Electrical and Computer Engineering
Head and Roanoke Electric Steel Professor in Engineering: Luke Lester
University Distinguished Professor: F. C. Lee and D. Boroyevich
University Distinguished Professor Emeritus: A. G. Phadke
Alumni Distinguished Professor Emeritus: C. W. Bostian
Bradley Professor Emeritus of Communications: W. H. Tranter
Bradley Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Electromagnetics: G. S. Brown
Clayton Ayre Professor: A. Wang
Joseph R. Loring Professor in ECE: S. Rahman
Willis G. Worcester Professor in ECE: J. H. Reed
Thomas Phillips Professor Emeritus: W. L. Stutzman
Virginia Microelectronics Consortium Professor: M. Agah
James S. Tucker Professor in ECE: J. S. Lai
Grant A. Dove Professor: Yue (Joseph) Wang
Professor Emeritus: J. R. Armstrong, I. M. Besieris, W. A. Davis, D. A. deWolf, F. G. Gray, T. Pratt, K. Ramu, S. M. Riad, F. W. Stephenson, J. S. Thorp, and H. F. VanLandingham
Associate Professor Emeritus: R. W. Conners, W. R. Cyre, R. L. Moose, and C. E. Nunnally
Professors: M. Agah, P. Ampadu, P. M. Athanas, S. M. Bailey, A. A. Beex, R. P. Broadwater, R. M. Buehrer, C. R. Clauer, C. Clancy, G.D. Earle, D. S. Ha, Y. T. Hou, M. S. Hsiao, M. T. Jones, G. Q. Lu, T. L. Martin, T. Mayer, S. F. Midkiff, L. M. Mili, K. Ngo, J-M. Park, P. Plassmann, T. C. Poon, S. Raman, B. Ravindran, A. Safaai-Jazi, W. A. Scales, P. Schaumont, D. J. Stilwell, Y. Xu, and J. Xuan
Associate Professors: A. L. Abbott, W. T. Baumann, R. Burgos, V. A. Centeno, S. W. Ellingson, L. J. Guido, J. De La Ree Lopez, M. Hudait, L. Liu, A. B. MacKenzie, M. Manteghi, L. Nazhandali, W. G. Odendaal, C. D. Patterson, J. Paul, J. M. Ruohoniemi, W. Saad, C. Wang, C. L. Wyatt, and Y. Yang
Collegiate Associate Professor: J. Mayer
Assistant Professors: T. Chantem, D. Bhatra, H. Dhillon, R. Gerdes, M. Ghassemi, X. Jia, K.J. Koh, Q. Li, Ch. Min, R. J. Moran, D. Parikh, R. Williams, Yang(Cindy) Yi, G. Yu, H. Zeng, W. Zhou, Yizheng Zhu, and Yunhui Zhu
Assistant Professor of PracticeL P. Han
Professors of Practice: K. Giles, G. Manzo, and K. R. Schulz
Advanced Instructors: J. Thweatt
Instructors: A. Ball, K. Cooper, and D. McPherson
Web: www.ece.vt.edu
Overview
The Bradley Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering offers bachelor of science degrees in electrical engineering (EE) and computer engineering (CPE). The difference between these two degrees is one of emphasis. Electrical engineering concentrates on physical processes and design in communications and networking; energy and power electronics systems; controls, robotics, and autonomy; micro- and nanoelectronics; space systems; RF and microwaves; and photonics. Computer engineering emphasizes the development of computer hardware and associated technical areas, such as networks and cybersecurity; machine learning; chip-scale integration; controls, robotics and autonomy; and software systems. In addition to undergraduate degrees, the department also offers M.S., M.Eng., and Ph.D. programs in both EE and CPE. An accelerated undergraduate/graduate (UG/G) program is available for qualified undergraduates.
Electrical engineers (EEs) and computer engineers (CPEs) create important and exciting technologies, systems and applications that make the world a better place for all of us. EEs and CPEs are inventing new ways to generate, distribute and use electric power that are more efficient, more sustainable and friendlier to the environment. For example, wider use of solar energy relies on improved photovoltaic devices, power electronics for energy conversion, and power grids. Some of our most critical global infrastructures, including the Internet, mobile voice and data networks, and the electric power grid are designed by EEs and CPEs. And, EEs and CPEs design sensors and embedded systems to monitor intelligent buildings and transportation systems. Applying innovative technologies to biology and the healthcare industry, EEs and CPEs create techniques for medical imaging, micro-electromechanical systems for medical diagnostics, implantable devices for health monitoring and drug delivery, and information systems to improve healthcare delivery. To meet the challenge of cybersecurity, EEs and CPEs design hardware and software for cryptographic algorithms and develop methods to ensure private communications through the Internet and wireless devices. They design new devices and systems for high-performance computing and networking. They build satellites and instruments to improve communications and enhance our knowledge of space and the Earth. And, EEs and CPEs enhance our leisure time by creating new ways to listen to music, watch movies, play games, communicate with friends, and build social networks.
