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Syllabus (Core courses) : MTech (RF & Photonics)

EE 540 Advance Electromagnetic Theory & Antennas 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Review of Maxwells Equation and boundary conditions; time harmonic electromagnetic fields;
vector potentials; electromagnetic theorems and concepts: uniqueness, image theory, field
equivalence principle, reciprocity; Plane, cylindrical and spherical waves ;radiation and
scattering ; dipole antennas and arrays, aperture antennas: radiation from open ended rectangular
and circular waveguides, horn antennas, parabolic antennas, slot antennas and arrays, microstrip
antennas.

Texts / References:

1. C. A. Balanis, Advanced Engineering Electromagnetics, John Wiley & Sons, 2009.


2. R. F. Harrington, "Time Harmonic Electromagnetic Fields," McGraw Hill, 2001.
3. C. A. Balanis, "Advanced Engineering Electromagnetics," John Wiley & Sons, 1989.
4. R. E. Collin, "Antenna and radio wave propagation," McGraw Hills, 1985.
5. C. A. Balanis, Antenna Theory: Analysis and Design, John Wiley & Sons, 2009.
6. R. J. Marhefka, A. S. Khan and J. D. Kraus, Antennas and Wave Propagation, Tata
McGraw - Hill Education 2010.
7. M. Sachidananda and A. R. Harish Antennas and Wave Propagation Oxford University
Press, USA 2007.

EE 541 RF Circuits and Systems 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Various parameters of interest in RF systems: NF, IIP3, SFDR etc. ; Scattering parameters of n-
port networks; Various implementation of transmission lines in RF/microwave circuits; Review
of some high speed RF devices; Microwave passive circuits: filters, impedance transformers,
hybrids, isolators etc.; Microwave active circuits: amplifiers, mixers, PLLs; Phase shifters.

Texts / References:

1. D. M. Pozar, Microwave Engineering, 4th Edition, Wiley, 2012.


2. C. Bowick, RF circuit design, 2nd Edition, Newnes, 2007.
3. R. C. Li, RF Circuit Design, 2nd Edition, John Wiley & Sons, 2012.
4. G. Gonzalez, Microwave Transistor Amplifiers: Analysis and Design, 2nd Edition,
Prentice Hall, 1996.
5. T. H. Lee, Planar Microwave Engineering: A Practical Guide to Theory, Measurement,
and Circuits, Cambridge University Press, 2004.
6. D. M. Pozar, Microwave and RF Design of Wireless Systems, John Wiley & Sons,
2001.
EE 542 Fiber Optic Systems 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Review of semiconductor physics - radiative recombination; LEDs, optical cavity, DH and other
lasers; P-I-N and APD detectors; detector noise; Optical fibers - ray and mode theories,
multimode and single-mode fibers, attenuation, dispersion; Gaussian beams; Power coupling,
splices and connectors; Fiber optic transmitter and receiver designs, Link analyses; Fiber optic
sensors; Optical Amplifiers; Solitons in optical fibers.

Texts / References:

1. J. C. Palais, Fiber Optic Communication, Pearson Prentice Hall, 2013.


2. S. O. Kasap, Optoelectronics and Photonics: Principles and Practices, Pearson
Prentice Hall, 2011.
3. J. Powers, An Introduction to Fiber Optic Systems, TMH 2010.
4. G. Keiser, Optical Fiber Communication, Mc Graw Hill 2013.
5. G. Keiser, Optical Communications Essentials, Mc Graw Hill 2013.
6. G. P. Agrawal, Fiber-Optic Communication Systems, John Wiley & Sons, 2011.
7. J. M. Senior, Optical Fiber Communications: Principles and Practice, Pearson 2011.
8. B. P. Pal, "Fundamentals of Fibre Optics in Telecommunication and Sensor Systems,
New Age International Publishers 2006.

EE 543 Optical Systems Laboratory 0-0-3-3

Course Contents:

1. Setting up a fiber optic analog Link


2. Study of losses in optical fiber:- Measurement of propagation loss and bending loss
3. Study of characteristics of fiber optic LED and detector
4. Measurement of numerical aperture
5. Study of frequency modulation and demodulation using fiber optic link
6. Setting up a fiber optic digital link
7. Study of modulation and demodulation of light source by pulse width modulation(PWM)
techniques
8. Study of modulation and demodulation of light source by pulse position modulation
(PPM) techniques.
9. Forming PC to PC communication link using optical fiber and RS-2 32 interface.
10. Setting up a fiber optic voice link

Texts / References:

1. J. B. Saleh and M. Teich, Fundamentals of Photonics, Wiley-Interscience, 2nd edition,


2007.
2. S. O. Kasap, Optoelectronics and Photonics: Principles and Practices, Pearson
Prentice Hall, 2011.
3. G. Keiser, Optical Communications Essentials, Mc Graw Hill 2013.
4. G. P. Agrawal, Fiber-Optic Communication Systems, John Wiley & Sons, 2011.
5. J. M. Senior, Optical Fiber Communications: Principles and Practice, Pearson 2011.

EE 544 Photonics Devices and Circuits 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Optical properties of semiconductor material, Diode lasers: steady state characteristics,


dynamics, and noise, Dielectric waveguides, perturbation and coupled mode theory, Photonic
crystals, metamaterials, plasmonics, Integrated optics and photonic integrated circuits, Optical
modulators, Photodetectors and solar cells Optoelectronic integration.

Texts / References:

1. B. Saleh and M. Teich, "Fundamentals of Photonics," Wiley-Interscience, 2nd edition,


2007.
2. L. A. Coldren, S. W. Corzine and and M. L. Mashanovitch, Diode Lasers and Photonic
Integrated Circuits, 2nd Edition, Wiley, 2012.
3. A. Yariv and P. Yeh, "Photonics," 6th ed, Oxford, 2007.
4. P. Bhattacharya, "Semiconductor Optoelectronics Devices," 2nd Edition, PHI, 2009.
5. R. G. Hunsperger, "Integrated Optics," Springer, 1995.
6. W. T Silfvast, Laser Fundamentals, 2nd Ed, Cambridge, 1993.

EE 545 Computational Electromagnetics 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Review of electromagnetic theory, Introduction to computational electromagnetics, Finite


difference methods: Basic components of finite difference solvers, Wave equation (1-D FDTD
method), Laplaces equation (2-D FDM), 2-D FDTD method, 3-D FDTD method, Perfectly
matched layer, Method of Moments: Integral formulation of electrostatics, Capacitance problem
in unbounded 2D region, Electromagnetic scattering, Scattering on thin wires, Analysis of
microstrip antennas and circuits, EM absorption in human body, Finite element method:
Overview, Laplaces equation (1-D FEM), Boundary condition for FEM, Helmholtz equation (2-
D FEM), Finite element method-boundary element method, FEM/MOM hybrid, Time domain
FEM, Fast multipole method.

Texts / References:

1. K. F. Warnick, "Numerical methods for engineering," SciTech, 2011.


2. A. Bondeson, T. Rylander and P. Ingelstrom, "Computation Electromagnetics," Springer,
2005.
3. M. N. O. Sadiku, "Numerical Techniques in Electromagnetics," CRC Press, 2001.
4. J. M. Jin, "Theory and Computation of Electromagnetic Fields," John Wiley, 2010.
5. D. B. Davidson, "Computational Electromagnetics for RF and Microwave Engineering,"
Cambridge University Press, 2011.

EE 546 Optical Networks 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Optical communications: Introduction to basic optical communications and devices. Optical


multiplexing techniques - Wavelength division multiplexing, Optical frequency division
multiplexing, time division multiplexing, code division multiplexing. Optical Networks:
Conventional optical networks, SONET / SDH, FDDI, IEEE 802.3, DQDB, FCS, HIPPI etc.
Multiple access optical networks, Topologies, Single channel networks, Multichannel networks,
Single hop networks, Multihop networks, Multiaccess protocols for WDM networks, Switched
optical networks. Optical amplification in all-optical networks. All-optical subscriber access
networks. Wavelength routed networks and other special topics, Optical networks management
issues.

Texts / References:

1. R. Ramaswami, K. N. Sivarajan and G. H. Sasaki, Optical Networks: A practical


Perspective, Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, 2010.
2. B. Mukherjee, Optical WDM Networks, Springer, 2006.
3. R. C. Sivamurthy, G. Mohan, WDM Optical Networks: Concepts, Design And
Algorithms, PHI Learning Pvt Ltd, 2002.

EE 547 Antennas, RF and Microwave Laboratory 0-0-3-3


Course Contents:

Experiments in basic microwave measurements; passive and active circuit characterization using
network analyser, spectrum analyser and noise figure meter; PC based automated
microwave/antenas measurements; integration of measurement and design of microwave circuits.
Texts / References:

1. N. B. Carvalho and D. Schreurs, Microwave and Wireless Measurement Techniques,


Cambridge University Press,November 2013.
2. G. H. Bryant, Principles Of Microwave Measurements, IEE Electrical Measurement
Series 5, January 1993.
3. C. A. Balanis, Antenna Theory : Analysis and Design, John Wiley & Sons, 2009..
4. R. J. Marhefka, A. S. Khan, J. D. Kraus, Antennas and Wave Propagation, Tata
McGraw - Hill Education 2010.
Syllabus (Core courses) : MTech (Communication Engineering)

EE 501 Linear Algebra and Optimization 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Linear Algebra - vector spaces, linear independence, bases and dimension, linear maps and
matrices, eigenvalues, invariant subspaces, inner products, norms, orthonormal bases, spectral
theorem, isometries, polar and singular value decomposition, operators on real and complex
vector spaces, characteristic polynomial, minimal polynomial; optimization - sequences and
limits, derivative matrix, level sets and gradients, Taylor series; unconstrained optimization -
necessary and sufficient conditions for optima, convex sets, convex functions, optima of convex
functions, steepest descent, Newton and quasi Newton methods, conjugate direction methods;
constrained optimization - linear and non-linear constraints, equality and inequality constraints,
optimality conditions, constrained convex optimization, projected gradient methods, penalty
methods.

Texts / References:

1. S. Axler, Linear Algebra Done Right, 2nd Edn., Springer, 1997.


2. E. K. P. Chong and S. H. Zak, An Introduction to Optimization, 2nd Edn., Wiley India
Pvt. Ltd., 2010.
3. G. Strang, Linear Algebra and Its Applications, Nelson Engineering, 2007.
4. D. C. Lay, Linear Algebra and Its Applications, 3rd Edition, Pearson, 2002.
5. D. G. Luenberger and Y. Ye, Linear and Nonlinear Programming, 3rd Edn., Springer,
2010.

EE 504 Probability and Stochastic Processes 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Axiomatic definitions of probability; conditional probability, independence and Bayes theorem,


continuity property of probabilities, Borel-Cantelli Lemma; random variable: probability
distribution, density and mass functions, functions of a random variable; expectation,
characteristic and moment-generating functions; Chebyshev, Markov and Chernoff bounds;
jointly distributed random variables: joint distribution and density functions, joint moments,
conditional distributions and expectations, functions of random variables; random vector- mean
vector and covariance matrix, Gaussian random vectors; sequence of random variables: almost
sure and mean-square convergences, convergences in probability and in distribution, laws of
large numbers, central limit theorem; random process: probabilistic structure of a random
process; mean, autocorrelation and autocovariance functions; stationarity - strict- sense
stationary and wide-sense stationary (WSS) processes: time averages and ergodicity; spectral
representation of a real WSS process-power spectral density, cross-power spectral density, linear
time-invariant systems with WSS process as an input- time and frequency domain analyses;
examples of random processes: white noise, Gaussian, Poisson and Markov processes.
Texts / References:

1. H. Stark and J. W. Woods, Probability and Random Processes with Applications to


Signal Processing, Prentice Hall, 2002.
2. A. Papoulis and S. U. Pillai, Probability, Random Variables and Stochastic Processes,
4th Edn., McGraw-Hill, 2002.
3. B. Hajek, An Exploration of Random Processes for Engineers, ECE534 Course Notes,
2011. http://www.ifp.illinois.edu/~hajek/Papers/randomprocesses.html

EE 531 Communication System Theory 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Review of digital modulation schemes and receivers in additive white Gaussian noise channels:
Probability of Error Calculation, CPM, MSK, CPFSK; intersymbol interference; Adaptive
receivers and channel equalization: MMSE, ZFE, FSE; Carrier and clock synchronization;
Effects of phase and timing jitter; Coded modulation schemes: TCM; Digital transmission over
fading channels.

Texts / References:

1. U. Madhow, Fundamentals of Digital Communication, Cambridge University Press,


2008.
2. J. G. Proakis, Digital Communications, 4th Edn., McGraw Hill, 2000.
3. S. Benedetto and E. Biglieri, Principles of Digital Transmission with Wireless
Applications, Kluwer Academic, 1999.
4. R. G. Gallager, Principles of Digital Communication, Cambridge University Press, 2008.

