Course Structure:
Abbreviations: BoS Board of Studies, FoT- Faculty of Technology; UoP-University of Pune Every candidate, admitted to the program, has to earn 160 credits before submission of the thesis. All core courses are domain specific, for a particular discipline of Studies in Engineering/Technology. The program specific electives are based on recent advances in the field of Engineering/Technology related to that specialization. The General/open electives are encompassing in nature and designed by every BoS, pertaining to diversified domains of Engineering and Technology. These courses can be taken by candidate, admitted to any discipline of Research under FoT. Seminars I and II are to be delivered on any contemporary topic in the domain of technology, the candidate relates to.
University of Pune
Faculty of Technology
Board of Studies in Mechanical and Materials Technology
Curriculum Structure Sr. No 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Course Title Materials Engineering Finite Element Method Mathematical Modeling and Analysis Instrumentation & Experimental Techniques Optimization Techniques Elective* Elective* Elective* Open Elective Open Elective Seminar I (Advanced Topic based on courses in semester I) Seminar-II (Advanced Topic based on courses in semester II) Advanced Mathematics Advanced Technologies in Materials and Mechanical Engineering Research Methodologies Seminar-III on Literature Review of Research Problem)/ field works/assignments Research Progress Seminar I and Report Research Progress Seminar II and Report Research Progress Seminar III and Report Research Progress Seminar IV and Report Thesis Submission Semester I I I II II I II II I II I II III III III III IV V VI VII VIII Credits 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 20 20 20 20 --
* Electives to be selected from following list MME1: Advanced Stress Analysis MME7: Advanced MME13: Advanced Gas Thermodynamics Dynamics MME2: Vehicle Dynamics MME8: Advanced Heat Transfer MME14: Advanced Air conditioning and Heating and Ventilation MME3: Engineering Fracture MME9: Advanced Fluid MME15: Internal Combustion Mechanics Mechanics Engines MME4: Vibration & Noise MME10: Computational Fluid MME16: Advanced Physical & Control Dynamics Mechanical Metallurgy MME5: Advanced Machine MME11: Refrigeration MME17: Microcontrollers Design Technology MME6: Analysis & Synthesis of MME12: Industrial Automation MME18: Drives & Actuators Mechanism 2
Note Candidates are required to perform minimum four (4) assignments for each core and elective course, and submit report as a bona fide document to supervisor/course instructor. The assignment may be in the form of modeling/ simulation/ programming/ experimental investigation/ fieldwork. Structure at a Glance: M. Tech equivalent Courses : 10 with 50 credits M. Tech related Seminars : 02 with 10 credits Preparatory PhD courses : 04 with 20 credits Research Progress Seminars : 04 with 80 credits
Schedule of the courses Admissions to this program will be done once in a year preferably in July. In general, credits for the courses will be earned in initial semesters of the program. BoS of various programs need to study several courses being offered for regular M.E / M.Tech programs at approved research centers, post graduate courses offered by the university departments in identifying the core and elective courses for the respective program. Candidates are expected to attend these courses at respective locations in initial phase of this program. For example a student registering for a program in Electrical and Electronics may take some M. Tech courses offered at COEP /VIT/SCOE/PICT or UoP Departments. Sponsored Candidates [who are not taking any fellowship / stipend] are permitted to take these courses on Self Study basis. Preparatory PhD Courses will be centrally conducted at UoP and evaluated by the FoT.