Students in the Bradley Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering learn from faculty who work at the cutting-edge of engineering research and bring the excitement of their discoveries to the classroom. Engineers want to make things that work. EE and CPE students get hands-on opportunities to build components and systems from the beginning of their studies. In the freshman year, students explore applications of electrical and computer engineering, such as medical imaging and cryptography. In the sophomore year, EE and CPE students use personal, portable equipment and components to build and explore simple digital and analog electronic systems, which become more complex each semester. Laboratories and team projects throughout the curriculum contribute to an enriching hands-on, minds-on learning experience. By their senior year, students have the option of participating in a team-based, industry-sponsored design project that spans two semesters in which they solve real-world engineering problems while learning project management and team-building skills.
Electrical engineering and computer engineering are dynamic and fast changing fields that drive innovation and solutions to global challenges. The ECE faculty has created a program of study that provides each graduate with a firm foundation in mathematics, physics, and engineering principles, and with broad experience in different areas of EE and CPE. The program enables our graduates to excel in their EE and CPE specialties, while gaining the tools to adapt to the technical changes and career opportunities they will experience in the future. EE and CPE students develop effective communication and teamwork skills and gain knowledge of ethics, all of which are essential to professional success. EE and CPE graduates are prepared to pursue careers in industry and government, advanced graduate work in EE and CPE, and other advanced professional degrees.
ECE seeks to develop tomorrow's engineering and technical leaders and innovators. Students can enhance their undergraduate experience by participating in multidisciplinary team projects, cooperative education and internships, research experiences for undergraduates, study abroad programs, dual degree and minor programs in other fields, and mentoring programs. The Cooperative Education (co-op) and Internship Program is highly recommended, as is participation in professional societies, including the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), Eta Kappa Nu (HKN) and the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). ECE works with the Ted and Karyn Hume Center for National Security and Technology to develop future leaders for the US government. ECE offers many scholarships for academic excellence, leadership and service, as well as for participation in various special academic programs.
Degree Requirements
The graduation requirements in effect at the time of graduation apply. When choosing the degree requirements information, always choose the year of your expected date of graduation. Requirements for graduation are referred to via university publications as "Checksheets". The number of credit hours required for degree completion varies among curricula. Students must satisfactorily complete all requirements and university obligations for degree completion.
The university reserves the right to modify requirements in a degree program. However, the university will not alter degree requirements less than two years from the expected graduation year unless there is a transition plan for students already in the degree program.
Please visit the University Registrar website at http://registrar.vt.edu/graduation-multi-brief/index1.html for degree requirements.
Undergraduate Course Descriptions (ECE)
1574: OBJECT-ORIENTED ENGINEERING PROBLEM SOLVING WITH C++
Problem solving techniques for engineering problems,
primarily from the fields of electrical and computer
engineering; procedural and object-oriented program
development, editing, compiling, linking, and debugging
using the C++ programming language. Must have C- or better
in the prerequisites.
Pre: (ENGE 1024 or ENGE 1215), (MATH 1205 or MATH 1205H or MATH 1225).
(2H,2L,3C)
2004: ELECTRIC CIRCUIT ANALYSIS
Introduction to the basic laws and techniques for the
analysis of electric circuits. Calculation of the response
of circuits with resistors, independent sources, controlled
sources, and operational amplifiers. The transient analysis
of basic circuits with R, L, and C components. An
introduction to AC analysis and phasors.
Pre: ENGE 1104 or ENGE 1204 or ENGE 1114 or ENGE 1216.
Co: MATH 2214.
(3H,3C)
2014: ENGINEERING PROFESSIONALISM IN ECE
Overview of the nature and scope of the electrical and
computer engineering profession. Working in a diverse
team environment; professional and ethical responsibility;
the impact of engineering solutions in a global and
societal context; contemporary issues; and life-long
learning. Sophomore standing required. Co: 2004 or
2504.
(2H,2C)
2054: APPLIED ELECTRICAL THEORY
For students in the Mechanical Engineering program or by
permission of the ECE Department. Fundamentals of electric
circuits; circuit laws and network theorems, operational
amplifiers, energy storage elements, response of first and
second order systems, AC steady state analysis.
Construction, analysis, and characterization of circuits
with student-owned Lab-in-a-Box system.
Pre: PHYS 2306.
Co: MATH 2214.
(2H,2L,3C)
2074: ELECTRIC CIRCUIT ANALYSIS LABORATORY
Construction, analysis, and characterization of circuits
with student-owned Lab-in-a-Box system. Experiments
include: characterization of breadboard backplane
wiring; component tolerances; Ohm's law; Kirchoff's
laws; series and parallel resistors; voltage and current
dividers; delta-wye configurations; mesh-current and node-
voltage analysis; superposition and Thevenin equivalents;
inverting and non-inverting amplifier circuits; series RC
and RL circuits; discharging LEDs and integrator and
differentiator circuits. Introductory design experiments
include a simple voltmeter and a flashing traffic arrow.
Must have a C- or better in prerequisites.
Pre: ENGE 1104 or ENGE 1204 or ENGE 1216.
Co: 2004, MATH 2214.
(3L,1C)
2164 (AOE 2664): EXPLORATION OF THE SPACE ENVIRONMENT
This introductory course covers a broad range of scientific,
engineering, and societal aspects associated with the
exploration and technological exploitation of space.
