T)
ASSESSMENT
1.
2.
TEXT BOOK
1.
REFERENCE BOOKS
1.
2.
3.
4.
Course designed
by
Student
1
Outcome
Mapping
of
instructional
2 objectives with
student
outcome
3 Category
4 Broad area
5 Approval
General
(G)
d e
X
f
X
g
X
Basic
Sciences
(B)
i
X
Engineering
Sciences
and
Technical Arts
(E)
Professio
nal
Subjects
(P)
X
Commu Signal
VLS Embedde
Electronics
nication Processing
I
d
-----23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
ECE-2013
15
SRM(E&T)
MA1001
L T P C
CALCULUS AND SOLID
3
2
0
4
GEOMETRY
Total Contact Hours 60
Prerequisite: Nil
Common to all Branches of Engineering except Bio group
PURPOSE
To impart analytical ability in solving mathematical problems as applied
to the respective branches of Engineering.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To apply advanced matrix knowledge to Engineering problems.
To improve their ability in solving geometrical applications of
2.
differential calculus problems
3. To equip themselves familiar with the functions of several variables.
4. To familiarize with the applications of differential equations.
5. To expose to the concept of three dimensional analytical geometry.
UNIT I-MATRICES
(12 hours)
Characteristic equation Eigen values and Eigen vectors of a real matrix
Properties of Eigen values Cayley Hamilton theorem orthogonal reduction
of a symmetric matrix to diagonal form Orthogonal matrices Reduction of
quadratic form to canonical form by orthogonal transformations.
UNIT II-FUNCTIONS OF SEVERAL VARIABLES
(12 hours)
Function of two variables Partial derivatives Total differential Taylors
expansion Maxima and Minima Constrained Maxima and Minima by
Lagrangian Multiplier method Jacobians Eulers theorem for
homogeneous function.
UNIT III-ORDINARY DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS
(12 hours)
Linear equations of second order with constant and variable coefficients
Homogeneous equation of Euler type Equations reducible to homogeneous
form Variation of parameter Simultaneous first order with constant coefficient.
ECE-2013
16
SRM(E&T)
REFERENCES
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
ECE-2013
17
SRM(E&T)
.
MA1001 CALCULUS AND SOLID GEOMETRY
Course designed
Department of Mathematics
by
a b c
d e f
g
h
i
Student
1
Outcome
X
X
Mapping of
instructional
1
1
2 objectives
with student 5
5
outcome
3 Category
General
(G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences
and
Technical Arts (E)
Professio
nal
Subjects
(P)
X
Elect
Embedde
ronic VLSI
d
s
----meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
4 Broad area
Commu
nication
5 Approval
-23rd
ECE-2013
Signal
Processing
18
SRM(E&T)
PY1001
PHYSICS
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to provide an understanding of physical concepts
and underlying various engineering and technological applications. In
addition, the course is expected to develop scientific temperament and
analytical skill in students, to enable them logically tackle complex
engineering problems in their chosen area of application.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To understand the general scientific concepts required for technology.
2.
To apply the Physics concepts in solving engineering problems.
3.
To educate scientifically the new developments in engineering and
technology.
4.
To emphasize the significance of Green technology through Physics
principles.
UNIT I-MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF SOLIDS AND ACOUSTICS
(9 hours)
Mechanical properties of solids: Stress-strain relationship Hookes law
Torsional Pendulum Youngs modulus by cantilever Uniform and nonuniform bending Stress-strain diagram for various engineering materials
Ductile and brittle materials Mechanical properties of Engineering materials
(Tensile strength, Hardness, Fatigue, Impact strength, Creep) Fracture
Types of fracture (Elementary ideas).
Acoustics: Intensity Loudness Absorption coefficient and its
determination Reverberation Reverberation time Factors affecting
acoustics of buildings and their remedies Sources and impacts of noise
Sound level meter Strategies on controlling noise pollution Ultrasonic
waves and properties Methods of Ultrasonic production (Magnetostriction
and Piezoelectric) Applications of Ultrasonics in Engineering and medicine.
UNIT
II-ELECTROMAGNETIC
WAVES,
CIRCUITS
AND
APPLICATIONS
(9 hours)
Del operator grad, div, curl and their physical significances - displacement
current Maxwells equations (derivation) Wave equation for
electromagnetic waves Propagation in free space Poynting theorem
ECE-2013
19
SRM(E&T)
20
SRM(E&T)
REFERENCES
1. Wole Soboyejo, Mechanical Properties of Engineered Materials,
Marcel Dekker Inc., 2003.
2. Frank Fahy, Foundations of Engineering Acoustics, Elsevier
Academic Press, 2005.
3. Alberto Sona, Lasers and their applications, Gordon and Breach
Science Publishers Ltd., 1976.
4. David J. Griffiths, Introduction to electrodynamics, 3rd ed.,
Prentice Hall, 1999.
5. Leonard. I. Schiff, Quantum Mechanics, Third Edition, Tata
McGraw Hill, 2010.
6. Charles Kittel, "Introduction to Solid State Physics", Wiley India Pvt.
Ltd, 7th ed., 2007.
7. Godfrey Boyle, Renewable Energy: Power sustainable future, 2nd
edition, Oxford University Press, UK 2004.
ECE-2013
21
SRM(E&T)
Course designed
by
Student
1
Outcome
Mapping
of
instructional
2
objectives with
student outcome
a b c d
X
X
1
4
General
(G)
3 Category
4 Broad area
5 Approval
PY1002
PY1001 PHYSICS
Department of Physics and Nanotechnology
e
X
2
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences
and
Technical Arts (E)
k
X
3
Professi
onal
Subject
s
(P)
X
Signal
Elect
Commu
Embed
Processi
ronic VLSI
nication
ded
ng
s
-----23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
PHYSICS LABORATORY
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite: Nil
L
0
T
0
P
2
C
1
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to develop scientific temper in experimental
techniques and to reinforce the physics concepts among the engineering
students.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To gain knowledge in the scientific methods and learn the process
1.
of measuring different Physical variables.
2.
Develop the skills in arranging and handling different measuring
instruments.
3.
Get familiarized with experimental errors in various physical
measurements and to plan / suggest on how the contributions could
be made of the same order, so as to minimize the errors.
ECE-2013
22
SRM(E&T)
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
REFERENCES
1.
G.L.Souires, Practical Physics, 4th Edition, Cambridge University,
UK, 2001.
2.
R.K.Shukla and Anchal Srivastava, Practical Physics, 1st Edition,
New Age International (P) Ltd, New Delhi, 2006.
3.
D. Chattopadhyay, P. C. Rakshit and B. Saha, An Advanced Course
in Practical Physics, 2nd ed., Books & Allied Ltd., Calcutta, 1990.
ECE-2013
23
SRM(E&T)
b
X
Basic
Sciences
(B)
X
Signal
Processin
g
--
Engineering
Sciences
and Technical Arts
(E)
Professiona
l Subjects
(P)
Electroni
cs
VLSI
Embedded
--
--
--
General
(G)
Commun
ication
-rd
23
e
X
ECE-2013
24
SRM(E&T)
CY1001
CHEMISTRY
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite: Nil
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
To enable the students to acquire knowledge in the principles of chemistry for
engineering applications.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
The students should be conversant with
1. The quality of water and its treatment methods for domestic and
industrial applications.
2. The classification of polymers, different types of polymerizations,
preparation, properties and applications of important polymers and
FRPs.
3. The phase rule and its application to one and two component systems.
4. The principle, types and mechanism of corrosion and protective
coatings.
5. The classification and selection of lubricants and their applications.
6. The basic principles, instrumentation and applications of analytical
techniques.
UNIT I-WATER TREATMENT
(9 hours)
Water quality parameters: Physical, Chemical & Biological significance Hardness of water - estimation of hardness (EDTA method) - Dissolved
oxygen determination (Winklers method), Alkalinity - determination disadvantages of using hard water in boilers: Scale, sludge formation disadvantages - prevention - treatment: Internal conditioning - phosphate,
calgon and carbonate conditioning methods - External: Zeolite, ion exchange
methods - desalination - reverse osmosis and electrodialysis - domestic water
treatment.
UNIT II-POLYMERS AND REINFORCED PLASTICS
(9 hours)
Classification of polymers - types of polymerization reactions - mechanism of
addition polymerization: free radical, ionic and Ziegler - Natta - effect of
structure on the properties of polymers - strength, plastic deformation,
elasticity and crystallinity -Preparation and properties of important resins:
Polyethylene, PVC, PMMA, Polyester, Teflon, Bakelite and Epoxy resins compounding of plastics - moulding methods - injection, extrusion,
compression and calendaring - reinforced plastics - FRP Carbon and Glassapplications.
ECE-2013
25
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
26
SRM(E&T)
5.
Course designed by
1 Student outcome
Mapping
of
instructional
2
objective
with
student outcome
3 Category
4 Broad area
5 Approval
CY1001 CHEMISTRY
Department of Chemistry
a b c d e f g
X X
X
1
,
6
General
(G)
k
X
2,
5
Basic
Sciences
(B)
4
Engineering
Sciences
and
Technical Arts
(E)
Professi
onal
Subjects
(P)
X
Signal
Commu
Electro
Embedd
Processi
VLSI
nication
nics
ed
ng
-----23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
CHEMISTRY LABORATORY
CY1002
PURPOSE
To apply the concepts of chemistry and develop analytical skills for
applications in engineering.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To enable the students to understand the basic concepts involved in the
analyses.
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
REFERENCES
1. Practical Chemistry (work book) Kamaraj & Arthanareeswari,
Sudhandhira Publications, 2011.
2. Chemistry Laboratory Manual Helen P. Kavitha, Scitech
Publications, 2008.
CY1002 CHEMISTRY LABORATORY
Course designed by
Department of Chemistry
a b c d e f g
h
i
j
k
1 Student outcome
X X
X
Mapping
of
instructional
2
objective
with
student outcome
1 1
1
Engineering
Professi
Basic
General
Sciences
and onal
Sciences
(G)
Technical Arts
Subjects
3 Category
(B)
(E)
(P)
X
Signal
Commu
Electroni
Embedd
Processi
VLSI
nication
cs
ed
4 Broad area
ng
-----5 Approval
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
ECE-2013
28
SRM(E&T)
L T P C
BASIC CIVIL ENGINEERING
2 0 0 2
CE1001 Total contact hours 30
Prerequisite: Nil
PURPOSE
To get exposed to the glimpses of Civil Engineering topics that is essential for
an Engineer.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To know about different materials and their properties.
2. To know about engineering aspects related to buildings.
3. To know about importance of surveying and the transportation systems.
To get exposed to the rudiments of engineering related to dams, water
4. supply, and sewage disposal.
UNIT I-BUILDING MATERIALS
(6 hours)
Introduction Civil Engineering Materials: Bricks composition
classifications properties uses. Stone classification of rocks quarrying
dressing properties uses. Timber - properties uses ply wood. Cement
grades types properties uses. Steel types mild steel medium steel
hard steel properties uses market forms. Concrete grade designation
properties uses.
UNIT II-MATERIAL PROPERTIES
(6 hours)
Stress strain types Hooks law three moduli of elasticity poisons
ratio relationship factor of safety. Centroid - center of gravity problems
in symmetrical sections only (I, T and channel sections). Moment of inertia,
parallel, perpendicular axis theorems and radius of gyration (definitions only).
UNIT III-BUILDING COMPONENTS
(6 hours)
Building selection of site classification components. Foundations
functions classifications bearing capacity. Flooring requirements
selection types cement concrete marble terrazzo floorings. Roof types
and requirements.
UNIT IV-SURVEYING AND TRANSPORTATION
(6 hours)
Surveying objectives classification principles of survey. Transportation
classification cross section and components of road classification of
roads. Railway cross section and components of permanent way functions.
ECE-2013
29
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
30
SRM(E&T)
Course designed
by
Student
1
outcome
Mapping of
instructional
2 objectives
with student
outcome
1
4
d e
X
3 Category
Basic
Sciences (B)
Signal
Processing
4 Broad area
Com
munic
ation
--
--
ME1001
k
X
2
4
1-4
Gener
al (G)
5 Approval
Engineering
Sciences
and
Technical Arts (E)
X
Electronics
--
Professio
nal
Subjects
(P)
VLS
I
Embedde
d
--
--
BASIC MECHANICAL
ENGINEERING
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite: Nil
L
2
T
0
P
0
PURPOSE
To familiarize the students with the basics of Mechanical Engineering.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To familiarize with the basic machine elements
2.
To familiarize with the Sources of Energy and Power Generation
3.
To familiarize with the various manufacturing processes
ECE-2013
31
SRM(E&T)
C
2
UNITI-MACHINE ELEMENTS
(10 hours)
Springs: Helical and leaf springs Springs in series and parallel. Cams:
Types of cams and followers Cam profile.
Power Transmission: Gears (terminology, spur, helical and bevel gears, gear
trains). Belt drives (types). Chain drives. Simple Problems.
UNIT II-ENERGY
(10 hours)
Sources: Renewable and non-renewable (various types, characteristics,
advantages/disadvantages). Power Generation: External and internal
combustion engines Hydro, thermal and nuclear power plants (layouts,
element/component description, advantages, disadvantages, applications).
Simple Problems.
UNIT III-MANUFACTURING PROCESSES
(10 hours)
Sheet Metal Work: Introduction Equipments Tools and accessories
Various processes (applications, advantages / disadvantages). Welding: Types
Equipments Tools and accessories Techniques employed -applications,
advantages / disadvantages Gas cutting Brazing and soldering. Lathe
Practice: Types - Description of main components Cutting tools Work
holding devices Basic operations. Simple Problems. Drilling Practice:
Introduction Types Description Tools. Simple Problems.
REFERENCES
1. Kumar, T., Leenus Jesu Martin and Murali, G., Basic Mechanical
Engineering, Suma Publications, Chennai, 2007.
2. Prabhu, T. J., Jai Ganesh, V. and Jebaraj, S., Basic Mechanical
Engineering, Scitech Publications, Chennai, 2000.
3. Hajra Choudhary, S.K. and HajraChoudhary, A. K., Elements of
Workshop TechnologyVols. I & II, Indian Book Distributing
Company Calcutta, 2007.
4. Nag, P.K., Power Plant Engineering, Tata McGraw-Hill, New
Delhi, 2008.
5. Rattan, S.S., Theory of Machines, Tata McGraw-Hill, New Delhi,
2010.
ECE-2013
32
SRM(E&T)
EC1001
BASIC ELECTRONICS
ENGINEERING
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite: Nil
L
2
T
0
P
0
C
2
PURPOSE
This course provides comprehensive idea about working principle, operation
and characteristics of electronic devices, transducers, Digital Electronics and
Communication Systems.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
At the end of the course students will be able to gain knowledge about the
1.
Fundamentals of electronic components, devices, transducers,
2.
Principles of digital electronics, and
3.
Principles of various communication systems
UNIT I-ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS
(4 hours)
Passive components resistors, capacitors & inductors (properties, common
types, I-V relationship and uses).
UNIT II-SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES
( 7 hours)
Semiconductor Devices - Overview of Semiconductors - basic principle,
operation and characteristics of PN diode, zener diode, BJT, JFET,
ECE-2013
33
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
34
SRM(E&T)
EC1002
ELECTRONICS ENGINEERING
PRACTICES
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite: Nil
Common for ECE, EEE, EIE, ITCE & ICE
L
0
T
0
P
2
C
1
PURPOSE
To equip the students with the knowledge of PCB design and fabrication
processes.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To familiarize the electronic components and basic electronic
1.
instruments.
To make familiar with PCB design and various processes involved.
2.
To provide in-depth core knowledge in the fabrication of Printed
3.
Circuit Boards.
To provide the knowledge in assembling and testing of the PCB based
4.
electronic circuits.
ECE-2013
35
SRM(E&T)
(6 hours)
ECE-2013
36
SRM(E&T)
NC1001/
NS1001/
SP1001/
YG1001
L T
NATIONAL CADET CORPS (NCC)/
0 0
NATIONAL SERVICE SCHEME (NSS)/
NATIONAL SPORTS ORGANIZATION
(NSO) / YOGA
Total Contact Hours 15 (minimum, but may vary
depending on the course)
Prerequisite: Nil
P
1
C
1
PURPOSE
To imbibe in the minds of students the concepts and benefits of
NCC/NSS/NSO/YOGA and make them practice the same
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To enable the students to gain knowledge about
NCC/NSS/NSO/YOGA and put the same into practice
ECE-2013
37
SRM(E&T)
38
SRM(E&T)
Assessment
An attendance of 75% is compulsory to earn the credits specified in the
curriculum. Grading shall be done by the faculty member handling the course
based on punctuality, regularity in attending the classes and the extent of
active involvement.
TEXT BOOKS
1. Yogiraj Vethathiri Maharishi, "Yoga for Modern Age", Vethathiri
Publishers, 1989
2. Vethathiri Maharishi T., "Simplified Physical Exercises", Vethathiri
Publishers, 1987.
NC1001/ NS1001/
SP1001/ YG1001
1 Student Outcome
2 Mapping
of
instructional
objectives
with
student outcome
3 Category
X
General
(G)
X
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences and
Technical Arts (E)
Profession
al Subjects
(P)
X
4 Approval
ECE-2013
39
SRM(E&T)
SEMESTER II
LE1001
ENGLISH
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite: N il
L
1
T
0
P
2
C
2
PURPOSE
To help students achieve proficiency in English and develop their
professional communication skills to meet the demand in the field of global
communication to enable them to acquire placement anywhere with ease and
confidence.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To enable students improve their lexical, grammatical and
communicative competence.
2. To enhance their communicative skills in real life situations.
3. To assist students understand the role of thinking in all forms of
communication.
4. To equip students with oral and appropriate written communication
skills.
5. To assist students with employability and job search skills.
UNIT I-INVENTIONS
(9 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary Tense and Concord:
B.
Listening and Speaking Common errors in Pronunciation
(Individual sounds); Process description (Describing the working of a
machine, and the manufacturing process).
C.
Writing Interpretation of data (Flow chart, Bar chart).
D.
UNIT II-ECOLOGY
(9 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary Error Analysis Synonyms and
Antonyms, Parallelisms.
B.
Listening and Speaking - Group Discussion.
C.
Writing Notice, Agenda, Minutes , letters to the editor via email :
Email etiquette.
D.
Reading Comprehension Summarizing and Note-making.
ECE-2013
40
SRM(E&T)
UNIT III-SPACE
(9 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary tense and concord; word formation.
B.