EE 532 Information and Coding Theory 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Information Theory: Entropy, relative entropy and mutual information for discrete ensembles;
Asymptotic equipartition property; Markov chains; Shannons noiseless coding theorem;
Encoding of discrete sources. Discrete memoryless channels; Shannons noisy coding theorem
and converse for discrete channels; Differential entropy; Calculation of channel capacity for
Gaussian channels. Coding Theory: Linear Codes, distance bounds, generator and parity check
matrices, error-syndrome table; Cyclic codes, generator and parity check polynomials; BCH
codes and Reed-Solomon Codes; An overview of convolutional codes; Maximum likelihood
decoding; MAP decoder; Introduction to turbo codes and LDPC codes.

Texts / References:
1. T. M. Cover and J. A. Thomas, Elements of Information Theory, John Wiley, New York,
1991.
2. R. H. Morelos-Zaragoza, The Art of Error Correcting Coding, John Wiley, New York,
2006.
3. R. W. Yeung, A First Course in Information Theory, Kluwer Academic,2002.
4. R. G. Gallager, Information Theory and Reliable Communication, John Wiley, 1968.
5. R. B. Ash, Information Theory, Dover Publications, 1990.
6. D. J. Mackay, Information Theory, Inference and Learning Algorithms, Cambridge
University Press, 2003.
7. W. Ryan and S. Lin, Channel Codes: Classical and Modern, Cambridge University
Press, 2009.

EE 538 Communication System Simulation Lab 0-0-3-3

Course Contents:

Simulation experiments are based on the following topics: Different modulation schemes such as
CPM, MSK, CPFSK, intersymbol interference; Adaptive receivers and channel equalization:
MMSE, ZFE, FSE; Carrier and clock synchronization.

Texts / References:

1. U. Madhow, Fundamentals of Digital Communication, Cambridge University Press,


2008.
2. J. G. Proakis, Digital Communications, 4th edition, McGraw Hill, 2000.
3. S. Benedetto and E. Biglieri, Principles of Digital Transmission with Wireless
Applications, Kluwer Academic, 1999.

EE 533 Wireless Communication 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Overview of current wireless systems and standards; wireless channel models- path loss and
shadowing models; statistical fading models; narrowband and wideband fading models; MIMO
channels. Diversity in wireless communications - Non-coherent and coherent reception; error
probability for uncoded transmission; realization of diversity: time diversity; frequency diversity:
DSSS and OFDM; receiver diversity: SC, EGC and MRC; transmit diversity: space-time codes;
Information theory for wireless communications- Capacity of fading channels: ergodic capacity
and outage capacity; high versus low SNR regime; waterfilling algorithm; capacity of MIMO
channels; Multiuser wireless communications: multiple access: FDMA, TDMA, CDMA and
SDMA schemes; interference management: power control; multiuser diversity, multiuser MIMO
systems.

Texts / References:
1. A. J. Goldsmith, Wireless Communications, Cambridge University Press, 2005.
2. D. Tse and P. Viswanath, Fundamentals of Wireless Communications, Cambridge
University Press, 2005.
3. A. Molisch, Wireless Communications, John Wiley & Sons, 2005.
4. S. Haykin and M. Moher, Modern Wireless Communications, Pearson Education, 2005.
5. T. S. Rappaport, Wireless Communications, Prentice Hall, 1996.
6. G. L. Stuber, Principles of Mobile Communications, Kluwer, 1996.
7. T. Cover and J. Thomas, Elements of Information Theory, John Wiley & Sons, 1991.

EE 534 Data Communication Networks 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Introduction to Computer Networks -Store-and-forward and circuit switching, layered network


architecture, the OSI network model, Internet architecture; Data Link Layer and Peer to Peer
protocols - Encoding (NRZ, NRZI, Manchester, 4B/5B), HDLC, Error detection, ARQ SW,
GBN, SR; Delay models in Data Networks-Traffic multiplexing on a communication link,
Littles theorem, The M/M/1 Queueing System, M/G/I Queues with Vacations, Priority Queues;
MAC protocols and LAN- Polling and Reservations, ALOHA, Slotted ALOHA, CSMA-CD,
Ethernet and IEEE 802.3, Wireless LAN and IEEE 802.11.Routing in packet networks-IP,
shortest-path routing, intra- domain routing (OSPF, RIP), inter-domain routing (BGP), routing
for mobile hosts; End-to-End Protocols- UDP and TCP; Congestion Control and Resource
Allocation -Resource Allocation, TCP Congestion Control, Congestion-avoidance mechanisms,
QoS; Internetworking using TCP/IP - Network programming using socket API, client/server
communication.

Texts / References:

1. D. Bertsekas and R. Gallager, Data Networks, 2nd Edn., Prentice Hall, 1992.
2. L. Peterson and B. Davies, Computer Networks: A Systems Approach, 4th Edition,
Elsevier, 2007.
3. A. Leon-Garcia and I. Widjaja, Communication Networks, 2nd Edn., McGraw Hill, 2009.
4. A. Kumar, D. Manjunath and J. Kuri, Communication Networking: An Analytical
Approach, Elsevier, 2004.

EE 636 Detection and Estimation Theory 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Review of random process, problem formulation and objective of signal detection and signal
parameter estimation; Hypothesis testing: Neyman-Pearson, minimax, and Bayesian detection
criteria; Randomized decision; Compound hypothesis testing; Locally and universally most
powerful tests, generalized likelihood-ratio test; Chernoff bound, asymptotic relative efficiency;
Sequential detection; Nonparametric detection, sign test, rank test. Parameter estimation:
sufficient statistics, minimum statistics, complete statistics; Minimum variance unbiased
estimation, Fisher information matrix, Cramer-Rao bound, Bhattacharya bound; Linear models;
Best linear unbiased estimation; Maximum likelihood estimation, invariance principle;
Estimation efficiency; Least squares, weighted least squares; Bayesian estimation: philosophy,
nuisance parameters, risk functions, minimum mean square error estimation, maximum a
posteriori estimation.

Texts / References:

1. H. V. Poor, An Introduction to Signal Detection and Estimation, 2nd edition, Springer,


1994.
2. S. M. Kay, Fundamentals of Statistical Signal Processing: Detection Theory, Prentice
Hall PTR, 1998.
3. S. M. Kay, Fundamentals of Statistical Signal Processing: Estimation Theory, Prentice
Hall PTR, 1993.
4. H. L. Van Trees, Detection, Estimation and Modulation Theory, Part I, John Wiley,
1968.
5. D. L. Melsa and J. L. Cohn, Detection and Estimation Theory, McGraw Hill, 1978.
6. L. L. Scharf, Statistical Signal Processing: Detection, Estimation, and Time Series
Analysis, Addison-Wesley, 1990.
7. V. K. Rohatgi and A. K. M. E. Saleh, An Introduction to Probability and Statistics, 2nd
edition, Wiley, 2000.

EE 539 Communication System Design Lab 0-0-3-3

Course Contents:

Laboratory experiments are based on the following topics: Design and system level
implementation of different modulation techniques (CPM, MSK, CPFSK); adaptive receivers;
channel equalizers (MMSE, ZFE, FSE).

Texts / References:

1. U. Madhow, Fundamentals of Digital Communication, Cambridge University Press,


2008.
2. J. G. Proakis, Digital Communications, 4th Edition, McGraw Hill, 2000.
3. S. Benedetto and E. Biglieri, Principles of Digital Transmission with Wireless
Applications, Kluwer Academic, 1999.
Syllabus (Core courses) : MTech (Power and Control)

EE 650 Linear Systems Theory 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Essentials of linear algebra: vector spaces, subspaces, singular value decomposition; state
variable modeling of linear dynamical systems; transfer function matrices; Stability theory:
Lyapunov theorems; controllability and observability; realization theory: balanced realization,
Kalman canonical decomposition; linear state feedback and estimation. Introduction to linear
robust control: model uncertainty, model reduction and co-prime factorization; robust stability
and robust performance.

Texts / References:

1. S. Lang, Introduction to Linear Algebra, Springer-Verlag, 2/e, 1997.


2. L. A. Zadeh and C. A. Desoer, Linear System Theory: The State Space Approach,
Springer-Verlag, 2008.
3. C.T. Chen, Linear System Theory and Design, Oxford University Press, 3/e, 1999.
4. W. Rugh, Linear System Theory, Prentice Hall, 2/e, 1995.

EE 581 Modern Power Systems 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Introduction to modern power system: interconnected power system, main objective in operation
of power system, structure of Indian power system; Power Component static and dynamic
modeling: static modeling of transmission lines, transformer, and capability curve of generator ;
Power flow analysis: Gauss-Seidel, Newton-Raphson (polar and rectangular form), decoupled
load flow, fast decoupled power flow, DC load flow, Distribution system power flow ;
Contingency analysis: contingency ranking, DC and AC sensitivity analysis ; Power system
stability: equal area criteria, rotor angle and voltage stability, energy function approach towards
transient stability prediction; Power system Operation and Control: Economic load dispatch, load
frequency control.

Texts / References:

1. J. J. Grainger and W D. Stevenson, Power System Analysis, Tata McGraw-Hill, 2003.


2. A. J. Wood and B. F. Wollenberg, Power Generation Operation and Control, John Wiley
and Sons, 2nd Edition, 2005.
3. N. G. Hingorani and L. Gyugyi, Understanding FACTS, Wiley-IEEE Press, 1999.
4. J. Arrillaga, High voltage direct current transmission, IEE Power Engineering Series,
2nd Edn., 1998.
5. P. Kundur, Power System Stability and Control, McGraw-Hill, 1995.
EE 683 Advanced Power Electronics 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Introduction to power electronics converters, Harmonic distortion, Modulation of one invert


phase leg, Modulation of single phase voltage source inverter, Zero space vector placement
modulation strategies, Modulation of current source inverters, Overmodulation of inverters,
Programmed modulation strategies, Programmed modulation of multilevel converters, Carrier
based modulation strategies, Space vector PWM, Implementation of modulation controllers.

Texts / References:

1. D. Grahame Holmes, Thomas A. Lipo, Pulse Width Modulation for Power Converters:
Principles and Practice, Wiley-IEEE Press, 1st Edition, 2003.
2. Ned Mohan, Power Electronics: Converters, Applications, and Design, Wiley, 3rd
Edition, 2002.

EE 558 Applied Control Lab 0-0-3-3

Course Contents:

DC Motor Speed Control: Using PLC to control the speed of DC Motor to understand the
principles of feedback control, PWM and PLC programming. The objective is to study the
following:

Open loop speed control


Close loop speed control
Use of PLC for the speed control
Acceleration and deceleration ramps programming in PLC
To Monitor the duty cycle of the motor

AC Machine Control: The objective will be to study:

Open loop speed control


Close loop speed control
Frequency converter and its control
Acceleration and deceleration ramps programming in the controller
PWM programming

Process Measurement and Control: The objective of this experiment is to understand:

Industrial measurements
The control systems used in industry
The programming techniques of the controller to achieve specific purpose
Process supervision through PC
Various transducers and sensors used in the industry.

EE 551 Optimal and Adaptive Control 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Basic mathematical concepts, Conditions for optimality, Calculus of variations, Pontryagins


maximum principle, Hamilton Jacobi-Bellman theory, dynamic programming, structures and
properties of optimal systems, various types of constraints, singular solutions, minimum time
problems, optimal tracking control problem

Model reference adaptive control, gain scheduling, adaptive internal model control, adaptive
variable structure control, adaptive back- stepping design, introduction to system identification,
direct and indirect adaptive control.

Texts / References:

1. D. E. Kirk, Optimal Control Theory: An Introduction, Prentice-Hall, 2004.


2. B.D.O. Anderson and J.B. Moore, Optimal Control: Linear Quadratic Methods, 2007.
3. M. Krstic, P. V. Kokotovic, I. Kanellakopoulos, Nonlinear and Adaptive Control Design,
John Willey and Sons, 1995.
4. K. J. Astrom and B. Wittenmark, Adaptive Control, 2/e, 2008.
5. G. Feng and R. Lozano, Adaptive Control Systems, Oxford University Press, 1999.

EE 652 Digital Control 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Discrete-time system representations: modeling discrete-time systems by linear difference


equations and pulse transfer functions, time responses of discrete systems; discrete state-space
models, stability of discrete-time systems. Finite settling-time control design: deadbeat systems,
inter sample behavior, time-domain approach to ripple-free controllers, limitations and
extensions of the deadbeat controller. State-feedback design techniques: linear system properties,
state feedback using Ackermann's formula, tracking of known reference inputs. Output-feedback
design techniques: observer design , observer-based output feedback design.

Texts / References:

1. B. C. Kuo, Digital Control Systems; Oxford University Press, 2/e, Indian Edition, 2007.
2. K. Ogata, Discrete Time Control Systems; Prentice Hall, 2/e, 1995.
3. M. Gopal, Digital Control and State Variable Methods; Tata Mcgraw Hill, 2/e, 2003.
4. G. F. Franklin, J. D. Powell and M. L. Workman; Digital Control of Dynamic Systems;
Addison Wesley, 1998, Pearson Education, Asia, 3/e, 2000.
5. K. J. Astroms and B. Wittenmark, Computer Controlled Systems - Theory and Design;
Prentice Hall, 3/e, 1997.

