EE - Electrical Engineering

EE 083 EE Capstone Workshop I

Students work with faculty adviser to complete the first phase of a capstone project.

0

Corequisites

EE 483

EE 084 EE Capstone Workshop II

Students work with faculty adviser to complete the second phase of a capstone project.

0

Corequisites

EE 484

EE 231 Logic Design

Introduction to designing digital circuits. Topics include number systems, Boolean algebra, simplification of Boolean functions, design and analysis of combinational and sequential logic circuits, hierarchical design, and simulation of digital circuits. Fee: $125

3

EE 261 Electrical Circuits

Circuit elements and concepts. Ohm's and Kirchhoff's laws. Simple resistive circuits. Review of matrix algebra. Node voltage method using matrix equations. Superposition. Thevenin and Norton equivalent circuits. Maximum power transfer theorem. Capacitance and inductance. Natural and step response of first- and second-order circuits. Sinusoidal steady-state circuits. PSPICE is incorporated as a simulation software.

3

Prerequisites

MTH 202, PHY 205 or corequisites.

Corequisites

EE 271, MTH 202, PHY 205 or prerequisites.

EE 262 Signals and Systems

Introduction to continuous- and discrete-time signals and systems. Continuous- and discrete-time linear time-invariant systems. Convolution. Impulse and step response. Laplace transform. Fourier series and Fourier transform. Sampling. Z transform. MATLAB software is incorporated throughout.

3

Prerequisites

EE 261

EE 271 Electrical Circuits Laboratory

Measurement experience with a variety of basic electrical instruments. The student engineer will verify many of the principles of electrical circuit theory. Fee: $50

1

Corequisites

EE 261

EE 300 Electrical Engineering Seminar

Study of ethical and professional responsibilities in the area of electrical engineering. The impact of solutions related to electrical engineering in global, economic, environmental, and societal contexts. Students are expected to develop a career plan and gain awareness regarding the importance of lifelong learning skills.

1

Prerequisites

Prerequisite: junior standing

EE 301 Electromagnetic Fields

Lumped vs. distributed electrical circuits. Transient response of lossless transmission lines. Sinusoidal steady-state waves on lossless transmission lines. Smith chart and impedance matching techniques and networks. Review of vector calculus. Maxwell's equations and solution of wave equations. Uniform plane electromagnetic waves in a simple unbounded lossless medium.

3

Prerequisites

EE 261, MTH 301, PHY 205

EE 332 Digital Systems Design

Introduction to digital systems. TTL and CMOS 74-series logic families. Register-transfer level (RTL) combinational and sequential circuit design principles and practices using 74-series devices. Overview of programmable logic device (PLD) architectures. Combinational and sequential circuit designs using a hardware description language. Fee: $75

3

Prerequisites

EE 231

Corequisites

EE 373

EE 334 Embedded Systems Design

Computer systems evolution. Processor to memory interface. Introduction to microcontrollers. Microcontroller instruction set architecture and assembly language programming. Parallel input/output device interfacing. Timers and interrupt handling. UART and Inter-IC (12C) serial communications. Analog-to-digital converter interface. Implementation of a microcontroller-based embedded system. Fee: $75

3

Prerequisites

EE 332 or CS 333

EE 351 Electronic Circuits I

Basic concepts of electronic circuit analysis and design. Physical operation and modeling of diodes, Bipolar Junction Transistors and MOSFETs. Small-signal analysis of electronic circuits. Amplifier biasing and bias-point stability. Use of SPICE as a design tool.

3

Prerequisites

EE 261

EE 352 Electronic Circuits II

EE 352 is a continuation of EE 351. It includes advanced analog circuit theory, analysis, and simulation using PSPICE. Topics include 1) BJT and MOS transistor amplifiers, 2) frequency response, 3) feedback and, 4) opamp active filters. EE 352 provides the theoretical foundation for the companion electronics laboratory course, EE 371.