Topics covered include: science of the space environment;
space weather hazards and societal impacts; orbital
mechanics and rocket propulsion; spacecraft subsystems;
applications of space-based technologies.
(3H,3C)
2204: ELECTRONICS
Introduction to basic electronic devices including diodes
and transistors and their operating principles. Analysis
of electronic circuits operating under dc bias and switching
conditions. Applications of devices in digital electronic
circuits. Must have a C- or better in prerequisite.
Pre: 2004.
(3H,3C)
2274: ELECTRONIC NETWORKS LABORATORY I
Principles of operation of electrical and electronic test
equipment and applications to measurement of circuit
parameters. Transient and steady state response of RLC
networks. Applications of laws and theories of circuits.
Design, prototyping, and testing of electronic devices and
circuits. Must have C- or better in prerequisite.
Pre: 2074.
Co: 2204.
(3L,1C)
2500: COMPUTER ORGANIZATION AND ARCHITECTURE
Computer organization and architecture: instruction
formats and construction; addressing modes;
memory hierarchy (cache, main memory and secondary memory)
operation and performance; simple pipelines; basic
performance analysis; simple OS functions, particularly as
they relate to hardware; virtual memory; computer I/O
concepts, including interrupt and DMA mechanisms;
intercomputer communication concepts.
Must have C- or better in prerequisite 2504.
Pre: 2504.
(3H,3C)
2504: INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTER ENGINEERING
An introduction to the design and operation of digital
computers, including information representation, logic
design, integrated circuits, register transfer description,
hardware description languages, basic computer organization
and assembly-level programming. The relationship between
software and hardware is stressed. This course duplicates
material in CS2504 and may not be taken for credit towards
graduation if CS2504 is also taken.
Pre: 1574.
(3H,3C)
2524: INTRODUCTION TO UNIX FOR ENGINEERS
Fundamental concepts of operating systems, emphasizing
a hands-on introduction to UNIX. User interfaces, UNIX
shell commands, the UNIX file system, task management,
common system utilities, the UNIX programming environment.
Students gain experience with system installation and
administration. Duplicates CS 2204. Must have C-
or better in prerequisite 2574.
Pre: 2574.
(2H,2C)
2534: MICROCONTROLLER PROGRAMMING AND INTERFACING
Operation and applications of microcontrollers, including
system level organization, analysis of specific
processors, and software and hardware interface
design.
Pre: 2504.
(3H,3L,4C)
2574: DATA STRUCTURES AND ALGORITHMS
Introduces fundamental data structures, algorithms, and
abstract data types. Main topics include data structures
such as arrays, linked lists, stacks, queues, graphs, and
trees, and algorithms such as those that are used for list
manipulation, graph searches, sorting, searching, and tree
traversals. Implementation of data structures and algorithms
in C++. C- or better in prerequisites.
Pre: 1574.
(3H,3C)
2704: SIGNALS AND SYSTEMS
Analysis techniques for signals and systems. Signal
representation, including Fourier and LaPlace transforms.
System definitions and properties, such as linearity,
causality, time invariance, and stability. Use of
convolution, transfer functions and frequency response to
determine system response. Applications to circuit
analysis. Hands-on projects to illustrate and integrate the
various concepts. C- or better in prerequisites.
Pre: (2004 or 2004H), 2074, (MATH 2214 or MATH 2214H).
(3H,3C)
2964: FIELD STUDY
Variable credit course.
2974: INDEPENDENT STUDY
A minimum GPA of 2.0 in all ECE courses is required for
enrollment.
Variable credit course.
2984: SPECIAL STUDY
Variable credit course.
3004: AC CIRCUIT ANALYSIS
Application of the basic laws and techniques of circuit
analysis to AC circuits. Complex numbers and algebra with
an emphasis on phasor representation of circuits.
Calculation of the frequency response of circuits with R,
L, and C components, independent sources, controlled
sources, and operational amplifiers. Analysis of AC
steady-state circuits and determination of average power.
Magnetically coupled circuits. Laplace and Fourier
transforms. Representation of circuits by two-port models.
C- or better in prerequisites.
Pre: 2704.
(3H,3C)
3054: ELECTRICAL THEORY
For students in curricula other than ECE. Fundamentals of
electric circuits: circuit laws and network theorems,
operational amplifiers, energy storage elements, response of
first and second order systems. AC steady state analysis.
Pre: PHYS 2306.
Co: MATH 2214.
(3H,3C)
3074: AC CIRCUIT ANALYSIS LABORATORY
Construction, analysis, and characterization of circuits
with student-owned Lab-in-a-Box system. Experiments
include: sinusoids and phasors including impedance,
admittance, and Kirchhoff's laws; sinusoidal steady-
state including node and mesh analysis, Thevenin and
Norton equivalent, and op amps; ac power analysis
including instantaneous and average power, power
factor, and complex power; magnetically coupled circuits
including mutual inductance, energy in a coupled circuit,
and transformers; frequency response including transfer
functions, Bode plots, resonance, and passive and
active filters; and two-port circuits. A C- or better is
required for all prerequisites.