Listening and Speaking Distinction between native and Indian
English (Speeches by TED and Kalam) accent, use of vocabulary
and rendering.
C.
Writing Definitions and Essay writing.
D.
Reading Comprehension Predicting the content.
UNIT IV-CAREERS
(9 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary Homonyms and Homophones.
B.
Listening and Speaking Group Discussion.
C.
Writing .Applying for job, cover letter and resume.
D.
Reading, etymology (roots ; idioms and phrases), Appreciation of
creative writing.
UNIT V-RESEARCH
(9 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary Using technical terms, Analogies
B.
Listening and Speaking -- Presentation techniques (Speech by the
learner).
C.
Writing Project Proposal.
D.
Reading Comprehension -- Referencing Skills for Academic Report
Writing (Research Methodology Various methods of collecting
data) Writing a report based on MLA Handbook.
REFERENCES
1.
Department of English and Foreign Languages, English for
Engineers, SRM University Publications, 2013.
2.
Dhanavel, S.P.. English and Communication Skills for Students of
Science and Engineering, Units 1-5. Chennai: Orient Blackswan
Ltd,2009.
3.
Meenakshi Raman and Sangeetha Sharama, Technical
Communication-Principles and Practice, - Oxford University Press,
2009.
4.
Day, R A. Scientific English: A Guide for Scientists and Other
Professionals, 2nd ed. Hyderabad: Universities Press, 2000.
ECE-2013
41
SRM(E&T)
LE1001 ENGLISH
Course
designed Department of English and Foreign Languages
by
Stude a b c d
e
f
g
h
i
nt
1
outco
X
me
2 Mapping of instructional objecti
1-5
Basic
General
Engineering Sciences and
Sciences
Categ
(G)
Technical Arts (E)
3
(B)
ory
X
Signal
Commun
Processi Electronics VLSI
Broad
ication
4
ng
area
----Appr
rd
5
23 meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
oval
CS1001
L
1
Profession
al Subjects
(P)
Embedded
--
T
0
P
2
C
2
PURPOSE
This Lab Course will enable the students to understand the fundamentals and
programming knowledge in MATLAB.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To learn the MATLAB environment and its programming
fundamentals.
2.
Ability to write Programs using commands and functions.
3.
Able to handle polynomials, and use 2D Graphic commands.
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
42
SRM(E&T)
REFERENCES
1.
R.K.Bansal, A.K.Goel, M.K.Sharma, MATLAB and its Applications
in Engineering, Pearson Education, 2012.
2.
Amos Gilat, MATLAB-An Introduction with Applications, Wiley
India, 2009.
3.
Stephen.J.Chapman, Programming in MATLAB for Engineers,
Cengage Learning, 2011.
ECE-2013
43
SRM(E&T)
PD1002
SOFT SKILLS-II
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite: Nil
L
1
T
0
P
1
C
1
PURPOSE
To enhance holistic development of students and improve their employability
skills.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To develop inter personal skills and be an effective goal oriented team
player.
2. To develop professionals with idealistic, practical and moral values.
3. To develop communication and problem solving skills.
4. To re-engineer attitude and understand its influence on behavior.
ECE-2013
44
SRM(E&T)
(4 hours)
45
SRM(E&T)
4.
5.
Course designed by
1 Student Outcome
Mapping
of
instructional
2
objectives with
student outcome
General
(G)
3 Category
Basic
Sciences
(B)
i
X
Engineering
Sciences
and
Technical Arts
(E)
Professi
onal
Subjects
(P)
X
Signal
Electro
Embedd
Processi
VLSI
nics
ed
ng
----meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
4 Broad area
Commu
nication
5 Approval
-23rd
MA1002
L T P C
ADVANCED CALCULUS AND
3
2
0
4
COMPLEX ANALYSIS
Total Contact Hours 60
Prerequisite: Nil
Common to all Branches of Engineering except Bio group
PURPOSE
To impart analytical ability in solving mathematical problems as applied
to the respective branches of Engineering.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To have knowledge in multiple calculus.
2. To improve their ability in Vector calculus.
3. To equip themselves familiar with Laplace transform.
4. To expose to the concept of Analytical function.
5. To familiarize with Complex integration.
ECE-2013
46
SRM(E&T)
2.
3.
47
SRM(E&T)
4.
5.
6.
7.
ECE-2013
48
SRM(E&T)
PY1003
MATERIALS SCIENCE
Total Contact Hours 60
Prerequisite : Nil
L
2
T
0
P
2
C
3
PURPOSE
The course introduces several advanced concepts and topics in the rapidly
evolving field of material science. Students are expected to develop
comprehension of the subject and to gain scientific understanding regarding
the choice and manipulation of materials for desired engineering applications.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To acquire basic understanding of advanced materials, their functions
1.
and properties for technological applications.
To emphasize the significance of materials selection in the design
2.
process.
To understand the principal classes of bio-materials and their
3.
functionalities in modern medical science.
To get familiarize with the new concepts of Nano Science and
4. Technology.
To educate the students in the basics of instrumentation, measurement,
5. data acquisition, interpretation and analysis.
UNIT IELECTRONIC AND PHOTONIC MATERIALS
(6 hours)
Electronic Materials: Fermi energy and FermiDirac distribution function
Variation of Fermi level with temperature in intrinsic and extrinsic
semiconductors Hall effect Dilute Magnetic Semiconductors (DMS) and
their applications
Superconducting
Materials:
Normal
and
High
temperature
superconductivity Applications.
Photonic Materials: LED LCD Photo conducting materials Photo
detectors (CCD) Photonic crystals and applications Elementary ideas of
Non-linear optical materials and their applications.
UNIT II-MAGNETIC AND DIELECTRIC MATERIALS
(6 hours)
Magnetic Materials: Classification of magnetic materials based on spin
Hard and soft magnetic materials Ferrites, garnets and magnetoplumbites
Magnetic bubbles and their applications Magnetic thin films Spintronics
and devices (Giant magneto resistance, Tunnel magneto resistance and
Colossal magneto resistance).
ECE-2013
49
SRM(E&T)
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
REFERENCES
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
ECE-2013
51
SRM(E&T)
Course designed by
a
Student
1
outcome
X
Mapping of
instructional
2
objective
1
with student
outcome
3
Category
Broad area
Approval
CY1003
k
X
Basic
Engineering
Professional
Sciences
Sciences and
Subjects(P)
(B)
Technical Arts (E)
X
Commu
Signal
Electronics VLSI
Embedded
nication
Processing
-----23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
General
(G)
PRINCIPLES OF ENVIRONMENTAL
SCIENCE
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite: Nil
L
2
T
0
P
0
C
2
PURPOSE
The course provides a comprehensive knowledge in environmental science,
environmental issues and the management.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To enable the students
1. To gain knowledge on the importance of environmental education
and ecosystem.
2. To acquire knowledge about environmental pollution- sources,
effects and control measures of environmental pollution.
3. To understand the treatment of wastewater and solid waste
management.
4. To acquire knowledge with respect to biodiversity, its threats and its
conservation and appreciate the concept of interdependence.
5. To be aware of the national and international concern for
environment for protecting the environment.
ECE-2013
52
SRM(E&T)
53
SRM(E&T)
4.
5.
6.
ECE-2013
54
SRM(E&T)
BT1001
L
2
T
0
P
0
C
2
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to provide a basic understanding of biological
mechanisms of living organisms from the perspective of engineers. In
addition, the course is expected to encourage engineering students to think
about solving biological problems with engineering tools.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To familiarize the students with the basic organization of organisms
and subsequent building to a living being.
2.
To impart an understanding about the machinery of the cell
functions that is ultimately responsible for various daily
activities.
3.
To provide knowledge about biological problems that require
engineering expertise to solve them.
UNIT I-BASIC CELL BIOLOGY
(6 hours)
Introduction: Methods of Science-Living Organisms: Cells and Cell theory
Cell Structure and Function, Genetic information, protein synthesis, and
protein structure, Cell metabolism-Homoeostasis- Cell growth, reproduction,
and differentiation.
UNIT II-BIOCHEMISTRY AND MOLECULAR ASPECTS OF LIFE
(5 hours)
Biological Diversity --Chemistry of life: chemical bonds--Biochemistry and
Human biology--Protein synthesisStem cells and Tissue engineering.
UNIT III-ENZYMES AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS
(5 hours)
Enzymes: Biological catalysts, Proteases, Carbonic anhydrase, Restriction
enzymes, and Nucleoside monophosphate kinasesPhotosynthesis.
UNIT IV-MECHANOCHEMISTRY
(7 hours)
Molecular Machines/MotorsCytoskeletonBioremediationBiosensors
ECE-2013
55
SRM(E&T)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Category
Broad Area
Approval
ECE-2013
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences
and
Technical Arts
(E)
X
Signal
Electronic VLSI
Processin
s
g
----23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
Commun
ication
56
SRM(E&T)
j
X
Profession
al Subjects
(P)
Embedded
--
EE1001
BASIC ELECTRICAL
ENGINEERING
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite: Nil
L
2
T
0
P
0
C
2
PURPOSE
This course provides comprehensive idea about circuit analysis, working
principles of machines and common measuring instruments.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
At the end of the course students will be able to
Understand the basic concepts of magnetic circuits, AC & DC
1.
circuits.
Explain the working principle, construction, applications of DC &
2.
AC machines and measuring instruments.
3.
Gain knowledge about the fundamentals of wiring and earthing.
UNIT IFUNDAMENTALS OF DC CIRCUITS
(6 hours)
Introduction to DC and AC circuits, Active and passive two terminal
elements, Ohms law, Voltage-Current relations for resistor, inductor, capacitor
, Kirchhoff's laws, Mesh analysis, Nodal analysis, Ideal sources equivalent
resistor, current division, voltage division.
UNIT IIMAGNETIC CIRCUITS
(6 hours)
Introduction to magnetic circuits-Simple magnetic circuits-Faraday's laws,
induced emfs and inductances.
UNIT IIIAC CIRCUITS
(6hours)
Sinusoids, Generation of AC, Average and RMS values, Form and peak
factors, concept of phasor representation, J operator. Analysis of R-L, R-C, RL-C circuits. Introduction to three phase systems - types of connections,
relationship between line and phase values.
UNIT
IVELECTRICAL
MACHINES
&
MEASURING
INSTRUMENTS
(6 hours)
Working principle, construction and applications of DC machines and AC
machines (1 - phase transformers, single phase induction motors: split phase,
capacitor start and capacitor start & run motors).
ECE-2013
57
SRM(E&T)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
EE1001 BASIC ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
Course designed
Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering
by
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j k
Student
1
outcome
X
X
Mapping of
instructional
2
objectives
1,2,3
1
with student
outcome
General
Basic
Profession
Engineering Sciences
(G)
Sciences
al Subjects
& Technical Arts (E)
3
Category
(B)
(P)
X
Communi
Signal
Electronics VLSI
Embedded
cation
Processing
4
Broad area
-----5
Approval
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
ECE-2013
58
SRM(E&T)
ME1005
ENGINEERING GRAPHICS
Total contact hours 75
Prerequisite: Nil
L
1
T
0
P
4
C
3
(3 hours)
ECE-2013
59
SRM(E&T)
Category
Approval
b
X
c
X
1,2,
3,4
1,2,
3,4
ECE-2013
g
X
1,2,
3,4
Engineering
Profession
Sciences And al Subjects
Technical Art (P)
(E)
X
meeting of the Academic Council , May 2013
General
(G)
23rd
Basic
Sciences
(B)
60
SRM(E&T)
EE1002
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
PRACTICES
Total Contact Hours -30
Prerequisite: Nil
PURPOSE
To provide exposure to the students with hands on experience on various
Electrical Engineering practices.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
At the end of the course students will be able
1.
To learn the residential wiring and various types of wiring.
2.
To measure the various electrical quantities.
To gain knowledge about the fundamentals of various electrical
3.
gadgets and their working and trouble shooting of them.
4.
To design a prototype of a transformer.
To know the necessity and types of earthing and measurement of
5.
earth resistance.
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
1.
Residential wiring (using Energy meter, fuses, switches, indicator,
lamps, etc).
2.
Types of wiring ( fluorescent lamp wiring, staircase wiring, godown
wiring, etc).
3.
Measurement of electrical quantities (like voltage, current, power,
power factor in RLC circuits).
4.
Measurement of energy (using single phase and three phase energy
meter).
5.
Study of Earthing and Measurement of Earth resistance.
6.
Study of trouble shooting of electrical equipments (fan, iron box,
mixer-grinder, etc).
7.
Study of various electrical gadgets (Induction motor, transformer,
CFL, LED, PV cell, etc).
8.
Assembly of choke or small transformer.
REFERENCE BOOKS
1.
61
SRM(E&T)
2.
3.
EE1002
Course
designed by
1 Student
outcomes
2 Mapping of
instructional
objectives
with student
outcome
3 Category
General
(G)
4 Broad area
(for
Pcategory)
5 Approval
Engineering
Sciences and
Technical
Arts(E)
X
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Professional
Subjects(P)
Commu Signal
VL
Electronics
nication Processing
SI
----23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
ECE-2013
62
SRM(E&T)
Embedd
ed
--
EC1003
ELECTRIC CIRCUITS
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite: Nil
Common for ECE & ITCE
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
To expose basic circuit concepts, circuit modeling and methods of circuit
analysis in time domain and frequency domain for solving simple and multi
dimensional circuits including coupled circuits and tuned circuits.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To understand the concept of circuit elements lumped circuits,
waveforms, circuit laws and network reduction.
2.
To solve the electrical network using mesh and nodal analysis by
applying network theorems.
3.
To understand the concept of active, reactive and apparent powers,
power factor and resonance in series and parallel circuits.
4.
To know the basic concepts of coupled circuits and tuned circuits.
5.
To analyze the transient response of series and parallel A.C. circuits
and to solve problems in time domain using Laplace Transform.
UNIT I-BASIC CIRCUIT CONCEPTS & LAWS
(9 hours)
Classification of Circuit Elements Node, Loop, Path & Branch Incidence
Matrix Network topology Analysis of Incidence Matrix- Tie Set & Cut Set
Kirchoff's Laws Series and Parallel Voltage and Current division rule.
Introduction to AC Analysis Complex Impedance Analysis: Mesh
Supermesh Nodal Supernodal.
UNIT II-NETWORK THEOREMS: (Both DC & AC Circuit Analysis)
(9 hours)
Source Transformation Theorem - Super Position Principle - Thevenin's &
Norton's Theorem - Reciprocity Theorem - Compensation Theorem Millman's Theorem - Maximum Power Transfer theorem - Star - Delta
Theorem.
UNIT III-RESONANCE & COUPLED CIRCUITS
(9 hours)
Resonance: Introduction series resonance parallel resonance Definition:
Q Factor- Half power frequency resonant frequency Bandwidth.
Coupled Circuits: Mutual inductance Co-efficient of Coupling Dot
Convention Energy Consideration Analysis of Coupled Circuits.
ECE-2013
63
SRM(E&T)
REFERENCES
1.
2.
ECE-2013
64
SRM(E&T)
Course designed
by
Student
1
outcome
Mapping of
instructiona
l objectives
2
with
student
outcome
1,3,
4
2,5
Category
General
(G)
Broad area
Communi
cation
Approval
2,5
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Signal
Processing
2
,
5
1,
2,
5
Engineering
Sciences
&Technical Arts
(E)
Profession
al
Subjects
(P)
X
Electron VLS
Embedded
ics
I
X
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
L
T P
C
ELECTRIC CIRCUITS LAB
0
0
2
1
EC1004 Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite: Nil
Common for ECE & ITCE
PURPOSE
To inculcate strong practical skills on the fundamental theorems and transient
circuit analysis.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To impart hands on experience in verification of circuit laws and
theorems.
2.
To measure circuit parameters.
3.
To study circuit characteristics and simulation of time response.
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
1.
Verification of Kirchoffs voltage and Current Laws
2.
Verification of Superposition Theorem
ECE-2013
65
SRM(E&T)
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
REFERENCES
1.
2.
3.
4.
Course designed
by
Student
1
outcome
Mapping of
instructional
2
objectives
with student
outcome
1,2,3
Communication
g h i
1,2,
3
Engineerin
g Sciences
&Technica
l Arts (E)
Professional
Subjects (P)
Category
General
(G)
Basic
Sciences (B)
Broad area
Commu
nication
Signal
Processing
Approval
X
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
j k
X
ECE-2013
66
Electronics
VLSI
SRM(E&T)
Embe
dded
SEMESTER III
LE1003
L
2
T
0
P
0
C
2
PURPOSE
Germany offers infinite opportunities for students of engineering for higher
studies, research and employment in Germany. B.Tech Students are offered
German Language during their second year. Knowledge of the language will
be helpful for the students to adjust themselves when they go for higher
studies.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To introduce the language, phonetics and the special characters in
1.
German language.
2.
To introduce German culture & traditions to the students.
By the end of Phase I, the students will be able to introduce
3.
themselves and initiate a conversation.
We endeavor to develop the ability among the students to read and
4.
understand small texts written in German
5.
To enable the students to elementary conversational skills.
UNIT - I
(6 hours)
Wichtige Sprachhandlungen: Phonetics Sich begren - Sich und andere
vorstellen formell / informell - Zahlen von 1 bis 1 Milliarde - verstehen &
sprechen.
Grammatik: regelmige Verben im Prsens - sein und haben im Prsens Personalpronomen im Nominative.
UNIT - II
(6 hours)
Wichtige Sprachhandlungen Telefon Nummern verstehen und sprechen
Uhrzeiten verstehen und sagen Verneinung nicht und kein (formell und
informell).
Grammatik : Wortstellung Aussagesatz W-Frage und Satzfrage (Ja/Nein
Frage) Nomen buchstabieren und notieren bestimmter und unbestimmter
Artikel und Negativartikel im Nom. & Akkusative.
ECE-2013
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UNIT - III
(6 hours)
Wichtige Sprachhandlungen Tageszeiten verstehen und ber Termine
sprechen -Verabredungen verstehen - Aufgaben im Haushalt verstehen
Grammatik Personalpronomen im Akkusativ und Dativ - W-Fragen wie,
wer, wohin,wo, was usw.- Genitiv bei Personennamen - Modalverben im
Prsens knnen, mssen, mchten.
UNIT - IV
(6 hours)
Wichtige Sprachhandlungen Sich austauschen, was man kann, muss
Bezeichnungen Lebensmittel Mengenangaben verstehen Preise verstehen
und Einkaufzettel schreiben
Grammatik Wortstellung in Stzen mit Modalverben Konnektor und
noch- kein-------mehr wie viel, wie viele, wie alt, wie lange
Possessivartikel im Nominative.
