Learning Outcomes:: EE 351 - Introduction To Energy Systems - Fall 2019
Learning Outcomes:: EE 351 - Introduction To Energy Systems - Fall 2019
Learning Outcomes:: EE 351 - Introduction To Energy Systems - Fall 2019
Learning Outcomes:
Upon completing this course, the student should be able to:
• Calculate voltages, currents and powers using phasor analysis
• Understand the operation of basic power electronics circuits
• Understand how various energy sources of energy can be transformed into electrical
power, calculate how much power can be generated
• Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of these various sources of energy
• Understand and perform calculation on balanced 3-phase systems
• Under the operation of transformers and electrical machines, calculate various parameters
associated with transformers and machines
• Explain the safety issues associated with electricity distribution systems
• Discuss how and why blackouts occur
Teaching Assistants:
Nina Vincent, Office Hour: Tuesday 10:30am-11:30am, EE 215, [email protected]
Website: http://zhangbaosen.github.io/teaching/EE351
Homework
Written homework will be assigned weekly. It will typically be due one week after it is assigned
and will consist of several problems, often with multiple parts.
Homework will be assigned and submitted through the course web site. Late homework will not
be accepted without pre-approval. Homework will be graded and returned as soon as possible.
Examinations
There will be an in-class midterm examination and a final examination. The exams are open
book and open notes, but electronic devices are not allowed except for a calculator.
Disabled Students
If you have a documented disability and wish to discuss academic accommodations, please
contact me as soon as possible. I am happy to make every reasonable accommodation.
Academic Integrity
I expect every member of the class to conform to the highest standards of academic integrity, as
stated in the official UW policy at
http://www.washington.edu/admin/rules/policies/SGP/SPCH209.html#7
Cheating can result in failure of the course and/or eventual expulsion from the University.
Because your homework has a bearing on your grade, it must be your own original work. You
may compare homework answers and discuss problem solving methods with other students in
the class, but the final result - the work you hand in - must consist of work that you, and you
only, have performed. Copying homework done by someone else, or copying old homework or
the answer key, copying the work of anyone else on examinations, the use of unauthorized notes
or other unauthorized aids during examinations, and knowingly permitting your work to be
copied for the purpose of cheating are all examples of cheating.
Examinations must be your individual original work. No discussion of any kind is allowed
among students while taking an examination. During an examination, you may ask the instructor
questions if you do not understand some aspect of a problem statement, or if you are unclear
about what is required.