EE 580 Control of Electrical Drives 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Mode ling of DC Machines, Phase Controlled DC Motor Drives, Chopper Controlled DC Motor
Drives, Modeling of Polyphase Induction Machines, Phase Controlled Motor Drives, Frequency
Controlled Induction Motor Drives, Vector Controlled Induction Motor Drives, Permanent
Magnet Synchronous and Brushless DC Motor Drive Modeling and Control.

Texts / References:

1. R. Krishnan, Electric Motor Drives: Modeling, Analysis and Control, Prentice Hall,
2002.
2. Mohamed El-Sharkawi, Fundamentals of Electric Drive, CL- Engineering, 1st Edition,
2000.

EE 654 Advanced Power and Control Lab 0-0-3-3

Course Contents:

Study of 3-phase inverter, Study of 3-phase rectifier, Control of buck- boost converter, Position
control of servo-motor, Speed control of 3- phase AC motor, Speed and position control of
stepper motor, Load flow analysis with power flow control using series compensation, Control of
power flow using back-to- back converter, Effect of SVC (Static Var Compensator) in
controlling the bus voltage, Synchronization of alternators.

Texts / References:

1. C. S. Indulkar, Laboratory Experiments in Electrical Power Engineering, Khanna


Publishers, 1/e, 2003.
2. 2. G. K Dubey, Fundamentals of Electrical Drives, Narosa Publishing House, 2/e, 2002.
3. O. P. Arora, Power Electronics Laboratory: Theory, Practice & Organization, Narosa
Publishing House, 1/e, 2007.
4. P. Kundur, Power System Stability and Control, McGraw-Hill, 1/e, 1994.
Syllabus (Core courses) : MTech (VLSI)

EE 502 Digital IC Design 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Basic Electrical Properties of MOS circuits: MOS transistor operation in linear and saturated
regions, MOS transistor threshold voltage, MOS switch and inverter, latch-up in CMOS inverter;
sheet resistance and area capacitances of layers, wiring capacitances; CMOS inverter properties -
robustness, dynamic performance, regenerative property, inverter delay times, switching power
dissipation, MOSFET scaling - constant-voltage and constant-field scaling; dynamic CMOS
design: steady-state behavior of dynamic gate circuits, noise considerations in dynamic design,
charge sharing, cascading dynamic gates, domino logic, np-CMOS logic, problems in single-
phase clocking, two-phase non-overlapping clocking scheme; subsystem design: design of
arithmetic building blocks like adders static, dynamic, Manchester carry-chain, look-ahead,
linear and square-root carry-select, carry bypass and pipelined adders and multipliers - serial-
parallel, Braun, Baugh-Wooley and systolic array multipliers, barrel and logarithmic shifters,
area-time tradeoff, power consumption issues; designing semiconductor memory and array
structures: memory core and memory peripheral circuitry.

Texts / References:

1. J.M. Rabaey, A. Chandrakasan and B. Nikolic, Digital Integrated Circuits- A Design


Perspective, 2nd ed., PHI, 2003
2. N.H.E. Weste and K. Eshraghian, Principles of CMOS VLSI Design - a System
Perspective, 2nd ed., Pearson Education Asia, 2002
3. S.M. Kang and Y. Leblevici, CMOS Digital Integrated Circuits Analysis and Design, 3rd
ed., McGraw Hill, 2003
4. J. P. Uyemura, Introduction to VLSI Circuits and Systems, John Wiley & Sons (Asia) Pte
Ltd, 2002
5. R. Jacob Baker, CMOS Circuit Design, Layout, and Simulation, IEEE Press, 1997.

EE 511 Semiconductor Device Modeling 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Junctions: equilibrium conditions, forward and reverse-biased junctions, reverse-bias breakdown,


transient and a-c conditions, recombination and generation in the transition, semiconductor
heterojunctions, Metal-semiconductor junctions: Schottky barriers, rectifying and Ohmic
contacts, Bipolar junction transistors: minority carrier distribution and terminal currents,
generalized biasing, switching, secondary effects, frequency limitations of transistors,
heterojunction bipolar transistors, Field-Effect Transistors: JFET- current-voltage characteristics,
effects in real devices, high-frequency and high-speed issues, Metal Insulator Semiconductor
FET, MOSFET- basic operation and fabrication; ideal MOS capacitor; effects of real surfaces;
threshold voltages; output and transfer characteristics of MOSFET, short channel and Narrow
width effects, MOSFET scaling, Optoelectronics Devices: Light emitting diodes, Lasers,
Photoconductors, Junction Photodiodes, Avalanche Photodiodes, Solar Cells, SPICE Models for
Semiconductor Devices: MOSFET Level 1, Level 2 and level 3 model, Model parameters;
SPICE models of p-n diode and BJT.

Texts / References:

1. B. G. Streetman and S. Banerjee, Solid State Electronic Devices, 6th Edition, PHI Private
Limited, 2011.
2. P. Bhattacharya, Semiconductor Optoelectronics Devices, 2nd Edition, PHI, 2009.
3. G. Massobrio and P. Antognetti, Semiconductor Device Modeling with SPICE, 2nd
Edition, TMH, 2010.
4. C. C. Hu, Modern Semiconductor Devices for Integrated Circuits, Pearson Education,
2010.
5. R. S. Muller and T. I. Kamins, Device Electronics for Integrated Circuits, 3rd Edition,
Wiley India, 2009.
6. S. M. Sze and K. K. Ng, Physics of Semiconductor Devices, 3rd Edition, Wiley India,
2010.
7. Y. Tsividis, Operation and Modeling of the MOS transistor, 2nd Edition, TMH, 1999.
8. S. A. Neamen and D. Biswas, Semiconductor Physics and Devices, 4th Edition, TMH,
2012.

EE 515 Semiconductor IC Technology 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Historical perspective, processing overview, crystal growth, wafer fabrication and basic
properties of Silicon Wafers, Clean Rooms, Wafer Cleaning, Epitaxy, Thermal Oxidation of
Silicon, Lithography, Wet and Dry Etching, Thin film deposition, Diffusion, Ion Implantation,
Metallization, Process Integration: Passive components, Bipolar Technology, MOSFET
Technology, MESFET Technology, MEMS Technology, IC Manufacturing: Electrical Testing,
Packaging, Yield, Future trends and Challenges: Challenges for integration, system on chip.

Texts / References:

1. G. S. May and S. M. Sze, Fundamentals of Semiconductor Fabrication, Wiley India,


2004.
2. J. D. Plummer, M. D. Deal and P. B. Griffin, Silicon VLSI Technology, Fundamentals,
Practice and Modeling, Pearson education, 2000.
3. S. M. Sze, VLSI Technology, 2nd Edn., TMH, 2004.
4. S. M. Sze, Semiconductor Devices: Physics and Technology, 2nd Edn., Wiley India,
2011.
5. W. R. Runyan and K. E. Bean, Semiconductor Integrated Circuit Processing Technology,
Addison Wesley Publishing Company, 1990.
6. S. A. Campbell, The Science and Engineering of Microelectronic Fabrication, Oxford
University Press, 1996.
7. M. J. Madou, Fundamentals of Microfabrication, 2nd Edition, CRC Press, 2011.

EE 512 VLSI Lab I 0-0-4-4

Course Contents:

Experiments are based on the following topics: Model Parameter extraction for a diode and
MOSFET; NMOS and PMOS characteristics; Inverter characteristics; layout of resistors,
capacitors, transistors and inverter; 1-bit Shift Register; digital logic cells; adders; multipliers;
Ring Oscillator.

Texts / References:

1. M. H. Rashid, Introduction to PSpice Using OrCAD for Circuits and Electronics, 3rd
Edition, Prentice-Hall India, 2006.
2. Charles H Roth Jr., Digital Systems Design Using VHDL, 8th Indian reprint, Thomson
Learning Inc., 2006.
3. J. M. Rabaey, A. Chandrakasan and B. Nikolic, Digital Integrated Circuits- A Design
Perspective, 2nd Edition, PHI, 2003.
4. N. H. E. Weste and K. Eshraghian, Principles of CMOS VLSI Design: A Systems
Perspective, Pearson Education, 2004.
5. Mentor Graphics CAD software manuals.

EE 503 Analog IC Design 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Introduction to analog VLSI and mixed signal issues in CMOS technologies; Basic MOS
models, SPICE Models and frequency dependent parameters; Basic MNOS/CMOS gain stage,
cascade and cascode circuits; Frequency response, stabilty and noise issues in amplifiers; CMOS
analog blocks: Current Sources and Voltage references; Differential amplifier and OPAMP
design; Frequency Synthesizers and Phased lock-loops; Non-linear analog blocks: comparators,
charge-pump circuits and multipliers; Basics of data converters; Analog Testing and Layout
issues; Low Voltage and Low Power Circuits; Introduction to RF Electronics.

Texts / References:

1. B. Razavi, Design of Analog CMOS Integrated Circuits, McGraw Hill 2001


2. P. E. Allen and D. R. Holberg, CMOS Analog Circuit Design, 2nd edition, Oxford
University Press, 1997
3. B. Razavi, RF Microelectronics, Prentice-Hall, 1998.
4. R. Jacob Baker, CMOS Circuit Design, Layout, and Simulation, IEEE Press, 1997.
5. P. R. Gray and R. G. Meyer, Analysis and design of Analog Integrated circuits 4th
Edition, Wiley Student Edition, 2001.
6. D. A. Johns and K. Martin, Analog Integrated Circuit Design, Wiley Student Edition,
2002.

EE 561 VLSI System Design 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Basics of system hardware design: Hierarchical design using top-down and bottom-up
methodology, System partitioning techniques, interfacing between system components, Handling
multiple clock domains, Synchronous and asynchronous design styles; Design of finite state
machines: state assignment strategies; The Processor: Data path and Control, Enhancing
performance with Pipelining, exploiting of Memory hierarchy.

Texts / References:

1. G. De. Micheli, Synthesis and Optimisation of Digital Circuits, Tata McGraw-Hill, 2004.
2. D. A. Patterson and J. L. Hennessy, Computer Organization and Design: The
Hardware/Software Interface, 2nd Edition, Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Inc, 1998.
3. J. Rabaey, Digital Integrated Circuits, A Design Perspective, 2nd Edition, Pearson
Education, 2003.
4. H. E. Weste and K. Eshraghian, Principles of CMOS VLSI Design, 2nd Edition, Eight
Indian Reprint, Pearson Education, 2002.
5. C. Mead and L. Conway, Introduction to VLSI Systems, Addison Wesley, 1979.

EE 663 VLSI DSP 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Introduction to DSP systems: Representation of DSP algorithms; Iteration Bound: Definition,


Examples, Algorithms for computing Iteration bound; Pipelining and Parallel Processing:
Definitions, Pipelining and parallel processing of FIR filters, Pipelining and parallel processing
for low power; Retiming: Definitions and Properties, Solving system of Inequalities, Retiming
techniques; Unfolding: Definition, An algorithm for unfolding, Applications of unfolding;
Folding: Definition, Folding transformations, Register minimization techniques, Register
minimization in folded architectures; Systolic Architecture Design: Introduction, Systolic array
design methodology, FIR systolic arrays, Selection of scheduling vector, Matrix-Matrix
multiplication and 2D systolic array design; CORDIC based Implementations: Architecture,
Implementation of FIR filter and FFT algorithm; Bit-Level arithmetic architectures: Parallel
multipliers, Bit-serial multipliers, Bit-Serial FIR filter design and Implementation; Redundant
arithmetic: Redundant number representation, Carry-free radix-2 addition and subtraction, radix-
2 hybrid redundant multiplication architectures; Low-power design: Theoretical background,
Scaling versus power consumption, Power analysis, Power reduction techniques, Power
estimation approaches.

Texts / References:

1. U. Meyer-Baese, DSP with FPGA, Springer, 2004.


2. K. K. Parhi, VLSI DSP Systems, Wiley, 2003.
3. R.G. Lyons, Understanding Digital Signal Processing, Pearson Education, 2004.

EE 513 VLSI Lab II 0-0-4-4

Course Contents:

Experiments are based on the following topics: NMOS and PMOS characteristics; Common
source amplifiers; Layout of resistors, capacitors, transistors; differential amplifier; cascode
amplifier; current mirror; push pull CS amplifier; negative feedback amplifier; multistage
amplifiers; operational amplifiers and comparators.

Texts / References:

1. M. H. Rashid, Introduction to PSpice Using OrCAD for Circuits and Electronics, 3rd
Edition, Prentice-Hall India, 2006.
2. B. Razavi, Design of Analog CMOS Integrated Circuits, McGraw Hill, 2001.
3. B. Razavi, RF Microelectronics, Prentice-Hall, 1998.
4. P. E. Allen and D. R. Holberg, CMOS Analog Circuit Design, 2nd Edition, Oxford
University Press, 1997.
5. D. A. Johns and K. Martin, Analog Integrated Circuit Design, Wiley Student Edition,
2002.
6. P. R. Gray and R. G. Meyer, Analysis and Design of Analog Integrated Circuits, 4th
Edition, Wiley Student Edition, 2001.
7. Mentor Graphics CAD software manuals.