UNIT V
(6 hours)
Wichtige Sprachhandlungen Freizeitanzeigen verstehen Hobbys und
Sportarten Anzeigen fr Freizeitpartner schreiben bzw. darauf antworten
Vorlieben und Abneigungen ausdrucken
Grammatik Verben mit Vokalwechsel im Prsens Modalverben im
Prsens drfen, wollen und mgen
- haben und sein im Prteritum
regelmige Verben im Perfekt Konnektoren denn, oder, aber.
REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Studio d A1. Deutsch als Fremdsprache with CD.
2. (Kursbuch und Sprachtraining).
ECE-2013
68
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Bro
4 ad
area
Ap
5 pro
val
Com
muni
catio
n
--
Signal
Processi
ng
Electronics
VLSI
Embedd
ed
--
--
--
--
L T P C
FRENCH LANGUAGE PHASE I
2 0 0 2
LE1004
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite
PURPOSE
To enable the student learners acquire a basic knowledge of the French
language and concepts of general French for everyday interactions and
technical French at the beginners level and also to get to know the culture
of France.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To enable students improve their grammatical competence.
2. To enhance their listening skills.
3. To assist students in reading and speaking the language.
4. To enhance their lexical and technical competence.
5. To help the students introduce themselves and focus on their
communication skills.
ECE-2013
69
SRM(E&T)
UNIT I
(6 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary: The second group verbs: Finir, rougir,
grossir, grandir . Les preposition de temps: , en, le, de 7h 8h,
jusqu , vers.
B.
Listening and Speaking the semi- vowels: Voil, pollutant.
C.
Writing the days of the week. Months, technical subjects, time, les
spcialits scientifiques et l anne universitaire, paragraph writing
about time table.
D.
Reading -- Reading of the text and comprehension answering
questions .
UNIT - II
(6 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary The adjectives, the nationality, feminine
& masculine noun forms les mtiers scientifiques.
B.
Listening and Speaking Vowels: soire, anne, prs de, trs.
C.
Writing Countries name, nationality, les mtiers scientifiques,
numbers from: 69 to infitive and some measures of unit.
D.
Reading Comprehension reading a text.
UNIT - III
6 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary near future, The demonstrative
adjectives, Express the aim by using the verb,
B.
Listening and Speaking La liaison interdite en haut.
C.
Writing some scientific terms, French expressions to accept an
invitation. Sentence framing.
D.
Reading Comprehension reading a text.
UNIT - IV
(6 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary the verbs: manger, boire , the partitive
articles.
B.
Listening and Speaking le e caduc.
C.
Writing- the food, the ingredients, fruits, vegetables, expression of
quantity, paragraph writing about food habits.
D.
Reading reading a text.
UNIT - V
(6 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary les prepositions de lieu: au la, l,
chez, the reflexives verbs, verbs to nouns.
ECE-2013
70
SRM(E&T)
B.
C.
D.
REFERENCE BOOKS
1.
2.
Course designed
by
Student
1
outcome
Mapping
of
instructional
2 objectives
with student
outcome
3 Category
g
X
1-5
General
(G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences and
Technical Arts
(E)
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
4
Broad area
5 Approval
Signal
Processi
Electronics
VLSI
ng
----23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
Commu
nication
ECE-2013
71
SRM(E&T)
Emb
edde
d
--
LE 1005
L
2
T
0
P
0
C
2
PURPOSE
To enable students achieve a basic exposure on Japan, Japanese language and
culture. To acquire basic conversational skill in the language.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To help students learn the Japanese scripts viz. hiragana and a
few basic kanji.
2.
To make the students acquire basic conversational skill.
3.
To enable students to know about Japan and Japanese culture.
4.
To create an advantageous situation for the students to have
better opportunity for employability by companies who have
association with Japan.
UNIT I
(8 hours)
Introduction to Japanese language. Hiragana Chart 1 - vowels and consonants
and related vocabulary.
Self introduction
Grammar usage of particles wa, no, mo and ka and exercises
Numbers (1-100)
Kanji introduction and basic kanjis naka, ue, shita, kawa and yama
Greetings, seasons, days of the week and months of the year
Conversation audio
Japan Land and culture
UNIT -II
(8 hours)
Hiragana Chart 1 (contd.) and related vocabulary
Grammar usage of kore, sore, are, kono, sono, ano, arimasu and imasu.
Particles ni (location) and ga. Donata and dare.
Numbers (up to 99,999)
Kanji numbers (1-10, 100, 1000, 10,000 and yen)
Family relationships and colours.
Conversation audio
Festivals of Japan
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UNIT - III
(5 hours)
Hiragana Charts 2&3, double consonants, vowel elongation and related
vocabulary
Lesson 3
Grammar - particles ni (time), kara, made and ne. Koko, soko, asoko and
doko.
Time expressions (today, tomorrow, yesterday, day before, day after)
Kanji person, man, woman, child, tree and book
Directions north, south, east and west
UNIT - IV
(5 hours)
Grammar - directions,-kochira, sochira, achira and dochira. Associated
vocabulary (mae, ushiro, ue, shita, tonari, soba, etc.)
Conversation audio
Japanese art and culture like ikebana, origami, etc.
UNIT - V
(4 hours)
Kanji hidari, migi, kuchi.
Japanese sports and martial arts.
REFERENCES
First lessons in Japanese, ALC Japan
1.
Japanese for dummies. Wiley publishing co. Inc., USA.
2.
Kana workbook, Japan foundation.
LE1005 JAPANESE LANGUAGE PHASE I
Course
Department of English and Foreign Languages
designed by
a b c
d e
f g h
i
j
k
Student
1
outcome
X
Mapping of
instructional
1
2 objectives
with student
4
outcome
Basic
Engineering
General
Professional
Sciences
Sciences
and
(G)
Subjects (P)
3 Category
(B)
Technical Arts (E)
X
Signal
Emb
Commu
Processin Electronics VLSI
edde
nication
4 Broad area
g
d
-----5 Approval
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
ECE-2013
73
SRM(E&T)
LE1006
L
2
T
0
P
0
C
2
PURPOSE
To enable students achieve a basic exposure on Korea, Korean language and
culture. To acquire basic conversational skill in the language.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To help students learn the scripts.
2.
To make the students acquire basic conversational skill.
3.
To enable students to know about Korean culture.
To create an advantageous situation for the students to have better
4.
opportunity for employability by companies who have association with
Korea.
UNIT - I
(6 hours)
Lesson 1 < Introduction to Korean Language >, Lesson2 < Consonants and
Vowels>,<Basic Conversation, Vocabularies and Listening >
UNIT - II
(10 hours)
Lesson 3 < Usage of To be >, Lesson 4 < Informal form of to be >,
Lesson 5 <Informal interrogative form of to be >, Lesson 6 < To be, to
have, to stay >, < Basic Conversation, Vocabularies and Listening >
UNIT - III
(10 hours)
Lesson 7 < Interrogative practice and Negation >, < Basic Conversation,
Vocabularies and Listening >
UNIT - IV
(4 hours)
Lesson 8 < Korean Culture and Business Etiquette >, < Basic Conversation,
Vocabularies and Listening >
REFERENCES
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
and
LE1007
L
2
T
0
P
0
C
2
PURPOSE
To enable students achieve a basic exposure on China, Chinese language and
culture. To acquire basic conversational skill in the language.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To help students learn the Chinese scripts.
2.
To make the students acquire basic conversational skill.
3.
To enable students to know about China and Chinese culture.
4.
To create an advantageous situation for the students to have better
opportunity for employability by companies who have association
with china.
UNIT - I
Introduction of Chinese Language.
UNIT - II
Phonetics and Notes on pronunciation.
ECE-2013
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SRM(E&T)
a) 21 Initials:
b p m f d t n l g k h j q x z c s zh ch sh r
b) 37 Finals:
a
o
ai
ou
an
ong
ang
ao
er
e
ei
en
eng
iao
ie
in
ing
iong
iou(iu)
i
ia
ian
iang
uang
uei(ui)
uen(un)
ueng
uo
u
ua
uai
uan
e
an
n
76
SRM(E&T)
3.
4.
PD1003
APTITUDE I
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite
L
1
T
0
P
1
C
1
PURPOSE
To enhance holistic development of students and improve their employability
skills.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To improve aptitude, problem solving skills and reasoning ability of
the student.
2.
To collectively solve problems in teams & group.
UNIT I NUMBERS
(6 hours)
Types and Properties of Numbers, LCM, GCD, Fractions and decimals, Surds.
ECE-2013
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SRM(E&T)
UNIT II-ARITHMETIC I
(6 hours)
Percentages, Profit & Loss, Simple Interest & Compound Interest, , Clocks &
calendars.
UNIT III-ALGEBRA - I
Logarithms, Problems on ages
(6 hours)
(6 hours)
UNIT VREASONING
Logical Reasoning, Analytical Reasoning.
(6 hours)
ASSESSMENT
1.
Objective type Paper based / Online Time based test.
REFERENCES
1.
Agarwal.R.S Quantitative Aptitude for Competitive
Examinations, S.Chand Limited, 2011.
2.
Abhijit
Guha,
Quantitative
Aptitude
for
Competitive
Examinations, Tata McGraw Hill, 3rd Edition, 2011.
3.
Edgar Thrope, Test Of Reasoning for Competitive Examinations,
Tata McGraw Hill, 4th Edition, 2012.
4.
Other material related to quantitative aptitude.
ECE-2013
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SRM(E&T)
PD1003 APTITUDE - I
Course designed
by
Student
1
Outcome
Mapping
of
instructional
2 objectives with
student
outcome
3 Category
d e
X
General
(G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences
and
Technical Arts
(E)
Professio
nal
Subjects
(P)
X
4 Broad Area
5 Approval
MA1003
Elect
Embedde
ronic VLSI
d
s
-----23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
Commu
nication
Signal
Processing
Prerequisite: Nil
Common to CSE, SWE, ECE, EEE, ICE, EIE, ITCE &
MECT
PURPOSE
To impart analytical ability in solving mathematical problems as applied to
the respective branches of Engineering.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To have thorough knowledge in Fourier series.
2.
To know to formulate and solve partial differential equations.
3.
To be familiar with applications of partial differential equations.
4.
To gain good knowledge in the application of Fourier transform.
5.
To learn about Z- transforms and its applications.
ECE-2013
79
SRM(E&T)
80
SRM(E&T)
6.
7.
ECE-2013
81
SRM(E&T)
EC1005
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
To enable the students understand the universal theoretical concepts in three
dimensional real world and find solution to problems related to electro
magnetic wave propagation.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To impart knowledge on the basic concepts of electric and magnetic
fields.
2.
To educate scientifically about Maxwells equations and Poynting
theorem
3.
To interpret the Wave propagation in between parallel plates.
4.
To emphasize the significance of different types of waveguides.
UNIT I-STATIC ELECTRIC FIELDS
(11 hours)
Introduction to co-ordinate system Rectangular Cylindrical and Spherical
The experimental law of Coulomb. Electric Field Intensity field of line
charge, sheet charge, continuous volume charge distribution Streamline and
sketches of fields - Electric flux density Gauss Law Applications of Gauss
Law - Some symmetrical charge distributions Differential volume element
Concept of divergence. Definition of Electric potential, work, Energy
potential difference Potential field of different types of charges Potential
gradient The dipole and field due to a dipole. Energy density in the electric
field.
UNIT II-STEADY MAGNETIC FIELDS
(9 hours)
Biot Savart Law Applications of Biot Savart Law - Amperes circuital law Applications circuital law Curl Stokes Theorem - Magnetic flux and
magnetic flux density The scalar and vector magnetic potentials
Derivation of the steady magnetic field laws.
UNIT III-TIME VARYING FIELDS AND MAXWELLS EQUATIONS
(7 hours)
Faradays law Displacement current Maxwells equations in point form
and integral form for steady fields and time varying fields Retarted
ECE-2013
82
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
83
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
84
SRM(E&T)
EC1006
ELECTRON DEVICES
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1001
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to provide a basis for understanding the
characteristics, operation and limitations of semiconductor and optoelectronic
devices. This course brings together the semiconductor device physics,
optoelectronic device principles and complete description of power supply
circuit.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To understand the physical construction, working and operational
1.
characteristics of Semiconductor devices.
To understand the operation of power supply circuits built using
2.
filters, rectifiers and voltage regulators.
To discuss the manufacturing process of monolithic ICs & the
3.
fabrication of components on monolithic IC.
UNIT I-SEMICONDUCTOR DIODES AND SPECIAL PURPOSE
DIODES
(12 hours)
Overview on Physics and Properties of Semiconductors: Intrinsic
semiconductor extrinsic semiconductor Fermi level in an intrinsic
semiconductor conductivity of a metal, intrinsic semiconductor and extrinsic
semiconductor drift diffusion recombination carrier life time.
Semiconductor diodes : Formation of PN junction working principle VI
characteristics PN diode currents diode current equation diode resistance
transition and diffusion capacitance diode models voltage breakdown in
diodes.
Special purpose diodes : Zener diode point-contact diode backward diode
varactor diode step-recovery diode schottky diode, PNPN diode RF
diode.
UNIT II-BIPOLAR TRANSISTORS
(6 hours)
Bipolar Transistors : Construction working transistor currents
transistor configurations and input-output characteristics Early effect (basewidth modulation) Ebers Moll model transistor as an amplifier
Transistor as a switch.
ECE-2013
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SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
86
SRM(E&T)
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SRM(E&T)
code, Gray code, Alpha numeric code, error detecting and error correcting
codes.
Arithmetic: Arithmetic number representation, Binary arithmetic,
Hexadecimal arithmetic, BCD arithmetic.
Boolean Algebra and Theorems: Logic gates and logic operations, Boolean
theorems and postulates, SOPs & POSs, Minterms and Maxterms.
Minimization of Boolean Functions: Algebraic simplification, Karnaugh
map simplification, Quine-Mc Cluskey or Tabulation method.
UNIT II-LOGIC GATES
(9 hours)
Logic Families: Metal Oxide Semiconductor logic families- switching
properties of NMOS and PMOS transistors, static NMOS, dynamic NMOS,
Static CMOS and dynamic CMOS logic families, CMOS Transmission gate
circuits, Bipolar logic families- switching properties of NPN and PNP
transistors, TTL, Schottkey TTL, Comparison of MOS logic circuits(CMOS)
with that of a TTL digital circuit, tristate gates.
Electrical characteristics: Meanings of speed, propagation delay, operating
frequency, and power dissipated per gate, supply voltage levels, operational
voltage levels of various logic families.
UNIT III-COMBINATIONAL SYSTEMS
(9 hours)
Binary arithmetic units (Adder, subtractor, n-bit parallel adder & subtractor,
look ahead carry generator), decoder, encoder, multiplexer, demultiplexer,
code converters, Magnitude comparators, parity generators.
Implementation of combinational logic by standard ICs.
UNIT IV-SEQUENTIAL SYSTEMS
(10 hours)
Flip-flop and Latch: SR latch, JK flip-flop, T flip-flop, D flip-flop and latch,
Master-slave RS flip-flop, Master-slave JK flip-flop, asynchronous inputs.
Registers & Counters: Shift registers (SISO, SIPO, PISO, PIPO), universal
shift register. Counters-Asynchronous/Ripple counters, Synchronous counters,
Modulus-n Counter, Ring counter, Johnson counter, Up-Down counter,
asynchronous clear, preset and load in a counter, synchronous clear, preset
and load in a counter, typical ICs for counters.
Synchronous (Clocked) sequential circuits: Moore and Mealey state
machine circuits, Analysis & design of synchronous sequential circuits State
machine design with SM charts.
UNIT V-MEMORY AND PROGRAMMABLE LOGIC
ECE-2013
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SRM(E&T)
(7 hours)
ECE-2013
89
SRM(E&T)
EC1008
L
3
T
1
P
0
C
4
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to introduce students to the fundamentals of signals
and systems which are basic to Digital Signal Processing. The main objective of
this subject is to help the students to mathematically analyze different types of
signals and their associated systems
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
At the end of this course, the students will be able to understand the
Various classifications of both Continuous time and Discrete time
1.
Signals and Systems.
Spectral analysis of Periodic and Aperiodic Signals using Fourier series.
2.
Analysis and characterization of the CT system through Laplace
3.
transform.
Analysis and characterization of the DT system through Difference
4.
equation.
Analysis and characterization of the DT system through Z transform.
5.
ECE-2013
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SRM(E&T)
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SRM(E&T)
TEXT BOOKS
1. Alan V Oppenheim, Ronald W. Schafer Discreate Time Signal
Processing Pearson education , 2nd edition, 2007
2. Simon Haykin and Barry Van Veen, Signals and Systems, John
Wiley & Sons Inc, 2nd Edition, 2007.
REFERENCES
1. John G. Proakis and Manolakis, Digital Signal Processing,
Principles, Algorithms and Applications, Pearson Education, 4th
Edition, 2007.
2. B.P. Lathi, Linear Systems & Signals, Oxford Press, Second
Edition, 2009.
3. Rodger E Ziemer, William H. Tranter, D. Ronald Fannin, Signals
and Systems continuous and Discrete, Pearson Education, 4th
Edition, 2009
4. Douglas K Linder, Introduction to Signals and Systems, Mc-Graw
Hill, 1st Edition, 1999
Course designed
by
Student
1
outcome
Mapping of
instructional
2 objectives
with student
outcome
3 Category
4 Broad area
5 Approval
ECE-2013
92
SRM(E&T)
L T P C
ELECTRON DEVICES LAB
0 0 3 2
EC1009 Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1004
PURPOSE
To reinforce learning in the accompanying EC1004 course through hands-on
experience by examining the electrical characteristics of various
semiconductor devices, such as diodes, BJTs and FETs. To provide the
student with the capability to use simulation tools for performing various
analysis of semiconductor devices.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To study experimentally the characteristics of diodes, BJTs and FETs.
2. To verify practically the response of various special purpose electron
devices.
3. To construct and simulate various semiconductor devices using tools
such as Pspice/multisim.
LIST OF RECOMMENDED EXPERIMENTS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
ECE-2013
93
SRM(E&T)
REFERENCES
1.
LAB MANUAL, Department of ECE, SRM University
2.
Paul B Zbar and Alber P Malvino, Michael A Miller, Basic
Electronics: A Text Lab Manual, 7th edition, Tata McGraw Hill,
2009.