Pre: 2074.
Co: 3004.
(3L,1C)
3104: INTRODUCTION TO SPACE SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGIES
Introduction to technologies and computational tools used in
space-based applications, including techniques for exploring
the planets and the near-Earth geospace environment.
Overview of orbits, spacecraft, control of spacecraft,
electromechanical system requirements for space-based
applications, and space environment interactions with
spacecraft systems. Understanding the space environment
and the engineering approaches required to operate it. A C-
or better is required in prerequisites.
Pre: 2204, 3105.
(3H,3C)
3105-3106: ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS
Maxwell's equations and their application to engineering
problems. 3105: transmission lines, electrostatics,
magnetostatics. 3106: time-varying fields, Maxwell's
Equations, waves, propagation, guided waves, radiation.
C- or better in prerequisites.
Pre: PHYS 2306, (MATH 2224 or MATH 2224H or MATH 2204 or MATH 2204H), (ECE 2004 or ECE 2004H) for 3105; 3105 for 3106.
(3H,3C)
3134: INTRODUCTION TO OPTOELECTRONICS
Fundamental principles of optoelectronics. The concept of
photons, spontaneous emission, and simulated emission. Rate
equation analysis of light emitting diodes and lasers.
Operation principles and device characteristics of
photodetectors and solar cells. Advanced topics such as
quantum well and emerging materials.
Pre: 3105.
(3H,3C)
3154: SPACE SYSTEMS LAB
Introduction to systems and techniques used in electrical
engineering design for space-based applications. Design,
fabricate, and test an electronic system following accepted
NASA and industry standards, including functional bench-top
tests, thermal cycle testing, shake and vibration tests, and
day in the life testing. Periodic formal reports will
document design approaches and test results.
Pre: 3105.
Co: 3104.
(3L,1C)
3174: OPTOELECTRONICS LAB
Characterization of optoelectronic devices such as light
emitting diodes, semiconductor lasers, and photodetectors.
Characterization and analysis of optical interference, wave
propogation in optical fibers, and optical diffraction.
Construction of simple optical imaging systems using lenses
and bulk optics.
Pre: 2274.
Co: 3134.
(3L,1C)
3204: ANALOG ELECTRONICS
Small signal modeling of transistors. Basic architecture
and functionality of linear amplifiers including transistor
biasing circuits, current sources, differential amplifier,
common emitter amplifier, common source amplifier,
emitter follower, source follower, common base amplifier,
and common gate amplifier. Frequency response of single
stage and multistage amplifiers.
Pre: 2204, 2704.
Co: 3274.
(3H,3C)
3254: INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS
Fundamentals of electronics, including basic device
principles. Include digital, operational amplifier, and
analog analysis for industrial applications and magnetic
circuits. For students in the Mechanical Engineering
program or by permission of the ECE Department.
Pre: 2054.
(3H,3C)
3274: ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS LABORATORY II
Design, build, and test amplifiers and other electronic
circuits to meet specifications. Bipolar and field-effect
transistors, diodes, integrated circuits such as operational
amplifiers, and passive components are used. Gain,
bandwidth, input and output impedance, positive and
negative feedback, and circuit stability are implemented
in the designs. Digital oscilloscopes, ammeters,
voltmeters, function generators, and power supplies are
used. A grade of C- or better is required in all
pre-requisite courses.
Pre: 2274, 3074.
Co: 3204.
(3L,1C)
3304: INTRODUCTION TO POWER SYSTEMS
Basic concepts of AC systems, single-phase and three-phase
networks, electric power generation, transformers,
transmission lines, electric machinery and the use of
power. Pre-requisite 3004 with C- or better.
Pre: 3004.
(3H,3C)
3354: ELECTRIC POWER ENGINEERING LABORATORY
Laboratory experiments based on principles of electric
power engineering.
Co: 3304.
(3L,1C)
3544: DIGITAL DESIGN I
Design techniques for combinational and sequential logic.
Design of digital circuits using standard integrated circuit
chips and programmable logic devices. Computer
simulation will be used to validate designs. Prototypes
will be constructed to demonstrate design functionality.
Pre: 2504.
(3H,3L,4C)
3574: APPLIED SOFTWARE DESIGN
An introduction to applied software design methods for use
in the writing of efficient, reusable, and modular C++
programs. Introduces the use of the following: classes,
inheritance, and polymorphism; design patterns; high-level
programming techniques using libraries, generics, and
containers; widgets, models, and views; software
frameworks for embedded systems; and advanced techniques
ranging from multi-threading to reflective programming.
Pre: 2574.
(3H,3C)
3604: INTRODUCTION TO RF & MICROWAVE ENGINEERING
Introduction to circuits, devices, and systems for radio
frequency (RF) and microwave applications. Fundamentals
of antennas, propagation, small signal and power amplifiers,
frequency conversion, and frequency synthesis. Tools and
concepts including s-parameters, design impedence matching,
dynamic range, noise figure, and link budget.
Pre: 2004, 3105.
(3H,3C)
3614: INTRODUCTION TO COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
Analysis and design of analog and digital
communication systems based on Fourier analysis.