EE 514 VLSI Lab III 0-0-4-4

Course Contents:

Experiments/Projects are based on the following topics: RF front-end: LNA, Mixer, VCO,
Frequency Synthesizer, Power Amplifiers and Filters; ADCs, DACs and Digital Compensation
techniques; base band designs: Filters, FFT, DCT, Channel coders and Decoders - Viterbi, Reed
Solomon, Turbo Codes; Modulation, Synchronization and Timing Recovery Circuits;
Image/Video compression techniques.

Texts / References:
1. B. Razavi, RF Microelectronics, Prentice-Hall, 1998.
2. P. E. Allen and D. R. Holberg, CMOS Analog Circuit Design, 2nd Edition, Oxford
University Press, 1997.
3. B. Leung, VLSI for Wireless Communication, Person Education, 2002.
4. R. J. Plassche, CMOS Integrated Analog-to-Digital and Digital-to-Analog Converters,
John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2004.
5. F. Horlin and A. Bourdoux, Digital Compensation for Analog Front- Ends: A New
Approach to Wireless Transceiver Design, John Wiley & Sons Inc., 2008.
6. K. K. Parhi, VLSI Digital Signal Processing: Systems, Design and Implementation, Wiley
Interscience, 2007.
7. E. C. Ifeachor and B. W. Jervis, Digital Signal Processing A Practical Approach, 2nd
Edition, Pearson Education, 2002.
8. B. Sklar, Digital Communications, Pearson Education, 2001
9. Mentor Graphics CAD software manuals.
Syllabus (Core courses) : MTech (Signal Processing)

EE 501 Linear Algebra and Optimization 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Linear Algebra - vector spaces, linear independence, bases and dimension, linear maps and
matrices, eigenvalues, invariant subspaces, inner products, norms, orthonormal bases, spectral
theorem, isometries, polar and singular value decomposition, operators on real and complex
vector spaces, characteristic polynomial, minimal polynomial; optimization - sequences and
limits, derivative matrix, level sets and gradients, Taylor series; unconstrained optimization -
necessary and sufficient conditions for optima, convex sets, convex functions, optima of convex
functions, steepest descent, Newton and quasi Newton methods, conjugate direction methods;
constrained optimization - linear and non-linear constraints, equality and inequality constraints,
optimality conditions, constrained convex optimization, projected gradient methods, penalty
methods.

Texts / References:

1. S. Axler, Linear Algebra Done Right, 2nd Edn., Springer, 1997.


2. E. K. P. Chong and S. H. Zak, An Introduction to Optimization, 2nd Edn., Wiley India
Pvt. Ltd., 2010.
3. G. Strang, Linear Algebra and Its Applications, Nelson Engineering, 2007.
4. D. C. Lay, Linear Algebra and Its Applications, 3rd Edition, Pearson, 2002.
5. D. G. Luenberger and Y. Ye, Linear and Nonlinear Programming, 3rd Edn., Springer,
2010.

EE 504 Probability and Stochastic Processes 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Axiomatic definitions of probability; conditional probability, independence and Bayes theorem,


continuity property of probabilities, Borel-Cantelli Lemma; random variable: probability
distribution, density and mass functions, functions of a random variable; expectation,
characteristic and moment-generating functions; Chebyshev, Markov and Chernoff bounds;
jointly distributed random variables: joint distribution and density functions, joint moments,
conditional distributions and expectations, functions of random variables; random vector- mean
vector and covariance matrix, Gaussian random vectors; sequence of random variables: almost
sure and mean-square convergences, convergences in probability and in distribution, laws of
large numbers, central limit theorem; random process: probabilistic structure of a random
process; mean, autocorrelation and autocovariance functions; stationarity - strict- sense
stationary and wide-sense stationary (WSS) processes: time averages and ergodicity; spectral
representation of a real WSS process-power spectral density, cross-power spectral density, linear
time-invariant systems with WSS process as an input- time and frequency domain analyses;
examples of random processes: white noise, Gaussian, Poisson and Markov processes.
Texts / References:

1. H. Stark and J. W. Woods, Probability and Random Processes with Applications to


Signal Processing, Prentice Hall, 2002.
2. A. Papoulis and S. U. Pillai, Probability, Random Variables and Stochastic Processes,
4th Edn., McGraw-Hill, 2002.
3. B. Hajek, An Exploration of Random Processes for Engineers, ECE534 Course Notes,
2011. http://www.ifp.illinois.edu/~hajek/Papers/randomprocesses.html

EE 524 Signal Processing Algorithms and Architectures 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Orthogonal transforms: DFT, DCT and Haar; Properties of DFT; Computation of DFT: FFT and
structures, Decimation in time, Decimation in frequency; Linear convolution using DFT; Digital
filter structures: Basic FIR/IIR filter structures, FIR/IIR Cascaded lattice structures, Parallel
allpass realization of IIR transfer functions, Sine- cosine generator; Computational complexity of
filter structures; Multirate signal processing: Basic structures for sampling rate conversion,
Decimators and Interpolators; Multistage design of interpolators and decimators; Polyphase
decomposition and FIR structures; Computationally efficient sampling rate converters; Arbitrary
sampling rate converters based on interpolation algorithms: Lagrange interpolation, Spline
interpolation; Quadrature mirror filter banks; Conditions for perfect reconstruction; Applications
in subband coding; Digital Signal Processors introduction: Computational characteristics of DSP
algorithms and applications; Techniques for enhancing computational throughput: Harvard
architecture, parallelism, pipelining, dedicated multiplier, split ALU and barrel shifter;
TMS320C64xx architecture: CPU data paths and control, general purpose register files, register
file cross paths, memory load and store paths, data address paths, parallel operations, resource
constraints.

Texts / References:

1. R. Chassaing and D. Reay, Digital signal processing and applications with


TMS320C6713 and TMS320C6416, Wiley, 2008.
2. S. K. Mitra, Digital Signal Processing: A Computer Based Approach, 3rd Edn., TMH,
2008.
3. J. G. Proakis and D. G. Manolakis, Digital Signal Processing:
4. Principles, Algorithms and Applications, Pearson Prentice Hall, 2007

EE 528 Signals and Systems Simulation Lab 0-0-3-3

Course Contents:

Fundamentals: Generation of signals, study of system properties; convolution and correlation; z-


transform; DFT using FFT; Linear convolution using circular convolution; aliasing due to
sampling in time and frequency domains; Design of FIR and IIR filters; Estimation of power
spectral density using periodogram and Welch's method; Generation of discrete and continuous
random variables, statistical analysis and validation, Monte-Carlo simulation. Applications:
Array Signal Processing, Communication Systems, Multirate Signal Processing, Image
Processing, Speech Processing.

Texts / References:

1. A. V. Oppenheim, R. W. Schafer and J. R. Buck, Discrete-time Signal Processing, 2nd


Edn., Prentice Hall, 1999.
2. V. K. Ingle and J. G. Proakis, Digital signal processing using MATLAB, Thompson
Brooks/Cole, Singapore, 2007.
3. MATLAB and Signal Processing Toolbox User's Guide (www.mathworks.com).
4. SCILAB and Signal Processing User's Guide (www.scilab.org).
5. OCTAVE (http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/)
6. D. H. Johson and D. E. Dudgeon, Array Signal Processing: Concepts and Techniques,
Prentice Hall PTR, 1993.
7. T. S. Rappaport, Wireless Communications: Principles and Practice, Prentice Hall PTR,
2002.
8. A. K. Jain, Fundamentals of Digital Image Processing, Tata McGraw Hill, 1997.
9. T. F. Quatieri, Discrete-time Speech Signal Processing: Principles and Practice, Pearson,
2006.

EE 525 Optimal and Adaptive Signal Processing 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Review: Hilbert space of random variables; response of linear systems to wide-sense stationary
inputs, spectral factorization theorem and innovation processes, autoregressive moving average
processes; Linear minimum mean-square error (LMMSE) estimation: minimum mean- square
error(MMSE) estimation of jointly Gaussian random variables, LMMSE, orthogonality principle
and Wiener Hoff equation; FIR Wiener filters, linear prediction-forward and backward
predictions, Levinson- Durbin Algorithm and lattice filter; IIR Wiener filters: non-causal Wiener
filter, innovation and and causal Wiener filter; Kalman filters: Gauss-Markov state variable
models; innovation and Kalman recursion, steady-state behaviour of Kalman filters; Adaptive
filters: steepest descent solution of FIR Wiener filter, LMS algorithm- convergence, steady-state
behaviour and practical considerations, RLS algorithm- method of least-squares, recursive
solution and square- root algorithms, application of adaptive filters-equalization and noise
cancellation. Spectral Estimation: Smoothed and windowed periodograms, minimum variance,
maximum entropy and parametric methods for spectral estimation, frequency estimation.

Texts / References:

1. M. H. Hayes, Statistical Digital Signal Processing and Modeling, John Wiley & Sons,
Inc., 2002.
2. S. Haykin, Adaptive Filter Theory, Prentice Hall, 2001.
3. D.G. Manolakis, V.K. Ingle and S.M. Kogon, Statistical and Adaptive Signal Processing,
McGraw Hill, 2000.
4. S. J. Orfanidis, Optimum Signal Processing, 2nd Edition, 2007 republication of the 1988
McGraw-Hill edition.
5. S. M. Kay, Fundamentals of Statistical Signal Processing: Estimation Theory, Prentice
Hall, 1993.
6. B. Widrow and S. D. Stearns, Adaptive Signal Processing, Prentice Hall, 1985.

EE 636 Detection and Estimation Theory 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Review of random process, problem formulation and objective of signal detection and signal
parameter estimation; Hypothesis testing: Neyman-Pearson, minimax, and Bayesian detection
criteria; Randomized decision; Compound hypothesis testing; Locally and universally most
powerful tests, generalized likelihood-ratio test; Chernoff bound, asymptotic relative efficiency;
Sequential detection; Nonparametric detection, sign test, rank test. Parameter estimation:
sufficient statistics, minimum statistics, complete statistics; Minimum variance unbiased
estimation, Fisher information matrix, Cramer-Rao bound, Bhattacharya bound; Linear models;
Best linear unbiased estimation; Maximum likelihood estimation, invariance principle;
Estimation efficiency; Least squares, weighted least squares; Bayesian estimation: philosophy,
nuisance parameters, risk functions, minimum mean square error estimation, maximum a
posteriori estimation.

Texts / References:

1. H. V. Poor, An Introduction to Signal Detection and Estimation, 2nd edition, Springer,


1994.
2. S. M. Kay, Fundamentals of Statistical Signal Processing: Detection Theory, Prentice
Hall PTR, 1998.
3. S. M. Kay, Fundamentals of Statistical Signal Processing: Estimation Theory, Prentice
Hall PTR, 1993.
4. H. L. Van Trees, Detection, Estimation and Modulation Theory, Part I, John Wiley,
1968.
5. D. L. Melsa and J. L. Cohn, Detection and Estimation Theory, McGraw Hill, 1978.
6. L. L. Scharf, Statistical Signal Processing: Detection, Estimation, and Time Series
Analysis, Addison-Wesley, 1990.
7. V. K. Rohatgi and A. K. M. E. Saleh, An Introduction to Probability and Statistics, 2nd
edition, Wiley, 2000.

EE 529 Digital Signal Processors Lab 0-0-3-3

Course Contents:
Fundamentals: Familiarization to Code Composer Studio; development cycle on TMS320C64xx
kit; Generation of signals, Fourier representation and z-transform, sampling theorem in time and
frequency domains, convolution and correlation, DFT and FFT; FIR and IIR filters; sampling
rate converters. Applications: Adaptive filter and experiments on communication such as
generation of a n-tuple PN sequence, generation of a white noise sequence using the PN
sequence, restoration of a sinusoidal signal embedded in white noise by Wiener Filtering; speech
and multi-media applications.

Texts / References:

1. R. Chassaing and D. Reay, Digital signal processing and applications with


TMS320C6713 and TMS320C6416, Wiley, 2008.
2. TMS320C64x Technical Overview, Texas Instruments, Dallas, TX, 2001.
3. TMS320C6000 Peripherals Reference Guide, Texas Instruments, Dallas, TX, 2001.
4. TMS320C6000 CPU and Instruction Set Reference Guide, Texas Instruments, Dallas,
TX, 2000.
5. IEEE Signal Processing Magazine: Oct 88, Jan 89, July 97, Jan 98, March 98 and March
2000.
Syllabus (Elective courses) : MTech

EE 562 Fundamentals of VLSI CAD 3-0-0-6

Course contents:

Matrices: Linear dependence of vectors, solution of linear equations, bases of vector spaces.
orthogonality, complementary orthogonal spaces and solution spaces of linear equations. Graphs:
representation of graphs using matrices; paths, connectedness; circuits, cutsets, trees;
fundamentals circuit and cutset matrices; voltage and current spaces of a directed graph and their
complementary orthogonality. Algorithms and data structures: efficient representation of graphs;
elementary graph algorithms involving BFS and DFS trees, such as finding connected and 2-
connected components of a graph, the minimum spanning tree, shortest path between a pair of
vertices in a graph; Algorithms for VLSI Physical Design, Synthesis, Circuit Simulation and
Digital Design Automation. Algorithms for Design Automation using FPGA/CPLD, Fault
Tolerant Systems, VLSI Testing.