3.
David A Bell, Laboratory Manual for Electronic Devices and
Circuits, 4th edition, PHI, 2001.
4.
Muhammed H Rashid, SPICE for circuits and electronics using
PSPICE, 2nd edition, PHI, 1995.
5.
G K Mithal, Practicals in Basic Electronics, G K Publishers
Private Limited, 1997.
6.
L K Maheswari and M M S Anand, Laboratory Manual for
Introductory Electronic Experiments, New Age, 2010.
7.
S Poornachandra Rao and B Sasikala, Handbook of Experiments in
Electronics and Communication Engineering, Vikas publishers,
2003.
EC1009 ELECTRON DEVICES LAB
Department of Electronics and Communication
Course designed by
Engineering
a
b
c
d e f
g h
i
j
k
1 Student outcome
X X
X
X
Mapping
of
1, 1,
1,
instructional
2
2, 2,
2,
3
objectives
with
3 3
3
student outcome
Engineering
Basic
Genera
Sciences & Professional
Sciences
l (G)
Technical
Subjects (P)
3 Category
(B)
Arts (E)
X
Comm Signal
V
Electr
unicati Processin
LS Embedded
onics
4 Broad area
on
g
I
X
5 Approval
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
ECE-2013
94
SRM(E&T)
L
0
T
0
P
3
C
2
(45 hours)
REFERENCES
1.
LAB MANUAL, Department of ECE, SRM University.
2.
L K Maheswari and M M S Anand, Laboratory Manual for
Introductory Electronic Experiments, New Age, 2010.
3.
S Poornachandra Rao and B Sasikala, Handbook of Experiments in
Electronics and Communication Engineering, Vikas publishers,
2003.
ECE-2013
95
SRM(E&T)
4.
Website: http://ozark.hendrix.edu/~burch/logisim/
ECE-2013
96
SRM(E&T)
SEMESTER IV
L
UNIT I
(6 hours)
Wichtige Sprachhandlungen: Zimmersuche, Mbel
Grammatik: Verben mit trennbaren Vorsilben im Prsens und Perfekt.
Verben mit trennbaren Vorsilben und Modalverben imPrsens. Verben mit
untrennbaren Vorsilben im Perfekt. Unregelmige und gemischte Verben im
Perfekt.
UNIT II
(6 hours)
Wichtige Sprachhandlungen: Kleidung ,Farben , Materialien.
Grammatik : formelle Imperativstze mit Sie informelle Imperativstze
Vorschlge mit wir sollen/wollen
wirSoll ich? Modalpartikeln
doch mal doch mal.
UNIT III
(6 hours)
Wichtige Sprachhandlungen : Sehenswrdigkeite (Prater, Brandenburger
Tr,Kolossium, Eifeltrm)
Grammatik : Ortsangaben mit Akk. und Dativ alle,man
Indefinitepronomen etwas, nichts,
ECE-2013
97
SRM(E&T)
UNIT IV
(6 hours)
Wichtige Sprachhandlungen : Wegbeschreibung/ Einladung interkulturelle
Erfahrung.
Grammatik : Verwendung von Prsens fr zuknftigen Zeitpunkt.
UNIT V
(6 hours)
Wichtige Sprachhandlungen: Essen und Trinken im Restaurant ,
Partyvorbereitung und Feier
Grammatik: Nomen aus Adjektiven nach etwasund nichts Nomen aus
dem Infinitiv von Verben, zusammegesetzte Nomen und ihre Artikel.
Adjektive im Nom. und Akk. nach unbestimmten Artikel, Negativartikel und
Possessivartikel.
REFERENCES
1.
2.
Course designed
by
Student
outcome
Mapping of
instructional
2 objectives
with student
outcome
1
3 Category
b c
f g
X
1-4
General
(G)
Engineering
Sciences and
Technical Arts
(E)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
4 Broad area
5 Approval
Signal
Electro
Processi
VLSI
nics
ng
----23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
Commu
nication
ECE-2013
98
SRM(E&T)
Embedd
ed
--
L T P C
FRENCH LANGUAGE PHASE II
2 0 0 2
LE1009 Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite
LE1004
PURPOSE
To enable the students communicate effectively with any French speaker and
have a competitive edge in the international market.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To enable students access information on the internet
2. To receive and send e mails
To assist students in gaining a certain level of proficiency to enable
3. them to give the level 1 exam conducted by Alliance Franaise de
Madras.
4. To enhance their lexical and technical competence.
UNIT I
(6 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary: The second group verbs: Finir, rougir,
grossir, grandir . Les preposition de temps: , en, le, de 7h 8h,
jusqu , vers.
B.
Listening and Speaking the semi- vowels: Voil, pollutant.
C.
Writing the days of the week. Months, technical subjects, time, les
spcialits scientifiques et l anne universitaire, paragraph writing
about time table.
D.
Reading -- Reading of the text and comprehension answering
questions .
UNIT II
(6 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary The adjectives, the nationality, feminine
& masculine noun forms les mtiers scientifiques.
B.
Listening and Speaking Vowels: soire, anne, prs de, trs.
C.
Writing Countries name, nationality, les mtiers scientifiques,
numbers from: 69 to infitive and some measures of unit.
D.
Reading Comprehension reading a text.
UNIT III
(6 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary near future, The demonstrative
adjectives, Express the aim by using the verb,
B.
Listening and Speaking La liaison interdite en haut.
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C.
D.
UNIT IV
(6 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary the verbs: manger, boire , the partitive
articles
B.
Listening and Speaking le e caduc
C.
Writing- the food, the ingredients, fruits, vegetables, expression of
quantity, paragraph writing about food habits.
D.
Reading reading a text.
UNIT V
(6 hours)
A.
Grammar and Vocabulary les prepositions de lieu: au la, l,
chez, the reflexives verbs, verbs to nouns.
B.
Listening and Speaking le e sans accents ne se prononce pas.
Cest un e caduc. Ex: quatre, octobre. les sons (s) et (z)- salut ,
besoin.
C.
Writing paragraph writing about ones everyday life, French
culture.
D.
Reading Comprehension -- reading a text or a song.....
REFERENCES
1.
2.
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100
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L T P C
JAPANESE LANGUAGE PHASE II
2 0 0 2
LE1010 Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite
LE1005
PURPOSE
To enable students to learn a little advanced grammar in order to improve
their conversational ability in Japanese
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To help students learn Katakana script (used to write foreign words)
2. To improve their conversational skill.
3. To enable students to know about Japan and Japanese culture.
4. To improve their employability by companies who are associated with
Japan.
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UNIT I
Introduction to Verbs; Ikimasu, okimasu, nemasu, tabemasu etc.
Grammar usage of particles de, o, to, ga(but) and exercises
Common daily expressions and profession.
Katakana script and related vocabulary.
Religious beliefs, Japanese housing and living style.
Conversation audio
(8 hours)
UNIT II
(8 hours)
Grammar :Verbs Past tense, negative - ~mashita, ~masen deshita..
i-ending and na-ending adjectives - introduction
Food and transport (vocabulary)
Japanese food, transport and Japanese tea ceremony.
Kanji Seven elements of nature (Days of the week)
Conversation audio
UNIT III
Grammar - ~masen ka, mashou
Adjectives (present/past affirmative and negative)
Conversation audio
(6 hours)
UNIT IV
Grammar ~te form
Kanji 4 directions
Parts of the body
Japanese political system and economy
Conversation audio.
(4 hours)
UNIT V
Stationery, fruits and vegetables.
Counters general, people, floor and pairs.
(4 hours)
REFERENCES
1.
2.
3.
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L
2
T
0
P
0
C
2
PURPOSE
To enable students achieve a basic exposure on Korea, Korean language and
culture. To acquire basic conversational skill in the language.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To help students learn the scripts.
2.
To make the students acquire basic conversational skill.
3.
To enable students to know about Korean culture.
4.
To create an advantageous situation for the students to have better
opportunity for employability by companies who have association
with Korea.
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UNIT I
(6 hours)
Lesson 1 <Review of Vowels and Consonants>, Lesson2 < Various Usages of
To be>, Lesson3 < Informal form of to be> <Basic Conversation,
Vocabularies and Listening>
UNIT II
(10 hours)
Lesson 4 < Informal interrogative form of to be>, Lesson 5 < To be, to
have, to stay>, Lesson 5 < Advanced Interrogative practice>, Lesson 6 <
Types of Negation>, <Basic Conversation, Vocabularies and Listening>
UNIT III
(10 hours)
Lesson 7 < Honorific forms of noun and verb2>, Lesson8 < Formal
Declarative2>, Lesson 9 < Korean Business Etiquette>, <Basic Conversation,
Vocabularies and Listening>
UNIT IV
(4 hours)
Lesson 10 <Field Korean as an Engineer1>, <Field Korean as an Engineer2>,
<Basic Conversation, Vocabularies and Listening>
REFERENCES
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
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104
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L
2
T
0
P
0
C
2
PURPOSE
To enable students achieve a basic exposure on China, Chinese language and
culture. To acquire basic conversational skill in the language.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To help students learn the Chinese scripts.
2. To make the students acquire basic conversational skill.
3. To enable students to know about China and Chinese culture.
4. To create an advantageous situation for the students to have better
opportunity for employability by companies who have association with
china.
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UNIT I
A) Greetings
Questions and answers about names
Introducing oneself
Receiving a guest
Making corrections
New
words:
you
goodwell
workjobpersonnelstaff member
ask
May I
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SRM(E&T)
UNIT III
Introducing people to each other
A.
Exchanging amenities
B.
Making/Negating conjectures
C.
Questions and answers about nationality
Grammar: Sentences with an adjectival predicate
UNIT IV
A) About places to go
Indicating where to go and what to do
Referring to hearsay.
Saying good-bye
B) Making a request
Questions and answers about postcodes and telephone numbers
Reading dates postcodes and telephone numbers
Counting Renmibi
Grammar:
UNIT V
A.
Asking and answering if someone is free at a particular time
B.
Making proposals
C.
Questions about answers about time
D.
Making an appointment
E.
Telling the time
F.
Making estimations
REFERENCES
1.
2.
3.
4.
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PD1004
PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT IV
APPTITUDE -II
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite: Nil
L
1
T
0
P
1
C
1
PURPOSE
To enhance holistic development of students and improve their employability
skills.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To improve verbal aptitude, vocabulary enhancement and reasoning
ability of the student.
UNIT I
Critical Reasoning Essay Writing.
(6 hours)
UNIT II
Synonyms Antonyms - Odd Word - Idioms & Phrases.
(6 hours)
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UNIT III
Word Analogy - Sentence Completion.
UNIT IV
Spotting Errors - Error Correction - Sentence Correction.
(6 hours)
(6 hours)
UNIT V
(6 hours)
Sentence Anagram - Paragraph Anagram - Reading Comprehension.
ASSESSMENT
1.
Objective type Paper based /Online Time based test.
REFERENCES
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
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MA1024
L
4
T
0
P
0
C
4
PURPOSE
To introduce the students to the idea of probability and random process, an
important mathematical tool in signal processing.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1
To acquire knowledge about Probability and Random variables.
2
To gain knowledge on 2 - D Random variables.
3
To expose to the concepts of Random process.
4
To gain knowledge about the Correlation Functions.
To learn about the applications of Fourier Transforms like Spectral
5
Density and others.
ECE-2013
110
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ECE-2013
111
SRM(E&T)
EC1011
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
To lay a strong foundation on the theory of transmission line and networks by
highlighting their applications.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To become familiar with propagation of signals through lines.
1.
Calculation of various line parameters by conventional and graphical
2.
methods.
Need for impedance matching and different impedance matching
3.
techniques.
Design of different types of filters, equalizer and attenuators.
4.
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ECE-2013
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REFERENCE
1. Umesh Sinha, Transmission Lines and Network, Satya Prakashan
Publishing Company, New Delhi, 2012.
EC1011 TRANSMISSION LINES AND NETWORKS
Department of Electronics and Communication
Course designed by
Engineering
a
b
c d e f
g h
i
j
k
1 Student outcome
X
X X
X
X
Mapping
of
1,
2,
instructional
1,2,
2,
2
4 4
3,
objectives
with
3,4
3,
4
student outcome
4
Engineering
Basic
General
Sciences & Professional
Sciences
(G)
Technical
Subjects (P)
3 Category
(B)
Arts (E)
X
Signal
V
Commu
Electr
Processi
L Embedded
Broad
area
nication
onics
4
ng
SI
X
5 Approval
23rd meeting of academic council, May 2013
EC1012
ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1006
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to introduce to the students the basics of biasing
transistor circuits, feedback amplifiers, large signal amplifiers, tuned
amplifiers, oscillators, wave shaping circuits, and to design and analyze
various electronic circuits and systems
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
At the end of this course, the students will learn
Operating point calculations, working and design of basic
1.
amplifiers, power amplifiers and tuned amplifiers.
Working of different types of feedback amplifiers & oscillators.
2.
Frequency response and design of tuned amplifiers.
3.
Basic working & design of wave shaping circuits.
4.
ECE-2013
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ECE-2013
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TEXT BOOKS
1. Robert L. Boylestad and Louis Nashelsky, Electronic Devices and
Circuit Theory, Pearson Education, 9th Edition, 2009.
2. David A Bell, Fundamentals of Electronic Devices and Circuits,
Oxford University Press, 2009.
3. David A. Bell, Solid State Pulse Circuits, Oxford University
Press, 2007.
REFERENCES
1.
2.
3.
Course
designed by
Student
1
outcome
Mapping
of
instructio
nal
2
objective
s
with
student
outcome
3
Categor
y
b
X
c
X
d
X
f
X
1,2,3
1,2,3
1,2,3
General
(G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering Sciences
&Technical Arts (E)
Commu
nication
Signal
Processi
ng
1,
2,
3
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
Broad
area
Electronics
VLSI
Embedded
X
5
Approv
al
rd
ECE-2013
116
j k
X X
SRM(E&T)
1,
2,
3,
4
EC1013
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
To enable the students to understand the fundamentals of integrated circuits
and designing electronic circuits using it.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To design simple circuits like amplifiers using op-amps.
2. To design waveform generating circuits.
3. To design simple filter circuits for particular application.
4. To gain knowledge in designing a stable voltage regulators.
UNIT I-OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER CHARACTERISTICS (9 hours)
Op-amp symbol, terminals, packages and specifications - Block diagram
Representation of op-amp- Ideal op-amp & practical op-amp - Open loop &
closed loop configurations DC & AC performance characteristics of op-amp
Frequency compensation - Noise Differential amplifiers General
Description, Manufacturers Specification, Electrical Characteristics and
internal schematic of 741 op-amps.
UNIT II-OPAMP APPLICATIONS
(9 hours)
Basic op-amp circuits: Inverting & Non-inverting voltage amplifiers Voltage follower - Summing, scaling & averaging amplifiers - AC amplifiers.
Linear Applications: Instrumentation Amplifiers-V-to-I and I-to-V
converters-Differentiators and Integrators.
Non-linear Applications: Precision Rectifiers Wave Shaping Circuits
(Clipper and Clampers) Log and Antilog Amplifiers Analog voltage
multiplier circuit and its applications Operational Trans-Conductance
Amplifier (OTA) - Comparators and its applications Sample and Hold
circuit.
UNIT III-WAVEFORM GENERATORS AND PLL
(9 hours)
Waveform Generators: Sine-wave Generators Square / Triangle / Sawtooth Wave generators.
IC 555 Timer: Monostable operation and its applications Astable operation
and its applications.
PLL: Operation of the Basic PLL-Closed loop analysis of PLL-Voltage
Controlled Oscillator-PLL applications.
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EC1014
ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS
LAB
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite: Nil
L
0
T
0
P
3
C
2
PURPOSE
The purpose of the lab is to train the students to design and analyze the
operation of discrete amplifier and oscillator circuits and understand their
functionality. This Laboratory can also support many experiments and new
ideas which are evolved in the mind of students.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To provide hands-on experience to the students so that they
1.
are able to put theoretical concepts to practice
To use computer simulation tolls such as PSPICE, or
2.
Multisim to carry out design experiments as it is a key
analysis tool of engineering design
To give a specific design problem to the students, which after
3.
completion they will verify using the simulation software or
hardwired implementation
ECE-2013
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LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
REFERENCES
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
ECE-2013
120
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L T P C
LINEAR INTEGRATED CIRCUITS LAB
0 0 3 2
EC1015
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite:Nil
PURPOSE
The purpose of the lab is to train the students to design and analyze the
operation of operational amplifier and oscillator circuits and understand their
functionality. This Laboratory can also support many experiments and new
ideas which are evolved in the mind of students.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To provide hands-on experience to the students so that they are able to put
theoretical concepts to practice.
2. To use computer simulation tolls such as PSPICE, or Multisim to carry out
design experiments as it is a key analysis tool of engineering design.
3. To give a specific design problem to the students, which after completion
they will verify using the simulation software or hardwired
implementation.
ECE-2013
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LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
REFERENCES
1.
LAB MANUAL, Department of ECE, SRM University
2.
David A Bell, Laboratory Manual for Operational Amplifiers &
Linear ICs, 2nd edition, PHI.
3.
Muhammed H Rashid, SPICE for circuits and electronics using
PSPICE, 2nd edition, PHI, 1995.
4.
L K Maheswari and M M S Anand, Laboratory Manual for
Introductory Electronic Experiments, New Age, 2010
ECE-2013
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T
0
P
1
C
1
APTITUDE-III
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite
PURPOSE
To enhance holistic development of students and improve their employability
skills.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. Understand the importance of effective communication in the workplace.
2. Enhance presentation skills Technical or general in nature
3. Improve employability scope through Mock GD, Interview
PD1005
UNIT I
Video Profile.
ECE-2013
(6 hours)
123
SRM(E&T)
UNIT II
Tech Talk / Area of Interest / Extempore / Company Profile.
(6 hours)
UNIT III
Curriculum Vitae.
(6 hours)
UNIT IV
Mock Interview.
(6 hours)
UNIT V
Group Discussion / Case Study.
(6 hours)
ASSESSMENT
1.
Objective type Paper based / Online Time based test.
2.
50% marks based on test, 50 % based on Continuous Communication
assessment.
REFERENCES
1.
Bovee Courtland and Throill John, Business Communication
Essentials: A skills-Based Approach to Vital Business English,
Pearson Education Inc., 2011.
2.
Dhanavel, S.P., English & Communication Skills for Students of
Science and Engineering, Orient Black Swan, 2009.
3.
