ECE 4th Year Curriculum Structure Syllabus 2022 23
ECE 4th Year Curriculum Structure Syllabus 2022 23
DEPARTMENT OF
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
9 EC7I03 IDE – 1: Docker 2 0 0 2
Industry driven
Elective
10 EC7I04 IDE – 2: VLSI Layout Design 2 0 0 2
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
9 EC8E603 Nano Electronics (Elective - 6) 3 0 0 3
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Introduction transmission lines, The Lumped-element circuit model for a transmission line,
Wave Propagation on a Transmission Line, The Lossless Line, The terminated lossless
line, Special Cases of Lossless Terminated Lines, Reflection and transmission coefficients,
Standing waves and SWR, The Smith Chart, Basic Smith Chart operations, Lossy Transmission
Lines
9 Hrs
SLE: The Low-Loss Line , The Distortionless Line, The Terminated Lossy Line, Simulation
of Transmission Lines for lossless and lossy conditions.
Text Books:
1. Constantine A. Balanis, “Antenna Theory: Analysis and Design”,4th Edition, 2016.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
2. David M Pozar, “Microwave Engineering”, John Wiley,3rd Edition, 2005.
3. Merrill I Skolnik, “Introduction to Radar systems”, TMH, 4th Edition, 2004.
Reference Book:
1 Samuel Y Liao, “Microwave Devices and circuits”, Prentice Hall,3rd Edition, 2004
Course Outcome:
Text Books:
1. Andrea Goldsmith, “Wireless Communications”,1st edition, Cambridge University
Press, 2005
2. Arunabha Ghosh, Jan Zhang, Jefferey Andrews, Riaz Mohammed, “Fundamentals of
LTE”, 1st edition, Pearson, 2010
3. Sanjay Sharma, “Wireless Cellular Communications”, 2nd Edition, Katson, 2007.
Reference books:
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
1. William C.Y. Lee, “Wireless & cellular Telecommunication systems”, 3 edition,rd
Course Outcome:
On successful completion of the course, the students will be able to
1. Design and simulate building blocks of data conversion system
2. Design, simulate and test ADC and DAC.
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
Design, Analyse(AC, DC and Transient) response and Generate& implement the Layout for
the following circuits using Cadence Virtuoso.
1. CMOS inverter
2. Clock driver circuit using CMOS gates
3. Sample and hold circuit
4. Static and Dynamic comparator circuit
5. Dickson charge pump circuit.
6. Common source amplifier
7. MOSFET based differential amplifier
8. two-stage operational amplifier circuit.
9. Supply-independent biasing circuit
10. Bandgap reference circuit
11. Two-bit R-2R Digital to Analog Converter and its characterization.
12. Three-bit Flash Analog to Digital Converter and its characterization.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
13. Willson current Mirror Circuit.
Course Outcome:
On successful completion of the course, the students will be able to
1. Performance analysis of various advanced digital modulation techniques such as
MSK, GMSK, GFSK.
2. Experimentally find the performance parameters of Couplers, Power dividers using
Microwave Striplines.
3. Performance analysis of various CODECs
4. Design, simulate and implement various Digital Communication circuits
5. Perform analysis on Fiber optic Link
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Course Outcome:
On successful completion of the course, the students will be able to
1. Identify the basic elements of optical fibertransmission link, fiber modes configurations
and structures.
2. Analyse the different kind of losses, signal distortion in optical wave-guides and their
signal degradation factors and the various optical source materials, LED
structures, Laser diodes. Principles of Photo diodes.
3. Apply the fiber opticalreceiver’s concepts in communication, basics of optical
amplifiers, receiver operation and configuration.
4. Analyse the fiber optical networks like SONET/SDH and Operational principles of
WDM.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Introduction, LED’s, LASER diodes: LASER diodes Modes and threshold conditions, single
mode Lasers, Principles of Photo diodes.
8 Hrs
SLE: Photo detector noise.
Text Book:
1. Gerd Keiser, “Optical Fiber Communication”, MGH, 4th Ed., 2011.
Reference Book:
2. John M. Senior, “Optical Fiber Communications”, Pearson Education. 3rd
Impression, 2007.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Course Outcomes:
On successful completion of the course the students will be able to:
1. Identify various Multimedia Communication Models.
2. Apply compression methods and standards for Multimedia communication.
3. Apply compression methods and standards for video signals.
4. Analyse synchronisation issues in multimedia communication.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
H.261, H.263, MPEG, MPEG 1, MPEG 2, MPEG-4 and Reversible VLCs, MPEG 7,
standardization process of multimedia content description, MPEG 21 multimedia framework.
8 Hrs.
SLE: MPEG 2000 compression technique.
Module 5: Synchronization:
Notion of synchronization, presentation requirements, reference model for synchronization,
Introduction to SMIL, Multimedia operating systems, Resource management, and process
management techniques.
7 Hrs.
SLE: Case Studies like MHEG, HyTime.
Text Books:
Reference Books:
Course Outcome:
On successful completion of the course, the students will be able to:
1. Apply the symmetric key crypto systems.
2. Apply the concepts of public key encryption techniques and explain applications of
hash functions.