Texts/References:

1. K. Hoffman and R.E. Kunze, Linear Algebra, Prentice Hall(India), 1986.


2. N. Balabanian and T.A. Bickart, Linear Network Theory; Analysis, Properties,
Design and Synthesis, Matrix Publishers, Inc., 1981.
3. T. Cormen, C.Leiserson and R.A. Rivest, Algorithms, MIT press and McGraw
Hill,1990.
4. N. Shervani, Algorithms for VLSI Physical Design Automation, 3rd Edn.,
KluwerAcademic Publishers, 1998
5. W. J. McCalla, Fundamentals of Computer-Aided Circuit Simulation,
KluwerAcademic Publishers, 1987
6. G. De Micheli, Synthesis and optimization of Digital Circuits, Tata McGraw Hill,
2003.
7. S. H. Gerez, Algorithms for VLSI Design Automatiom, John Wiley & Sons, 1999.

EE 621 Advanced Topics in Random Processes 3-0-0-6

Course Contents

Convergence of a sequence of random variables; Chernoff bound and large deviations theory;
mean-square calculus- stochastic continuity derivatives and integrals; ergodicity;
KarhunenLoeve expansion; Random walk process; Discrete time Markov chains: recurrence
analysis, Foster's theorem; continuous time Markov Process; Poisson and birth and death
processes; Wiener process and Brownian motion process.

Texts/References:
1. D. R. Cox, D. R. and H.D. Miller, The Theory of Stochastic Processes, Chapman
& Hall - CRC, 177.
2. H. Stark and J. W. Woods, Probability and Random Processes with Application to
Signal Processing, 3/e, Pearson Education, 2002
3. B. Hajek, An Exploration of Random Processes for Engineers, Course Notes, 2005,
http://www.ifp.uiuc.edu/~hajek/Papers/randomprocesses.html

EE 623 Advanced Topics in Signal Processing 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Multirate signal processing: Fundamentals of multirate systems: Introduction, basicmultirate


operations,Interconnection of building blocks, Polyphase representation,Multistage
implementations, Special filters and filter banks; Maximally decimated filterbanks: Introduction,
Errors created in QMF bank, Alias free QMF system, Powersymmetric QMF banks, M-channel
filter banks, Polyphase representation, Perfect reconstruction systems;

Paraunitary Perfect Reconstruction (PR) Filter Banks: Introduction, Lossless transfer matrices,
Filter bank properties induced byparaunitariness, Two channel FIR paraunitary QMF banks, Two
channel paraunitaryQMF lattice, M-channel FIR paraunitary filter banks;

Linear Phase Perfect Reconstruction QMF Banks: Introduction, Lattice structures for linear
phase FIR PR QMF banks, Formal synthesis of linear phase FIR PR QMF lattice;

Cosinemodulated Filter Banks: Introduction, Pseudo QMF bank, Design of pseudo QMFbank,
Efficient polyphase structures, Cosine modulated perfect reconstructionsystems;

Applications of Multirate Signal Processing: Analysis of audio, Speech,Image and video signals;

Time frequency signal analysis and processing: Time-Frequency concepts, Time-domain


representation, Frequency domain representation,Joint time-frequency representation, Desirable
characteristics of a time-frequency distribution (TFD), Analytic signals, Hilbert transform,
Duration, Bandwidth, Bandwidthduration product, Uncertainty principle, Instantaneous
frequency, Time delay;

Time-Frequency Distributions: Wigner distribution, Wigner-ville distribution, Time-varying


power spectral density, Short-term Fourier transform, Spectrogram, Gabor
transform,Instantaneous power spectra, Energy density, Quadratic TFDs, Relationship
betweenTFDs;

Applications of Time-Frequency Analysis: Analysis of non-stationary signalslike speech, audio,


image and video signals.

Texts/References:
1. P. P. Vaidyanathan, Multirate Systems and Filter Banks, Pearson-Education,
Delhi, 2004.
2. B. Boashash, Time-Frequency Signal Analysis and Processing: A Comprehensive
Reference, Elsevier, UK, 2003.
3. L. Cohen, Time-Frequency Analysis, Prentice Hall, 1995.
4. F. Hlawatsch and F. Auger, Time-Frequency analysis: Concepts and Methods,
Wiley-Iste, 2008
5. A. Spanias, T. Painter and V. Atti, Audio Signal Processing & Coding, Wiley-
Interscience, NJ, USA, 2007.

EE 624 Image Processing 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:
Human visual system and image perception; Monochrome and colour vision models;Image
acquisition and display: Video I/O devices; Standard video formats; Imagedigitization, Display
and storage; 2-D signals and systems; Image transforms: 2D-DFT,DCT, KLT, Harr transform
and discrete wavelet transform; Image enhancement:Histogram processing, Spatial-filtering,
Frequency-domain filtering; Image restoration:Linear degradation model, Inverse filtering,
Wiener filtering; Image compression: Lossyand lossless compression, Entropy coding,
Transform coding, Subband coding; Imagecompression standards: Video compression- motion
compensation, Video compressionstandards; Image analysis: Edge and line detection,
Segmentation, Feature extraction,Classification; Image texture analysis; Morphological image
processing: Binarymorphology- Erosion, Dilation, Opening and closing operations,
Applications, Basic grayscale morphology operations; Colour image processing: Colour models
and colourimage processing.

Texts/References:

1. A. K. Jain, Fundamentals of Digital Image processing, Pearson Education, 2009.


2. R. C. Gonzalez and R. E. Woods, Digital Image Processing, Pearson Education, 2008.
3. R. C. Gonzalez, R. E. Woods and S. L. Eddins, Digital Image Processing using
MATLAB, Pearson Education, 2004.
4. W. K. Pratt, Digital Image Processing, John Wiley & Sons, 2006.
5. S. Ahmed, Image Processing, McGraw -Hill, 1994.
6. S. J. Solari, Digital Video and Audio Compression, McGraw-Hill, 1997

EE 625 Computer Vision 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Image formation and image models; Image filtering; Lines, Blobs, Edges and boundarydetection;
Representation of 2-D and 3-D structures; Bayes decision theory for patternrecognition;
Supervised and unsupervised classifications; Parametric and nonparametricschemes; Clustering
for knowledge representation; Applications of neural networks andfuzzy logic in pattern
recognition; Feature extraction in images; Texture analysis andclassification; Image
segmentation; Optical character recognition; 2-D and 3-D objectrecognition; Surface extraction
from monocular images; Stereo image pair analysis; Optical flow and 3-D motion analysis.

Texts/References:

1. A. K. Jain, Fundamentals of Digital Image processing, Pearson Education, 2009.


2. D. A. Forsyth and J. Ponce, Computer Vision, A Modern Approach, Pearson
Education, 2003.
3. D. H. Ballard and C. M. Brown, Computer Vision, Prentice Hall, 1982.
4. R. O. Duda and P. E. Hart, Pattern Classification and Scene Analysis, John
Wiley, 2006.
5. R. Jain, R. Kasturi and B. G. Schunck, Machine Vision, McGraw-Hill, 1995.
6. R. C. Gonzalez and R. E. Woods, Digital Image Processing, Addison-Wesley,
2008.
7. R. Schalkoff, Pattern Recognition Statistical, Structural and Neural
Approaches, John Wiley, 2007.

EE 626 Biomedical Signal Processing 3-0-0-6

Contents: Sources of bioelectric potential, resting potential, action potential, propagation of


action potentials in nerves; rhythmic excitation of heart; ECG: Pre-processing, wave form
recognition, morphological studies and rhythm analysis, automated diagnosis based on
decision theory, ECG compression, Evoked potential estimation. EEG: Evoked responses,
averaging techniques, pattern recognition of alpha, beta, theta and delta waves in EEG
waves, sleep stages, epilepsy detection.EMG: Wave pattern studies, biofeedback.
application of signal processing techniques such as linear prediction, lattice - filtering &
adaptive signal processing for extraction of physiological parameters; introduction to
wavelets & time frequency models and their applications to heart sounds, fetal ECG &
vesicular sound signals; speech production model, inverse filtering techniques for
extraction of vocal tract parameters, glottal inverse filtering; electroglottograpic signals;
signal processing techniques for detection of pathologies in speech production system;
speech synthesis and speech recognition in diagnostic and; therapeutic applications;
medical imaging techniques: CT scan, ultrasound, NMR and PET. Experiments are based
on acquisition of biomedical signals and implementation of algorithms covered in the
course to charcterise these signals.

Texts/References

1. E.N. Bruce, Biomedical Signal Processing and Signal Modelling, John Wiley and
Sons, 2001.
2. W. J. Tompkins, ed., Biomedical Signal Processing; Prentice Hall, 1995.
3. M. Akay: Wavelets and Time frequency methods for Biomedical signal
Processing; IEEE Press, 1995.
4. L. Rabinar: Digital Processing of speech signals; Prentice Hall, 1978.
5. A. C. Guyton: Human Physiology; Prism International, 1991.

EE 627 Speech Signal Processing and Coding 3-0-0-6

Contents: Introduction: speech production and perception, information sources in speech,


linguistic aspect of speech, acoustic and articulatory phonetics, nature of speech, models for
speech analysis and perception; Short-term processing: need, approach, time, frequency and
time-frequency analysis; Short-term Fourier transform (STFT): overview of Fourier
representation, non-stationary signals, development of STFT, transform and filter-bank views
of STFT; Cesptrum analysis: Basis and development, delta, delta-delta and mel-cepstrum,
homomorphic signal processing, real and complex cepstrum; Linear Prediction (LP) analysis:
Basis and development, Levinson-Durbins method, normalized error, LP spectrum, LP
cepstrum, LP residual; Sinusoidal analysis: Basis and development, phase unwrapping,
sinusoidal analysis and synthesis of speech; Speech coding: Need and parameters,
classification, waveform coders, speech-specific coders, GSM, CDMA and other mobile
coders; Applications: Some applications like pitch extraction, spectral analysis and coding
standard.

Texts/References
1. L.R. Rabiner and R.W. Schafer, Digital Processing of Speech Signals Pearson Education,
Delhi, India, 2004
2. J. R. Deller, Jr., J. H. L. Hansen and J. G. Proakis Discrete-Time Processing of Speech
Signals, Wiley-IEEE Press, NY, USA, 1999.
3. D. OShaughnessy, Speech Communications: Human and Machine, Second
Edition,University Press, 2005.
4. T. F. Quatieri, Discrete time processing of speech signals, Pearson Education, 2005.
5. L. R. Rabiner, B. H. Jhuang and B. Yegnanarayana, Fundamentals of speech recognition,
Pearson Education, 2009.

EE 628 Speech Technology 3-0-0-6

Contents: Applications, pattern recognition, feature extraction, modeling, testing; Speech


recognition: Objective, issues, block diagram description, classification, development of speech
recognition system using vector quantization (VQ), dynamic time warping (DTW), Hidden
Markov Model (HMM) and Neural networks (NN); Speech synthesis: Objective, issues, block
diagram description, classification, development of speech synthesis system using articulatory,
parametric, concatenative and HMM based approaches; Speaker recognition: Objective, issues,
block diagram description, classification, development of speaker recognition system using VQ,
DTW, GMM, NN and HMM; Speech enhancement: Objective, issues, block diagram
description, classification, enhancement of noisy speech, reverberant speech enhancement and
multi-speaker speech processing.

Texts/References
1. L. R. Rabiner, B. H. Jhuang and B. Yegnanarayana, Fundamentals of speech recognition,
Pearson Education, 2009.
2. J. R. Deller, Jr., J. H. L. Hansen and J. G. Proakis Discrete-Time Processing of Speech
Signals, Wiley-IEEE Press, NY, USA, 1999.
3. D. OShaughnessy, Speech Communications: Human and Machine, Second
Edition,University Press, 2005.
4. J. Benesty, M. M. Sondhi and Y. Huang, Handbook of speech processing, Springer, 2008.

EE 631 Electrical Power Quality and Reliability 3-0-0-6

Course Contents

Conventional power definitions and limitations; Evaluation of modern power theories; Power
components in single phase and three phase power circuits based on conventional and modern
power theories; Power quality (PQ) in power system: definitions, identification and
classification; Overview of classical PQ improvement schemes; Introduction of custom power
devices (CPD); Operation and control of distribution static compensator (DSTATCOM) for load
compensation and voltage regulation; Series compensation with dynamic voltage restorer
(DVR); Unified power quality conditioner (UPQC) for shunt and series compensation; Hybrid
custom power devices.

Texts / References:
[1]. Hirofumi Akagi, Edson Hirokazu Watanabe and Mauricio Aredes, Instantaneous power
theory and applications to power conditioning, John Wiley & Sons, 2007.
[2]. Arindam Ghosh and Gerard Ledwich, Power quality enhancement using custom power
devices, Springer Science & Business Media, 2012.
[3]. Narain G Hingorani and Laszlo Gyugyi, Understanding FACTS: concepts and technology
of flexible AC transmission systems, Wiley-IEEE press, 2000.
[4]. Mahesh Kumar, "NPTEL Course on Power Quality in Power Distribution Systems, web
link http://nptel.ac.in/courses/108106025/ .