Rizvi M. Ashraf, Effective Technical Communication, Tata
McGraw-Hill Publishing Company Limited, 2006.
ECE-2013
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Course designed by
1 Student Outcome
Mapping
of
instructional
2
objectives with
student outcome
3 Category
i j
X X
k
X
1
,
2
2,3
Engineering
Sciences and
Technical Arts
(E)
Professiona
l Subjects
(P)
1,2,
3
General
(G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
X
4 Broad area
5 Approval
ECE-2013
Signal
Elec
Processi
tron VLSI
Embedded
ng
ics
-----23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
Commu
nication
125
SRM(E&T)
MA1015
L
T
DISCRETE MATHEMATICS
4
0
Total Contact Hours 60
Prerequisite
Nil
Common to CSE, SWE, ECE, ITCE & EEE
P
0
C
4
PURPOSE
To impart analytical ability to describe, analyze and solving mathematical
problems as applied to the respective branches of Engineering in a logical and
systematic fashion.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To understand Logic and mathematical reasoning and to count
1.
/enumerate objects in a systematic way. To understand Mathematical
induction and recursion.
To understand Set theory, relations and functions and to Read,
2.
understand and construct mathematical arguments.
To understand Recurrence Relation, Generating functions and
3.
Algebraic Systems and their applications in coding theory - Group
codes.
To understand to apply graph theory to solve real-world problems like
4.
traveling salesman problem and networks and the maximum flow
problem.
To understand Boolean algebra and its application to switching
5.
theory. To understand grammars, finite state machines and Turing
Machines.
UNIT I-MATHEMATICAL LOGIC
(12 hours)
Propositions and Logical operators - Truth tables and propositions generated
by a set - Equivalence and Implication - Tautologies - Laws of logic - Proofs
in Propositional calculus - Direct proofs - Conditional conclusions - Indirect
proofs - Mathematical Induction - The existential and universal quantifiers Predicate calculus including theory of inference.
UNIT IISET THEORY
(12 hours)
Laws of Set theory - Partition of a set - The duality principle - Relations
Properties - Equivalence relation and partial order relation-poset-Graphs of
relations - Hasse diagram - Matrices of relations - Closure operations on
relations - Warshall's algorithm - Functions Combinatorics - Pigeonhole
Principle Generalized Pigeon hole principle.
ECE-2013
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SRM(E&T)
REFERENCES
1.
Alan Doerr and Kenneth Levasseur, "Applied Discrete Structures for
Computer Science", Galgotia Publications (P) Ltd, 1992.
2.
Tremblay J. P. and Manohar R., Discrete Mathematical Structures
with applications to Computer Science, Tata Mc Graw Hill
Publishing Co., 35th edition, 2008.
3.
V. Sundaresan, K.S. Ganapathy Subramanian and K. Ganesan,
Discrete Mathematics, New Revised Edition, A. R. Publications,
2001
4.
Kolman and Busby, Discrete Mathematical Structures for Computer
Science, Prentice Hall, 3rd edition, 1997.
5.
Kenneth H.Rosen, Discrete Mathematics and its Application, Fifth
edition, Tata McGraw-Hill Publishing company PVT .Ltd. New
Delhi, 2003.
6.
Lipschutz Seymour, Marc Lars Lipson, Discrete Mathematics, Mc
Graw Hill Inc., 1992.
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7.
8.
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L T P C
MICROPROCESSORS AND
3 0 0 3
MICROCONTROLLERS
EC1016
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1012
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to teach students the fundamentals of
microprocessor and microcontroller systems. The student will be able to
incorporate these concepts into their electronic designs for other courses
where control can be achieved via a microprocessor/microcontroller
implementation.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
Through the use of assembly language, by the end of the course students will
become thoroughly familiar with the elements of microprocessor software and
hardware. They will be able to:
1. Understand fundamental operating concepts behind microprocessors and
microcontrollers.
2. Appreciate the advantages in using microprocessors / microcontrollers in
engineering applications.
3. Design microprocessor based solutions to problems.
4. Understand low-level programming.
5. Apply this knowledge to more advanced structures.
UNIT I-MICROPROCESSOR- 8086
(9 hours)
Register Organization -Architecture-Signals-Memory Organization-Bus
Operation-I/O Addressing-Minimum Mode-Maximum Mode-Timing
Diagram-Interrupts - Service Routines I/O and Memory Interfacing
concepts.
UNIT II-PROGRAMMING OF 8086
(12 hours)
Addressing Modes-Instruction format-Instruction set-Assembly language
programs in 8086. RISC architecture introduction to ARM Programmingregister configuration and instruction set sample program.
UNIT III-INTERFACING DEVICES
(8 hours)
Programmable Peripheral Interface (8255) - Programmable Interval Timer
(8254) - Programmable Interrupt Controller (8259A) - Programmable DMA
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TEXT BOOKS.
1. Muhammad Ali Mazidi and Janice Gillispie Mazidi, "The 8051 Microcontroller and Embedded systems", 7th Edition, Pearson
Education, 2004.
2. Doughlas.V.Hall, Microprocessor and Interfacing : Programming
and Hardware, Revised 2nd edition, McGraw Hill, 1992
3. Steve Furber, ARM System On Chip Architecture, Second Edition,
Pearson Education, 2000.
4. K. Ray and K. M. Bhurchandi, "Advanced Microprocessors and
Peripherals Architectures, Programming and Interfacing", Tata
McGraw Hill, 2002 Reprint
REFERENCE
1. Kenneth.J.Ayala,
8051
Microcontroller
Architecture,
Programming and Applications, 3rd edition, Thomson, 2007.
ECE-2013
130
SRM(E&T)
EC1016A
MICROPROCESSORS AND
MICROCONTROLLERS
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1012
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to teach students the fundamentals of
microprocessor and microcontroller systems. The student will be able to
incorporate these concepts into their electronic designs for other courses
where control can be achieved via a
microprocessor/microcontroller implementation.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
Through the use of assembly language, by the end of the course students will
become thoroughly familiar with the elements of microprocessor software and
hardware. They will be able to:
1. Understand fundamental operating concepts behind microprocessors and
ECE-2013
131
SRM(E&T)
2.
3.
4.
5.
microcontrollers.
Appreciate the advantages in using RISC microprocessors /
microcontrollers in engineering applications.
Design microprocessor based solutions to problems.
Understand Low-Level and Embedded C Programming.
Apply this knowledge to more advanced structures.
ECE-2013
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TEXT BOOKS.
1. Muhammad Ali Mazidi and Janice Gillispie Mazidi, "The 8051 Microcontroller and Embedded systems", 7th Edition, Pearson
Education, 2004.
2. Doughlas.V.Hall, Microprocessor and Interfacing : Programming
and Hardware, Revised 2nd edition, McGraw Hill, 1992.
3. Andrew N. Sloss, Dominic Symes, Chris Wright and John Rayfield,
ARM System Developer's Guide, Designing and Optimizing System
Software, Elsevier, 2004.
4. David Seal, ARM Architecture Reference Manual, Pearson
Education, 2007.
5. Michael J. Pont, Embedded C, Addison Wesley, 2002.
6. Ray.K and Bhurchandi.K.M, "Advanced Microprocessors and
Peripherals Architectures, Programming and Interfacing", Tata
McGraw Hill, 2002 Reprint.
REFERENCES
1. Kenneth.J.Ayala, 8051 Microcontroller Architecture, Programming
and Applications, 3rd edition, Thomson, 2007.
2. nuvoTon Cortex M0 (Nu-LB-NUC100/140) Driver and Processor
Reference Manual; www.nuvoton.com
EC1016A MICROPROCESSORS AND MICROCONTROLLERS
Department of Electronics and Communication
Course designed by
Engineering
a
b
c
d
e f
g h
i
j
k
1 Student outcome
X X X X
X
X X X
Mapping of
1, 1,
1, 1,
instructional
2, 2,
4,
2
3, 3,
5
5
5
objectives with
3, 3,
5
4
4
student outcome
4
4
Engineering
Basic
Genera
Sciences &
Professional
Sciences
l (G)
Technical
Subjects (P)
3 Category
(B)
Arts (E)
X
Comm
Signal
Electr VL
unicati
Embedded
Processing onics SI
4 Broad area
on
X
5 Approval
ECE-2013
133
SRM(E&T)
L T P C
DIGITAL SIGNAL PROCESSING
3 1 0 4
EC1017 Total Contact Hours 60
Prerequisite
EC1008
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to introduce the concepts of Digital signal
processing and DSP Processor. The mathematical analysis of FIR and IIR
filter design and simulation using MATLAB are dealt with in detail
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
At the end of this course, the students will be able to understand the
1. Structures of Discrete time signals and systems.
Fast Fourier Transform Implementations, Frequency response and design
2.
of FIR and IIR filters.
3. Finite word length effect.
4. DSP Processor- TMS320C5X.
UNIT I-REVIEW OF DISCRETE TIME SIGNALS AND SYSTEMS
(9 hours)
Overview of signals and systems DFTFFT using DIT and DIF algorithms
Inverse DFT-FFT using DIT and DIF algorithms Applications Circular
convolution MATLAB programs for DFT and FFT.
UNIT II-DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF IIR FILTERS
(9 hours)
Design of analog filters using Butterworth and Chebyshev approximations
IIR digital filter design from analog filter using impulse invariance technique
and bilinear transformations Matlab programs for IIR filters.
UNIT III-DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF FIR FILTERS
(9 hours)
Linear phase response Design techniques for FIR filters Fourier series
method and frequency sampling method Design of Linear phase FIR filters
using windows: Rectangular, Hanning and Hamming windows Matlab
programs for FIR filters.
ECE-2013
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SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
135
SRM(E&T)
Catego
ry
General
(G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences
&
Technical Arts
(E)
Appro
val
Communi
cation
Signal
Processing
X
Electroni
cs
VLS
I
Embedded
ECE-2013
136
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
Broad
4 area
and
SRM(E&T)
k
X
2
EC1018
COMMUNICATION THEORY
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite: Nil
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
The course considers analog communication systems and techniques. In this
course we will introduce some of the basic mathematical concepts that will
allow us to think in the two domains of communications, the time domain
and the frequency domain. We will cover the basic types of analog
modulation (AM, FM, and PM) from both a mathematical description and
from a block-diagram system approach.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
The scope of this course is to provide the complete analysis of Analog
communications. This knowledge helps them to acquire better application of
these principles in Digital communications. The overall objective is to
introduce the student to the basics of communication theory. This course
emphasizes:
Analog modulation and demodulation techniques.
1.
Acquiring
mathematical
understanding
of
Analog
2.
Communication Systems.
Understanding the trade-offs (in terms of bandwidth, power,
3.
and complexity requirements)
Performance evaluation of communication systems in the
4.
presence of noise.
Design of practical communication system at the block
5.
diagram level under certain constraints and requirements.
UNIT I-AMPLITUDE MODULATION SYSTEMS
(10 hours)
Need for modulation, Amplitude Modulation System, Single Tone & Multiple
Tone Amplitude Modulation, Power Relation, Generation of Amplitude
Modulation Linear Modulation Collector Modulation method Non-linear
Modulation Square law Modulator, Product Modulator, Switching
Modulator - Demodulation of Amplitude Modulation Envelope Detector,
Coherent Detector, VSB, Performance comparison of various Amplitude
Modulation System.
ECE-2013
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ECE-2013
138
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
139
SRM(E&T)
EC1019
PROCESSOR LAB
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite: Nil
L
0
T
0
P
3
C
2
PURPOSE
This laboratory will provide the students a perfect introduction to the world of
Microprocessors and to provide hands-on experience essential to the real
understanding of microprocessors architecture and its interfacing to the
peripheral devices. The experiments are designed to provide the students with
the design principles of microprocessor systems and real time programming.
The course accomplishes this by using microprocessor kits, simulators and
software development systems.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
2.
3.
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
PART-A:
ECE-2013
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SRM(E&T)
PART-B:
INTERFACING
WITH
APPLICATION
BOARDS
8255 PPI.
Transfer data serially between two kits (Study of 8253/8251).
8279 Keyboard & display
Seven segment display
LCD Display
Traffic light.
8259 programmable interrupt controller.
8257/8237 DMA controller.
8 bit ADC and 8 bit DAC.
Stepper motor control.
DC motor speed measurement and control module.
Real Time Clock.
Logic Controller.
REFERENCES
1.
LAB MANUAL, Department of ECE, SRM University
2.
A K Ray and K M Bhurchandi, Advanced Microprocessors and
Peripherals, Tata McGraw-Hill, 2006.
3.
Muhammad Ali Mazidi and Janice Gillispie Mazidi, Rolin D.
McKinlay, The 8051 Microcontroller and Embedded Systems:
Using Assembly and C, 2nd Edition, Pearson Education, 2011.
ECE-2013
141
SRM(E&T)
EC1019A
PROCESSOR LAB
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite: Nil
L
0
T
0
P
3
C
2
PURPOSE
This laboratory will provide the students a perfect introduction to the
world of Microprocessors and to provide hands-on experience essential to the
real understanding of microprocessors architecture and its interfacing to the
peripheral devices. The experiments are designed to provide the students with
the design principles of microprocessor systems and real time programming.
The course accomplishes this by using microprocessor kits, simulators and
software development systems.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To demonstrate programming proficiency using the various
4.
addressing modes and data transfer instructions of the target
microprocessor.
To apply knowledge of the microprocessors internal registers and
5.
operations by use of a PC based microprocessor simulator.
To interface the processor to external devices.
6.
ECE-2013
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SRM(E&T)
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
PART-A: GENERAL PURPOSE PROGRAMMING EXERCISES
Minimum six experiments to be conducted.
1. Introduction of Microprocessor and Microcontroller Kit.
2. Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication and Division.
3. Finding the maximum value in an array.
4. Sorting of data.
5. Finding number of positive / negative elements in a block of data.
6. BCD-to-Hex conversion and Hex-to-BCD conversion.
7. Binary-to-ASCII and ASCII-to-Binary conversion.
8. Square Root of a given data.
9. LCM and GCD.
PART-B: INTERFACING WITH APPLICATION BOARDS (8051,
ARM Cortex M0 {Nu-LB-NUC140})
Minimum six experiments to be conducted
1. 8255 PPI.
2. Transfer data serially between two kits (Study of 8253/8251).
3. 8279 Keyboard & display using 8051 controller.
4. Seven segment display using nuvoTon (NUC140) board.
5. LCD Display using 8051/ Nu-LB-NUC140 controller.
6. Traffic light using nuvoTon (NUC140) board.
7. 8259 programmable interrupt controller.
8. 8257/8237 DMA controller.
9. 8 bit ADC and 8 bit DAC. using nuvoTon (NUC140) board
10. Stepper motor control using 8051 controller.
11. DC motor speed measurement and control module.
12. Real Time Clock using nuvoTon (NUC140) board.
13. Logic Controller.
REFERENCES
1. Processor Lab MANUAL, Department of ECE, SRM University
2. Ray.A.K and Bhurchandi.K.M, Advanced Microprocessors and
Peripherals, Tata McGraw-Hill, 2006.
3. Muhammad Ali Mazidi and Janice Gillispie Mazidi, Rolin D.
McKinlay, The 8051 Microcontroller and
Embedded Systems: Using Assembly and C, 2nd Edition, Pearson
Education, 2011.
ECE-2013
143
SRM(E&T)
4.
Course designed by
1 Student outcome
Mapping of
2 instructional objectives
with student outcome
Categor
y
1,2,
3
1,2
,3
1,2
,3
Engineering
Sciences &
Technical Arts
(E)
General (G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Communica
tion
Signal
Processing
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
Broad
4 area
Electro
nics
X
VLSI
Embedded
X
Approv
5
al
ECE-2013
144
SRM(E&T)
EC1020
COMMUNICATION
ENGINEERING LAB
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
L
0
T
0
P
3
C
2
PURPOSE
The experiments in this laboratory enable the students to gather basic
knowledge on communication systems. Different experiments are performed
which forms the fundamental blocks of any communication system used nowa-days. Experiments are performed using electronic instrument, such as
oscilloscopes, signal generators, spectrum analyzers, and network analyzers.
Certain experiments are simulated using MATLAB and P-SPICE simulation
software.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To practice the basic theories of analog communication system.
2.
To provide hands-on experience to the students, so that they are
able to apply theoretical concepts in practice.
3.
To use computer simulation tools such as P-SPICE, or Matlab to
carry out design experiments as it is a key analysis tool of
engineering design.
4.
To give a specific design problem to the students, which after
completion they will verify using the simulation software or
hardware implementation.
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
1.
AM modulator and Demodulator.
2.
DSB-SC modulator and Demodulator.
3.
SSB modulator and Demodulator.
4.
FM modulator and Demodulator.
5.
PAM modulator and Demodulator.
6.
TDM Multiplexer and Demultiplexer.
7.
FDM Multiplexer and Demultiplexer.
8.
Pre emphasis and De-emphasis in FM.
9.
Simulation experiments using P-SPICE and Matlab.
b)
AM modulator with AWGN noise in Matlab.
c)
Pre-emphasis and De-emphasis in FM using P-SPICE.
ECE-2013
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SRM(E&T)
REFERENCES
1.
John O. Attia, PSPICE and MATLAB for Electronics: An integrated
approach, CRC press, 2002.
2.
LAB MANUAL, Department of ECE, SRM University.
ECE-2013
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SRM(E&T)
EC1047
INDUSTRIAL TRAINING I
(Training to be undergone after IV semester)
2 week practical training in industry
Prerequisite: Nil
L
0
T
0
P
1
C
1
PURPOSE
To provide hands-on experience at site / planning or design office where civil
engineering projects are carried out
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. Students have to undergo two week practical training in Electronics and
Communication Engineering related project site or design / planning office so
that they become aware of the practical application of theoretical concepts
studied in the class rooms.
ECE-2013
147
SRM(E&T)
Course designed by
1 Student Outcome
2 Mapping of
instructional
objectives with
student outcome
3 Category
Genera
l
(G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences &
Technical Arts (E)
Profession
al Subjects
(P)
X
--
--
--
--
SEMESTER VI
L T P C
APTITUDE IV
1 0 1 1
PD1006
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite
PURPOSE
To enhance holistic development of students and improve their employability
skills.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To improve aptitude, problem solving skills and reasoning ability of the
student.
2.
To collectively solve problems in teams & group.
UNIT I-ARITHMETIC - II
Ratios & Proportions, Averages, Mixtures & Solutions.
