IST YEAR B.E. PROGREMMES COMMON
(Computer Science & Engg., Electrical, Electronics & Electrical Communication, Information Technology)
Four weeks of Workshop Project in Winter break
BE 1st Year Second Semester (Electrical Science Stream) |
S. No. |
Course Code |
Course Name |
L |
T |
P |
Total |
Credits |
1 |
MA 102 or
MA 102H |
Mathematics II |
3 |
1 |
0 |
4 |
4 |
2 |
|
Humanities 1 (Elective) |
3 |
0 |
0 |
3 |
3 |
3 |
EN 102 |
Unified Mechanical Engineering I |
3 |
1 |
0 |
4 |
4 |
4 |
TA 102 |
Engineering Graphics |
2 |
0 |
4 |
6 |
4 |
5 |
TA 104 |
Mechatronics |
3 |
1 |
3 |
7 |
5 |
6 |
PE 102 |
Physical Education II |
0 |
0 |
2 |
2 |
0 |
7 |
TA 100 |
Workshop Project |
-- |
-- |
-- |
-- |
2 |
|
Total |
14 |
3 |
9 |
26 |
22 |
Humanities 1 (Electives) |
1 |
HU 101 |
Women in Third World Development |
|
|
|
|
|
2 |
HU 102 |
Sociology |
|
|
|
|
|
3 |
HU 103 |
Micro Economics |
|
|
|
|
|
4 |
HU 104 |
Communication Skills |
|
|
|
|
|
Course Name : MATHEMATICS II
Course Code : MA 102
Credits : 4
Design Points : 1
L T P : 3 1 0
Lecture wise breakup No. of Lectures
ALGEBRA (20)
Vector spaces, Linear dependence, Basis, Dimension, Co- ordinates with respect to a basis, Change of basis, Subspace., Linear transformation Rn ®Rm , Range space and Rank, Null space and Nullity, Rank and Nullity relation, Matrix representation of a linear transformation, Similar matrices, Invertible linear transformation., Inner product, Norm, Gram-Schmidt orthogonalization process., Eigenvalues and eigenvectors, Cayley Hamilton theorem., Properties of eigenvalues and eigenvectors of Symmetric, Skew-symmetric, Orthogonal, Hermitian, Skew – Hermitian, Unitary and Normal matrices, Bounds on eigenvalues, Diagonalization of a matrix.
DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS (14)
First order exact differential equations, Integrating factor, Orthogonal trajectories, Existence and uniqueness of solutions, Applications to Science and Engineering., Higher order linear differential equations with constant coefficients, Methods of variation of parameters and undetermined coefficients., Equations reducible to linear equations with constant coefficients, Existence and uniqueness of solution of initial value problem, Wronskian. Simultaneous linear equations with constant coefficients. Applications including modeling of physical systems.Second order differential equations with variable coefficients, Total differential equations, Simultaneous total differential equations with applications.
LAPLACE TRANSFORM (11)
Laplace transform, Inverse transforms properties, Transforms of derivatives and integrals, Unit step function, Dirac’s delta function, Differentiation and integration of transforms, Applications to differential equations.
BOOK:
1. Advanced Engineering Mathematics, Kreyszig, John Wiley and Sons, 8th edition, 2001.
REFERENCES:
1.
Linear Algebra, Hoffman and Kunze, Prentice Hall, 2ndedition, 2001.
2. Introduction Linear Algebra with Applications, Kolman, Pearson Education, 2001
3. An introduction to ordinary Differential Equations, Coddington, Prentice Hall, 2001
MA 102H, MATHEMATICS II
In addition to the contents of MA 102 the additional topics:
Series solution of differential equations – Power series method, Legendre’s equation, Legendre’s polynomials and their properties, Frobenius method, Bessel’s equation, Bessel’s functions and their properties
Course Name : WOMEN IN THIRD WORLD DEVELOPMENT
Course Code : HU 101
Credits : 3
L T P : 3 0 0
Pr-req. : ----
Lecture wise breakup No of Lectures
The impact of development on women’s work
(03)
Gender division of labour, women in agriculture, home-based workers, export-oriented industries especially textile/garment and electronics industry.