Topics include linear systems and filtering, power and
energy spectral density, basic analog modulation techniques,
quantization of analog signals, line coding, pulse
shaping, and transmitter and receiver design concepts.
Applications include AM and FM radio, television,
digital communications, and frequency-division and
time-division multiplexing.
Pre: 2704, STAT 4714.
(3H,3C)
3704: CONTINUOUS AND DISCRETE SYSTEM THEORY
Continuous- and discrete-time system theory. Block
diagrams, feedback, and stability theory. System analysis
with Bode diagrams. Discrete-time stability, difference
equations, Z-transforms, transfer functions, Fourier
transforms, and frequency response. Sampling of continuous
systems and an introduction to digital filtering. Hands-on
projects to illustrate and integrate the various continuous-
and discrete-time concepts and tools.
Pre: 2704.
(3H,3C)
3964: FIELD STUDY
Variable credit course.
3974: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
3984: SPECIAL STUDY
Variable credit course.
4104: MICROWAVE AND RF ENGINEERING
Passive and active Radio Frequency and microwave
components and circuits for wireless communications;
transmission-line theory; planar transmission-lines and
waveguides; S-parameters; resonators; power dividers and
couplers; microwave filters; sources, detectors, and active
devices; modern RF & microwave CAD; measurement techniques.
C- or better in prerequisites.
Pre: 3106, 3204, 2014.
(3H,3L,4C)
4114: ANTENNAS
Antenna fundamentals, analysis and design principles, and a
survey of antenna types including: arrays, wire antennas,
broadband antennas, and aperture antennas.
Pre: 3106, 2014.
(3H,3C)
4124: RADIO WAVE PROPAGATION
Behavior of radiated electromagnetic waves in terrestrial,
atmosphere, space, and urban environments; path,
frequency and antenna selection for practical
communication systems; propagation prediction.
Pre: 3106.
(3H,3C)
4134: FIBER OPTICS APPLICATIONS
Theory of optical fiber waveguide propagation and design
applications in communication and sensing systems.
Pre: 3106.
(3H,3C)
4144: INTRODUCTION TO OPTICAL INFORMATION PROCESSING
Modern wave optics. The application of Fourier transforms
to image analysis, optical spatial filtering, and image
processing.
Pre: 3106.
(3H,3C)
4154: INTRODUCTION TO SPACE WEATHER
The space environment from the Sun to the Earth's upper
atmosphere and the practical consequences (space weather)
of this environment on the modern technologies and human
health. Concepts in space plasma physics. Examples of
observations and data utilized to illustrate the environment
and its dynamic variability.
Pre: 3106.
(3H,3C)
4164: INTRODUCTION TO GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM (GPS) THEORY AND DESIGN
Fundamental theory and applications of radio navigation with
the Global Positioning System GPS. Satellite orbit theory,
GPS signal structure and theory, point positioning with
pseudoranges and carrier phases, selective availability,
dilution of precision, differential GPS, atmospheric
effects on GPS signals.
Pre: 3106 or AOE 4134, ECE 2014.
(3H,3L,4C)
4194: ENGINEERING PRINCIPLES OF REMOTE SENSING
Physical principles involved in remote sensing of Earth's
environment and their implementation in engineering systems:
fundamentals of electromagnetic wave propagation, scattering
by matter, effects of propagation media, passive and active
systems, remote sensing platforms, data processing, systems
integration, and introductory concepts important for the
design and analysis of remote sensing engineering systems.
Pre: 3106.
(3H,3C)
4205-4206: ELECTRONIC CIRCUIT DESIGN
Stability and response of feedback amplifier, wideband
amplifiers, operational amplifier characteristics,
waveform generators and wave shaping, nonlinear circuit
applications, signal generators, and photolithography.
Design of analog electronic circuits, circuit simulation,
response characterization, and printed circuit
construction. C- or better in prerequisites.
Pre: 3204 for 4205; 4205, 2014 for 4206.
(3H,3C)
4214: SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICE FUNDAMENTALS
Fundamental semiconductor device physics associated with
semiconductor materials and devices with an in-depth
coverage of p-n and Schottky diodes, bipolar junction
transistors and metal-oxide semiconductor and junction
field effect transistors.
Pre: 2204 or MSE 3204 or PHYS 3455.
(3H,3C)
4220: ANALOG INTEGRATED CIRCUIT DESIGN
Integrated circuit design in silicon bipolar, MOS
(Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor), and BiCMOS
(Bipolar Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor)
technologies for communications, sensor, instrumentation,
data conversion, and power management applications. Models
for active devices in bipolar and MOS technologies;
transistor-level amplifiers and output stages (amplifier
classifications); transistor-level current mirrors and
voltage reference generators, transistor-level operational
amplifiers; transistor-level feedback circuits; noise and
linearity; layout and simulation of analog intergrated
circuits with modern VLSI CAD (Very Large Scale Integration-
Computer Aided Design) software.
Pre: 3204.