(6 hours)
(6 hours)
UNIT III-ALGEBRA II
(6 hours)
ECE-2013
148
SRM(E&T)
(6 hours)
Course designed by
1 Student Outcome
Mapping
of
instructional
2
objectives with
student outcome
3 Category
PD1006 APTITUDE IV
Career Development Centre
a
b
c d e f
g
X
X
1
General
(G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences
and
Technical Arts
(E)
Profession
al Subjects
(P)
X
4 Broad area
5 Approval
ECE-2013
Signal
Electron
processin
VLSI
Embedded
ics
g
-----23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
Commu
nication
149
SRM(E&T)
EC1021
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to enable the students to understand the basics of
antennas and various types of antenna arrays and its radiation patterns. The main
objective of this subject is to help students to identify the different latest antennas
available for specific communication.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To study various antennas, arrays and radiation patterns of antennas.
2.
To learn the basic working of antennas.
To understand various techniques involved in various antenna
3.
parameter measurements.
4.
To understand the propagation of radio waves in the atmosphere.
150
SRM(E&T)
Radiation pattern Beam width Radiation resistance Antenna efficiencyDirectivity-Polarization and Phase Measurements.
UNITV-RADIO WAVE PROPAGATION
(9 hours)
Basics of propagation-Ground wave propagation Space wave propagationConsiderations in space wave propagation Super refraction Ionospheric
wave propagation Structure of ionosphere Mechanism of ionospheric
propagation Effect of earths Magnetic field on Radio wave propagation
Virtual height MUF Skip distance OWF Ionosphere abnormalities.
TEXT BOOKS
1. John D Kraus, Ronald J Marhefka, Ahmad S Khan, Antenna and
Wave Propagation, Tata McGraw Hill, 4th Edition, 2010.
2. R.L.Yadava, Antennas and Wave Propagation, PHI, 2011.
REFERENCES
Constantine A.Balanis, Antenna Theory: Analysis and Design, Third
Edition, John Wiley and Sons, 2012.
G.S.N. Raju, Antennas and wave propagation, 1st Edition Pearson
Education, 2012.
Robert S. Elliott, Antenna Theory and Design, John Wiley and Sons,
Revised Edition, 2007.
EC1021 ANTENNA AND WAVE PROPAGATION
Course designed Department of Electronics and Communication
by
Engineering
a
b
c
d
e
f
g h
i j k
Student
1
outcome
X X
X
X
X
Mapping of
instructional 1,
1,2, 2,
1,2
2,
2 objectives
2,
4
4
,3
3
with student 3
outcome
Engineering
Professio
General
Basic Sciences Sciences
& nal
(G)
(B)
Technical Arts Subjects
3 Category
(E)
(P)
X
Communi Signal
Electron VL Embedde
Broad area
cation
Processing
ics
SI
d
4
X
5 Approval
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
ECE-2013
151
SRM(E&T)
EC1022
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
To expose basics of Microwave and Optical devices and components. To
introduce the students to a few microwave measurements. To expose various
optical fiber modes configurations and various signal degradation factors
associated with optical fiber and to the design simple optical communication
system.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To understand all basic Microwave and Optical devices and
components.
2. To learn few microwave measurements and analyze parameters.
3. To understand the principles of fiber-optic communications and the
different kind of losses, signal distortion in optical wave guides and
other signal degradation factors.
4. To design the optical communication system.
UNIT I-MICROWAVE AMPLIFIERS AND OSCILLATORS (9 hours)
Introduction to microwave transmission Application and limitation
Klystron amplifier Reflex Klystron Oscillator TWT amplifiers
Magnetron Oscillator Gunn oscillator.
UNIT II-MICROWAVE COMPONENTS
(9 hours)
Directional coupler E plane Tee, H- plane Tee Magic Tee Circulators
Isolators Attenuators Phase Shifters Avalanche breakdown devices, PIN
diode and TUNNEL diode.
Power, VSWR, Impedance Measurement.
UNIT
III-INTRODUCTION
TO
OPTICAL
FIBERS
AND
TRANSMISSION CHARACTERISTICS
(9 hours)
The
propagation
of
light
in
optical
waveguides
ECE-2013
152
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
153
SRM(E&T)
L T P C
DIGITAL COMMUNICATION
3 0 0 3
EC1023 Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1018 , EC1020
PURPOSE
To provide a comprehensive coverage of digital communication systems. The
key feature of digital communication systems is that it deals with discrete
messages and to add organization and structure to this field
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To learn and understand
1. The process of sampling, quantization and coding that are fundamental to
the digital transmission of analog signals and digital modulation systems.
2. Baseband and passband transmission systems.
3. M-ary signaling and spread spectrum Techniques.
ECE-2013
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SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
155
SRM(E&T)
REFERENCES
1. John G. Proakis, Digital Communication, McGraw Hill Inc, 5th
Edition, 2008.
2. Singh, R.P. & Sapre, S.D, Communication Systems: Analog &
Digital, Tata McGraw-Hill, 5th reprint, 2000.
EC1023 DIGITAL COMMUNICATION
Department of Electronics and Communication
Course designed by
Engineering
a
b c d e f g h
i
j k
1 Student outcome
X
X X
X
X
Mapping
of
1,
instructional
1,
1,2
2,
2
2,
2
objectives
with
2
,3
3
3
student outcome
Engineering
Basic
Genera
Sciences & Professional
Sciences
l (G)
Technical
Subjects (P)
3 Category
(B)
Arts (E)
X
Comm Signal
Elect
VL
Embedded
Broad
area unicati Processin ronic
SI
4
on
g
s
X
5 Approval
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
ECE-2013
156
SRM(E&T)
L T P C
MICROWAVE AND OPTICAL
0 0 3 2
COMMUNICATION LAB
EC1024
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1006 , EC1009
PURPOSE
Microwave communication deals with the study of operation and
characteristics of microwave sources and microwave components. It also deals
with the measurement of load impedance VSWR, antenna gain and radiation
pattern. Optical communication deals with the study of the characteristics of
the optical fiber, sources and detectors and setting up of analog and digital
fiber links using LED and LASER sources.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To familiarize the students with microwave and optical communication
techniques/technologies.
2. To understand the fundamentals of microwave circuit design using
ORCAD PSPICE tool, and become familiar with basic microwave
measurements.
3. To analyze optical signals and devices in optical communication
systems, and learn how to measure and interpret optical signals.
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
MICROWAVE EXPERIMENTS
1.
Mode Characteristics of Reflex Klystron.
2.
Study of power distribution in Directional coupler, E & H plane and
Magic tee.
3.
Wavelength and Frequency measurement.
4.
Impedance measurement by slotted line method.
5.
Gain and Radiation pattern of Horn antenna.
6.
Study of Micro strip components.
OPTICAL COMMUNICATION EXPERIMENTS
1.
2.
3.
4.
157
SRM(E&T)
PSPICE SIMULATION
1.
2.
3.
REFERENCE BOOK
1. LAB MANUAL, Department of ECE, SRM University.
ECE-2013
158
SRM(E&T)
EC1025
DIGITAL COMMUNICATION
LAB
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1018 , EC1020
L
0
T
0
P
3
C
2
PURPOSE
This lab helps the students to understand the basic principles of digital
communication systems by practical module systems. The experiments are
designed in such a way that the theoretical concepts introduced in lectures are
re-discussed and implemented practically.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To demonstrate digital communication concepts using hands-on
experience and using simulation environments such as PSPICE /
Multisim, or Matlab/Simulink, or LabVIEW.
2.
To use commercial, modular systems which have some distinct
advantages over breadboarding to examine more complex
communication topics and to deliver a hands-on laboratory experience.
3.
To use LabVIEW in conjunction with data acquisition cards and
interconnected instruments, and to present communication concepts
using real-world signals so that the students can investigate and
manipulate.
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
159
SRM(E&T)
13.
REFERENCE
1.
EC1049
MINOR PROJECT
Total Contact Hours 30
Prerequisite
Nil
L
0
T
0
P
2
C
1
PURPOSE
To carry out a design project in one of the specializations of Electronics and
communication engineering with substantial multidisciplinary component
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1 To guide the students in such a way so that they carry out a work on
a topic as a forerunner to the full fledged project work to be taken
subsequently in VIII semester. The project work shall consist of
substantial multidisciplinary component.
ECE-2013
160
SRM(E&T)
The students will carry out a project in one of the following Electronics and
communication engineering areas but with substantial multidisciplinary
component involving Electrical Engineering, Computer Science Engineering,
Information Technology, Mechanical Engineering, BioMedical Engineering.
Communication
Signal Processing
Electronics
VLSI
Embedded
Student groups will be formed (6 in a group) and a faculty member will be
allocated to guide them. There will be three reviews. First review will not
carry any marks but the project topic will be finalized in it. Of remaining 2
reviews one will be carried out in the mid-semester and the last one by the end
of semester.
Assessment:
MARKS
AWARDED BY
30
Guide
20
20
10
20
ECE-2013
Review committee
during II review
Review committee
during III review
Review committee
during III review
Review committee
during III review
161
CRITERIA
For regularity, systematic
progress, extent of work
and quality of work
Presentation, contents and
viva
Quality of project report
Multidisciplinary
component
Presentation, contents and
viva
SRM(E&T)
Course designed by
Student
Outcome
Mapping
of
instructional
2
objectives with
student outcome
1
3 Category
General
(G)
4 Broad Area
Commu
nication
5 Approval
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences
and
Technical Arts
(E)
Professio
nal
Subjects
(P)
X
Signal
Electronic VLS Embedde
Processi
s
I
d
ng
X
X
X
X
X
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
SEMESTER VII
L T P C
WIRELESS COMMUNICATION
3 0 0 3
EC1026 Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1023
PURPOSE
To introduce the students to the concepts of wireless systems, mobile systems.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To understand and gain complete knowledge about.
1.
Basic wireless, cellular concepts.
2.
Radio wave propagation and Mobile Channel models.
3.
Various performance analysis of mobile communication system
4.
Standards 1G, 2G Basic system available.
ECE-2013
162
SRM(E&T)
163
SRM(E&T)
TEXT BOOKS
1. Rappaport T.S, Wireless Communications: Principles and
Practice, Pearson education, 2nd edition, 2009.
2. William Stallings, Wireless Communication & Networking,
Pearson Education Asia, 2009.
3. Feher K. Wireless Digital Communications, Prentice Hall 1995.
4. Schiller, Mobile Communication, Pearson Education Asia Ltd.,
2008.
REFERENCES
1. Andrea Goldsmith, Wireless Communications, Cambridge University
Press, Aug 2005.
2. Lee W.C.Y., Mobile Communications Engineering: Theory &
Applications, McGraw Hill, New York 2nd Edition, 1998
ECE-2013
164
SRM(E&T)
L T P C
COMPUTER COMMUNICATION
3 0 0 3
EC1027
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
PURPOSE
It is very much required for an ECE graduate to know use of computers in
communication as well as in network formation. The syllabus focuses on
mode of data transfer, layer and protocols related to networks.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
Understand about the functions and services of all 7 layers of OSI
model.
2.
Get an idea of various network standards.
UNIT I-DATA COMMUNICATION & NETWORKING BASICS(9 hours)
Data transfer modes Telephone system Protocols & standards
Multiplexing Circuit switching Message & packet switching
Introduction to LAN, MAN & WAN IEEE standards for LAN Network
topologies.
UNIT II-OSI LOWER LAYERS
(9 hours)
Network models OSI layer architecture Issues in data traffic over network
Physical layer standards Data link control & protocol ARQ schemes
HDLC protocol.
UNIT III-NETWORK LAYER
(9 hours)
Need for Internetworking Addressing Routing Issues Internet protocol
(IPV4/V6) Congestion & flow control mechanism TCP/IP model.
UNIT IV-OSI HIGHER LAYERS
(9 hours)
Transport layer TCP & UDP Session layer issues Presentation layer
Application layer.
UNIT V-APPLICATION & INTRODUCTION TO ISDN
(9 hours)
Application layer: Email FTP HTTP Compression Techniques.
Introduction to ISDN Broadband ISDN Features ATM Concept.
ECE-2013
165
SRM(E&T)
TEXT BOOKS
1. Behrouz A.Fehrouzan, Data communication & Networking, McGraw Hill, 4th Edition, 2007.
2. Andrew S.Tanenbaum, Computer Networks, Pearson Education
India, 3rd Edition, 2010.
REFERENCES
1. William Stallings, Data & Computer Communication, Pearson
Education India, 8th Edition, 2007.
2. Rarnier Handel, N.Huber, Schroder, ATM Networks Concepts,
Protocols Applications, Addison Welsey, 3rd Edition, 2009.
EC1027 COMPUTER COMMUNICATION
Department of Electronics and Communication
Course designed by
Engineering
a
b
c d e f
g h
i
j
k
1 Student outcome
X
X
X
Mapping
of
1,
1,
2 instructional objectives
1
2
2
with student outcome
Engineering
Basic
General
Sciences & Professional
Sciences
(G)
Technical
Subjects (P)
3 Category
(B)
Arts (E)
X
Commu Signal
Electr VL
Embedded
nication Processing onics
SI
4 Broad area
X
5 Approval
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
ECE-2013
166
SRM(E&T)
L T P C
ELEMENTS OF INFORMATION THEORY AND 3 0 0 3
CODING
EC1028
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
MA1024
PURPOSE
To learn the basic principles of encoding, error detection, and error correction,
decoding, mutual information, and channel capacity, which will be extremely
useful in understanding the working of a digital communication system.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To analyze the process of coding for analog and discrete sources and the
mathematical model for information sources.
2.
To solve problems on error detection and error correction for various types
of codes.
3.
To understand the principles of Huffman codes and to solve problems
therein.
4.
To study the properties of Entropy and the principles of Shannon-Fano
coding.
5.
To learn the concepts of mutual information, channel capacity, and
Shannons Main Theorem.
167
SRM(E&T)
codes and its special cases Extensions of a code Huffman codes Radix r
Noise in Huffman coding probabilities Use of Huffman codes Hamming
Huffman coding
UNIT IV-ENTROPY AND SHANNONS FIRST THEOREM (5 hours)
Entropy and its Mathematical properties Entropy and coding ShannonFano coding Entropy of a Markov process The Adjoint system
Robustness of Entropy.
UNIT V-MUTUAL INFORMATION, CHANNEL CAPACITY &
SHANNONS MAIN THEOREM
(11 hours)
Information channel Capacity of a Binary symmetric channel System
entropies Mutual information Definition of channel capacity Uniform
channel Conditional mutual information Random encoding - Average
random code Fano bound Converse of Shannons theorem.
REFERENCES
1. Hamming, Richard W., Coding and Information Theory, Prentice
Hall Inc., NJ, 1986.
2. Proakis, J. G., Digital Communications, McGraw Hill Inc., 4th
Edition, NY, 2001.
EC1028 ELEMENTS OF INFORMATION THEORY AND CODING
Department of Electronics and Communication
Course designed by
Engineering
a
b c d e
f
g h
i
j
k
Student
1
outcome
X
X
X
Mapping of
1,
instructional
1,2
2,
2 objectives with
2,5
,3,
4,
student
4,5
5
outcome
Engineering
Basic
General
Sciences
Professional
Sciences
(G)
&Technical Subjects (P)
3
Category
(B)
Arts (E)
X
Signal
V
Communi
Electr
Processin
L
Embedded
cation
onics
4
Broad area
g
SI
X
5
Approval
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
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L T P C
VLSI DESIGN
3 0 0 3
EC1029 Total Contact Hours 60
Prerequisite
EC1007
PURPOSE
To introduce the technology, design concepts, electrical properties and
modeling of Very Large Scale Integrated Circuits.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To learn the basic MOS Technology.
2. To learn the MOS Process Technology and its second order effect.
3. To learn the concepts of modeling a digital system using Hardware
Description Language.
4. To learn the basic concept of VLSI implementation strategies based on
CMOS and FPGA.
UNIT I-MOS TECHNOLOGY
(9 hours)
Chip Design Hierarchy IC Layers Photolithography and Pattern Transfers
Basic MOS Transistors CMOS Fabrication: n-well p-well twin tub
Latch up and prevention (SOI) Submicron CMOS Process Masks and
Layout CMOS Design Rules: Lambda based layout Types of rules
SCMOS Design Rule set II.
UNIT II-MOS CIRCUIT DESIGN PROCESS
(9 hours)
Introduction of MOSFET: Symbols, Enhancement mode-Depletion mode
transistor operation Threshold voltage derivation body effect Drain
current Vs voltage derivation channel length modulation. NMOS and
CMOS inverter Determination of pull up to pull down ratio Stick diagrams
VLSI Circuit Design Flow.
UNIT III-CMOS LOGIC GATES & OTHER COMPLEX GATES
(9 hours)
Gate delays Logical Effort - CMOS Static Logic Transmission Gate Logic
Tri-State Logic Pass Transistor Logic Dynamic CMOS Logic Domino
CMOS Logic, NORA CMOS Logic, Differential Cascade Voltage Switch
(DCVS) Logic, True Single Phase Clock (TSPC) Dynamic Logic.
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Course designed by
1
Student outcome
Mapping of
instructional
objectives with
student outcome
Category
Broad area
Approval
1
,
3
Genera
l (G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
3
,
4
2,
3
Engineering
Sciences &
Technical
Arts (E)
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
V
Electr
L
Embedded
onics
SI
X
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
Comm
unicati
on
Signal
Processin
g
L T P C
NETWORK SIMULATION LAB
0 0 3 2
EC1030
Total Contact Hours 45
Pr requisite: Nil
PURPOSE
Network Simulation is a cost-effective method to design, analyze and evaluate
network protocols and is an important tool in networking research.
To know and understand communication networks using NETSIM Software
and LAN Trainer kit.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To understand the basics of network simulation.
2. To introduce simulations and use simulation tools in networking.
3. To design and analyze different networks, and protocols.
4. To simulate and evaluate networks using network simulator (ns-2).
5. To study the communication networks characteristics and to analyze
various MAC and routing layer Protocols.
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LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
(45 hours)
1.
Ethernet LAN protocol. To create Scenario and study the
performance of CSMA/CD protocol through simulation.
2.
Token bus and Token Ring protocols. To create scenario and study
the performance of token bus and token ring protocols through
simulation.
3.
Wireless LAN protocols. To create scenario and study the
performance of network with CSMA/CA protocol and compare with
CSMA/CD protocols.
4.
Implementation and study of stop and wait protocol.
5.
Implementation and study of Go back N and selective repeat
protocols.
6.
Implementation of distance vector routing algorithm.
7.
Implementation of Link state routing algorithm.
8.