Quality Measures Maximum 3 failures are allowed through-out the course work or else candidature will be terminated. Upon successful completion of course work, with the earning of 80 credits, a research committee (RC) will be formed which shall consist of Guide, industry Co-guide [or Industry Guide and Institute Co-Guide, as the case may be], two experts from the identified pool of experts by the respective board, and one senior expert from the pool of experts identified by the other boards as nominated by the Dean of the FoT. This committee will closely monitor the progress of the candidate and recommend the continuation of the research. If the progress is not satisfactory for consecutive two times, the candidate will have to drop the program. The RC will accept the pre-synopsis only after minimum one publication in journals of high repute. The list of such journals to be furnished by respective boards. The evaluation of all the courses shall be done by respective research centers, university departments identified by the respective boards as per the prevailing evaluation systems of the institutes. For example a candidate registered for course at COEP shall be evaluated as per 3
present evaluation system of the COEP. Whereas, the other course for which he has registered at other place like university department/ SIT, will be evaluated by UoP. All courses will have a theory paper of 100 marks. The conversion of marks and grade sheet compilation will be done by this faculty of technology. Financial Matters The Course teacher shall be paid an honorarium of Rs. 10,000/- per credit for a batch of 20 students for in house courses. If the batch exceeds 20, this will be doubled. Every RC member shall be entitled for an honorarium of Rs. 2000/- per candidate per semester. The guide shall be entitled to receive an honorarium of Rs. 5000/- per candidate per semester. The faculty shall pay Rs. 6000/- per course per candidate to the respective research center towards the academic fees for accommodating the candidates desirous to take courses offered by the respective research centers. The Faculty of Technology to make all administrative arrangements with these external centers.
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T.H. Glisson, Introduction to System Analysis, 1987, McGraw Hill. W.J. Palm, Modeling Analysis and Control of Dynamic Systems, 2nd Ed., 1999, John Wiley. Ernest O Doebelin, System Modeling and Response, theoretical and experimental approaches, 1980, Wiley. Gray M. Sandquist, Introduction to System Science. David K. Cheng, Analysis of Linear Systems. James B. Reswick, Charles K Taff, Introduction to Dynamic Systems. Robert L. Woods, Kent L. Lawrence, Modeling & Simulation of dynamic system. Robert A. Gabel & Richard A. Roberts, Signals and Linear Systems. Eugenio Hernandez, Guido Weiss, A First Course on Wavelets, 1996, CRC Press. Alan V Oppenheim & Ronald W. Schafer, Digital Sigal Processing, Prentice Hall of India, Pvt. Ltd. Richard E Blahut, Fast Algorithms for Digital Signal Processing, 1985, Addison-Wesley Publishing Co. Dougllao F Elliott, K Ramamohan Rao, Fast Transforms Algorithms, Analysis and Applications, 1982, Academic Press Inc., Chapters 1, 2 & 3.
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References
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Cook and Young, Advanced Mechanics of Materials, Prentice Hall Richard G. Budynas, Advanced Strength and Applied Stress Analysis, McGraw Hill Boresi, Schmidt, Sidebottom, Advanced Mechanics of Materials, Willey Timoshenko and Goodier, Theory of Elasticity, McGraw Hill Timoshenko, Advanced Strength of Materials, Vol. 1, 2, CBS Den Harteg, Advanced Strength of Materials Dally & Riley, Experimental Stress Analysis Timoshenko, Theory of Plates and Shells, McGraw Hill th Hertzberg R. W., Deformation and Fracture Mechanics of Engineering Materials, 4 edition, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1996.
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References
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. W T Thomson, Theory of Vibrations with Applications, CBS Publishers Delhi S S Rao, Mechanical Vibrations, Addison-Wesley Publishing Co. Leonard Meirovitch, Fundamentals of Vibration, McGraw Hill International Edison. Ashok Kumar Mallik, Principles of Vibration Control, Affiliated East- West Press. A H Church, Mechanical Vibrations, John Wiley & Sons Inc J P Den Hartog, Mechanical Vibrations, McGraw Hill. Srinivasan,Mechanical Vibration Analysis, McGraw Hill. G K Groover, Mechanical Vibrations Kewal Pujara, Vibration and Noise for Engineers, Dhanpat Rai & co.