3

Prerequisites

EE 351

Corequisites

EE 371

EE 371 Electronic Circuits Laboratory

Companion laboratory course to the EE 352 Electronics Circuits II lecture course. Students analyze, assemble, and test various electronic circuits. Students perform rigorous AC and DC measurements using state-of-the-art instrumentation and correlate results to theoretical analysis. Rigorous written reporting of laboratory results is required. Designated as a Writing in the Discipline course. Fee: $50

1

Corequisites

EE 352

EE 373 Digital Systems Design Laboratory

Familiarization with the laboratory equipment. Basic gate operations. Combinational logic design using SSI, MSI, and LSI logic devices. Logic design with programmable logic devices. Sequential logic circuits. MSI counters. Designated as a Writing in the Discipline course. Fee: $75

1

Corequisites

EE 332

EE 403 Communication Systems

Introduction to analog and digital communication systems with emphasis on modulation, demodulation, encoding, decoding, and synchronization techniques used in wireless systems. Python is used to simulate communication systems and to write a software defined receiver (SDR) for a real RF signal.

3

Prerequisites

EE 262

Cross Listed Courses

EE 503

EE 404 Automatic Control Systems

Modeling and control of continuous-time control systems. Topics include feedback, transfer functions, responses in the time and frequency domains, stability, and compensation. Applications include manufacturing and robotics.
3

Prerequisites

MTH 321

EE 421 Electric Power Systems

Introduction to the modeling, design, and operation of modern power generation, transmission, and distribution systems. Topics include complex power, three-phase systems, compensation, and power flow.

3

Prerequisites

EE 261

EE 424 Renewable Energy

Study of renewable energy systems including photovoltaic, wind, geothermal systems, biofuels, and tidal energy. Overview of renewable energy credits, sustainability definitions, life cycle assessment, and exergy assessment techniques.
3

Prerequisites

ME 331

Cross Listed Courses

ME 438

EE 434 ASIC Design

Introduction to ASIC (application-specific integrated circuits) design flow. Synthesis of combinational and sequential logic. Synthesis of hardware description language constructs. Post-synthesis design tasks. FPGA (field programmable gate array) architectures. Design prototyping with FPGAs.

3

Prerequisites

EE 435

EE 435 Verilog Digital Systems Modeling

Introduction to Verilog-based design process. Hierarchical modeling methodology. Basic Verilog language structures for modeling digital hardware functions. Modules and ports. Gate-level modeling. Data flow modeling. Behavioral modeling. Tasks and functions. Useful modeling techniques in digital system design. Component timing and delay modeling. Logic synthesis with Verilog HDL.

3

Prerequisites

EE 332

EE 436 Testing of Digital Systems

Introduction to topics in testing of digital systems. Physical circuit failures and fault modeling. Fault simulation and fault coverage. Algorithms for automatic test pattern generation. Introduction to Built-in self test. Testing of sequential circuits. Test application and response processing techniques. Design for testability. Includes an advanced testing project.

3

Prerequisites

EE 332

Cross Listed Courses

EE 536

EE 437 Advanced Computer Architecture

Processor control unit design techniques. Pipelined data path and control unit design. Cache memory and cache coherency design techniques. Memory management using virtual memory. Case studies of contemporary high-performance computer architectures.

3

Prerequisites

EE 334 or CS 333

EE 438 Introduction to Digital VLSI Design

Introduction to digital CMOS VLSI chip design using Tanner's L-EDIT layout software, and PSPICE. Topics include CMOS gate logic design simulation and layout, speed and power considerations, and CMOS VLSI chip design using Standard Cells. Students are required to complete a modest-sized CMOS integrated circuit design project through layout, simulation, and verification.

3

Prerequisites

EE 231

EE 439 Pre-silicon Verification

This course is an introduction to functional pre-silicon verification of digital systems. The course will cover verification flow, simulation based verification, virtual platforms, formal verification and FPGA-based emulation.