EE 632 Mobile Communication 3-0-0-6

Course Contents

Evolution of mobile radio communication; Different generations of wireless communication and


their technical specifications; Cellular concept: frequency reuse, channel assignment, handoff,
interference, i mproving system capacity and cell coverage, radio trunking; Mobile radio
propagation: free space propagation, reflection, diffraction, scattering, link budget design;
Fading: multipath propagation, Doppler shift, impulse response model,multipath parameters,
statistical models for multipath propagation; Mitigation of fading effects: equalization, diversity,
channel coding; Transmitter and receiver techniques: modulation up to GMSK, line coding,
pulse shaping, OFDM; Multiple access: FDMA, TDMA, SSMA, SDMA.

Texts:
1. T. S. Rappaport, Wireless Communications: Principles and Practice, Pearson
Education, 2004.
2. S. Haykin and M. Moher, Modern Wireless Communications, Pearson Education,
2005.

References:

1. W. H. Tranter et. al., Principles of Communication Systems Simulation


withWireless Applications, Pearson Education, 2004.
2. A. Mitra, Lecture Notes on Mobile Communication[online], QIP Section, IIT
Guwahati, 2009.

Operation and Planning of Power Distribution


EE 634 3-0-0-6
Systems

Course Contents:

Primary and secondary distribution system layouts: introduction, substation layout, substation
location, construction, and bus schemes, the rating of distribution substation, overhead and
underground distribution networks, distribution line construction, distribution system line
conductors; Reliability assessment of distribution systems: introduction, reliability modelling
concept, different reliability indices, customer interruption cost evolution and customer damage
function; Distribution system planning: introduction, different components of distribution system
planning, different planning approaches, planning models and solution strategies; Distribution
system automation and smart grid: introduction to distribution system automation, the basic
elements of distribution system automation, power market deregulation and distribution system
automation, load management at different peak and off-peak duration, compatibility of load
management with system design and operation, smart grid and smart metering; Integration of
Distributed Generation (DG): introduction to DG, Effect of renewable energy sources on power
distribution systems.

Text/References:
[1] T. Gonen. Electric Power Distribution System Engineering; CRC Press, 3rd Edition, 2014.
[2] H. Lee. Willis. Power Distribution Planning Reference Book; CRC press; 2nd Edition,
Revised and Expanded, 2004.
[3] A. S. Pabla, Electric Power Distribution; Tata Mcgraw-Hill Publishing Company Ltd., 5th
Edition, 2007.
[4] Math Bollen and Fainan Hassan, Integration of Distributed Generation in the Power System;
IEEE Press, 2011.
[5] R. Billington and R. Allan, Reliability Evaluation of Power Systems; Springer, Berlin, 2nd
Edition, 1996.

EE 635 Advanced Topics in Communication Systems 3-0-0-6


Course Contents:

Ultra wideband (UWB) communication systems: UWB concepts, advantages and challenges,
single band versus multiband, FCC emission limits, UWB applications; UWB sources and
antennas: UWB pulse generation, UWB antennas; Pulse-detection and multiple-access
techniques: Conventional pulse-detection techniques, pulse modulation and detection
techniques, UWB multiple-access techniques; Interference issues: Interference with WLAN,
cellular & GPS. Multiple-Input, Multiple-Output (MIMO) wireless communication: Basic
MIMO model, MIMO capacity in fading channels, Diversity multiplexing trade off, Space-time
code for MIMO wireless communication. Software Define Radio (SDR): Characteristics and
benefits of a software radio, design principles of software radio, enhanced flexibility with
software radios, receiver design challenges.

Texts/References
1. K. Siwiak and D. McKeown, Ultra-Wideband Radio Technology, John Wiley and Sons
Limited, 2004.
2. S. Haykin and M. Moher, Modern Wireless Communication, Pearson Education, 2005.
3. Jeffrey H. Reed, Software Radio: A Modern Approach to Radio Engineering, Prentice Hall,
May 2002
4. Faranak Nekoogar, Ultra-Wideband Communications: Fundamentals and Applications,
Prentice Hall, 2005.
5. C. Oestges and B. Clerckx, MMIO Wireless Communications, 1st Ed, 2007.
6. Paul Burns, Software Defined Radio for 3G, Artech House Inc., 2003.

EE 637 Error Control Codes 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Block codes and convolutional codes: Introduction to groups and vector spaces;Generator and
parity check matrices, Dual codes, Hamming codes, General properties oflinear codes and
different coding bounds, Ring and finite fields, Encoding and decodingof cyclic codes, BCH
codes and RS codes-construction, properties and decoding, Trellisrepresentations of
convolutional codes and decoding using Viterbi algorithm; Iterative Codes: LDPC Codes,
Tanner graph, Cycles, irregular codes, Message-passing decoderand density evolution; Turbo
codes: Definition, BCJR algorithm and EXIT charts;Network Codes: Introduction, The Max-
Flow bound, Single-source Linear NetworkCoding-Acyclic and Cyclic networks, Multi-source
Network Coding.

Texts/References:

1. W.E Ryan and S Lin, Channel Codes-Classical and Modern, Cambridge


University Press,2009
2. R.W Yeung, Information Theory And Network Coding, Springer, 2008
3. F.J. MacWilliams and N.J.A Sloane, The Theory of Error-Correcting Codes,
Elsevier Science, 1988
4. D Lun and T Ho, Network Coding - An Introduction, Cambridge University Press,
2008

EE 638 Multimedia Security 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Digital rights management (DRM) framework: Requirements of a DRM system,Architectures,


Dimensions to content protection: Tracing (fingerprinting), authentication,Encryption, Key
management and access control.

Multimedia fingerprinting: Fingerprinting basics, Marking assumption, Collusion attack,Frame


proof and anti-collusion codes; Combining fingerprint modulation with coding:Introduction to
coded fingerprint modulation, Semi-fragile fingerprinting; Multicastfingerprinting problem:
Bandwidth security tradeoff; Efficient security architectures:WHIM, Watercasting, Chameleon
cipher; Joint fingerprinting and decryption (JFD)framework; Fingercasting.

Multimedia encryption: Traditional symmetric key ciphers, Shannons principles ofconfusion


and diffusion; Overview of Advanced Encryption Standard (AES); Block andstream ciphers;
Information theoretic secrecy; Multimedia encryption: Concept of layering,Multimedia
compression technologies and standards; Principles for selective encryption;Image and Video
encryption schemes: Chaotic maps, Transform domain encryption,Huffman tree mutation;
Streaming media encryption: Scalable video protection; Keymanagement and distribution
schemes: Key management for IP Multimedia: Public key methods, Key distribution by data
embedding; Key exchange in multicast groups: Keyrefresh problem, Logical Key Hierarchy
(LKH); Key distribution for fine grained accesscontrol.

Content authentication techniques: Data authentication, One way hash functions,Message


authentication codes (MACs); Multimedia authentication: Perceptual hashes;Parameterization;
Watermarking based authentication: Notion of semi-fragility,Construction and design of semi-
fragile watermarks; Example: Principles of videoauthentication: Scalability issues, packet loss,
post-processing.

Privacy preserving protocols: Zero knowledge protocols, Anonymous fingerprinting,Public key


watermarking, Non-perfect secret sharing constructions for anonymousfingerprinting with shared
access control.

Texts/References:

1. W. Zeng, H. Yu and C. Lin, Multimedia Security Technologies for Digital Rights


Management, Elsevier, UK, 2006.
2. K. Karthik and D. Hatzinakos, Multimedia Encoding for Access Control With
Traitor Tracing: Balancing Secrecy, Privacy and Traceability, VDM Verlag,
ISBN: 978-3-8364-3638-0, Germany, 2008.
3. B. Furht and D. Kirovski (Eds.), Multimedia Security Handbook, CRC press,
U.S., 2005.
4. B. Schneier, Applied Cryptography: Protocols, Algorithms and Source Code in C,
2nd EdITION, Wiley India, 2007 (Reprint).

EE 639 Sparse Representations and Compressive Sensing 3-0-0-6

Course contents:

Introduction to signal representations: Fourier transform, band limited signals, sampling


bandlimited signals; Sparse representation of signals: wavelet transform, ridgelet
transform,curvelet transform; Sampling sparse signals (compressive sensing): incoherence,
restrictedisometry property, null space property, random matrices; Robust and stable
reconstruction:L1 minimization, basis pursuit, matching pursuit; Applications of sparse
representations:denoising, compression, dictionary design; Applications of Compressive
Sensing: analog-todigitalconversion, imaging, radar, DNA microarray, channel estimation;
Extensions: low- rankmatrices, matrix completion, nuclear-norm minimization.

Texts

1. M. Elad, Sparse and Redundant Representations: From Theory to Applications in


Signal and Image Processing, Springer, 2010.
2. J. L. Starck, F. Murtagh and J. M. Fadili, Sparse Image and Signal Processing:
Wavelets, Curvelets, Morphological Diversity, CUP, 2010.

References

1. G. Strang, Linear Algebra and Its Applications, 4th Ed., Cengage, 2006.
2. G. Grimmett and D. Stirzaker, Probability and Random Processes, OUP, 2001.
3. S. Boyd and L. Vandenberghe, Convex Optimization, CUP, 2004.

MIMO Wireless Communications: Fundamentals and


EE 642 3-0-0-6
Advances

Course contents:

Introduction: Diversity-multiplexing trade-off, transmit diversity schemes, advantages and


applications of MIMO systems
Analytical MIMO channel models: Uncorrelated, fully correlated, separately correlated and
keyhole MIMO fading models, parallel decomposition of MIMO channel.
Power allocation in MIMO systems: Uniform, adaptive and near optimal power allocation.
MIMO channel capacity: Capacity for deterministic and random MIMO channels, Capacity of
i.i.d., separately correlated and keyhole Rayleigh fading MIMO channels.
Space-Time codes: Advantages, code design criteria, Alamouti space-time codes, SER analysis
of Alamouti space-time code over fading channels, Space-time block codes, Space-time trellis
codes, Performance analysis of Space-time codes over separately correlated MIMO channel,
Space-time turbo codes.
MIMO detection: ML, ZF, MMSE, ZF-SIC, MMSE-SIC, LR based detection
Advances in MIMO wireless communications: Spatial modulation, MIMO based cooperative
communication and cognitive radio, multiuser MIMO, cognitive-femtocells and large MIMO
systems for 5G wireless.

Texts/ References:

1. B. Clerckx and C. Oestges, MIMO wireless networks, Elsevier Academic Press, 2nd ed.,
2013.
2. T. M. Duman and A. Ghrayeb, Coding for MIMO communication systems, John Wiley and
Sons, 2007.
3. N. Costa and S. Haykin, Multiple-input multiple-output channel models, John Wiley & Sons,
2010.
4. J. Choi, Optimal Combining & Detection, Cambridge University Press, 2010.
5. A. Chokhalingam and B. S. Rajan, Large MIMO systems, Cambridge University Press, 2014.

EE 643 Network Coding and Applications 3-0-0-6

Course contents:

Theoretical frameworks for network coding: Max-flow min-cut theorem, routing capacity of a
network, the main theorem of network multicast; linear, algebraic and random network coding,
network coding for non-multicast networks; Network coding applications: Content distribution,
network coding for wireless networks, security, network error correcting codes, distributed
storage systems.

Texts/ References:

1. C. Fragouli & E. Soljanin, Network Coding Fundamentals, NOW Publishers, 2007.


2. C. Fragouli & E. Soljanin, Network Coding Applications, NOW Publishers, 2008.
3. T. Ho, Network Coding: An Introduction, Cambridge University Press, 2008.

Mathematical techniques for Control and Signal


EE 645 3-0-0-6
Processing

Course contents:

Basics of analysis, Banach and Hilbert spaces, standard function spaces:L2 and Hardy spaces,
operator theory, approximation and projections, well-posedness and introduction to inverse
problems, applications in control and signal processing. Introduction to group theory with
applications in image processing.
Texts/ References:

1. Wynn C. Stirling, Todd K. Moon, Mathematical Methods and Algorithms for Signal
Processing, Prentice Hall, 2000.
2. Steven B. Damelin, Willard Miller Jr, The Mathematics of Signal Processing, Cambridge
University Press, 2012.
3. Alex Poznyak, Advanced Mathematical Tools for Control Engineers: Volume 1: Deterministic
Systems, Elsevier, 2010.
4. Erwin Kreyszig, Introductory Functional Analysis with Applications, John Wiley & Sons,
2007.
5. I. N. Herstein, Topics in Algebra, John Wiley & Sons, 2006.

