University of
Puerto Rico
Mayagüez Campus
Syllabus & Instructor Information Sheet Form
A. COURSE SYLLABUS |
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1. General Information: |
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Course Number: Course Title: Credit-Hours: |
INEL 4075 Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering 3 |
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2. Course Description: |
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Laws and
fundamentals concepts that govern the behavior of electric and magnetic circuits;
ideal models of resistors, voltage and current sources, capacitors and
inductors; three-phase circuits and transformers. Not for electrical or
computer engineering students. |
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3. Pre/Co-requisites: |
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Pre-requisites:
FISI 3172 (Physics II), MATE 3063 (Calculus III) |
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4. Textbook, Supplies and Other Resources: |
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Textbook:R. Dorf and J.A. Svodoba, Introduction
to Electric Circuits, 5th Edition, John Wiley, 2001 |
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5. Purpose: |
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The purpose
of the course is to introduce engineering students other than electrical
engineering students to the basic concepts needed to analyze electric
circuits. |
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6. Course Goals: |
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After completing the course, each student should be able to analyze a DC or an AC electric circuit using the techniques learned in class. In addition, the student should be able to solve circuit problem containing components such as operational amplifiers and ideal transformers. The student should be able to perform sinusoidal steady-state power calculations and to analyze a three-phase balanced circuit. |
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7. Requirements: |
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Differential and integral calculus; ability to solve simultaneous linear algebraic equations. |
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8. Laboratory/Field Work (If applicable): |
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No laboratory or field work in this course. |
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9. Department/Campus Policies: |
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9a. Class attendance: Class attendance is compulsory. The 9b. Absence from examinations: Students are required to attend all examinations. If a student is absent from an examination for a justifiable reason acceptable to the professor, he or she will be given a special examination. Otherwise, he or she will receive a grade of zero of "F" in the examination missed. (Bulletin of Information Undergraduate Studies, pp. 39, 1995-96) 9c. Final examinations: Final written examinations must be given in all courses unless, in the judgment of the Dean, the nature of the subject makes it impracticable. Final examinations scheduled by arrangements must be given during the examination period prescribed in the Academic Calendar, including Saturdays. (See Bulletin of Information Undergraduate Studies, pp. 39, 1995-96). 9d. Partial withdrawals: A student may withdraw from individual courses at any time during the term, but before the deadline established in the University Academic Calendar. (See Bulletin of Information Undergraduate Studies, pp. 37, 1995-96). 9e. Complete withdrawals: A student may completely withdraw from
the 9f. Disabilities: All the reasonable accommodations according to the Americans with Disability Act (ADA) Law will be coordinated with the Dean of Students and in accordance with the particular needs of the student. 9g. Ethics: Any academic
fraud is subject to the disciplinary sanctions described in article 14 and 16
of the revised General Student Bylaws of the |
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11. General Topics: |
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Lectures
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Topic
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Sections
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2
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Electric circuits, current, voltage, power, energy. Active and
passive circuits, resistors, Ohm's Law.
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1.3, 1.5, 1.6, 2.4, 2.5
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2
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Independent sources, connecting voltmeter and ammeter. Dependent
sources, transducer, switches.
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2.6, 2.7, 2.8, 2.9, 2.10
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3
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Circuit terminology, KCL, KVL. Series resistor, voltage divider,
examples. Parallel resistor, current divider, examples.
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3.2, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6
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1
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Circuit analysis reducing to equivalent resistance.
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3.7
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3
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Source transformation, circuit analysis using source
transformation technique. Node Voltage Analysis w/ current source, matrices to solve system of
equations. Examples with current and voltage source, example w/
dependent source, example with supernode.
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5.3, 4.3, 4.4, 4.5
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2
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Mesh Current Analysis. Examples with current and voltage source, supermesh.
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4.6, 4.7
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5
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Superposition and examples. Thevenin's
Theorem ( Rth, Vth)
and examples. Norton's Equivalent Circuit. Maximum Power Transfer.
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5.4, 5.5, 5.6, 5.7
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3
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Ideal Operational Amplifier. Examples and applications for inverting
and non-inverting configurations, voltage follower and the summing amplifier.
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6.4, 6.5
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3
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Inductor and capacitor.
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7.3, 7.4,
7.5, 7.6, 7.7, 7.8
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4
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AC, sinusoidal sources. Complex numbers, phasor concept. Phasor
Relationship for R, L, and C. Impedance and Admittance.
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10.2, 10.3, 10.6, 10.7, 10.8
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2
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Examples of AC Analysis using phasors
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5
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Periodic Waveform, average and effective values. Complex Power,
apparent power, average power, reactive power. power factor, correcting p.f., maximum power transfer. Examples.
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11.3, 11.4, 11.5, 11.6, 11.8
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2
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Coupled inductors, ideal transformer.
