ele1iel intro to electrical

INTRODUCTION TO ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING

ELE1IEL

2019

Credit points: 15

Subject outline

This introductory subject assumes no prior knowledge of electrical or electronics engineering. The subject provides an overall introduction to electrical engineering. The subject then consists of two components: DC and AC Circuit Analysis. The first component introduces elementary circuit analysis techniques and applies them to DC circuits. The second component extends these analysis techniques and applies them to AC Circuits. At the end of the subject, students will be familiar with: circuit theory, sinusoidal and non-sinusoidal waveforms, phasors, impedance, network theorems, measurement systems, instruments and DC/AC applications. Engineers Australia stage 1 competencies covered in this subject are: 1.1, 1.2, 2.1 and 3.2

SchoolSchool Engineering&Mathematical Sciences

Credit points15

Subject Co-ordinatorTommy Huynh

Available to Study Abroad StudentsYes

Subject year levelYear Level 1 - UG

Exchange StudentsYes

Subject particulars

Subject rules

PrerequisitesN/A

Co-requisitesN/A

Incompatible subjectsN/A

Equivalent subjectsN/A

Special conditionsN/A

Learning resources

Readings

Resource TypeTitleResource RequirementAuthor and YearPublisher
ReadingsIntroductory circuit analysis,PrescribedBoylstad, R. L.13TH EDN, PEARSON, 2016.

Graduate capabilities & intended learning outcomes

01. Analyse DC and AC circuits to determine the currents flowing through, voltages across and power delivered/absorbed by circuit elements.

Activities:
The first half of the semester is dedicated to DC analysis and the second to AC analysis. The material is covered in lectures, online tutorials and laboratory experiments, and is assessed in weekly assignments, weekly laboratory reports, triweekly quizzes and in the final exam.

02. Apply circuit analysis theorems to determine the voltage across or current through a circuit element.

Activities:
In the first half of the semester circuit analysis theorems are studied and applied to DC circuits. In the second half, the analysis techniques are extended and applied to AC Circuits. Students are expected to demonstrate the ability to apply all of the various analysis theorems as well as identify which circuit analysis theorem is most appropriate to efficiently solve a given problem. The material is covered in lectures, online tutorials and laboratory experiments, and is assessed in weekly assignments, weekly laboratory reports, triweekly quizzes and in the final exam.

03. Investigate and analyse engineering problems using provided information sources.

Activities:
Examples of complex engineering problems are covered in lectures and videos tutorials, and such problems are mainly assessed in weekly assignments and to a lesser extent in triweekly quizzes and the final exam.

04. Construct and analyse circuits to ascertain and document their functionality through measurements.

Activities:
Students follow laboratory instructions to construct, debug and analyse circuits. Examples of circuit construction and analysing techniques are given in the lectures and during the weekly laboratory session. Students are expected to carry out experiments under the supervision and direction of a laboratory demonstrator and compare their experimental measurements to theoretical expectations.

05. Clearly document experimental concepts and results through a written technical report.

Activities:
For most of the weekly laboratory experiments students are required to write a brief technical report focusing on a particular section of the report each week (e.g. introduction, method, results, discussion, conclusion). For the final laboratory experiment students are expected to produce a complete and detailed technical report.

Subject options

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Start date between: and    Key dates

Bendigo, 2019, Semester 2, Blended

Overview

Online enrolmentYes

Maximum enrolment sizeN/A

Enrolment information

Subject Instance Co-ordinatorTommy Huynh

Class requirements

Laboratory ClassWeek: 32 - 43
One 3.0 hours laboratory class per week on weekdays during the day from week 32 to week 43 and delivered via face-to-face.

LectureWeek: 31 - 43
One 1.0 hours lecture per week on weekdays during the day from week 31 to week 43 and delivered via face-to-face.

LectureWeek: 31 - 43
Two 1.0 hours lecture per week on weekdays during the day from week 31 to week 43 and delivered via online.

TutorialWeek: 32 - 43
One 1.0 hours tutorial per week on weekdays during the day from week 32 to week 43 and delivered via face-to-face.

Assessments

Assessment elementComments%ILO*
2 Written Tests (equivalent 1000 words each)5001, 02, 03, 04
2 assignments (equivalent 450 words each) Submitted via online form on LMS2001, 02, 03, 04
8 Short Laboratory Reports completed online (approximately 200 words each) Involves making & recording measurements, and having work checked by a demonstrator3001, 03, 05

Melbourne, 2019, Semester 2, Blended

Overview

Online enrolmentYes

Maximum enrolment sizeN/A

Enrolment information

Subject Instance Co-ordinatorTommy Huynh

Class requirements

Laboratory ClassWeek: 32 - 43
One 3.0 hours laboratory class per week on weekdays during the day from week 32 to week 43 and delivered via face-to-face.

LectureWeek: 31 - 43
One 1.0 hours lecture per week on weekdays during the day from week 31 to week 43 and delivered via face-to-face.

LectureWeek: 31 - 43
Two 1.0 hours lecture per week on weekdays during the day from week 31 to week 43 and delivered via online.

TutorialWeek: 32 - 43
One 1.0 hours tutorial per week on weekdays during the day from week 32 to week 43 and delivered via face-to-face.

Assessments

Assessment elementComments%ILO*
2 Written Tests (equivalent 1000 words each)5001, 02, 03, 04
2 assignments (equivalent 450 words each) Submitted via online form on LMS2001, 02, 03, 04
8 Short Laboratory Reports completed online (approximately 200 words each) Involves making & recording measurements, and having work checked by a demonstrator3001, 03, 05