DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING ELEG 2113 ELECTRIC CIRCUITS 2 1- Department, number, and title of course: Electrical Engineering ELEG 2113 Electric Circuits 2 2- Instructor Information: Dr. Daniel Bullock Office: Corley 261 Phone: (479) 968-0331 Email: dbullock@atu.edu Website: http://faculty.atu.edu/dbullock/ 3- Course Designation: Required 4- Course (catalog) description: Prerequisite: ELEG 2103 or consent of instructor. Prerequisite/Corequisite MATH 3243. A continuation of ELEG 2103 covering phasor analysis, steady state power, complex network functions, frequency response, transformers, Laplace methods. Lecture three hours. 5- Textbook: J. David Irwin, R. Mark Nelms, Basic Engineering Circuit Analysis, John Wiley & Sons Publishing, 9th Edition, 2007. 6- Bibliography The Art of Electronics, 2nd Edition, P. Horowitz, Cambridge University Press, 1989, ISBN No. 9780521370950. Student Manual for The Art of Electronics, T. Hayes and P. Horowitz, Cambridge University Press, 1989, ISBN No. 9780521377096. 7- Justification/Rationale for the course: Circuits based on alternating current are extremely important for any electrical engineer. This course will give the student the tools needed to analyze components’ response (in both the time and frequency domain) to sinusoidal varying inputs. 8- Course learning outcomes / expected performance criteria The successful student will be able to: 1. Perform AC steady-state power analysis on single and three phase circuits. 2. Analyze circuits containing mutual inductance and ideal transformers 3. Derive transfer functions (variable frequency response) from circuits containing independent sources, dependent sources, resistors, capacitors, operational amplifiers, transformers, and mutual inductance elements. 4. Calculate Laplace transforms and inverse Laplace transforms. 5. Apply Laplace transforms to circuit analysis. 9- Topics covered. 1. AC Steady State Analysis. 2. Steady-State power analysis. 3. Magnetically coupled networks. 4. Variable Frequency Network 5. Laplace Transforms 6. Applications of Laplace Transforms to Circuit Analysis 10- Class / Laboratory schedule: 3 lecture sessions per week, 50 minutes per session 11- Contribution of course to meeting the requirements of Curriculum (Criterion 5) Engineering Topics – 3 Credit Hours 12- Relationship of Course to Program Outcomes a S b c d S – Strong 13- Evaluation Methods: Quizzes - 25% Exams - 40% Final Exam- 25% Design Project- 10% 14- Assessment: A 90 – 100% B 80 – 89% C 70 – 79% D 60 – 69% F Below 60% e S f M – Medium g M h W – Weak i j W k M 15- Course Policies: Absence Policy*: Students will be dropped from the course with an F* after three unexcused absences. If not dropped from the class, grade will be lowered one letter for each three absences, excused or non-excused. Academic Dishonesty Policy*: Cheating or plagiarism is not tolerated and repercussions will range from a grade of zero on the assignment to expulsion from the university. Academic Misconduct Policy*: Disruption of teaching is not tolerated and repercussion will range from a verbal warning to expulsion from the class. Make Up Tests: Make-up tests will be administered from 3:00 – 5:00 p.m. on Fridays by appointment and only for excused absences. Tests must be taken within 6 weekdays of the original date of the test. Make-up quizzes are not available. *Please refer to the Student Handbook p. 10-20 (http://www.atu.edu/currentstudents.shtml) and the Faculty Handbook pages 74-79 (http://www.atu.edu/stuserv/files/StudentHandbook.doc Section 4) for definitions and clarification of these policies. 16- Person(s) who prepared this description and date of preparation Daniel Bullock, August, 2011.