FOR
SEMESTER - I
Digital Simulation of
MEEPE 105-1 MEEPE 106-1 High Voltage DC Transmission
Power Electronic Circuits
MEEPE 105-2 Robotics and Automation MEEPE 106 - 2 Power System Operation and Control
Industrial Control
MEEPE 105-3 MEEPE 106 - 3 Advanced Power System Stability
Electronics
MEEPE 105-4 Estimation theory MEEPE 106 - 4 Flexible AC Transmission System
Electives: New Electives may be added by the department according to the needs of
emerging fields of technology. The name of the elective and its syllabus should be submitted to the
University before the course is offered.
1
SEMESTER - II
MEEPE205 - 4 Electric drives MEEPE 206 - 4 Analysis and design of Artifial Networks
Electives: New Electives may be added by the department according to the needs of
emerging fields of technology. The name of the elective and its syllabus should be submitted to the
University before the course is offered.
2
SEMESTER - III
Hrs / Week Evaluation Scheme (Marks)
Sl. Credits
Course No. Subject Sessional
No. ESE** (C)
L T P Total
Sub (Oral)
TA* CT
Total
1.Industrial Training OR
1 MEEPE 301 2. Industrial Training and Mini 0 0 20 50 0 50 100 150 10
Project
2 MEEPE 302 Masters Thesis Phase - I 0 0 10 100*** 0 100 0 100 5
* TA based on a Technical Report submitted together with presentation at the end of the
Industrial Training and Mini Project
** Evaluation of the Industrial Training and Mini Project will be conducted at the end of the third
semester by a panel of examiners, with at least one external examiner, constituted by the
University.
*** The marks will be awarded by a panel of examiners constituted by the concerned institute
SEMESTER - IV
Hrs / Week Evaluation Scheme (Marks)
Sl.
Course No. Subject Sessional ESE** Credits
No. (Oral (C)
L T P Total
Sub &
TA* CT
Total Viva)
1 MEEPE 401 Masters Thesis 0 0 30 100 0 100 100 200 15
Total 300 15
* 50% of the marks to be awarded by the Project Guide and the remaining 50% to be awarded
by a panel of examiners, including the Project Guide, constituted by the Department
** Thesis evaluation and Viva-voce will be conducted at the end of the fourth semester by a panel
of examiners, with at least one external examiner, constituted by the University.
3
MEEPE 101 OPTIMIZATION TECHNIQUES L T P C
3 1 0 4
Module 1: Linear programming
Direct search methods Random search pattern search and Rosen broochs hill
claiming method- Descent methods-Steepest descent, conjugate gradient, quasi Newton
and DFE method.
References:
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MEEPE 102 ADVANCED POWER SEMICONDUCTOR L T P C
DEVICES 3 1 0 4
References:
6
MEEPE 103 POWER CONVERTORS L T P C
3 1 0 4
Ideal models power switches analysis of thyristor controlled half wave rectifier- R, L,
RL, RC load circuits load circuit with electromotive force- thyristor specifications- heat
sink calculations- surge currents- limitation on di/dt, dv/dt, classification and analysis of
commutation, MOSFETs and IGBTs.
Continuous and discontinuous modes of single phase half and full wave rectifiers half
controlled configurations- RL circuit with electromotive force. Effect of transformer
leakage reactance- operating domains of three phase full converters and semi converters.
Reference:
1. Ned Mohan, Undeland and Robbin, Power Electronics: converters, Application and
design John Wiley and sons.Inc, Newyork, 1995.
2. Rashid M.H., Power Electronics Circuits, Devices and Applications ", Prentice Hall
India, New Delhi, 1995.
3. P.C Sen.," Modern Power Electronics ", Wheeler publishing Co, First Edition,
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New Delhi, 1998.
4. M.D.Singh and K.B.Khanchandam,Power Electronics, Tata Mc Grew Hill
Publishing Company, New Delhi, 1998
5. P.S.Bimbra, Power Electronics, Khanna Publishers, Eleventh Edition, 2003
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MEEPE 104 INDUSTRIAL CONTROL ELECTRONICS L T P C
3 1 0 4
Module 1: Industrial power controllers
Uninterrupted power supplies- switch in regulators and switched mode power supplies-
solid state tap changing of transformers (solid state circuit breakers) programmable logic
controllers.