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LAB PRACTICE
1 One complete design project considering all above concepts 2 Two assignments (Gear & spring) References
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. M.F. Spotts, Mechanical Design Analysis Robert Norton, Machine Design D.W. Dudley, Practical Gear design R.C. Jhonson, Optimum design A.M. Wahl, Mechanical Springs D. Hull and T.W. Clyne, An introduction to composite materials
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Term Work: The term work comprises of assignments on the following topics. 1. Complex Mechanism Analysis. 2. Dynamic Analysis. 3. Graphical and Analytical Synthesis. 4. Curvature Theory. Use of software such as 'ADAMS' and 'Working Model' is recommended 18
Exercises/ assignments for laboratory practice: 1. Computer aided energy analysis of steady flow cyclic system 2. Study of mixture of gases, gas and vapour, estimation of properties and preparation of Charts 3. Analysis of ideal gas system using statistical thermodynamic techniques 4. Study of behavior of pure substance with change in pressure and temperature 5. Preparation of computer program to study the effect of percentage of theoretical on adiabatic flame temperature and equilibrium composition for a hydrocarbon fuel (program to be run for variable input data)
References
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Cengel, Thermodynamics, TMH Howell & Dedcius: Fundamentals of engineering Thermodynamics, McGraw Hill, Inc, USA Van Wylen & Sontag: thermodynamics, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., USA Holman, Thermodynamics, 4th edition, McGraw Hill Zimmansky & Dittman, Heat and Thermodynamics, 7th edition, TMH
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Rao, Y.V.C., Postulational and Stastistical thermodynamics, Allied Pub. Inc. Jones and Hawkings: engineering Thermodynamics, john Wiley & Sons, Inc. USA Faires V. M. and Simmag: Thermodynamics. McMillan Pub. Co. Inc. USA Turns, Thermodynamics- Concepts and Applications, Cambridge University Press Wark, Advanced Thermodynamics, McGraw Hill Nag P.K., Basic & Applied Thermodynamics, TMH, New Delhi. Jones & Dugan, Advanced Thermodynamics, Prentice Hall Int. Bejan, Advanced Thermodynamics, John Wiley, Inc.
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Assignments:
1. Fluidized bed combustion. 2. Heat pipes 3. Numerical method in heat conduction & convection. 4. Combined heat transfer. 5. Passive heat transfer augmentation techniques. 6. Electronic cooling 7. One problem on network method (Radiation). 8. Heat transfer during melting and solidification. References
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Incropera and Dewitt, Fundamentals of heat and mass transfer, John Wiley and sons. Yunus Cengel, Heat transfer - a practical application, Tata McGraw Hill. M.N. Ozisik, Heat transfer a basic approach, McGraw Hill Int. A Bejan, Convective heat transfer, John Wiley and sons. J.P. Holman- Heat transfer, McGraw Hill, Int. S.P. Sukhatme, Heat transfer, University Press
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References
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. R.J. Dossat, Principles of refrigeration, Pearson Education Asia C.P. Arora, Refrigeration and Air-Conditioning Stoecker and Jones, Refrigeration and Air-conditioning Jordan and Priester, Refrigeration and Air-conditioning A.R. Trott, Refrigeration and Air-conditioning, Butterworths J.L. Threlkeld, Thermal Environmental Engineering, Prentice Hall W.F. Stoecker, Industrial Refrigeration Handbook, McGraw-Hill John A. Corinchock, Technicians guide to Refrigeration systems, McGraw-Hill P.C. Koelet, Industrial Refrigeration: Principles, design and applications, Mcmillan ASHRAE Handbook (i) Fundamentals (ii) Refrigeration ISHRAE handbooks ARI Standards Refrigeration Handbook, Wang, Mc Graw Hill, Int.