(09)
The impact of technology on women's work.
(03)
National and International migration of women
(04)
Third world women workers especially domestic workers and nurses in developed countries
(04)
Sustainable development: deforestation and the quality of women's lives
(05)
Empowering women: literacy, employment and political participation
(07)
Assessment of development programs and projects from a feminist perspective
(05)
BOOKS
1. Seth, Mira, “Women and Development”, Sage Publications Limited
REFERENCES
- Devi, Laxmi, “Women and Development”, Anmol Publications
- Momsen, J., "Women and Development in the Third World", Routledge: London, 1991.
- Ostergaard, L., "Gender and Development", Routledge: London, 1992.
- Rajput, Pam, “Women and Globalization”, APH Publishing Corporation
- Rose, K., "Where Women are Leaders: The SEWA Movement in India", Zed: London, 1992.
- “Gender and Relationships – A practical action kit for young people” Published by: The Commonwealth Secretariat, Marlborough House, Pall Mall, London
Course Name : SOCIOLOGY
Course Code : HU 102
Credits : 3
L T P : 3 0 0
Pr-req. : ----
Lecture wise breakup No of LecturesSOCIOLOGY – THE DISCIPLINE (03) Sociology as a science, impact of industrial and French Revolution on the emergence of sociology, Relevance of sociology for engineering
BASIC CONCEPTS (03)Society, association, institution, Culture relativism, Social structure, social system, Socialization, competition, conflict, accommodation, Social Mobility
PIONEERING CONTRIBUTIONS TO SOCIOLOGY (04) Seminal Views of Karl Marx, Emile Durkheim, Max Weber, Alwin Toeffler
EVOLUTION OF SOCIETY (05)
Primitive, Agrarian, Industrial and post-industrial, Features of industrial society, impact of automation on society, industrialization and social change, Features of Post-industrial society
ECONOMY AND SOCIETY (05)Economic systems of simple and complex societies, Sociological dimensions of economic life, market (free) economy and controlled (planned) economy
INDUSTRIAL SOCIOLOGY (05)
SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY (03)
Ethos of science, social responsibility of science
SOCIAL CHANGE (05)
Theories of change, factors of change, directed social change, social policy and social development, Social cost benefit analysis, Role of engineers in development.
UNDERSTANDING INDIAN SOCIETY (06)
Traditional Hindu social organization, Caste System, Agrarian society in India, social consequences of land reforms and green revolution, Working of the democratic political system in a traditional society, Problem of education in India, Gender discrimination, Economic reforms liberalization, privatization and globalization, Strategies for developments in India
SOCIAL PROBLEMS (03)
AIDS, alcoholism, drug addiction, corruption BOOKS1. M.Haralambos Sociology: “Themes and Perspectives, Fifth Edition, 2000”, By Collins EducationalREFERENCES
- David Mandilbaum, Society in India, 1990, Popular.
- M.N.Srinivas, Social Change in Modern India, 1991, Orient Longman.
- Etzioni, Amitai, “Social Problems”, Prentice Hall
- Schneider, “Industrial Sociology”, London, McGrawHill
- L. Broom, P. Selznick and D. Dorrock, Sociology, 11th Ed. 1990, Harper International
Course Name : MICRO ECONOMICS
Course Code : HU 103
Credits : 3
L T P : 3 0 0
Lecture wise breakup No. of Lectures
Introduction to Economics: Evolution of Economic thought; Wealth, Welfare and scarcity concepts.
(3)
Division of Economic activities, Relationship of Economics with other Social Sciences and Engineering
(3)
Basic Economic Concepts; Good, Value, Utility, Cost and Wealth.
(5)
Demand and Laws of consumption: Law of diminishing marginal utility and law of equi marginal utility.
(10)
Production and cost concepts.
(8)
Economies to Scale, Internal and External Economies.
