ENEE 372 Analog Electronics  (3)

 

Required course for majors in the electrical specialty.

 

Catalog Description:

Analog electronics for the Electrical Engineering student. Semiconductors, transistor amplifiers, operational amplifiers. Analysis of circuits employing semiconductor devices and amplifiers. Fall semester. Lecture 3 hours

 

Prerequisites:

ENEE 272, 273 or ENGR 270, 271 and CPCS 250, all with grades of C or better.

 

Corequisite:

ENEE 371

 

Text book/references:

                Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering”, 2nd edition, by Leonard S. Bobrow; Oxford Press, 1996

 

Course Objectives: (numbers in brackets indicate the relationship to engineering program outcomes)

1.        to learn the basic principles of operation of semiconductor diodes, bipolar junction transistors, and field effect transistors (2);

2.        to learn the basic analysis techniques for circuits containing the semiconductors listed above (2);

3.        to learn to use modern techniques and tools such as PSPICE for circuit analysis (2);

4.        to learn to apply your knowledge of math, science, and electrical engineering (1,2);

5.         to learn how to identify and solve electrical engineering problems (2).

 

Class/laboratory schedule:

Lecture either three times per week at 50 minutes per class, or two times per week at 75 minutes per class.

 

Topics Covered:

PN junction, Diodes,  Zener diodes, voltage regulation, NPN Bipolar Junction Transistors, Field Effect Transistors, CMOS, Digital applications of BJT’s and CMOS Transistors, Transistor Amplifiers, Miller Capacitance, frequency characteristics of BJT amplifiers, Class A and B amplifiers.

 

Contribution to Professional Component:

Contributes toward the 1.5 years of engineering topics as a 3 credit hour course in engineering sciences.

               

Relationship of course to program outcomes

                                This course supports engineering outcomes 1 and 2.

 

Prepared by:         Dr. Michel Elizabeth Holder, 6/7/03