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5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
Refrigeration and Air conditioning, ARI Prentice Hall, New Delhi. Norman C. Harris, Modern air conditioning Jones W. P., Air conditioning Engineering, Edward Arnold Publishers Ltd, London, 1984. Jones W. P., Air conditioning Engineering - Applications, Edward Arnold Publishers Ltd, London, 1984 Hainer R. W., Control System for Heating, Ventilation and Air conditioning, Van Nastrand Reinhold Co., New York, 1984. 10. C P Arora, Refrigeration and Air conditioning, Tata McGraw Hill Publication, New Delhi. 11. McQuiston, Faye, Parker, Jerald, Spitler, Jeffrey, 2000, Heating, Ventilating and Air Conditioning-Analysis and Design, 5th ed. John Wiley & Sons
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References
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. The management of control system Justification & Technical auditing,N E Britannica, ISA S.K.Singh, Computer Aided process control, Prentice Hall of India Webb & Ries, Programmable Logic controllers, Prentice Hall of India Garry Dunning, Introduction of PLC, Thomas learning Distributed control systems for Industrial Automation Popovik Bhatkar, Prentice Hall of India Krishna Kant, Computer based process control, Prentice Hall of India Ibrahim Zeid, CAD/ CAM- Theory and Practice Ramamurthy V, Computer aided mechanical design & analysis
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MME17: Microcontrollers
Introduction to 8 bit architecture, memory and I/O interfacing, Introduction to software and hardware tools (Cross assembler, Logic analyzer, Emulator, Simulator) 8051 architecture, comparison with microprocessor, Pin diagram, clock and oscillator, flags, PSW, Stack, Internal Memory, External Memory, Idle mode, Power down mode, SFR counter, timer, timer mode, serial I/O, and interrupt structure Programming, Instruction set, addressing mode and programming of 8051. Interfacing to external world, external RAM and ROM, Display (LED/LCD) and key board, ADC and DAC, memory Interfacing, Stepper motor, I2C compatible, PIC Controllers Architecture of PIC microcontrollers, features, interfacing of I/O devices with PIC controllers. PIC 16c6x, 16c7x. PIC memory organization Introduction to ARM controllers, Comparison between RISC & CISC processor, Versions & variants of ARM processor, Register model of ARM processor, Modes of operation, Applications of ARM processor Buses and protocols, RS 232 C, RS485, I2C, SPI, Modbus, Derivatives of microcontroller, Conceptual Study of various derivatives of 8051 microcontroller such as RD, OTP, AVR, containing PWM, RTC, Timer, EEPROM, in system programming Laboratory Practice: Perform any four practicals from the following list of practicals (1) Interfacing of keyboard and display. (2) Interfacing of stepper motor and ADC/DAC. (3) I2C Interfacing (4) RS-232 Interfacing (5) Interfacing of displays and peripherals to ARM processors. (6) Covert a proven Rubic cube algorithm into a higher level language, cross compile and use the micro controller to guide a robot to solve the rubic cube. (7) Implement a row column matrix of optical sensors connected with microcontroller. Implement a user friendly storage system for an assembly station where assembly operator will pick up assembly components from storage in desired sequence only (sequence on microcontroller, feedback from optical row column matrix, flashing lamps for every location for user friendly implementation.) (8) Implement a simple PLC on a microcontroller kit. References
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Kennith Ayala, 8051 Microcontroller, Thomas Learning. Predko, Programming and customizing 8051 microcontroller, TMH. Peatman, Programming PIC microcontrollers, Pearson Education A.V.Deshmukh, Microcontrollers Theory & Applications, McGraw Hill Rajkamal, Microcontrollers, Architecture &Programming, Pearson Education M.A.Mazidi & J.G.Mazidi, The 8051 Microcontroller & Embedded systems, PHI. Arm Processor Hand book, Dominic Symens
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References
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Sen P.C., Thyristorised D.C. Drives, John Wiley & sons. Murphy J.M.D. & Turnbull F.G., Thyristor control of AC Motors, Pergamon press. B.K.Bose, Power Electronics & A.C. Drives, Prentice Hall Publication. M.Rashid, Power Electronics, Tata Mc GRAW Hill Publications. Dubey G.K., Power semiconductor Drives, Prentice Hall Publication. N.K.De and P.K.Sen, Electric Drives , Prentice Hall Publication. Liptak manual, Process Control
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