3

Prerequisites

EE 334

Cross Listed Courses

EE 539

EE 451 Advanced Analog Electronics

Analysis and design of advanced MOS analog electronic circuits. Topics include advanced MOS semiconductor device models, active loaded amplifiers, operational amplifiers, feedback compensation, and switched-capacitor filters. PSPICE is used as a circuit simulation tool. An introduction to photovoltaics, thermoelectronics, and nanoelectronics is also included.

3

Prerequisites

EE 352

EE 463 Digital Signal Processing

This course covers techniques used to process digital signals in applications such as audio filtering and speech recognition. Topics include analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog conversions, aliasing, quantization, discrete-time signals and systems, discrete-time Fourier transform, Z-transform, and digital filter design. MATLAB is used to demonstrate concepts and to process real signals.
3

Prerequisites

EE 262

Cross Listed Courses

BME 563

EE 464 Real-time Digital Signal Processing

Introduction to the hardware and software used in real-time digital signal processing (DSP) systems. Topics include analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog converters, DSP chip architecture, and special software techniques such as frame-based processing, circular buffering, digital filters, and the Fast Fourier Transform. Students will implement real-time DSP systems using C language and will run them on a DSP board.
3

Prerequisites

EE 262, CS 305

EE 465 Introduction to Neuroimaging and Brain Stimulation

Applications of electrical engineering in recording and modifying neural activity of the brain. Topicsinclude basics of brain imaging techniques such as electroencephalography (EEG), magneticresonance imaging (MRI), and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Introduction to treatmentmethods utilizing electric and magnetic fields to alter brain activity such as repetitive transcranialmagnetic stimulation (rTMS).

3

Prerequisites

EE 262

Cross Listed Courses

BME 564

EE 483 Electrical Engineering Capstone Project I

A major design experience based on the knowledge and skills acquired in earlier course work and incorporating appropriate standards and multiple realistic constraints. Projects have some combination of the following characteristics: realism, communication, exposure, teamwork, learning, and related opportunities. 

3

Prerequisites

EGR 351 or EGR 352 or corequisites, EGR 300, EE 334 or EE 351 or EE 400-level

Corequisites

EGR 351 or EGR 352 or prerequisites, EE 083

EE 484 Electrical Engineering Capstone Project II

Continuation of a major design experience based on the knowledge and skills acquired in earlier course work and incorporating appropriate standards and multiple realistic constraints. Projects have some combination of the following characteristics: realism, communication, exposure, teamwork, learning, and related opportunities. 

3

Prerequisites

EE 483

Corequisites

EE 084

EE 490 Directed Study

Selected study or project in electrical engineering for upper-division students. Must be arranged between the student and an individual faculty member and subsequently approved by the dean of engineering. No more than three hours of directed study taken at the University may be used for elective credits to satisfy degree requirements.

Variable

EE 491 One Time Course Offering

Credit Arranged.

Variable

EE 492 One Time Course Offering

Credit Arranged.

Variable

EE 493 Research

Faculty-directed student research. Before enrolling, a student must consult with a faculty member to define the project. May be repeated for credit.
1-3

Prerequisites

Upper division standing.

EE 503 Communication Systems

Introduction to analog and digital communication systems with emphasis on modulation, demodulation, encoding, decoding, and synchronization techniques used in wireless systems. Python is used to simulate communication systems and to write a software defined receiver (SDR) for a real RF signal. Knowledge of signals & systems is required.

3

EE 504 Automatic Control Systems

Modeling and control of continuous-time control systems. Topics include feedback, transfer functions, responses in the time and frequency domains, stability, and compensation. Applications include manufacturing and robotics. Knowledge of Laplace transforms is required. A research paper on a relevant topic of interest is required.
3

EE 521 Electric Power Systems

Introduction to the modeling, design, and operation of modern power generation, transmission, and distribution systems. Topics include complex power, three-phase systems, compensation, and power flow. Knowledge of basic circuit analysis is required. A research paper on a relevant topic of interest is required.