Module 2: Analog controllers
Error amplifiers-on/off controllers-proportional controllers-Integrated controllers-
proportional integrated controllers-derivative controllers-PID controllers cascaded control-
Feed forward control- Data acquisition systems.
Module 3: Opto-electronic devices and control
Introduction to light- industrial light sources-photoconductive cells, photodiodes and
phototransistors optoisolatiors, optocouplers and interrupt modules-applications of light
barriers, interrupter modules and photo sensors Bar code and bar code readers-video
acquisition systems.
Module 4: Servo-systems and servo controllers
Introduction to servo systems and microcomputer based servo amplifiers-block diagram of
servo systems and servo amplifiers-functional description cascde control circuits-velocity
loop amplifier-current loop amplifier-PWM control circuits-input and output signal for the
control circuits-programming and operation of microcomputer based servo controllers.
References:
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MEEPE 105-1 DIGITAL SIMULATION OF POWER L T P C
ELECTRONIC SYSTEM 4 0 0 4
Reference:
10
MEEPE 105-2 ROBOTICS AND AUTOMATION L T P C
3 0 0 3
Module 1: Introduction
Geometric configuration of robots Manipulators Drive systems Internal and external
sensors- End effectors Control systems Robot programming languages and
applications
Introduction to robotic vision
References:
1. Fu K S, Gonazlez R C and Lee C S G, Robotics (Control, Sensing, Vision and
Intelligence), McGraw-Hill, 1987.
2. Wesley, E Sryda, Industrial Robots: Computer Interfacing and Control. PHI, 1985.
3. Asada and Slotine, Robot Analysis and Control, John Wiley and Sons, 1986.
4. Philippe Coiffet, Robot Technology, Vol. II (Modeling and Control), Prentice Hall INC,
1981.
5. Saeed B Niku, Introduction to Robotics, Analysis, Systems and Applications, Pearson
Education, 2002.
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6. Groover M P, Mitchell Wesis, Industrial Robotics Technology Programming
andApplications, Tata McGraw-Hill, 1986.
7. Sciavicco L, B Siciliano, Modeling & Control of Robot Manipulators, 2nd
Edition,Springer Verlag, 2000.
8. Gray J O, D G Caldwell (Ed), Advanced Robotics & Intelligent Machines, The
Institution of Electrical Engineers, UK, 1996.
9. Craig John J, Introduction to Robotics: Mechanics and Control, Pearson, 1989
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MEEPE 105-3 INDUSTRIAL CONTROL ELECTRONICS L T P C
3 0 0 3
Module 1
Review of switching regulators and switch mode power supplies-Uninterrupted power
supplies- solid state circuit breakers programmable logic controllers.Analog Controllers
- Proportional controllers, Proportional Integral controllers, PID controllers, Feed
forward control
Module 2
Signal conditioners-Instrumentation amplifiers voltage to current, current to voltage,
voltage to frequency, frequency to voltage converters ; Isolation circuits cabling;
magnetic and electro static shielding and grounding.
Module 3
Opto-Electronic devices and control , Applications of opto isolation, interrupter modules
and photo sensors Fibre optics Bar code equipment, application of barcode in industry.
Module 4
Stepper motors and servo motors- control and applications. Servo motors servo motor
controllers servo amplifiers selection of servo motor applications of servo motors.
References:
1. Michael Jacob, Industrial Control Electronics Applications and Design, Prentice
Hall, 1988.
2. Thomas, E. Kissel, Industrial ElectronicsPHI, 2003
3. James Maas, Industrial Electronics, Prentice Hall, 1995.
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MEEPE 105-4 ESTIMATION THEORY L T P C
3 0 0 3
References:
1. James S Meditch, Stochastic Optimal Linear Estimation and Control, McGraw-Hill,
New
York, 1969.
2. Jerry M Mendel Lessons in Estimation Theory for Signal processing, Communication,
and Control, Prentice-Hall Inc, New Delhi, 1995.
3. Mohinder S Grewal, Angus P Andrews, Kalman Filtering; Theory and Practice,
Prentice-Hall Inc, Englewood Cliffs, 1993.
