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National University

of Computer & Emerging Sciences

Course Outlines of BS Electrical Engineering Degree Program


Course Title Pre-requisite(s) Text Book(s) Circuit Analysis I None Title Author Publisher Title Author Publisher Course Code Credit Hrs EE104 3

Ref. Book(s)

Electric Circuits J.W. Nilsson and Susan A. Riedel Addison-Wesley, 6th Edition Fundamentals of Electric Circuits (2nd or later Edition) Charles K. Alexander & Matthew N. O. Sadiku McGraw Hill, 2nd Edition

Objective:

Understand and apply the basic concepts of DC circuit analysis which includes the basic concepts of Ohm's Law and Kirchoff's Voltage and Current Laws, the analysis process of dc and ac circuits with multiple energy sources, both independent and dependent, and transient analysis of first order circuits Chapter

Week 01&02

03&04

05&06

07&08

Course Contents/Topics 1.1 Electrical Engineering: An Overview 1.2 The International System of Units 1.3 Circuit Analysis: An Overview 1.4 Voltage and Current 1.5 The Ideal Basic Circuit Element 1.6 Power and Energy 2.1 Voltage and Current Sources 2.2 Electrical Resistance (Ohms Law) 2.3 Construction of a Circuit Model 2.4 Kirchoffs Laws 2.5 Analysis of a Circuit Containing Dependant Sources 3.1 Resistors in Series 3.2 Resistors in Parallel 3.3 The Voltage-Divider Circuit 3.4 The Current-Divider Circuit 3.5 Measuring Voltage and Current 3.6 The Wheatstone Bridge 3.7 Delta-to-Wye (Pi-to-Tee) Equivalent Circuits 4.1 Terminology 4.2 Introduction to the Node-Voltage Method 4.3 The Node-Voltage Method and Dependant Sources 4.4 The Node-Voltage Method: Some Special Cases 4.5 Introduction to the Mesh-Current Method 4.6 The Mesh-Current Method and Dependant Sources 4.7 The Mesh-Current Method: Some Special Cases 4.8 The Node-Voltage Method Versus the Mesh-Current Method 4.9 Source Transformations

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4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 09


5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7

Thevenin and Norton Equivalents More on Deriving a Thevenin Equivalent Maximum Power Transfer Superposition

Operational Amplifier Terminals Terminal Voltages and Currents The Inverting-Amplifier Circuit The Summing-Amplifier Circuit The Noninverting-Amplifier Circuit The Difference-Amplifier Circuit A More Realistic Model for the Operational Amplifier

10&11

12-14

15&16

6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5

The Inductor The Capacitor Series-Parallel Combinations of Inductance and Capacitance Mutual Inductance A Closer Look at Mutual Inductance The Natural Response of an RL Circuit The Natural Response of an RC Circuit The Step Response of RL and RC Circuits A General Solution for Step and Natural Responses Sequential Switching Unbounded Response The Integrating Amplifier Introduction to the Natural Response of a Parallel RLC Circuit The Forms of the Natural Response of a Parallel RLC Circuit The Step Response of a Parallel RLC Circuit The Natural and Step Response of a Series RLC Circuit A Circuit with Two Integrating Amplifiers

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