EE 646 Power Electronics for Renewable Energy Systems 3-0-0-6

Course contents:

Introduction: Potential of renewable energies in Indias future Power generation, Need of power
electronics for power generation from renewable energies.
Solar PV Systems: Solar PV characteristics, Grid requirement for PV, Power electronic
converters used for solar PV, Control techniques, MPPT, Grid connected and Islanding mode,
Grid synchronization, PLLs, battery charging in PV systems.
Wind Energy Conversion: Wind Turbine characteristics, Grid requirement for Wind, PMSM and
DFIG for wind generators, Power electronic converters for PMSM and DFIG, Control
techniques, MPPT, Grid connected and Islanding mode.
Other renewable energy systems: Fuel Cells, Biogas, Biomass etc
Power electronic converters and control for Microgrids and Smart grids

Texts/ References:

1) Remus Teodorescu, Marco Liserre, Pedro Rodriguez, Grid Converters for Photovoltaic and
Wind Power Systems Wiley-IEEE Press, January 2011.
2) Suleiman M. Sharkh, Mohammad A. Abu-Sara, Georgios I. Orfanoudakis, Babar Hussain,
Power Electronic Converters for Microgrids Wiley-IEEE Press, April 2014.
3) Fang Lin Luo, Hong Ye, Advanced DC/AC Inverters: Applications in Renewable Energy
CRC Press.
4) Sudipta Chakraborty, Marcelo G. Simes, William E. Kramer, Power Electronics for
Renewable and Distributed Energy Systems Springer 2013.

EE 647 Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits 3-0-0-6

Course contents:
Fundamentals of RF circuits and systems: Duplexing, FDMA, dB, dBm, Voltage gain, Channel,
ACR, AACR, Noise factor, NF of a cascaded system, Sensitivity, HD, Gain compression, P1dB,
Cross modulation, Inter modulation, IM3, IIP3, SFDR, Transmit mask

Transmitter and Receiver architectures: Review of modulation schemes, Receiver architectures,


Transmitter architectures

Passive and active components for CMOS RFIC: Review of MOSFET, RF transistor layout,
CMOS process, Capacitors, Varactors, Resistors, Inductors, Transformers, Transmission lines
Resonance, Matching, S-parameters, etc. Noise in electrical circuits and NF calculations, Two
port noise theory

Low Noise Amplifiers: Resistive terminated CS and CG LNA, Inductive degenerated LNA, Shunt
feedback LNA, Noise canceling LNAs, Linearity improvement techniques

Power Amplifiers: Basics and Class A, B, C, D, E, F and other configurations, Power combining,
Linearity improvement techniques

Mixers: Specifications, NL system as a mixer, Active mixers, Passive mixers

Oscillators: Introduction, LC Oscillators, Phase noise, Introduction to PLLs; Type-I PLLs,


Charge pump PLLs: Mathematical model, Design issues and Phase noise

Frequency synthesizers: Integer N synthesizers, Dividers,

Texts/ References:

1) B. Razavi, "RF Microelectronics", 2nd Ed., Pearson, 2012.


2) Thomas H. Lee, "The design of CMOS radio-frequency integrated circuits", 2nd Ed.,
Cambridge University Press, 2004.

EE 648 Organic Semiconductor Devices 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:
Introduction to organic semiconductor devices; Electronic Transitions, Excitons, and Energy
transfer; Charge generation and recombination mechanisms; Polaron and Disorder models for
charge transport; Space charge and Trap limited currents; Charge injection at metal/organic
interface; Organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs); Bilayer, Bulk-heterojunction, Inverted, and
Tandem organic photovoltaic (OPV) devices; Carrier loss mechanisms in OPVs;
Nanomorphology; Hybrid Perovskite solar cells and LEDs; Top and bottom contact organic
thin film transistors (OTFTs); Display driver circuits; Operating principles of organic lasers and
memory devices; Device degradation mechanisms and Stability testing methods; Organic thin
film deposition techniques and Overview of various printing technologies.
Texts/References:
[1]. Suganuma Katsuaki, Introduction to Printed Electronics, Springer, 2014.
[2]. Stergios Logothetidis, Handbook of Flexible Organic Electronics - Materials,
Manufacturing, and Applications, 1st Ed., Woodhead Publishing, 2014.
[3]. Eugenio Cantatore, Applications of Organic and Printed Electronics: A Technology
Enabled Revolution, Springer, 2012.
[4]. Wolfgang Brtting and Chihaya Adachi, Physics of Organic Semiconductors, 2nd Ed.,
Wiley-VCH, 2012.
[5]. Anna Khler and Heinz Bssler, Electronics Processes in Organic Semiconductors - An
Introduction, 1st Ed., Wiley-VCH, 2015.
[6]. Wenping Hu, Organic Optoelectronics, 1st Ed., Wiley-VCH, 2013.
[7]. Sam-Shajing Sun and Larry R. Dalton, Introduction to Organic Electronic and
Optoelectronic Materials and Devices, 2nd Ed., CRC Press, 2015.
[8]. Franky So, Organic Electronics: Materials, Processing, Devices, and Applications, CRC
Press, 2010.

EE 649 Design and Realization of Power Converters 3-0-0-6

Course contents:

Ratings and Specifications of power semiconductor devices, Gate drive circuits, protection
circuits, snubbers, design of power electronic circuit, different sections of power converters,
types of grounds, selection of components, multi-layer printed-circuit-boards(PCB) , power PCB,
issue of signal integrity, PCB design, harness design, bus bar structure, electromagnetic
interference(EMI), conducted and radiated EMI, EMI filters, enclosure design, design of
magnetics, thermal calculations, cooling methods, power line AC filter design, packaging of
power converter, art in power electronic product design.

Texts/ References:

1. N. Mohan, Power Electronics- Converters, Applications and Design, 3rd Ed., John Wiley &
Sons, 2003.
2. Abraham I. Pressman, Keith Billings, Switching Power Supply Design, 3rd Ed., McGraw-Hill,
2009.
3. Henry W Ott, Electromagnetic Compatibility Engineering, John Wiley & Sons, 2009.
4. Franois Costa, Eric Laboure, Bertrand Revol, Electromagnetic Compatibility in Power
Electronics, Wiley, 2014.
5. Mark I. Montrose, EMC and the Printed Circuit Board: Design, Theory, and Layout Made
Simple, Wiley-IEEE Press, 1998.
6. Keith Billings and Taylor Morey, Switchmode Power Supply Handbook, 3rd Ed., McGraw-
Hill, 2011.
Requisite Software:
LTSpice, Design Spark PCB, Design Spark Mechanical (All are opensource.)

EE 651 Multivariable Control Theory 3-0-0-6

Course contents:

Mathematical Fundamentals: Invariant subspaces, Similarity transformations, Quotienting and


equivalence classes; Canonical Representations and Feedback Laws:, Multivariable Observer
and controller canonical representations, multivariable pole placement problem, multivariable
observer design problem; System decomposition: Controllability indices and system invariants,
Controllability subspaces and Observability subspaces, stabilizability and detectability,
Disturbance decoupling and Output stabilization problems; Binary Systems:Introduction to linear
modular systems.

Texts/ References:

1. C. T. Chen, Linear System Theory and Design , 3 rd Edn., Oxford 1999.


2. O. Gasparyan, Linear and Nonlinear Multivariable Feedback Control: A Classical
Approach , John Wiley and Sons, 2007.
3. W. M. Wonham, Linear Multivariable Control: A Geometric Approach , Springer,
1985.

EE 653 Nonlinear Systems and Control 3-0-0-6

Course Contents

Introduction: state-space representation of dynamic al systems, phase-portraits of second order


systems, types of equilibrium points: stable/unstable node, stable/unstable focus, saddle;
Existence and uniqueness of solutions: Lipschitz continuity, Picard's iteration method, proof of
existence and uniqueness theorem, continuous dependence of solutions on initial conditions;
Features of nonlinear dynamical systems: multiple disjoint equilibrium points, limit cycles,
Bendixson criterion, Poincare-Bendixson criterion; Linearization: linearization around an
equilibrium point, validity of linearization: hyperbolic equilibrium points, linearization around a
solution; Stability analysis: Lyapunovstability of autonomous systems,Lyapunov theorem of
stability, converse theorems of Lyapunov theorem, construction ofLyapunov functions:
Krasovskii method and variable gradient method, LaSalle invariance principle, region of
attraction, input/output stability of non-autonomous systems, L-stability; Control of nonlinear
systems:describing functions method, passivity theorem, small gain theorem, Kalman-
Yakubovich-Popov lemma, Aizermann conjecture, circle/Popov criteria, methods of integ ral
quadratic constraints and quadratic differential forms for designing stabiliz ing linear controllers,
multiplier techniques.

Texts/ References:
1. H.K. Khalil, Nonlinear systems, Prentice Hall, 3rdEdn., 2002.
2. M. Vidyasagar, Nonlinear systems analysis, 2ndEdn., Society of Industrial and
Applied Mathematics, 2002.
3. H. Marquez, Nonlinear Control Systems: Analysis and Design, Wiley, 2003.
4. A. Isidori, Nonlinear Control Systems, Springer, 3rdEdn., 1995.
5. F. Verhulst, Nonlinear Diffrential Equations and Dynamical Systems, Springer,
1990.

EE 657 Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Introduction: Problem framing, feature selection, dimensionality reduction using PCA and other
methods; Discriminative classifiers: LDA, Multi-layer perceptron, backpropagation, SVM;
Unsupervised learning: Clustering, Vector Quantization, Kohonen Map, EM Algorithm;
Generative models: Definition and characteristics, probabilistic graphical models, density
estimation in learning; Combining classifiers: Advantages, boosting, hierarchical classifiers, and
issues; Selected special topics such as manifold learning and case studies.

Texts:

1. S. Marsland, Machine Learning: An Algorithmic Perspective, Chapman &


Hall/CRC, 2009.
2. R. O. Duda, P. E. Hart and D. G. Stork, Pattern Classification, 2nd Edn., Wiley
India, 2007.

References:

1. C. . Bishop, Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning (Information Science and


Statistics), Springer, 2006.
2. I. H. Witten, Data Mining: Practical Machine Learning Tools And Techniques,
2nd Edn., Elsevier India, 2008.

EE 659 Modeling and Simulation of Dynamic Systems 3-0-0-6

Course Content:

Review of ordinary differential equations. State space modeling of linear time invariant systems,
Partial differential equations, State space modeling of time varying systems, Solution of state
equations, matrix inversion, SVD, Difference equations, State space modeling of discrete time
systems, Modeling of stochastic systems, Modeling examples of various practical systems.
Simulation diagrams of state space models, Simulation of dynamic systems using MATLAB
SIMULINK toolboxes.
Texts/References:

1. C.T. Chen, Linear System Theory and Design, Oxford University Press, 3/e, 1999.
2. R. L. Woods and K. L. Lawrence, Modeling and Simulation of Dynamic Systems,
Prentice Hall,1999
3. G. Allaire, Numerical Analysis and Optimization: An Introduction to
Mathematical Modelling and Numerical Simulation, Oxford University Press,
2007

EE 660 Biometrics 3-0-0-6

Course Content:
Introduction: History and Overview of Biometrics, Applications of Biometrics and Future
Trends; Image Processing for Biometric Applications; Biometrics as a Pattern Recognition
System; Biometric System Modalities: Face Recognition, Fingerprint Recognition, Iris
Recognition, Voice/Speaker recognition, Hand Geometry Recognition, Gait Recognition,
Signature Recognition; Additional Biometric Traits; Biometric System Design and Performance
Evaluation; Multi-modal Biometric Systems; Biometric Security; Privacy and Ethical Issues.

Texts/ References:

1. Anil K. Jain, Arun A. Ross and Karthik Nandakumar, Introduction to Biometrics,


Springer, 2011, ISBN 978-0-387-77326-1.
2. J. Ashbourn, Biometrics: Advanced Identity Verification: The Complete Guide,
Springer, 2000, ISBN-13: 978-1852332433.
3. J.L. Wayman, A.K. Jain, D. Maltoni and D. Maio, Biometric Systems: Technology,
Design and Performance Evaluation, Springer, 2005, ISBN 978-1-84628-064-1.
4. D. Maltoni, D. Maio, Anil K. Jain and Salil Prabhakar Handbook of Fingerprint
Recognition, Springer, 2009, ISBN 978-1848822535.
5. Stan Z. Li and Anil K. Jain Handbook of Face Recognition, Springer; 2nd ed., 2011,
ISBN 978-0857299314.

EE 661 Selected Topics in Information Theory 3-0-0-6

Course Content:
Rate Distortion theory: Calculation of the rate distortion function, achievability of the rate
distortion function, computation of the rate distortion function; Information Theory and
Statistics: Sanovs theorem, conditional limit theorem, Chernoff-Stein lemma, Fisher
Information; Maximum Entropy: Spectrum estimation, Burgs maximum entropy theorem;
Universal Source Coding: Method of types, Arithmetic coding, Lempel-Ziv coding; Network
Information Theory: Multiple-access Channel, encoding of correlated sources, broadcast
channels, relay channel; Information Theory and Portfolio Theory: Optimal Investment and
information theory, Universal Portfolios and data compression.
Texts :

1. Cover & Thomas, Elements of Information Theory, 2nd ed, Wiley, 2006.
2. Csiszar & Korner, Information Theory: Coding Theorems for Discrete Memoryless
Systems, Cambridge university press, 2011.

References:

1. El Gamal, Y.-H. Kim, Network Information Theory, Cambridge University Press, 2011.
2. Robert M. Gray, Entropy and Information Theory, Springer, 1988.