4. Grimble M J, M A Johnson, Optimal Control and Stochastic Estimation; Theory and
Applications, Wiley, New York, 1988.
5. Peter S Meybeck, Stochastic Models, Estimation, and Control, Volume 1 & 2,
Academic
Press, New York, 1982.
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6. Papoulis Athanasios, Probability, Random Variables, and Stochastic Process, 2nd
Edition,
McGraw-Hill, New York, 1984.
7. Frank L Lewis, Optimal Estimation, Wiley, New York, 1986.
8. Mcgarty J P, Stochastic Systems and State Estimation, John Wiley, New York, 1974.
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MEEPE 106-1 HIGH VOLTAGE DC TRANSMISSION L T P C
3 0 0 3
References:
16
MEEPE 106-2 POWER SYSTEMS OPERATION L T P C
AND CONTROL 3 0 0 3
References:
1. Allen J. Wood And Wollenberg B.F., Power Generation Operation and Control,
John Wiley & Sons, NY, 1996
2. Kirchmayer L.K., Economic Operation of Power System, John Wiley & Sons,
1953
3. Nagrath, I.J. and Kothari D.P., Modern Power System Analysis, TMH, New
Delhi, 1980
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MEEPE 106-3 ADVANCED POWER SYSTEM STABILITY L T P C
3 0 0 3
18
References:
19
MEEPE 106-4 FLEXIBLE AC TRANSMISSION SYSTEMS L T P C
3 0 0 3
References:
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MEEPE 107 POWER ELECTRONICS LABORATORY L T P C
0 0 3 2
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
A) HARDWARE
1. Single Phase Semi-converter with R-L load for continuous & discontinuous
conduction modes
2. Single Phase Full-converter with R-L load for continuous & discontinuous
conduction modes
3. Digital firing circuit
4. Three Phase Full-converter with R-L-E load
5. Controlled and Uncontrolled rectifier with different types of filters - continuous &
discontinuous modes of operation
6. Transformer and Inductor design
7. Current & voltage commutated thyristorized chopper
8. MOSFET/ IGBT/Transistor based DC Choppers (Buck & Boost)
9. Half bridge square wave inverter
10. Single-phase Sine triangle PWM inverter
11. Single Phase AC Voltage Controller
12. Transfer function of armature controlled DC Motor
13. Microcontroller and DSP based control of dc-dc converters
14. Study of harmonic pollution by power electronics loads using power quality
analyser
B) SIMULATION
1. 3-phase full converter and semi-converter with R, RL and RLE loads
2. 3-phase ac voltage controller
3. Closed loop control of DC-DC converter
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4. 3-phase sine PWM inverter
5. Measurement of THD of current & voltage waveforms of controlled &
uncontrolled 3-phase rectifiers.
Each student shall present a seminar on any topic of interest related to the core / elective
courses offered in the first semester of the M. Tech. Programme. He / she shall select the
topic based on the references from international journals of repute, preferably IEEE
journals. They should get the paper approved by the Programme Co-ordinator / Faculty
member in charge of the seminar and shall present it in the class. Every student shall
participate in the seminar. The students should undertake a detailed study on the topic and
submit a report at the end of the semester. Marks will be awarded based on the topic,
presentation, participation in the seminar and the report submitted
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MEEPE 201 SOLID STATE DC AND AC DRIVES L T P C
3 1 0 4
References:
23
MEEPE 202 SYSTEM THEORY L T P C
3 1 0 4
References:
1. Gopal, M., `Modern Control Systems Theory, Wiley Eastern Ltd., 1990.
2. Ogata, K., `Modern Control Engineering, Prentice Hall of India, 1981.
3. Kuo, B.C., `Automatic Control Systems, Prentice Hall of India, 1983.
4. Dasgupta, S., `Control Systems Theory, Khanna publishers, New Delhi, 1975.
5. Vanikov, `Tranisent Process in Electrical Power Systems, Mir Publishers, Moscow,
1981
24
MEEPE 203 ELECTRICAL ENERGY CONSERVATION L T P C
AND MANAGEMENT 3 1 0 4
References:
1. Openshaw Taylor E., Utilisation of Electric Energy, Orient Longman Ltd, 2003
25
2. Donald R. Wulfingoff, Energy Efficiency Manual, Energy Institute Press, 1999.
3. Tripathy S.C., Electrical Energy Utilization and Conservation, TMH, 1991.
4. Cyril G. Veinott, Joseph E. Martin, Fractional & Sub Fractional HP Electric Motor,
McGraw Hill, 1987.
