MTECH Electrical and Electronics 2nd Session outlines
EEE 721 Power System Protection and Control 3 credit hours
The course aims at exposing students to advanced classical and analytical operating principles and main features of various types of relays and protection schemes; provide the students with the knowledge, practical skills and competencies necessary for the application of relays and schemes to the protection of plant and systems including transmission, distribution and industrial networks and rotating machines. Content Areas of study include: General protection issues: Transducers for use with protection relays such as current and voltage transformers. Relay types and designs: Principles and schemes for protecting power lines, transformers, buses, generators. Protection of building electrical services. Use of MCBs and fuses, extended to protection of appliances. Advances towards computer-based monitoring and protection of industrial and utility protection systems. Wide area monitoring, protection and control systems (SCADA and EMS) Communication technology used in protection.
The aim of this course is to develop in students’ deep insight, knowledge and advanced skills relating to construction, detailed working and modern-day applications of electrical machines. Content Areas of study include: Transformers: Equivalent Circuit, per unit system of measurement, voltage regulation and efficiency, three phase transformers, types of connections, testing, parallel operation. Synchronous Generators: Equivalent circuit and operations, Characteristics of Salient and Non-Salient poles, model parameters, Single and parallel operation, ratings. Synchronous Motors: Basic Principle, Equivalent Circuit, steady state operation: Torque speed characteristics, power factor correction, starting of synchronous motors, ratings, speed control. Induction Motors: Production of rotating field and torque, Construction, Synchronous speed, Slip and its effect on rotor frequency and voltage. Equivalent circuit. Power and torque. Losses, efficiency and power factor. Torque-speed characteristic. Starting and speed control. Induction generator.
EEE 724 Electrical Installation Estimation and Costing 3 credit hours
This course is designed to provide students with advanced competencies on different types of electrical installations, electrical engineering drawings, and regulations related to electrical installation and testing. It will also provide analytical skills on planning, estimation of and costing of residential, industrial and commercial electrical contractors, tender and tender document and its related procedures. Content: Areas covered include: Estimating, Costing and Contracting: Estimation and estimation tools. Electrical Schedule of rates, catalogues, Survey and source selection, recording estimates. Quantity and cost of material required. Types of contract system. Tendering procedure and preparation of simple tender, Earnest Money Deposit, Security Deposit., Schedule of rates Estimating and Costing of Domestic and Industrial Wiring: Layout for domestic Wiring, Load calculation. Cable selection. Earthing. Selection of switchgear. Overall Estimating and costing. Estimating and Costing of Repairs and Maintenance of Electrical Devices and Equipment: Preparation of detailed drawing work of the product. Preparation of material quantity sheet for the product. Materials and cost required for maintenance work. EDP 721: Entrepreneurship Development Education 3 credit hours (NS) This course aims to provide advanced hands activities-on introduction to the scalable venture creation process for students with a strong interest in technology entrepreneurship. The course is designed for a variety of student interests. It directly addresses the concerns of students wanting to become entrepreneurs in the near or more distant future. It is also useful to anyone who expects to be interacting with entrepreneurs in their business careers. Finally, this course is useful for anybody with a curious mind and a willingness to combine serious analysis with creative thinking Content Areas to be covered include: Overview; Basic Definitions & Concepts of Entrepreneurship. Entrepreneurial Insights: Nature; Role in Economic Development; Intrapreneurship. Starting a New Venture: Opportunity Recognition; Problem Solving; Product Planning & Development; e-Commerce & Business Start-up. Business Plan Development. Marketing Plan: Industry Analysis & Market Research; the Marketing Mix; Preparation of the Marketing Plan; Technology & Marketing. Organizational and Financial Plan: Types of Ownerships; Budgeting; Analysis and Financial Statements; Financial Ratios. Financing the Venture: Sources of Capital; SME. Resource optimization, Profiling Entrepreneurs, Idea Generation. Expanding the Venture: Goal Setting – Vision; Penetration; Diversification; Five Forces Model Ending a Venture – Exit Strategies, Venture Liquidation, Bankruptcy, Listing Ventures, Going Public.
EEE 724 Electrical Project Seminar 3 credit hours
By the end of the course learners will be able to the learner will examine best practices and implement them for designing, developing and presenting a quality scientific presentation using a presentation software. The learner will practice critical evaluation of other students’ work. Content Students will create and deliver a PowerPoint presentation on an active area of research that is currently under investigation. The topic may be of particular interest to you (e.g., a potential Thesis topic, or extracts from thesis), or may be in an area that is alien to you. However, the presentation must report on active, cutting edge research. It is expected that this presentation will last 12 to 15 minutes at a time, followed by short time for questions from the audience. Students will be evaluated according to their participation in discussions, critique of fellow students, written abstract, presentation, and ability to perform the course expectations in a professional and prompt manner.