(3H,3C)
4224: POWER ELECTRONICS
Power devices and switching power converters including
rectifiers and inverters; design of electronic power
processing circuits and their control as applied to
computer, telecommunication, transportation, and industrial
systems. A C- or better is required in all prerequisites.
Pre: 3204, 2014.
(3H,3C)
4234 (MSE 4234): SEMICONDUCTOR PROCESSING
Manufacturing practices used in silicon integrated circuit
fabrication and the underlying scientific basis for these
process technologies. Physical models are developed to
explain basic fabrication steps, such as substrate growth,
thermal oxidation, dopant diffusion, ion implantation, thin
film deposition, etching, and lithography. The overall CMOS
integrated circuit process flow is described within the
context of these physical models.
Pre: 2204 or 3054.
(3H,3C)
4244: INTERMEDIATE SEMICONDUCTOR PROCESSING LABORATORY
Design, layout, fabricate, and characterize microelectronic
devices. Analyze test results to verify performance to the
predetermined specifications. Required oral and written
reports. A C- or higher is required in all pre-requisite
courses.
Pre: (4234 or MSE 4234), ECE 2014.
(1H,6L,3C)
4284: POWER ELECTRONICS LABORATORY
Design and testing of electronic power processing systems
for commercial and aerospace applications.
Co: 4224.
(3L,1C)
4304: DESIGN IN POWER ENGINEERING
A study of the principles in electric power engineering.
Expert systems, superconductivity, DC transmission,
motor control, system protection, high performance motors,
solar energy, microcomputer applications, machine design,
computer-aided design, digital relaying and space station
application.
Pre: 3304, 2014.
(3H,3C)
4334: POWER SYSTEM ANALYSIS AND CONTROL
Development of methods for power analysis and control.
An analysis and design of systems for steady state,
transient, and dynamic conditions. Digital solutions
emphasized.
Pre: 3304.
(3H,3C)
4344: ELECTRIC POWER QUALITY FOR THE DIGITAL ECONOMY
Causes, consequences and solutions of power quality
problems that affect the operation of computerized processes
and electronic systems. Industry standards, monitoring
techniques and economic consideration of power quality
issues.
Pre: 3304.
(3H,3C)
4354: POWER SYSTEM PROTECTION
Protection of power apparatus and systems. Fuses. Voltage
and current transducers. Relays. Coordination of relays.
Pilot channels. Grounding practices. Surge phenomena.
Insulation coordination.
Pre: 4334.
(3H,3C)
4364: ALTERNATE ENERGY SYSTEMS
Electric energy from alternative energy sources including
solar, wind, hydro, biomass, geothermal and ocean.
Characteristics of direct conversion, electromechanical
conversion, and storage devices used in alternative energy
systems. Power system issues associated with
integration of small scale energy sources into the
electricity grid.
Pre: STAT 4714.
(3H,3C)
4374: POWER SYSTEM PROTECTION LABORATORY
Experimental verification of principles and practice of
protective relaying. Experiments and design projects to
demonstrate the principles and techniques of industrial
power system design. Fuses, time overcurrent, and
instantaneous relays. Differential relaying for
transformers. Distance relaying. Current and voltage
transformers.
Pre: 4334.
Co: 4354.
(3L,1C)
4405-4406: CONTROL SYSTEMS
4405: Introduction to the design of feedback
compensation to improve the transient and steady-state
performance of systems. Course covers modeling
techniques, root locus analysis and design, Nyquist
criterion, and frequency domain compensation.
Pre: 3704 for 4405; 4405 for 4406.
(3H,3C)
4424 (CS 4824): MACHINE LEARNING
Algorithms and principles involved in machine learning;
focus on perception problems arising in computer vision,
natural language processing and robotics; fundamentals
of representing uncertainty, learning from data, supervised
learning, ensemble methods, unsupervised learning,
structured models, learning theory and reinforcement
learning; design and analysis of machine perception
systems; design and implementation of a technical project
applied to real-world datasets (images, text, robotics). A
grade of C- or better in prerequisites.
Pre: 2574, (STAT 4604 or STAT 4705 or STAT 4714).
(3H,3C)
4504 (CS 4504): COMPUTER ORGANIZATION
Overview of the structure, elements and analysis of modern
enterprise computers. Performance evaluation of commercial
computing. Past and emerging technology trends. Impact of
parallelism at multiple levels of computer architecture.
Memory and storage. Fundamental computer system
descriptions, Amdahl's Law, Flynn's Taxonomy. A grade of
C or better required in prerequisites.
Pre: 2504 or CS 3214.
(3H,3C)
4514: DIGITAL DESIGN II
Advanced digital design techniques for developing complex
digital circuits. Emphasis on system-level concepts and
high-level design representations while meeting design
constraints such as performance, power, and area.
Methods presented that are appropriate for use with
automated synthesis systems. Commercial hardware
description language simulation and synthesis tools used
for designing a series of increasingly complex digital
systems, and implementing those systems using Field
Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs).
Pre: 3544.
(3H,3L,4C)
4520: DIGITAL AND MIXED-SIGNAL SYSTEM TESTING AND TESTABLE DESIGN
Various topics on testing and testable design for digital
and mixed-signal systems are studied: fault modeling, logic
and fault simulation, fault modeling, automatic test pattern
generation, deterministic ATPG, simulation-based ATPG, delay
fault testing, design for testability, built-in-self-test
and fault diagnosis.