5. Abhay Jain, How to Achieve Energy Conservation, Electrical India, Feb04, pp.48-
53.
6. Ashok Bajpai, Key Role of Energy Accounting and Audit in Power System,
Electrical India, Apr04, pp.38-47.
7. Sasi.K.K. & Isha.T.B., Energy Conservation in Industrial motors, Electrical India,
Apr04, pp.48-51.
8. Sreejith.P.G., Electrical Safety Auditing, Electrical India, May04, pp.38-46.
9. Sreejith.P.G., Electrical Safety Auditing, Electrical India, Jun04, pp.38-45.
10. Thokal.S.K., Electrical Energy Conservation by Improvement of Power factor,
Electrical India, Jul04,pp.38-41.
11. Dr.Omprakash G. Kulkarni, Load End Energy Management, Electrical India
December Annual Issue, 2004.pp.58-67.
26
MEEPE 204 MODELING AND ANALYSIS OF ELECTRICAL L T P C
MACHINES 3 1 0 4
Module 1: Introduction
Principles of Electromagnetic Energy Conversion, General expression of stored magnetic
energy, co-energy and force/torque, example using single and doubly excited system.
References:
27
MEEPE 205-1 FUZZY SYSTEMS L T P C
3 0 0 3
Module 1: Introduction
Different faces of imprecision-inexactness, Ambiguity, Undecidability, Fuzziness and
certainty, Fuzzy sets and crisp sets, probability & Fuzzy logic Fuzzy control and
knowledge based systems.
References:
1. Zimmermann, H.J., Fuzzy Set Theory and its Applications, Allied Publishers
Limited, Madras, 1966
2. Klir, G.J and Folger, T. Fuzzy Sets, Uncertainty and Information; PHI, New
Delhi, 1991
3. Earl Cox, The Fuzzy Systems Handbook, AP Professional Cambridge, MA
02139, 1994
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4. D. Driankov, H. Hellendoon, M. Reinfrank, An Introduction to Fuzzy Control,
Narosa Publishing House, New Delhi, 1996
5. R.C. Berkon, S.L.Trubath, Fuzzy Systems Design Principles, IEEE Press
Standard Publishers Distributors, New Delhi, 2000.
29
MEEPE 205-2 RENEWABLE POWER GENERATION L T P C
SOURCES 3 0 0 3
Module 1: Photo-Voltaics
Basic characteristics of sunlight-solar energy resource- photovoltaic cell-characteristics-
equivalent circuit- photovoltaic fort battery charging- charge regulators- equipments and
systems.
References:-
1. John F. Walker & Jenkins, N., Wind Energy Technology, John Wiley and sons,
Chichester, U.K., 1997.
3. Freries LL, Wind Energy Conservation Systems, Prentice Hall, U.K., 1990.
4. Imamura M.S. et.al. Photovoltaic system technology, European hand book, H.S.
Stephen & Associates, 1992.
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MEEPE 205-3 DYNAMICS OF ELECTRICAL MACHINES L T P C
3 0 0 3
References:
31
MEEPE 205-4 ELECTRIC DRIVES L T P C
3 0 0 3
32
References:
1. R. Krishnan, Electrical Motor Drives, PHI-2003
2. G.K.Dubey, Power semi conductor controlled drives, Prentice Hall- 1989
3. G.K.Dubey, Fundamentals of Electrical Drives, Narosa- 1995
4. S.A. Nasar, Boldea , Electrical Drives, Second Edition, CRC Press - 2006
5. M. A. ElSharkawi , Fundamentals of Electrical Drives , Thomson Learning -2000
6. W. Leohnard, Control of Electric Drives,-Springer- 2001
7. Murphy and Turnbill, Power Electronic Control of AC motors, Pergamon Press
8. Vedam Subrahmaniam, Electric Drives, TMH-1994
9. P C Sen; Thyristor D C Drives, John Wiley
10. Bimal K Bose; Modern Power electronics and A C Drives, Person Education Ltd.
33
MEEPE 206-1 ADVANCESD MICROPROCESSORS AND
L T P C
MICROCONTROLLERS
3 0 0 3
References:
1. Barry, B. Brey, The Intel Microprocessor 8086/8088, 8086/8088, 80286, 80386,
80486, Pentium and Pentium preprocessor architecture, programming and
interfacing, PHI, 4th edition, 1997.