(3)
Recent emerging Trends in Economies, WTO
(7)BOOKS:1. Ahuja H.L. , “Business Economics Micro” , S.Chand & Co. Ltd New Delhi.
2. Gupta M L & Gupta S P, “Economics for Engineers”’ ESS PEE Publications, Chandigarh.REFERENCES:
- Koutsoyiannis A., “Modern Microeconomics” , Macmillan, II Edition.
- Gupta R.D., “Elementary Economic Theory”, Kalyani Publishers.
- Chadha G.K., (Ed.) “WTO and the Indian Economy”, Deep & Deep publications pvt. Limited.
- Aswathappa K, “Essentials of Business Environment”, Himalaya Publishing House, New Delhi.
- Kreps A., “Course in Microeconomic Theory”, Prentice Hall Of India Pvt. Ltd.
- Samuelson Paul A & Nordhaus William D, “Economics”, Tata McGraw – Hill Publishing Company Ltd., New Delhi.
Course Name : COMMUNICATION SKILLS
Course Code : HU 104
Credits : 3
L T P : 3 0 0
Pr-req. : ----
Lecture wise breakup No of Lectures
Fundamentals of Communications: Process of communication. Barriers to communication. Overcoming the barriers to communication
(04)
Spoken Communication: Effective verbal communication. Public speaking. Oral presentation. Group discussion. Facing the personal interview. Practice sessions
(10)
Written Communication: effective written communication. Report writing, letter writing Business letters and resume. Exercises
(14)
Effective use of the English Language.: Elements of Style. Pronunciation - practice in the Language Laboratory
(08)
The significance of communication in organization. Types of Communication – Upward, Downward, horizontal and vertical channels of communication
(04)
BOOKS:
1. Ludlow R. and Panton F., “The essence of effective communication”, Prentice Hall of India Pvt. Ltd
REFERENCES:
1. Bill Scott, Communication for Professional Engineers, Thomas Telford Ltd.
2. John M. Lannon, Technical Writing, Little Brown and Co.
3. William Strunk Jr., The Elements of Style, 3rd edn., Macmillan Publishing Co.
4. Rodriques, M.V. Effective Communications, Himalayan Publishing House, Delhi.
5. Sharma R.C. and Krishna Mohan, Business correspondence and Report writing, Tata Mcgraw Hill, New Delhi.
Course Name : UNIFIED MECHANICAL ENGINEERING – I
Course Code : EN 102Credits : 4
L T P : 3 1 0
Pr-req. : ----
Lecture wise breakup No of Lectures
Force system, equilibrium of rigid bodies, dynamics: Plane Trusses: Engineering Materials, Properties of Materials: Stress & Stairs: Transformation of plane state of stress: Shear force & Bending moment diagrams for beams: Stresses due to Bending, Torsion and Combined loads: Deflection of beams (for simple cases): Machanism, Degree of freedom of mechanism & kinematics pairs, Kinematic diagram: Kinematic inversions: Law of Friction, application of friction in machines, belt drive: Motion analysis of gear trains: Balancing of rotating masses
BOOK:
1. Mechanical Sciences: G K Lal, Vijay Gupta et.al, Narosa Publishing House
Course Name : ENGINEERING GRAPHICS
Course Code : TA 102Credits : 4
L T P : 2 0 4
Pr-req. : ----
Lecture wise breakup No of Lectures
Introduction to CAD software.
(02)
Introduction to Engg. Graphics. System of Projections. Orthographic projections. Projection of oblique areas. Circular features
(04)
Reading of Orthographic views. Meaning of lines and areas. Pictorial sketching. Missing views and missing lines
(02)
Conventional practices, Rotations, rounds and fillets. Dimensioning
(02)
Sectioning. Different types of sectioning. Conventions
(02)
Projections on auxiliary planes
(03)
Elements of descriptive geometry. Lines and planes. True length, True shape, minimum distance, true angles
(03)
General introduction to isometric views
(01)
Simple assembly drawing & layouts, conventions for bolts, nuts, shafts etc.