Pre: 2574, (3504 or 3544).
(3H,3C)
4524: ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND ENGINEERING APPLICATIONS
Problem solving methods; problem spaces; search techniques;
knowledge representation; programming languages for AI;
games; predicate logic; knowledge-based systems; machine
learning; planning techniques; reactive systems; artificial
neural networks; natural language understanding; computer
vision; robotics.
Pre: 2574, STAT 4714.
(3H,3L,4C)
4525-4526: VIDEO GAME DESIGN AND ENG
4525: Fundamental concepts in the development and
engineering of modern 2-D and 3-D real-time interactive
computer video games. Game design and engineering
principles, game architecture, game mechanics and
interaction, computer graphics, strategy, artificial
intelligence (AI), optimization, play testing and fuzzy
logic are included.
4526: Advanced concepts in the development and
engineering of modern 2-D and 3-D real-time interactive
computer video systems. Topics include non-player character
(NPC) behavior learning, search and planning, player
modeling, procedural content generation, AI-assisted game
design.
Pre: 3574 for 4525; 4525 for 4526.
(3H,3C)
4530: HARDWARE-SOFTWARE CODESIGN
An introduction to the design of mixed hardware-
software systems, focusing on common
underlying modeling concepts, the design
of hardware-software interfaces, and the
trade-offs between hardware and software
components. Students will use simulation tools
to conduct experiments with mixed hardware-
software systems in the area of embedded systems.
Pre: (3504 or 3544), 2534.
(3H,3C)
4534: EMBEDDED SYSTEM DESIGN
Introduction to the design of embedded computer systems;
design, implementation, and analysis of embedded computer
hardware and software; design, implementation, and debugging
of complex software applications on embedded systems; and
fundamentals of real-time operating systems for embedded
computers. Semester-long design project including written
and oral presentations. C- or better required in
pre-requisites.
Pre: 3574, 2534, 2014.
(3H,3L,4C)
4540: VLSI CIRCUIT DESIGN
Introduction to the design and layout of Very Large Scale
Integrated Circuits (VLSI). Emphasis is placed on digital
CMOS circuits. Static and dynamic properties of MOSFET
devices, along with integrated circuit fabrication are
examined. Computer-aided design tools are used to
produce working integrated circuit designs.
Pre: 2204, 2504.
(3H,3C)
4550: REAL-TIME SYSTEMS
Theory, algorithmic and protocol concepts, mechanisms, and
implementations of real-time computer systems. Introduction
to real-time systems, real-time scheduling, real-time
synchronization, real-time operating system kernels, and
real-time resource management algorithms (e.g., scheduling,
synchronization), their implementations in production
operating system kernels, experimental studies of those
implementations, and real-time applicaiton development.
Pre: 4534 or CS 3214.
(3H,3C)
4554: INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTER VISION
Techniques for automated analysis of images and videos.
Image formation, detecting features in images, segmenting
or grouping image regions and image features, multiple view
geometry, object instance and category recognition in images
and video processing.
Pre: 3574, (STAT 4705 or STAT 4714).
(3H,3C)
4560: COMPUTER AND NETWORK SECURITY FUNDAMENTALS
This course introduces fundamental security principles
and real-world applications of Internet and computer
security. Topics covered in the course include legal and
privacy issues, risk analysis, attack and intrusion
detection concepts, system log analysis, intrusion
detection and packet filtering techniques, computer
security models, computer forensics, and
distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks. Must
have C- or better in ECE 4564 or CS 3214.
Pre: 4564 or CS 3214.
(3H,3C)
4564: NETWORK APPLICATION DESIGN
Application program interface and network transport services
including User Datagram Protocol and Transmission Control
Protocol from the Internet Protocol suite. Client-server
organization and design of synchronous, asynchronous, and
multithreaded client and server applications. Design,
implementation, and testing techniques to improve
robustness and performance. Partially duplicates
CS 4254 and credit will not be allowed for both.
Pre: (2504, 2574).
(3H,3C)
4570 (CS 4570): WIRELESS NETWORKS AND MOBILE SYSTEMS
Multidisciplinary, project-oriented design course that
considers aspects of wireless and mobile systems including
wireless networks and link protocols, mobile networking
including support for the Internet Protocol suite, mobile
middleware, and mobile applications. Students complete
multiple experiments and design projects.
Pre: 4564.
(3H,3C)
4574: LARGE-SCALE SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT FOR ENGINEERING SYSTEMS
Large-scale software implementations of the hierarchy of
engineering analysis, design, and decision evaluation.
Computer-aided engineering programs with state-of-the-art
computer tools and methods. Operator overloading, dynamic
polymorphism, graphical user interfaces, generic
programming, dynamic link libraries, and multiple threads.
Pre: 3574.
