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Undergraduate |
(ENG)
|
Leader: H Abachi
Offered:
Clayton First semester 2005 (Day)
Malaysia First semester 2005 (Day)
Caulfield Second semester 2005 (Day)
Clayton Second semester 2005 (Day)
Malaysia Second semester 2005 (Day)
Synopsis: Introduction to Electrostatics: electric charge, forces and fields, electric potential, emf, application in capacitors, energy and information storage. dielectrics, polarisation, electrical breakdown. Magnetic fields, current and current loops in magnetic field. force on charges, engineering applications solenoid. Electromagnetic induction. inductance. Engineering applications:Transformer. Electric Motor. Energy stored in magnetic field. Ohm's Law, Kirchhoffs Laws. Mesh and Nodal analysis. Circuit theorems, superposition. DC and AC networks, AC power systems. Ideal Op Amp circuits, applications in instrumentation. Logic, Boolean algebra. Digital arithmetic, Combinatorial logic circuit.
Objectives: Upon successful completion of this unit, a student will be able to: 1. understand and analyse electrostatic forces, fields, potentials and emfs in simple electric charge configurations and apply these to capacitors, electronic devices and other applications. 2. understand how magnetic fields are related to currents, and how emfs are generated by magnetic induction, and apply these in instruments, motors, transformers, power generation and transmission 3. use and analyse DC and AC circuits with the appropriate methods, including phasor and forced response 4. understand the basic principles of the operational amplifier, as part of a general electronic instrument 5. apply digital logic in simple circuits 6. make reliable measurements using electrical meters, oscilloscopes and other electronic instruments, analyse data, and interpret observations 7. communicate and discuss concepts, measurements and applications related to electrical engineering. The unit also aims to: 8. improve oral and written communication skills 9. develop skills in completing tasks as part of a team 10. develop confidence in solving new engineering problems.
Assessment: Laboratory/Tests 30%, Examination 70% (3 hours). Students must achieve at least 45% in both the continued assessment and examination components to pass the unit.
Contact Hours: 3 hours of lectures, 3 hours of laboratory/practice classes and 6 hours of private study per week
Prerequisites: VCE Physics 3/4 or ENG1080
Corequisites: ENG1091
Prohibitions: ENG1301, ENG1803