2. John B. Peatman, Design with microcontrollers, Mcgraw Hill, Singaore, 1998.
34
MEEPE 206-2 DIGITAL SINGAL PROCESSING L T P C
3 0 0 3
References:
1. Oppenheim And Schaffer, Discrete Time Signal Processing, PHI 1992
2. Johny R. Johnson, Introduction To Digital Signal Processing, PHI 1994
35
2. Defatta, D.J., Lucas J.G. And Hodgkiss, W.S. Digital Signal Processing-A System
Design Approach, John Wiley And Sons 2 nd Edition, 1995
36
MEEPE 206-3 NETWORK PRINCIPLES AND PROTOCOLS L T P C
3 0 0 3
References:
37
MEEPE 206-4 ANALYSIS AND DESIGN OF ARTIFICIAL L T P C
NEURAL NETWORKS 3 0 0 3
3. Zimmermann, H.J. Fuzzy Set Theory And Its Applications, Allied Publishers
Limited, Madras, 1996
4. Klir, G.J., And Folger, T,M Fuzszy Sets, Uncertainty And Information HPI,
NewDelhi, 1991
5. Limin Fu, Neural Networks In Computer Intelligence, Mcgraw Hill, USA, 1994.
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MEEPE 207 POWER ELECTRONIC SIMULATION LABORATORY
List of Experiments:-
Each student shall present a seminar on any topic of interest related to the core / elective
courses offered in the second semester of the M. Tech. Programme. He / she shall select
the topic based on the references from international journals of repute, preferably IEEE
journals. They should get the paper approved by the Programme Co-ordinator / Faculty
member in charge of the seminar and shall present it in the class. Every student shall
participate in the seminar. The students should undertake a detailed study on the topic and
submit a report at the end of the semester. Marks will be awarded based on the topic,
presentation, participation in the seminar and the report submitted.
39
MEEPE 301 INDUSTRIAL TRAINING AND MINIPROJECT L T P C
0 0 20 10
The student shall undergo (1) Industrial training of 3 month duration OR (2) Industrial
training of one month duration and a Mini Project of two month duration.. Industrial
training should be carried out in an industry / company approved by the institution and
under the guidance of a staff member in the concerned field. At the end of the training he
/ she has to submit a report on the work being carried out. He/she should also submit mini
project report.
The thesis (Phase - I) shall consist of research work done by the candidate or a
comprehensive and critical review of any recent development in the subject or a detailed
report of project work consisting of experimentation / numerical work, design and or
development work that the candidate has executed.
In Phase - I of the thesis, it is expected that the student should decide a topic of thesis,
which is useful in the field or practical life. It is expected that students should refer
national & international journals and proceedings of national & international seminars.
Emphasis should be given to the introduction to the topic, literature survey, and scope of
the proposed work along with some preliminary work / experimentation carried out on the
thesis topic. Student should submit two copies of the Phase - I thesis report covering the
content discussed above and highlighting the features of work to be carried out in Phase
II of the thesis. Student should follow standard practice of thesis writing. The candidate
will deliver a talk on the topic and the assessment will be made on the basis of the work
and talks there on by a panel of internal examiners one of which will be the internal guide.
These examiners should give suggestions in writing to the student to be incorporated in the
Phase II of the thesis.
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MEEPE 401 MASTERS THESIS L T P C
0 0 30 15
In the fourth semester, the student has to continue the thesis work and after successfully
finishing the work, he / she have to submit a detailed thesis report. The work carried out
should lead to a publication in a National / International Conference. They should have
submitted the paper before M. Tech. evaluation and specific weightage should be given to
accepted papers in reputed conferences.
41