3

EE 524 Renewable Energy

Advanced study of renewable energy systems including photovoltaic, wind, geothermal systems, biofuels, and tidal energy. Study of renewable energy credits, sustainability definitions, life cycle assessment, and exergy assessment techniques.
3

Cross Listed Courses

ME 538

EE 534 ASIC Design

Introduction to ASIC (Application Specific Integrated Circuit) design flow. Synthesis of combinational and sequential circuits. Synthesis of hardware description language constructs. Post-synthesis design tasks. FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array) architectures. Design prototyping with FPGAs. Advanced topics on ASIC prototyping strategies.
3

EE 535 Verilog Digital Systems Modeling

Verilog-based design process. Hierarchical modeling methodology. Basic Verilog language structures for modeling digital hardware functions. Modules and ports. Gate level modeling. Dataflow modeling. Behavioral modeling. Tasks and functions. Useful modeling techniques in digital system design. Component timing and delay modeling. Logic synthesis with Verilog HDL. Advanced topics on high-level synthesis and system verification.
3

EE 536 Testing of Digital Systems

Introduction to topics in testing of digital systems. Physical circuit failures and fault modeling. Fault simulation and fault coverage. Algorithms for automatic test pattern generation. Introduction to Built-in self test. Testing of sequential circuits. Test application and response processing techniques. Design for testability. Includes an advanced testing project and a research paper.

3

Cross Listed Courses

EE 436

EE 537 Advanced Computer Architecture

Processor control unit design techniques. Pipelined datapath and control unit design. Cache memory and cache coherency design techniques. Memory management using virtual memory. Case studies of contemporary high-performance computer architectures. Advanced topics on parallel computer architectures.
3

EE 538 Introduction to Digital VLSI Design

Digital CMOS VLSI chip design using Tanner's L-EDIT layout software, and PSPICE. Topics include CMOS gate logic design simulation and layout, speed and power considerations, and CMOS VLSI chip design using Standard Cells. A modest-sized CMOS integrated circuit design project through layout, simulation, and verification is required. A term paper on future trends in digital CMOS VLSI technology is required.
3

EE 539 Pre-silicon Verification

This course is an introduction to functional pre-silicon verification of digital systems. The course will cover verification flow, simulation based verification, virtual platforms, formal verification and FPGA-based emulation.  Includes an advanced verification project.  Prior knowledge of embedded systems is required.

3

Cross Listed Courses

EE 439

EE 551 Advanced Analog Electronics

Analysis and design of advanced MOS analog electronic circuits. Advanced MOS semiconductor device models, active loaded amplifiers, operational amplifiers, feedback compensation, and switched-capacitor filters. PSPICE circuit simulation tool. Students design a custom CMOS OpAmp using hand calculations and PSPICE simulations. Introduction to photovoltaics, thermoelectronics, and nanoelectronics is also included. Students write a term paper on future trends in analog MOS technology.
3

EE 563 Digital Signal Processing

Covers techniques used to process digital signals in applications (audio filtering, speech recognition, biomedical signal processing). Topics: analog-to-digital/digital-to-analog conversions, aliasing, quantization, discrete-time signals & systems, discrete-time Fourier transform, Z-transform, digital filter design. MATLAB used to demonstrate concepts and process real signals. Includes an advanced project to explore a digital signal processing system. Prior course in signals and systems recommended.
3

Cross Listed Courses

BME 563

EE 564 Real-time Digital Signal Processing

Hardware and software used in real-time digital signal processing systems. Analog-to-digital/digital-to-analog converters, DSP chip architecture, and software techniques including frame-based processing, circular buffering, digital filters, and Fast Fourier Transform. Implementation of real-time DSP systems using C language on a DSP board. Includes a project to explore a DSP system in detail. Recommended prior courses: signals & systems; C-language programming.
3

EE 590 Directed Study

Credit arranged.

Variable

EE 591 One Time Course Offering

Credit arranged.

Variable

EE 592 One Time Course Offering

Credit arranged.

Variable

EE 593 Research

Faculty-directed student research. Before enrolling, a student must consult with a faculty member to define the project. May be repeated for credit.
1-3

EE 599 Thesis

Credit arranged.

Variable