EE 664 Introduction to Parallel Computing 3-0-0-6

Course Content:
Scope of Parallel Computing: Limits to parallelizability, NC-reductions, P-completeness;
Parallel programming platforms; Introduction to high performance computing and parallel
programming: shared memory parallel programming, distributed parallel programming, data
parallel and task parallel models, parallel programming patterns, Amdahl's Law; Parallel
algorithm design: decomposition, task and interactions; Communication models: synchronous
and asynchronous; analytical modeling of parallel programs; Programming using message
passing paradigm and shared address space: Threads, OpenMP, Intel TBB, MPI, CUDA,
Hybrid parallel programming by combining pThreads and MPI calls; Case studies: Image
processing, analog/digital circuit simulation, smart grid;

Texts:
1. A. Grama, G. Karypis, V. Kumar, A. Gupta, Introduction to parallel computing, 2nd
Edition, Addison-Wesley, 2004.
2. Joseph Ja'Ja', An introduction to parallel algorithms, 1st Edition, Addison-Wesley, 1992

References:
1. Thomas H. Cormen, Charles E. Leiserson, Ronald L. Rivest, Clifford Stein, Introduction to
Algorithms, 3rd Edition, PHI Learning, 2010.
2. Frank Thomson Leighton, Introduction to Parallel Algorithms and Architectures: Arrays,
Trees and Hypercubes, 1st Edition, Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, 1991.
3. Michael T. Heath, Abhiram Ranade, Robert S. Schreiber, Algorithms for Parallel
Processing, 1st Edition, Springer, 1998.
4. Karl Heinz Hoffmann, A. Meyer, Parallel Algorithms and Cluster Computing:
Implementations, Algorithms and Applications, Illustrated Edition, Springer, 2006.
5. Kontoghiorghes E. J., Parallel Algorithms for Linear Models: Numerical Methods and
Estimation Problems, Springer, 2000.
6. Henri Casanova, Arnaud Legrand, Yves Robert, Parallel Algorithms, Taylor &
Francis/BSP Books, 2008.
7. Jacques M. Bahi, Sylvain Contassot-vivier, Raphael Couturier, Parallel Iterative
Algorithms: From Sequential to Grid Computing, Chapman & Hall/crc, 2007
EE 672 Intelligent Sensor and Actuator 3-0-0-6

Course Content:

Control Instrumentation and design, Component interconnection and signal conditioning,


Performance and specification analysis, Classification of sensors and actuators, Theory and
Analysis of Magnetic Sensors, Solid state sensors and their analysis, Linear Actuators, Fast
acting actuators, Latching linear actuators, Stepper motors as actuators, Rotary sensors and
actuators, Special magnetic devices, Digital Transducers

Texts/References:

1. Andrzei M. Pawlak, Sensors nd actuators in Mechatronics: Design and


Application, CRC Press, 1st Edition 2006.
2. Clarence W. de Silva, Sensors and Actuators: Control System Instrumentation,
CRC Press, 1st Edition, 2007

EE 673 Synchrophasor Technology 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Introduction to Synchrophasor technology: basic architecture and communication requirement;


Phasor and frequency estimation; Basic principles for Wide area monitoring and control in real-
time; Dynamic modeling of synchronous generator; Transient stability monitoring and control;
Small signal monitoring and control; Wide area power system stabilizers; Synchrophasor
applications in power system protection and emergency control; Optimal placement of phasor
measurement units; State estimation; Real-time monitoring and control of voltage stability.

Texts:

1. A. G. Phadke and J. S. Thorp, Synchronized Phasor Measurements and their


Applications, Springer, 2008.
2. M. Shadidehpour and Y. Wang, Communication and Control in Electric Power
System, Wiley, 2003.

References:

1. P. Kundur, Power System Stability and Control, McGraw-Hill, 1995.


2. P. M. Anderson and A. A. Fouad, Power System Control and Stability, 2nd
Edition, Wiley, 2003.
3. Hsiao Dong Chiang, Direct Methods for Stability Analysis of Electric Power
Systems: Theoretical Foundation, BCU Methodologies, and Applications, Wiley,
2011.
EE 674 High Voltage Transmission 3-0-0-6

Overview: Comparison of EHV AC and DC transmission, description of DC transmission


systems, modern trends in AC and DC transmission, Corona and corona loss in transmission
lines. EHV AC Systems: Limitations of extra long AC transmission, Voltage profile and voltage
gradient of conductor, Electrostatic field of transmission line, Reactive Power planning and
control, traveling and standing waves, EHV cable transmission system. Static Var System:
Reactive VAR requirements, Static VAR systems, SVC in power systems, design concepts and
analysis for system dynamic performance.

HVDC System: Converter configurations and their characteristics, DC link control, converter
control characteristics; Monopolar operation, converter with and without overlap, smoothing
reactors, transients in DC line, converter faults and protection, HVDC Breakers.

Power flow analysis in AC/DC systems: Component models, solution of DC load flow, per unit
system for DC quantities, solution techniques of AC-DC power flow equations, Parallel
operation of HVDC/AC systems.

Texts:

1. Begamudre R.D., EHV AC Transmission Engineering, 2nd Edn., Wiley Eastern


Ltd., New Delhi, 1991.
2. Arrillaga J., HVDC Transmission, IEE Press, London, 1983.

References:

1. Kimbark E., Direct Current Transmission, Vol-I, John-Wiley & Sons, N.Y., 1971.
2. Padiyar K.R., HVDC Power Transmission Systems, Wiley Eastern Ltd., New
Delhi,1990.
3. Arrillaga J. and Smith B.C., AC-DC Power System Analysis, IEE Press,
London,1998.
4. Hingorani N.G. and Gyugyi L., Understanding Facts, IEEE Press, New
York,1999.

EE 680 Electric and Hybrid vehicles 3-0-0-6

Course Content

Introduction to Hybrid Electric Vehicles, Conventional Vehicles: Basics of vehicle performance,


vehicle power source characterization, transmission characteristics, mathematical models to
describe vehicle performance, Hybrid Electric Drive-trains, Electric Drive-trains, Electric
Propulsion unit Energy Storage Requirements in Hybrid and Electric Vehicles, Hybridization of
different energy storage devices, Sizing the drive system, Energy Management Strategies,
Implementation issues of energy management strategies, Case Studies: Design of a Hybrid
Electric Vehicle (HEV), Design of a Battery Electric Vehicle (BEV).

Texts/References:

1. Lino Guzzella and Antonio Sciarretta, Modern Electric, Hybrid Electric and Fuel
Cell Vehicles: Fundamentals, Theory and Design, CRC Press, 2nd Edition, 2009
2. James Larminie and John Lowry, Electric Vehicle Technology Explained, Wiley,
1st Edition, 2003
3. Lino Guzella, Antonio Sciarretta, Vehicle Propulsion Systems: Introduction to
Modeling and Optimization, Springer, 2nd Edition, 2007.

EE 682 Advanced Electric Drives 3-0-0-6

Course Content

Motors with continuous rotation, Electromagnetic Stepping Drives, Drives with limited motion,
Piezoelectric drives, Open loop and closed loop control of fractional horse power motors,
Magnetic bearings and their control, Integration and Control of Mechanical transfer units such as
gears, pulleys, flexible drives etc., Project design of drive systems, Application of Artificial
Intelligence in Electric Drives, AI based steady state and transient analysis of Induction
Machines, AI based Switch Reluctance Machine performance estimation and Control.

Texts/References:

1. Hans Dieter Stoelting, Handbook of fractional Horsepower Drives, Springer, 1st


edition, 2009
2. Ion Boldea, Syed A. Nasar, Electric Drives, CRC Press, 2nd Edition, 2005
3. Peter Vas, Artificial Intelligence Based Electrical Machines and Drives:
Application of Fuzzy, Neural and Genetic Algorithm Based Techniques, Oxford
University Press, 1999.

EE 684 Numerical Methods in Electromagnetics 3-0-0-6

Course Contents:

Fundamental Concepts: Review of Electromagnetic Theory, Classification of EMProblems,


Analytical solution methods for EM problems; Finite Difference Methods:Finite differencing of
partial differential equations (PDEs), Applications in Guidedstructures and Wave scattering
problems, Numerical Integration;

VariationalMethods: Calculus of Variations, Weighted Residual Method, Eigenvalue


Problem;Method of Moments: Integral equations, Greens Equation, Application to QuasiStatic,
Scattering, Radiation and EM absorption problems; Finite Element Methods: Solution of
Laplaces equation, Solution of Poissons Equation, Mesh generation in 2D and 3D, Application
to Electric Machines and Actuators; Transmission- line-Matrix Method: Transmission line
equations, Solution to Diffusion and Wave equations; Boundary Element Methods: 2D Laplaces
and Helmholtzs equations, 2D Diffusion equation, Greens Functions for Potential Problem;
Finite Difference Time Domain Method (FTDT): The FTDT grid and the Yee Algorithm,
Numerical Stability of FDTD, Absorbing and perfectly matched layers.
Texts:

1. M. N.O. Sadiku, Numerical Techniques in Electromagnetism, CRC Press, 2nd


Edn., 2001
2. A. F. Peterson, S. L. Ray, and R. Mittra, Computational Methods for
electromagnetic, Wiley IEEE Press, 1997.

References:
1. A R. F. Harrington, Field computation by moment methods, Wiely-IEEE Press ,
1993.
2. W. C. Gibson, The Method of Moments in Electromagnetics, Taylor & Francis,
2008.
3. A. Taflove and S. C. Hagness, Computational Electromagnetics: The Finite
Difference Time Domain Method, 3rd Edn.,Artech House, 2005.
4. J. Jin, The Finite Element Method in Electromagnetics, 2nd Edn., John Wiley &
Sons, 2002.

GENERALIZED THEORY OF ELECTRICAL


EE 685 3-0-0-6
MACHINES
Course Contents:

Reference Frame: Commonly used reference frames, Transformation between reference frames;
Transformations in Machines: Power invariance, 3-phase to 2-phase transformation, Parks
Transformation; DC Machines: Voltage and torque equations, transfer function of DC Machines,
Steady State Analysis of DC Machines; Polyphase Induction Machines: D-Q model, axes
transformation, Steady state analysis from different frames of references; Polyphase
Synchronous Machines: Equivalent circuit, Parks Model, Shot Circuit Analysis, Steady State
Analysis; Permanent Magnet Machines: Basic operation principle, Parks model, Steady State
analysis for various PWM techniques.
Texts:

1. A. K. Mukhopadhyay, Matrix Analysis of Electrical Machines, New Age, 1996.


2. P. Vas, Electrical Machines and Drives: A Space-Vector Theory Approach (Monographs
in Electrical and Electronic Engineering), Oxford University Press, 1993.

References:

1. D. O'Kelly and S. Simmons, Introduction to Generalized Electrical Machine Theory,


McGraw- Hill Education, 1968.
Departmental Elective Courses

Code Course Name LT-P Credits


EE 562 Fundamentals of VLSI CAD 3-0-0 6
EE 621 Advanced Topics in Random Processes 3-0-0 6
EE 623 Advanced Topics in Signal Processing 3-0-0 6
EE 624 Image Processing 3-0-0 6
EE 625 Computer Vision 3-0-0 6
EE 626 Biomedical Signal Processing 3-0-0 6
EE 627 Speech Signal Processing and Coding 3-0-0 6
EE 628 Speech Technology 3-0-0 6
EE 631 Electrical Power Quality and Reliability 3-0-0 6
EE 632 Mobile Communications 3-0-0 6
Operation and Planning of Power
EE 634 3-0-0 6
Distribution Systems
Advanced Topics in Communication
EE 635 3-0-0 6
Systems
EE 637 Error Control Codes 3-0-0 6
EE 638 Multimedia Security 3-0-0 6
Sparse Representations & Compressive
EE 639 3-0-0 6
Sensing
MIMO Wireless Communications:
EE 642 3-0-0 6
Fundamentals and Advances
EE 643 Network Coding and Applications 3-0-0 6
Mathematical techniques for Control and
EE 645 3-0-0 6
Signal Processing
Power Electronics for Renewable Energy
EE 646 3-0-0 6
Systems

EE 647 Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits 3-0-0 6

EE 648 Organic Semiconductor Devices 3-0-0 6


Design and Realization of Power
EE 649 3-0-0 6
Converters
EE 651 Multivariable Control Theory 3-0-0 6
EE 653 Nonlinear Systems and Control 3-0-0 6
EE 657 Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning 3-0-0 6
Modeling and Simulation of Dynamic
EE 659 3-0-0 6
Systems
EE 660 Biometrics 3-0-0 6
EE 661 Selected Topics in Information Theory 3-0-0 6
EE 664 Introduction to Parallel Computing 3-0-0 6
EE 672 Intelligent Sensor and Actuator 3-0-0 6
EE 673 Synchrophasor Technology 3-0-0 6
EE 674 High Voltage Transmission 3-0-0 6
EE 680 Electric and Hybrid vehicles 3-0-0 6
EE 682 Advanced Electric Drives 3-0-0 6
EE 684 Numerical Methods in Electromagnetics 3-0-0 6
EE 685 Generalized Theory of Electrical Machines 3-0-0 6

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