(3H,3C)
4580: DIGITAL IMAGE PROCESSING
This course provides an introduction to basic concepts,
methodologies and algorithms of digital image processing
focusing on the two major problems concerned with digital
images: (1) image analysis and object restoration for easier
interpretation of images, and (2) image analysis and object
recognition. Some advanced image processing techniques
(e.g., wavelet and multiresolution processing) will also be
studied in this course. The primary goal of this course is
to lay a solid foundation for students to study advanced
image analysis topics such as computer vision systems,
biomedical image analysis, and multimedia processing &
retrieval.
(3H,3C)
4605-4606: RADIO ENGINEERING
Wireless application circuit design for gain and filter
control at radio frequencies to interface the baseband
processing systems and the antennas of communication
systems. 4605: Design of radio transmitter and receiver
circuits using scattering-parameter methods. Circuits
include oscillators, radio frequency amplifiers and matching
networks, mixers and detectors. 4606: Design of amplitude,
frequency, and pulse-modulated communication systems,
including modulators, detectors, and the effects of noise.
Design basics and guidelines for phase-locked loops and
several power amplifier configurations.
Pre: 3105, 3204, 3614, 2014 for 4605; 4605 for 4606.
(3H,3C)
4614: TELECOMMUNICATION NETWORKS
An introduction and overview of the architecture,
technology, operation, and application of telecommunication
networks. Major topics include the convergence of telephone
and computer networks, the layered architecture of computer
networks with emphasis on the Internet, and wireless network
technology and applications.
Pre: 2504, 2704, STAT 4714.
(3H,3C)
4624: DIGITAL SIGNAL PROCESSING AND FILTER DESIGN
Analysis, design, and realization of digital filters.
Discrete Fourier Transform algorithms, digital filter
design procedures, coefficient quantization.
Pre: C or better in 3704
Pre: 3704, 2014.
(3H,3C)
4634: DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS
System level analysis and design for digital communications
systems: analog-to-digital conversion, digital baseband
communications, carrier modulation formats, matched
filters, bandwidth efficiency, receiver design, link
budgets, signal-to-noise ratio, bit error rates in additive-
white-noise Gaussian (AWGN) channels, and
multiple access. Must have a grade of C- or better
in prerequisites 3614 and STAT 4714.
Pre: 3614, STAT 4714.
(3H,3C)
4644: SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS
Theory and practice of satellite communications. Orbits
and launchers, spacecraft, link budgets, modulation, coding,
multiple access techniques, propagation effects, and
earth terminals.
Pre: 3614.
(3H,3C)
4664: ANALOG & DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS LABORATORY
Laboratory experiments which deal with the design and
measurement of analog and digital communication systems.
Concepts include SNR, Modulation Index, PCM, and spread
spectrum.
Pre: 3614.
Co: 4634.
(3L,1C)
4675-4676: RADIO ENGINEERING LABORATORY
Laboratory techniques for radio frequencies including the
design of amplifiers, oscillators, and a single-side-band
receiver. Associated measurements will be used.
Pre: 3106, 3204 for 4675; 4675 for 4676.
Co: 4605 for 4675; 4606 for 4676.
(3L,1C)
4704: PRINCIPLES OF ROBOTICS SYSTEMS
Introduction to the design, analysis, control, and operation
of robotic mechanisms. Introduction to the use of
homogeneous coordinates for kinematics, dynamics, and camera
orientation; sensors and actuators, control, task planning,
vision, and intelligence.
Pre: (2574, STAT 4714) or (ME 3514, STAT 3704).
(3H,3C)
II.
4805-4806: SENIOR DESIGN PROJECT
Industry-like experience emphasizing technical, project
management and personal development. Students working
in teams will complete a sizeable hardware, or hardware
related software project. Proposal process, design concept,
detailed design, implementation and test. Important
"real-life" skills such as teamwork, project management,
communication, ethics and engineering professionalism. Two
semester-long design project. Pre: 4805: Electrical
Engineering majors must have completed the following courses
with a C- or better: 2014, 2534, and any 2 of the following
courses: (3105, 3204, 3304, 3614, 3704). Computer
Engineering majors must have completed the following courses
with a C- or better: 2014, 2534, 3574 and one of the
following courses: (3204 and 3274, 3004 and 3074, 3544,
3614, 3704, 3714, 4424, 4704, CS 3214, CS 4264). 4806:
A C- or better in prerequisite. Pre: 4805.
(3H,3C)
4944: CYBERSECURITY SEMINAR
Theory and practice of cybersecurity problems and
solutions for building secure computing hardware,
software, and networks. Technical, social and legal
aspects of secure systems. Historical and ongoing
attacks that spawn real-world responses. Ongoing
research in cybersecurity defenses. Senior standing.
Pass/Fail only.
Pre: 2504 or CS 2505.
(1H,1C)
4964: FIELD STUDY
Variable credit course.
4974: INDEPENDENT STUDY
A minimum in-major GPA of 2.0 is required for
enrollment.
Variable credit course. X-grade allowed.
4984: SPECIAL STUDY
A minimum in-major GPA of 2.5 is required for
enrollment.
Variable credit course. X-grade allowed.
4994: UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH
A minimum GPA of 2.0 in all ECE courses is required
for enrollment.
Variable credit course. X-grade allowed.