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11.9, 11.10
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5
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Three phase voltages, sequence, Y-Y circuit, analysis of Y-Y balanced
circuit. D-connected
source and load, D-Y
transformation, Y-D
circuit, analysis of Y-D
balanced circuit.
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12.3, 12.4, 12.5, 12.6
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3
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Exams
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Mayagüez Campus
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B. Instructor Information Sheet |
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1. General Information: |
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Instructor:
Title: Office: Phone: Office Hours: E-mail / URL: Course URL: |
Nayda G. Santiago Instructor T-219 832-4040 Ext. 3178 Mon, Tue,
Wed & Fri Nayda.Santiago@ece.uprm.edu / http://www.ece.uprm.edu/~nayda http://www.ece.uprm.edu/~nayda/Courses/Inel4075F03/index.html |
2. Course Description: |
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Course Number: INEL 4075 Course Title: Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering-- See item
number 2 in Course Syllabus Section for Course Description. |
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3. Purpose: |
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The purpose of the course is to introduce engineering students other than electrical engineering students to the basic concepts needed to analyze electric circuits. |
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4. Course Goals: |
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After completing the course, each student should be able
to analyze a DC or an AC electric circuit using the techniques learned in
class. In addition, the student should be able to solve circuit problem containing
components such as operational amplifiers and ideal transformers. The student
should be able to perform sinusoidal steady-state power calculations and to
analyze a three-phase balanced circuit. |
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5. Requirements: |
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All students are expected to: Complete all lessons. Do all assigned readings and related homework. Come to class all the time and on time. Pass all tests and quizzes to receive credit for the course. |
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6. Laboratory/Field Work (If applicable), General Rules: |
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No
laboratory project of fieldwork is required. Radios, tape recorders, and other audio or video equipment are not permitted in the classroom at any time. Cellular Phones and pagers should be in quiet mode in the classroom and OFF during exams. Smoking is not permitted in any area other than those areas designated for smoking.
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7. Instructional Strategy: |
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The course will consist mainly of lectures.
Students will be assigned problems as homework to be individually solved for
their own benefit. Students should have a problem notebook to solve all
assigned problems. Not all problems will be collected for grading, however,
failure to complete homework problems will adversely affect students skills
to master the material. Quizzes will test the student ability to solve the
problems. There will also be homeworks to collect
in class. These will count towards the final grade. |
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8. Evaluation/Grade Reporting: |
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Evaluation will be based on three midterm exams, a
set of quizzes, and a final exam weighted as indicated below: Midterm
1:
20% Midterm
2:
20% Midterm
3:
20% Quizzes &
Hwks
20% Final Exam:
20%
-------------- Total:
100% The
final exam is optional. If a student decides not to take the final exam, the
final evaluation will be based on the weights indicated below: Midterm
1:
25% Midterm
2:
25% Midterm
3:
25% Quizzes &
Hwks
25%
-------------- Total:
100% Quizzes
and homeworks will count towards one grade. The
lowest grade in a quiz will be dropped and others will count towards the
grade. We will not have makeup quizzes. There will be a quiz evaluating the
material taught from the date of midterm 3 to the end of class. Final grades will be assigned according to the
following scale: 0
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59 F 60
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69 D 70
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79 C 80
- 89
B 90
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100 A |
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9. Deadlines: |
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Important
dates: Exam
1: September 26,
2003 Exam
2: Exam
3: To be
announced Final
Exam: December 12, 2003, 2:15pm in C114 All exams
will be held during the class hour. |
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10. Attendance and Behavior: |
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Attendance will be daily monitored in class. Students are not allowed to leave the classroom during class except in exceptional circumstances. It is the student responsibility to ensure signing-up everyday the attendance list to be circulated by the professor at the beginning of each class. Approximately, every 15 lectures an attendance report will be generated. A student with more than 3 (three) missed lectures in a reporting period will be considered not to be regularly attending class. Make-up for exams will be furnished only upon “valid excuse”. Your professor reserves the right to determine what is a “valid excuse”. There will be no make-up for
quizzes. No baseball caps allowed during quizzes or exams. No “special” projects will be given to anyone to improve grades or for any other reason. Students are not allowed improper behavior. Honesty is expected from all
students. If a student is caught cheating during an exam, quiz or homework,
this clearly demonstrates that he or she is not capable of producing
individual intellectual property material. Therefore the student will face
the following sanctions: The grade will be zero in the
piece of work where cheating was found. The department will be notified of
the student name and evidence of cheating so the department determines if
disciplinary action should be taken to the “Junta de Disciplina”. If there is a pending case at the
“Junta de Disciplina”, the student will
be awarded an incomplete with F until the “Junta de Disciplina”
decides the case. |
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12. Instructor Responsibilities (If applicable): |
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Your
instructor will provide handouts for material discussed in class not covered
in the textbook. |
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13. Course Outline And Schedule: |
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--See
item 11 in Course Syllabus Section |
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14. Additional References:--See
item 4 in Course Syllabus Section |