Implementation of data encryption and decryption.
9.
Transfer of files from PC to PC using windows/ UNIX socket
processing.
REFERENCE:
1.
LAB MANUAL, Department of ECE, SRM University.
EC1030 NETWORK SIMULATION LAB
Department of Electronics and Communication
Course designed by
Engineering
a
b
c
d e f
g h
i j
k
1 Student outcome
X X
X
X
Mapping
of
1, 1,
1,2
instructional
2
2, 2,
,3,
3,5
objectives
with
3 3
4
student outcome
Engineering
Basic
Genera
Sciences & Professional
Sciences
l (G)
Technical
Subjects (P)
3 Category
(B)
Arts (E)
X
Comm Signal
V
Electr
L
Embedded
Broad
area unicati Processin
onics
4
on
g
SI
X
5 Approval
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
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EC1031
L
0
T
0
P
3
C
2
PURPOSE
The laboratory consists of hands-on assignments which accompany the
lectures of EC1029. The goal is to illustrate concepts discussed in the class
and to give the students the opportunity to build and test real systems. The lab
exercises will make use of the Xilinx FoundationTM System which is a a
powerful state-of-the-art CAD tool for designing and implementing digital
systems on Field Programmable devices (FGPAs or CPLDs).
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To gain expertise in design and development and simulation of digital circuits
with Verilog HDL
To apply concepts and methods of digital system design techniques as
1.
discussed in the class (EC1029) through hands-on experiments.
Learn to design combinational and sequential digital systems starting
2. from a word description that performs a set of specified tasks and
functions.
To analyze the results of logic and timing simulations and to use these
3.
simulation results to debug digital systems.
Develop skills, techniques and learn state-of-the-art engineering tools
4. (such as HDL, Xilinx / Altera tools) to design, implement and test digital
systems on FPGAs / CPLDs.
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
(45 hours)
1.
2.
3.
4.
Multiply-Accumulate circuits.
5.
Digital Filters.
6.
State Machines.
7.
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REFERENCES
1.
LAB MANUAL, Department of ECE, SRM University.
2.
Michael D. Ciletti, Advanced Digital Design with the Verilog
HDL, Prentice Hall Higher Education, 2010, Edition 2.
3.
Bhaskar J, A VHDL Primier, Prentice Hall, 3rd Edition, 1999.
4.
Douglas L.Perry, VHDL:Prigramming by Example, McGraw-Hill,
2002.
5.
Charles H.Roth, Lizy Kurian John, Digital systems design using
VHDL, Thomson, 2008.
Course designed by
1 Student outcome
Mapping
of
instructional
2
objectives with
student outcome
3 Category
Broad
area
5 Approval
ECE-2013
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EC1048
INDUSTRIAL TRAINING II
(Training to be undergone after VI
semester)
2 week practical training in industry
Prerequisite: Nil
L
0
T
0
P
1
C
1
PURPOSE
To provide hands-on experience at site / planning or design office where
civil engineering projects are carried out
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
Students have to undergo three week practical training in
Electronics and Communication Engineering related project site
or design / planning office so that they become aware of the
practical application of theoretical concepts studied in the class
rooms.
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EC1050
L
0
T
0
P
24
C
12
PURPOSE
To simulate real life situations related to Electronics and Communication
Engineering and impart adequate training so that confidence to face and
tackle any problem in the field is developed in the college itself.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1
To guide the students such a way that the they carry out a
comprehensive work on the chosen topic which will stand them in
good stead as they face real life situations. The project work so
chosen by the student shall culminate in gaining of major design
experience in the related area of specialization.
MAJOR PROJECT
Each project will cover all the aspects ( to the extent possible) like
investigation, designing, coding detailing ,implementation of a Electronics
and Communication circuits / systems in which the aspects like performance
analysis, application of relevant standards etc., will find a place. Alternately,
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a few research problems also may be identified for investigation and the use
of laboratory facilities to the fullest extent may be taken as a project work.
The project shall be driven by realistic constraints like that related to
economic, environmental, social, political, ethical, health & safety,
manufacturability and sustainability. The outcomes to be attained by students
by doing the project work shall be spelt out clearly. A project report is to be
submitted on the topic which will be evaluated during the final review.
Assessment procedure will be as spelt out in the regulations.
PRACTICE SCHOOL
Alternately, a student is encouraged to take an industrial project with
Electronics and Communication companies or firms chosen by the institute. In
such cases the student will stay with the firm and carry out the project. The
project will be guided by the faculty member and the concerned officer in the
industry. All the requirements spelt out under MAJOR PROJECT above,
shall be incorporated under this work also. However reviews will be
conducted in the institute which the student shall attend.
Course
designed by
Student
1
Outcome
Mapping of
instructional
2 objectives
with student
outcome
3 Category
4 Broad Area
5 Approval
General
(G)
Basic
Science
s
(B)
Engineering Sciences
and Technical Arts
(E)
Professiona
l Subjects
(P)
X
Signal
Commu
Electron
Processi
VLSI
Embedded
nication
ics
ng
X
X
X
X
X
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
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EC1101
ELECTROMAGNETIC
INTERFERENCE AND
ELECTROMAGNETIC
COMPATIBILITY
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite: Nil
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to expose the students to the basics and
fundamentals of Electromagnetic Interference and Compatibility and
application in System Design.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To study EMI Fundamentals and EMI sources.
2.
To learn EMI Measuring Instruments and their usage.
3.
To study EMI standards and controlling methods.
UNIT I-EMI ENVIRONMENT
(9 hours)
Concepts of EMI and EMC and Definitions, Sources of EMI Celestial
Electromagnetic noise- Lightning Discharge-Electrostatic DischargeElectromagnetic Pulse-Electromagnetic emissions-Noise from relays and
Switches-Nonlinearities in Circuits.
UNIT II-EMI COUPLING PRINCIPLES
(9 hours)
Capacitive coupling - Inductive coupling- Common Impedance Ground
Coupling- Ground Loop coupling-Transients in power supply lines- Radiation
coupling-Conduction coupling-Common mode and Differential-mode
interferences- Conducted EM noise on power supply lines.
UNIT III-EMI MEASUREMENTS
(9 hours)
Open Area test site measurements-Measurement precautions Anechoic
Chamber TEM - Reverberating TEM-GTEM cell Comparisons.
UNIT IV-EMI CONTROL TECHNIQUES
(9 hours)
EMC Technology- Grounding-Shielding-Electrical Bonding-Power line filterCM filter DM filter- EMI suppression Cables- EMC Connectors -Isolation
transformer.
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L T P C
FUNDAMENTALS OF MEMS
3 0 0 3
EC1102
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite: Nil
PURPOSE
This course is offered to students to gain basic knowledge on MEMS (Micro
Electro Mechanical System) and various fabrication techniques. This enables
them to design, analyze, fabricate and test the MEMS based components.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To introduce MEMS and micro fabrication.
2.
To study the essential electrical and mechanical concepts of MEMS.
3.
To study various sensing and actuating technique.
4.
To know about the polymer and optical MEMS.
UNIT I-INTRODUCTION TO MEMS AND MICRO FABRICATION
(9 hours)
History of MEMS Development, Characteristics of MEMS-Miniaturization Micro electronics integration - Mass fabrication with precision. Sensors and
Actuators- Energy domain. Sensors, actuators
Micro fabrication - microelectronics fabrication process- Silicon based MEMS
processes- New material and fabrication processing- Points of consideration
for processing. Anisotropic wet etching, Isotropic wet etching, Dry etching of
silicon, Deep reactive ion etching (DRIE), and Surface micromachining
process- structural and sacrificial material.
UNIT II-ELECTRICAL AND MECHANICAL CONCEPTS OF MEMS
(9 hours)
Conductivity of semiconductors, crystal plane and orientation, stress and
strain - definition - Relationship between tensile stress and strain- mechanical
properties of Silicon and thin films, Flexural beam bending analysis under
single loading condition- Types of beam- longitudinal strain under pure
bending -deflection of beam- Spring constant, torsional deflection, intrinsic
stress, resonance and quality factor.
UNIT III-ELECTROSTATIC AND THERMAL PRINCIPLE SENSING
AND ACTUATION
(9 hours)
Electrostatic sensing and actuation-Parallel plate capacitor - ApplicationInertial, pressure and tactile sensor parallel plate actuator- comb drive.
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L T P C
FUNDAMENTALS OF
3 0 0 3
NANOTECHNOLOGY
EC1103
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1006
PURPOSE
To introduce to the students, the various opportunities in the emerging field of
nano electronics and nano technologies.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1
The objective of this course is to make students familiar with the
important concepts applicable to small electronic devices, their
fabrication, characterization and application.
UNIT I-LIMITATIONS OF CMOS
(9 hours)
Fundamentals of MOSFET devices - Scaling of CMOS Limitations
Alternative concepts in materials Structures of MOS devices: SOI
MOSFET, FINFETS, Dual Gate MOSFET, Ferro electric FETs.
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ELECTRONIC MEASUREMENTS &
3 0 0 3
INSTRUMENTATION
EC1104
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1013
PURPOSE
The Purpose of this course is to introduce students to the various types of
measurements made in electronics and the instruments used for measuring
them. The main objective of this subject is to help students identify the
different latest measurement techniques available for specific engineering
applications.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. Understand the various measurement techniques available.
2. Understand the basic working of instruments used for measurement.
3. Understand the errors in measurements and their rectification.
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REFERENCES
1.
A.K.Sawhney, A Course in Electrical and Electronic
Measurements and Instrumentation, Dhanapat Rai & Sons, 2012.
2.
Earnest .O Doeblin, Measurement Systems Application and
Design, McGraw Hill International editions, 4th edition, 1990.
3.
A.J.Bouwens, Digital Instrumentation, McGraw Hill, 1986.
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L T P
SENSORS AND TRANSDUCERS
3 0 0
EC1105 Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1001
PURPOSE
To impart knowledge on various types of sensors and transducers
Automation in science, Engineering and medicine.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To study basic concepts of various sensors and transducers.
2. To develop knowledge in selection of suitable sensor based
requirement and applilcation.
C
3
for
on
UNIT I-NTRODUCTION
(9 hours)
Definition, classification, static and dynamic parameters, Characterization
Electrical, mechanical, thermal, optical, biological and chemical,
Classification of errors Error analysis, Static and dynamic characteristics of
transducers, Performance measures of sensors.
UNIT II-MECHANICAL AND ELECTROMECHANICAL SENSORS
(9 hours)
Resistive Potentiometer, strain gauge, Inductive sensors and transducer,
capacitive sensors, ultrasonic sensors.
UNIT III-THERMAL AND RADIATION SENSOR
(9 hours)
Thermal Sensors: Gas thermometric sensors, acoustic temperature sensors,
magnetic thermometer, resistance change -type thermometric sensors, thermo
emf sensors, junction semiconductor types, Thermal radiation sensors,
spectroscopic thermometry
Radiation Sensors: Photo detectors, photovoltaic and photo junction cells,
photo sensitive cell, photo FETs and other devices.
UNIT IV-MAGNETIC AND ELECTROANALYTICAL SENSOR
(9 hours)
Magnetic Sensors: Force and displacement measurement, magneto resistive
sensors, Hall Effect sensor, Inductance and eddy current sensors,
Angular/rotary movement transducer, Electro magnetic flow meter, squid
sensor.
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3 Category
b
X
1,2
1,2
General
(G)
d
X
1,
2
1,2
Basic Sciences
(B)
i
X
Engineering
Sciences &
Technical
Arts (E)
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
4 Broadarea
Communic
ation
5 Approval
X
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
ECE-2013
Signal
Processing
188
Electro
nics
V
L
SI
Embedded
SRM(E&T)
L T P C
BIOMEDICAL INSTRUMENTATION
3 0 0 3
EC1106 Total Contact hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1001
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to introduce the students to the basics of Electrophysiology and its measurements, non-electrical parameters related to various
systems of human body and their measurements, Electrodes and Transducers
used in bio signal acquisition. This course will enable the students to learn the
basic principles of different instruments/equipment used in the health care
industry. Also student will get to know about various Medical Imaging
techniques used for diagnosis along with other diagnostic and therapeutic
devices.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To understand the Origin of Bioelectric potential and their measurements
1.
using appropriate electrodes and Transducers.
To understand how to measure various biochemical and nonelectrical
2.
parameters of human system.
To understand the Electro-physiology of various systems and recording
3.
of the bioelectric signals.
4. To understand the working principles of various Imaging techniques.
To understand the design aspects of various Assist and Therapeutic
5.
Devices.
UNIT I-BIOPOTENTIAL ELECTRODES AND TRANSDUCERS
(9 hours)
Electrode theory- Electrode electrolyte interface, half-cell potential,
Hydrogen, Calomel, Ag-AgCl electrode, needle and wire electrode, surface
electrodes, microelectrode-metal micropipete.
Physiological Transducers: Resistive transducers - Thermistor, Inductive
Transducers - Capacitive Transducers - Photoelectric Transducers Piezoelectric Transducers -, Biochemical Transducers- pH, pCo2 and pO2
electrodes.
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EC1107
CONTROL ENGINEERING
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
Nil
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
To understand the fundamental need for control system and to derive its
transfer function.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To understand the methods of representation of systems and deriving
their transfer function model.
2. To give basic knowledge is obtaining the open loop and closed loop
frequency responses of systems.
3. Applications of control systems.
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TEXT BOOK
Gopal, Control Systems, Principles & Design, Tata McGraw Hill, New
Delhi, 2002.
REFERENCES:
1. K. Ogata, Modern Control Engineering, 5th Edition, Pearson
Education India, New Delhi, 2010.
2. I.J. Nagrath & M. Gopal, Control Systems Engineering, New Age
International Publishers, 2006.
3. M.N. Bandyopadhyay, Control Engineering Theory and Practice,
Prentice Hall of India, 2003.
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EC1108
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
To study the basic structure of a digital computer and to discuss in
detail the organization of the Control unit, the Arithmetic and Logical unit,
the Memory unit and the I/O unit.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To have a thorough understanding of the basic structure and
1.
operation of a digital computer.
To discuss in detail the operation of the arithmetic unit including
2.
the algorithms &implementation of fixed-point and floating-point
addition, subtraction, multiplication &division.
To study in detail the different types of control and the concept of
3.
pipelining.
To study the hierarchical memory system including cache
4.
memories and virtual memory.
To study the different ways of communicating with I/O
5.
devices and standard I/O interfaces.
UNIT I-INTRODUCTION
(9 hours)
Evolution of Computers, VLSI Era, System Design- Register Level,
Processor Level, CPU Organization, Data Representation, Fixed
Point Numbers, Floating Point Numbers, Instruction Formats, Instruction
Types. Addressing modes.
UNIT II-DATA PATH DESIGN
(9 hours)
Fixed Point Arithmetic, Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication and Division,
Combinational and Sequential ALUs, Carry look ahead adder, Robertson
Algorithm, Booths algorithm, non-restoring division algorithm, Floating
Point Arithmetic, Coprocessor, Pipeline Processing, Modified booths
Algorithm
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EC1109
EMBEDDED SYSTEMS
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1007, 1016
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
To provide sufficient Knowledge to understand the embedded systems design,
embedded programming and their operating system.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To provide in-depth knowledge about embedded processor, its
1.
hardware and software.
To explain programming concepts and embedded
2.
programming in C and assembly language.
To explain real time operating systems, inter-task
3.
communication and an embedded software development tool.
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Course
designed by
Student
1
outcome
Mapping of
instructional
2 objectives
with student
outcome
1,2
General
(G)
3 Category
2,3
1
,
3
Basic
Sciences (B)
k
X
2,
3
Engineering
Sciences &
Technical
Arts (E)
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
Signal
Processing
Electr
onics
V
L
SI
4 Broad area
Communic
ation
5 Approval
Embedded
X
EC1110
VIRTUAL INSTRUMENTATION
USING LABVIEW
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite: Nil
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
To enable the students to understand basics, programming techniques, data
acquisition and interfacing techniques of virtual instrumentation and to use
VI for different applications.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
The students will be able to familiarize the basics and need of VI.
2.
The students will be able to learn LabVIEW software basics.
3.
To get better understanding of data acquisition techniques.
4.
The students can have an exposure to different interfacing techniques.
5
The students can able to design some real time application using
LabVIEW software.
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5.
DIGITAL TELEVISION
EC1111
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
Television technology has now become a vital tool to the information revolution
that is sweeping across the countries of the world. This syllabus aims at a
comprehensive coverage of Digital Television systems with the emphasis on
television evolution.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To study the evolution of television systems
2.
3.
4.
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UNIT I-INTRODUCTION
(9 hours)
Raster images Quantization Image structure Brightness and contrast
Raster scanning Resolution Introduction to luma and chroma.
UNIT II-DIGITIZATION
(9 hours)
Image digitization Perception and visual acuity Luminance and lightness
CIE system of colorimetry Color science Video signal processing
Gamma Luma and color differences.
UNIT III-DIGITAL TELEVISION
(9 hours)
Digital Television types JPEG Video compression MPEG2, MPEG4,
H264, Motion JPEG (M-JPEG) compression.
UNIT IV-HIGH DEFINITION TV
(9 hours)
HDTV evolution and role of Grand Alliance HDTV compressed video and
audio streams Packetized transport Transmission HDTV receiver
HDTV standards Metadata broadcasting.
UNIT V-DTV FUTURE AND ACCESSORIES
(9 hours)
3D TV Plasma, LCD, Digital Light Processing HDMI Digital Video
Disk (DVD), Blue Ray Disk, Super hi-vision.
TEXT BOOKS
1. Philip J. Cianci, HDTV and the Transition to Digital Broadcasting:
Understanding New Television Technologies, Focal Press, 2007.
2. Iain E. G. Richardson, H.264 and MPEG-4 and Video compression
video coding for Next-generation Multimedia, John Wiley & Sons
Ltd., 2003.
REFERENCES
1. K.F.Ibrahim, Newnes Guide to Television and Video Technology,
Newnes Publishers, 2007.
2. Charles poynton, Digital Video and HDTV Algorithms and
Interfaces, Morgan Kaufman publishers, 2007.
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Course designed
by
Student
1
outcome
Mapping of
instructional
2 objectives
with student
outcome
3 Category
1,2,3
1
,
2
1,2
,3,
4
General (G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Communicati
on
Signal
Processin
g
Engineering
Sciences &
Technical
Arts (E)
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
Broad
area
5 Approval
EC1112
V
L
SI
Electr
onics
Embedded
X
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to introduce the basic concept and
methodologies for digital image processing.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
The students undergoing this course will be able to know.