(03)
Elementary development and intersections
(04)
BOOK:
1.
Graphic Science; Engineering Drawing, Descriptive Geometry, Graphical Solutions by French, Thomas Ewing, and Vierck, Charles J. - McGraw-Hill, New York
Course Name : MECHATRONICS
Course Code : TA 104Credits : 5
L T P : 3 1 3
Design Points : 4
Pr-req. : ----
Rationale:
The integration of Electronics Engineering, Electrical Engineering and Computer Technology & Control Engineering with Mechanical Engineering is increasingly forming a crucial part in the design, manufacture and maintenance of a wide range of engineering products and processes. A consequence of this is a need for engineers and technicians to adopt an interdisciplinary and integrated approach to engineering. Mechatronics is a term used to describe this integrated approach. This course is designed to provide a background to Mechatronics and to provide links through to more specialized skills.
Lecture wise breakup No of Lectures
INTRODUCTION TO MECHATRONICS (03)
Mechatronics case study, introduction to the Mechatronics Engineering Laboratory.
REVIEW OF BASIC ELECTRONICS (03)
Ohm’s law, semiconductors (PN junction diodes, AC rectification, Zener diode), Power supplies
PRINCIPLES AND APPLICATIONS OF TRANSISTORS AND OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER (06)
Transistor (common emitter characteristics, emitter, follower circuit, FET); thyristor, triac, operational amplifiers (inverting, unity gain, non-inverting, C/V and V/C amplifiers, differential amplifier, instrumentation amplifier).
DIGITAL ELECTRONICS (06)
Boolean algebra; digital electronic gates; combination logic systems (simple gates, NAND and NOR gates, latches, positive and negative logic, tri-state logic); sequential logic systems (J-K flip-flop, registers and counter, timers and pulse circuits).
SENSOR AND TRANSDUCE: PRINCIPLES AND APPLICATIONS (08)
Introduction to sensors and transducers; general transducer characteristics (performance characteristics, static and dynamic characteristics); calibration; signal conditioning.
Sensor and Transducer applications
Measurement of : angular position, linear displacement, rotational speed, force, pressure, strain, flow rate, temperature.
DRIVE TECHNOLOG: PRINCIPLES AND APPLICATIONS (06)
Physical principles; solenoid-type devices; DC machines; AC machines; stepper motors.
Drive Technology Applications:
Linear motors; voice coil motors; electro-pneumatic and electro-hydraulic actuators.
ELECTOR MECHANICAL SYSTEM: PRINCIPLES AND APPLICATIONS (05)
Rotary to linear motion conversion; power transmission
Electromechanical System Applications, Coupling; gearing; belts; pulleys; bearings
A/D, D/A CONVERSION: BASIC PRINCIPLE ONLY. (02)
INTRODUCTION TO PROGRAMMABLE LOGIC CONTROLLERS (05)
PLC Hardware, PLC Memory structure, Basic application
MICROPROCESSOR AND MICROCONTROLLER BASIC OPERATION (04)
Microcontroller applications
BOOK:
1. Mechatronics by W Bolton Pearson Education
REFERENCES:
- Dan Necsulescu Mechatronics published by Pearson Education (Singapore) Pvt. Ltd., Indian Branch, 482 FIE, Patparganj, Delhi India.
- Book by H M T Limited, Mechatronics Tata McGraw Hill Publishing Company Limited, New Delhi.
3. Mechatronics Principles, Concepts & Applications by Nitaigour P Mahalik published by TMH.
4. Introduction to Mechatronics & Measurement Systems by Alciatore et. al TMH
Course Name : WORKSHOP PROJECT
Course Code : TA 100
Credits : 2 (will be credited 2nd / 3rd semester)
Pr-req. : ----
The students shall be given individual / team project work during the summer / winter vacation involving the use of manufacturing skills learnt by them during the course work. The project shall be of four weeks duration.
The grade earned by the students during the summer / winter training shall be entered in 2nd semester / 3rd semester for summer / winter training respectively