1.
Fundamentals of image processing.
2.
Various transforms used in image processing.
3.
Image processing techniques like image enhancement,
reconstruction, compression and segmentation.
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L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
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205
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
206
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L T P C
COMMUNICATION SWITCHING
3 0 0 3
TECHNIQUES
EC1114
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1018
PURPOSE
To learn the basic principles of switching, signaling, and traffic in the context
of telecommunication networks.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To study the concepts of message switching, circuit switching, strowger
switching, crossbar switching, electronic switching, and digital
switching.
2. To understand the problems of congestion, queuing, and to study
methods like Grade of Service, and Blocking Probability to provide an
estimate of the amount of traffic present in various systems.
3. To solve problems in single-stage networks, strict-sense non-blocking
networks, and sectionalized switching networks.
4. To study concepts like Reliability, Availability, and Security in various
types of switching systems.
5. To learn the different kinds of signaling, circuit and packet switching
techniques.
UNIT I-BASIC` SWITCHING SYSTEMS FOR TELECOMMUNICATION
(9 hours)
Crossbar switching Electronic space division switching Time division
switching Time multiplexed switching n-stage combination switching hybrid time and space division multiplexes.
UNIT II-TRAFFIC ENGINEERING
(9 hours)
Congestion Network traffic load and Parameters Traffic measurement
Lost-call system Grade of Service and Blocking probability Modeling
switching systems Incoming traffic and service time characterization
Blocking models and loss estimates Queuing systems Simulation models.
UNIT III-SWITCHING NETWORKS
(9 hours)
Single-stage networks Gradings Link systems Grades of service of link
systems Application of graph theory to link systems Use of expansion
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208
SRM(E&T)
EC1115
ASIC DESIGN
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1012
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
The purpose of this course is to introduce the students the basics of designing
and using ASICs. The operation of tools used in the design is also explained.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To give basic knowledge of ASIC internals.
1.
To impart knowledge on ASIC types and tools used in the design.
2.
To give basic understanding of tools used.
3.
UNIT I-INTRODUCTION TO ASICS
(9 hours)
Introduction to ASICs : Full-custom and Semi -custom ASIC CMOS logic
ASIC library design.
UNIT II-PROGRAMMABLE ASICS
(9 hours)
Programmable ASICs Anti fuse static RAM EPROM and technology
Actel ACT Xilinx LCA Altera flex Altera MAX Logic cells I/O cells
Interconnects Low level design entry: Schematic entry.
UNIT III-SIMULATION AND SYNTHESIS
(9 hours)
Logic synthesis: A comparator MUX, Inside a logic synthesizer, VHDL and
logic synthesis, FSM synthesis, memory synthesis Simulation: Types of
simulation logic systems how logic simulation works.
UNIT IV-ASIC TESTING
(9 hours)
Boundary scan test Faults Fault simulation Automatic test pattern
generation algorithm: D-algorithm, PODEM Built in self test.
UNIT V-ASIC CONSTURCTION
(9 hours)
System partitioning power dissipation partitioning methods floor
planning and placement: Routing: Global routing, detailed routing, special
routing Introduction to SOC.
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TEXT BOOK
1. M.J.S.Smith, Application Specific Integrated Circuits, Addison
Wesley Longman Inc., 1996. (Pearson Education Reprint 2006).
REFERENCES
1. M. Sarafzadeh and C.K. Wong, An Introduction to VLSI Physical
Design, McGraw Hill, 2nd Edition, 1996.
2. Wolf Wayne, FPGA based system design, Pearson Education,
2005.
3. Design manuals of Altera, Xilinx and Actel.
4. Jan M. Rabaey. Anantha Chandrakasan, Borivoje Nikolic, Digital
Integrated Circuits, Prentice-Hall Publication, 2nd Edition, 2002.
Course designed
by
Student
1
outcome
Mapping of
instructional
2 objectives
with student
outcome
3 Category
4 Broad area
5 Approval
EC1115
Department
Engineering
a
b
X
ASIC DESIGN
of Electronics
c
X
d
X
1,2
2,
3
1
,
3
General (G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
and
g
Communication
h
i
X
2,
3
Engineering
Sciences &
Technical
Arts (E)
k
X
1,
2
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
V
Communica Signal
Electr
L Embedded
tion
Processing onics
SI
X
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
ECE-2013
210
SRM(E&T)
EC1116
EMBEDDED C AND
MICROCONTROLLER
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1016
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
The objective of the course is to provide strong foundation in ARM
SOC architecture, as well as programming of ARM Microcontroller using
Embedded C language, which is a great demand in the todays core industry.
This course content satisfies the thrust to bridge the gap between the academic
course and core industry skill set requirement.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
Understand fundamentals in ARM Architecture and its instruction
1.
set.
Appreciate the advantages in using ARM microcontrollers &
2.
systems development using ARM target boards.
3.
Design systems applications using Embedded C programming
4.
Apply this knowledge to more real-time case study.
UNIT I-THE ARM PROCESSOR FUNDAMENTALS AND
INSTRUCTION SET
(9 hours)
ARM Register structure Program Status register- Pipeline, Exception,
Interrupts on vector table- core extension- ARM Processor families. Data
processing instructions-Branch Instructions-Load-store instructions, software
Interrupts- Program status resister instructions, loading instructions-ARMv5E
Extensions, conditional execution.
UNIT II-THE THUMB INSTRUCTION SET AND ARM
ARCHITECTURE
(9 hours)
THUMB register usage, ARM-THUMB Interworking-other Branch
instruction, Data Processing instruction-single register Load-store
instructions- multiple register load store instruction-stack instruction-Software
Interrupt instructions ARM Processor Cores - ARM assembly language
programming - writing and optimizing ARM assembly code - Instruction
schedules.
ECE-2013
211
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
212
SRM(E&T)
Student
outcome
Mapping of
instructional
2 objectives
with student
outcome
Department
Engineering
a
b
1,2,3,4
Electronics
c
and
g
Communication
h
2,4
General (G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences &
Technical
Arts (E)
Communicatio
n
Signal
Processin
g
Electr
onics
3 Category
4 Broad area
of
V
L
SI
Professional
Subjects (P)
Embedded
X
5 Approval
rd
L T P C
CRYPTOGRAPHY AND NETWORK
3 0 0 3
SECURITY
EC1117
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite: Nil
PURPOSE
To study various aspects of Network Security Attacks, Services and
Mechanisms.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
To understand the mathematical concepts of various Encryption,
1.
Authentication and Digital Signature Algorithms.
To standby the design of different general purpose and application
2.
specific security Protocols and standards.
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UNIT I-INTRODUCTION
(9 hours)
Security Services, Mechanisms and Attacks Network Security ModelClassical Encryption Techniques Steganography Data Encryption Standard
(DES).
UNIT II-ADVANCED BLOCK CIPHERS AND PUBLIC KEY
CRYPTOSYSTEMS
(9 hours)
Block cipher modes operation Overview of IDEA, Blowfish, RC5, CAST128 Characteristics of advanced symmetric Block ciphers Key
Distribution Principle RSA algorithm Public Key Management Diffie
Hellmen Key Exchange X.509 Public Key Certificate Format.
UNIT
III-MESSAGE
AUTHENTICATION
AND
DIGITAL
SIGNATURE
(9 hours)
Message Authentication codes MAC HASH function Principle of MD5,
SHA-1 and HMAC algorithms-Digital Signature algorithm.
UNIT IV-NETWORK SECURITY
(9 hours)
Authentication Application Kerbros Email Security PGP Network
Security IPSec Web Security SSL SET.
UNIT V- SYSTEM SECURITY
(9 hours)
Intrusion Detection Password management Malicious software Viruses
and countermeasures Firewall Types and Configurations Trusted System.
TEXT BOOK
1. William Stallings, Cryptography and Network Security, Pearson
Education, 5th Edition, New Delhi, 2011.
REFERENCES
1. B.A. Forouzan and D. Mukhopadhyay, Cryptography and Network
Security, Tata Mc-Graw Hill, 2nd Edition, 2010.
2. William Stallings, Cryptography and Network Security, PHI, New
Delhi, 2nd Edition, 1999.
ECE-2013
214
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
215
SRM(E&T)
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
ECE-2013
216
SRM(E&T)
TEXT BOOK
1. Dennis Roddy, Satellite Communications, Tata Mc-Graw Hill
Publications, 4th Edition, 2008.
REFERENCES
1. Madhavendra Richharia, Leslie David, Satellite Systems for
Personal Applications Concepts and Technology, WileyBlackwell, 2010.
2. Wilbur L.Prichard, Henry G. Suyerhood, Ropert A. Nelson,
Satellite Communication System Engineering, 2nd Edition,
Pearson Education, 1993.
3. Pratt, Timothy, Charles W. Bostian, Satellite Communication,
John Wiley and Sons, 2nd Edition, New York, 1986.
ECE-2013
217
SRM(E&T)
Course designed by
1 Student outcome
Mapping
of
instructional
2
objectives
with
student outcome
3 Category
1,
2
1,
3
1,
3
1,
2
1,3
Genera
l (G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences &
Technical
Arts (E)
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
4 Broad area
Comm
unicati
on
Signal
Processin
g
Elect
ronic
s
VL
SI
Embedded
X
5 Approval
MOBILE COMPUTING
EC1119
2.
3.
ECE-2013
218
of
SRM(E&T)
wireless
UNIT I-INTRODUCTION
(9 hours)
Introduction to Mobile Computing Wireless transmission: Signal
Propagation Multiplexing Modulation Spread Spectrum and Cellular
Systems.
UNIT II-WIRELESS PROTOCOLS
(9 hours)
Infrastructure and adhoc networks IEEE 802.11: Protocol architecture
Physical and MAC layer; Hiperlan2: Reference model and configurations
Physical layer Data link layer & Convergence layer; Bluetooth: Protocol
stack radio layer Baseband layer Link manager protocol L2CAP layer
and security.
UNIT III-WIRELESS NETWORKING
(9 hours)
Satellite systems Cellular networks Cordless systems Wireless Local
Loop IEEE 802.16: System reference model Protocol architecture MAC
layer & Physical layer.
UNIT IV-PACKET RADIO NETWORKS
(9 hours)
Packet Radio Networks: Architecture and components of PRNETs Routing
in PRNETs Pacing techniques Media access and flow acknowledgement
in PRNETs.
UNIT V-AD-HOC MOBILE NETWORKS
(9 hours)
Types of Ad-hoc mobile communications & Host movements Challenges
facing Ad-hoc mobile networks Problems in Ad-hoc channel access
Existing Ad-hoc MAC protocols: MACA MACABI PAMAs DBTMA.
TEXT BOOK
1. Jochen Schiller, Mobile Communications, Pearson Education, 2nd
Edition, 2002.
REFERENCES
1. C.K. Toh, Ad Hoc Mobile Wireless Networks: Protocols and
Systems, Pearson Education, 2002.
2. William Stallings, Wireless Communications and Networks,
Pearson Education, 2nd Edition, 2002
ECE-2013
219
SRM(E&T)
Student
outcome
Mapping of
instructional
2 objectives
with student
outcome
Department
Engineering
a
b
of
c
1,2,
3
General (G)
3 Category
Electronics
d
and
g
Communication
h
1,
2
2,
3
1,
2,
3
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences &
Technical
Arts (E)
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
Broad
area
5 Approval
EC1120
Communica
tion
Signal
Processing
Electr
onics
V
L
SI
Embedded
X
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
BLUETOOTH TECHNOLOGY
PURPOSE
To Study the concepts of Bluetooth Technology.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To study the fundamental concepts of Bluetooth module.
2.
3.
4.
ECE-2013
220
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
221
SRM(E&T)
EC1121
COMMUNICATION NETWROK
PROTOCOLS
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite: Nil
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
The course introduces the students to the emerging areas in Internetworking.
This will enable the students to acquire a solid understanding of the different
components involved in the seamless working of the Internet.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To learn the technology of Data Networking.
2.
To learn Internet addressing and routing methods.
3.
To study Client Server model and Internet Security.
ECE-2013
222
SRM(E&T)
223
SRM(E&T)
3.
Mapping
of
instructional
2
objectives
with
student outcome
Catego
3
ry
General
(G)
Basic
Sciences
(B)
1
,
2
1,
2,
3
2,
3
Engineering
Sciences
&
Technical Arts
(E)
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
Broad
4
area
Appro
5
val
Communi
cation
Signal
Processing
Electr
onics
VLSI
Embedded
X
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
ECE-2013
224
SRM(E&T)
EC1122
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
The course will provide students with the fundamental concepts in photonics,
which have increasing applications in the area of information technology and
communication, healthcare and life science, optical sensing, lightning, energy
and manufacturing. The course will focus on the applications in optical
communication and networks.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
2.
3.
4.
225
SRM(E&T)
TEXT BOOK
1. Rajiv Ramaswamy, Kumar N. Sivaranjan and Galen H. Sasaki,
Optical Networks A practical perspective, 3rd edition, Elsevier,
2010.
REFERENCES
1. Keiser, Optical Fiber Communication Systems, 4th edition, Tata
McGrawHill. Edition, 2010.
2. Joseph C.Palais Fiber Optic Communications, Fifth edition,
Seventh impression, Pearson, 2012.
3. Djafar.K. Mynbaev Lowell and Scheiner, Fiber Optic
Communication Technology, Sixth impression, Pearson Education
Asia, 9th impression, 2011.
4. John M. Senior, Optical Fiber Communications Principles and
Practice, Pearson Education, 2009.
5. John Powers, An Introduction to Fiber optic Systems, 2nd edition,
Tata-McGraw Hill, 2010.
ECE-2013
226
SRM(E&T)
EC1122
Course designed
by
Student
1
outcome
Mapping of
instructional
2 objectives
with student
outcome
3 Category
1,2
General (G)
3,4
Basic
Sciences
(B)
Engineering
Sciences &
Technical
Arts (E)
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
4 Broad area
Communica
tion
5 Approval
X
23rd meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
EC1123
Signal
Processing
Electr
onics
V
LS
I
L
3
Embedded
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
To learn about the specifications, design and analysis of RF systems for
wireless communication applications.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
2.
3.
ECE-2013
227
SRM(E&T)
228
SRM(E&T)
EC1124
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
This course provides a way to study the Artificial Neural Networks and Fuzzy
Logic concepts.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To learn the various architectures of ANN.
To learn the methods of representing information in ANN like self
2.
organizing networks, associative and competitive learning.
To understand and apply concepts of Crisp sets, Fuzzy sets and Fuzzy
3.
Relations.
ECE-2013
229
SRM(E&T)
230
SRM(E&T)
EC1125
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
Learning design of digital circuits is a fundamental necessity for designing
practical systems. To develop standard design practices for digital circuits at a
higher level of abstraction a hardware description language is useful. This
subject provides necessary instruments to achieve that goal.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
Apply advanced theorems to simplify the design aspects of various
1.
practical circuits.
2. Design State Machines.
3. Implement various digital circuits using Programmable Logic Devices.
4. Implement combinational and sequential circuits using VHDL.
ECE-2013
231
SRM(E&T)
232
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
233
SRM(E&T)
ECE-2013
234
SRM(E&T)
TEXT BOOKS
1. Owen Bishop, Electronics Circuits and Systems, 3rd Edition,
Newnes, 2010.
2. Michael Tooley B A, Electronic Circuits: Fundamentals and
Applications, 3rd Edition, Newnes, 2006.
REFERENCE
1. John B.Peatman , Design with PIC Microcontrollers, Prentice
Hall, 1998.
Broad
area
5 Approval
ECE-2013
Comm
unicati
on
Signal
Processin
g
Elect
VL
ronic
Embedded
SI
s
X
rd
23 meeting of Academic Council, May 2013
235
SRM(E&T)
EC1202
TELECOMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1001
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
This course has been designed to cover some of the most important changes
that have occurred in the telecommunications industry during the last two or
three decades. This course gives an excellent overview of existing
technology to allow the readers to better manage voice and data networks.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1. To discuss various analog and digital technologies in voice and
data networks.
2. To understand many telecommunications technologies in the
generic sense and their applications and implications.
UNIT I-PSTN TECHNOLOGY
(9 hours)
Introduction: History of telecommunications various networks used to
transmit voice, video and data signals media used to convey
telecommunication signals basics of the three major voice communication
technologies basics of PC-based voice communication systems (CTI)
basics of LAN & WAN telecommunication standards.
PSTN Technology: Difference between simplex, half-duplex and duplex
transmissions basic understanding of telephone set history and evolution
of Central Exchange Switching Operator Switch Boards (PBX) intraoffice
and interoffice calls Extended Area Service (EAS) circuit switching,
packet switching & TDM switching DTMF signaling dial register inband & out-of-band signaling.
UNIT II-CUSTOMER-PROVIDED EQUIPMENTS
(9 hours)
Working of telephone sidetone ringers DTMF dial feature phone,
proprietary telephone, hands-free phone, speaker phones, ISDN telephones
key systems CBXs private-in-line network and a software-defined network
station features Telecommunication Application Program Interface
(TAPI).
ECE-2013
236
SRM(E&T)
237
SRM(E&T)
EC1203
MODERN WIRELESS
COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
Total Contact Hours 45
Prerequisite
EC1001
L
3
T
0
P
0
C
3
PURPOSE
This course is to provide comprehensive background knowledge of wireless
and mobile communication for readers. This course is intended for anyone
who wants (or needs) to learn about the new wave of wireless networks. It
will introduce the readers to all the most important wireless technologies
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
1.
To discuss the fundamentals of cellular mobile wireless networks.
To provide an overview of various approaches to communication
2.
networks.
To study the numerous different-generation technologies with their
3.
individual pros and cons.
To discuss about the principles of operation of the different access
4.
technologies like FDMA, TDMA, SDMA and CDMA and their pros
and cons.
ECE-2013
238
SRM(E&T)
239
SRM(E&T)
Student
outcome
Mapping of
instructional
2 objectives
with student
outcome
Department
Engineering
a
b
X
1,2,3,4
3,4
General (G)
3 Category
of
Electronics
c
d
X
Basic
Sciences
(B)
e f
X
and
g
Communication
h
X X
Engineering
Sciences &
Technical
Arts (E)
Professional
Subjects (P)
X
Broad
area
Communicatio
n
Signal
Processin
g
Electr
onics
V
L
SI
Embedded
X
5 Approval
ECE-2013
240
SRM(E&T)
S.No.
Details of Amendment
Effective from
Approval with
date
ECE-2013
241
SRM(E&T)