3. Explain Digital Signatures along with Web and IP security.
4. Explain Firewall and Cloud security concepts.
SLE: Block cipher design principles; Number of rounds, design of function F; strict avalanche
criterion (SAC), bit independence criterion (BIC), S-BOX Design, guaranteed avalanche (GA)
criterion, Key Schedule Algorithm.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Module 3: Public-Key Encryption and Hash Functions
Principles and applications of public-key cryptosystems, requirements for public-key
cryptosystems, One-way function, Trap-door one-way function, public-key cryptanalysis,
brute-force attack, Probable-message attack. Rivest-Shamir-Adleman (RSA) algorithm,
description of the algorithm, computational aspects, security of RSA. Other Public-Key
Cryptosystems; Diffie-Hellman key exchange algorithm, discrete logarithm, Key exchange
protocol, man in the middle attack, Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC), security of Elliptic
curve cryptography, Applications of Cryptographic Hash Functions.
8 Hrs.
SLE: Applications of Message Authentication Functions.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Textbook:
SYSTEM VERILOG(3:0:0)
Sub Code: EC7E204 CIE: 50% Marks
Hrs./Week: 03 Hrs SEE: 50% Marks
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
SEE Hrs: 3 Hrs. Max. Marks: 100
Course Outcomes:
On successful completion of the course the students will be able to:
1. Apply object oriented techniques for digital system verification.
2. Develop the System Verilog codes for digital system design and verification.
3. Create/build test benches for the basic design/methodology.
4. Construct the constrained random tests for verification of the functional coverage.
5. Design and build the ATM as an example.
Module 3: Randomization:
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Introduction, Randomization in System Verilog, Constraint details, Solution probabilities,
Valid constraints, In-line constraints, Random number functions, Common randomization
problems, Iterative and array constraints, Random control.
8 Hrs
SLE: Random Generators and Random Device Configuration
Text Book:
1. Chris Spear, “System Verilog for Verification – A guide to learning the Test
bench language features”, 2ndEdition,Springer Publications, 2010.
2. Stuart Sutherland, Simon Davidmann, Peter Flake, “System Verilog for Design A
guide to using system Verilog for Hardware design and modelling”, 2nd
Edition,Springer Publications,2006
3. Stuart Sutherland, “RTL modeling with System Verilog for simulation and
synthesis: using System Verilog for ASIC and FPGA design” Tualatin, 2017
RF ELECTRONICS (3:0:0)
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Sub. Code: EC7E302 CIE: 50% Marks
Hrs. /Week: 3 Hrs. SEE: 50% Marks
SEE Hrs: 3 Hrs. Max. Marks: 100
Course Outcome:
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
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General Considerations: Problem of Input Matching, LNA Topologies, Gain Switching, Band
Switching, High-IP2 LNAs, Nonlinearity Calculations.
8 Hrs.
SLE: Design Examples
Module 3: MIXERS: General Considerations, Passive and active Down conversion Mixers,
Improved Mixer Topologies, Upconversion Mixers.
8 Hrs.
SLE: Upconversion Mixer Topologies.
Text Books:
1. Behzad Razavi,“RF Microelectronics”, Prentice Hall Communications Engineering
And Emerging Technologies Series, 2011.
2. Lee Thomas H, “The Design of Cmos Radio-Frequency Integrated Circuits”,
Cambridge Univ Press, 2nd edition, 2003
3. Kiat Seng YEO, Manh Anh DO, ChirnChye BOON, “CMOS RF Integrated
Circuits and Systems”, world scientific publishing, 2010.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Reference Books:
1. Reinhold Ludwig, Pavel bretchko, “RF circuit design: Theory and applications”
Prentice Hall Publications, 2000.
2. For Design Examples:
https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/electrical-engineering-and-computer-science/6-776-high-
speed-communication-circuits-spring-2005/lecture-notes/
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Sub. Code: EC7E303 CIE: 50% Marks
Hrs. /Week: 3 Hrs. SEE: 50% Marks
SEE Hrs: 3 Hrs. Max. Marks: 100
Prerequisite: Analog CMOS IC 1 & 2
Course Outcome :
On successful completion of the course, the students will be able to,
1. Design the building blocks of data conversion systems.
2. Explain the working of data converters
3. Design digital to analog converters and analog to digital converters.
4. Identify the characteristics and quantify the performance of data converters.
Text Books:
1. Behzad Razavi.” Design of Analog CMOS Integrated Circuits”,McGrawHill, 2002.
2. R. Jacob Baker, Harry W. Li and David E. Boyce, ”CMOS Circuit Design, Layout
and Simulation”
References:
1. Behzad Razavi,”Fundamentals of Microelectronics”, Wiley, 1st Edition, 2008.
2. R. Jacob Baker, Harry W. Li and David E. Boyce,”Principles of Data Conversion
System Design”, 1995.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Sub. Code: EC7E304 CIE: 50% Marks
Hrs./week: 3 Hrs SEE: 50% Marks
SEE Hrs: 3 Hrs Max Marks: 100
Course Outcome:
Note: Tutorial/ Exercise/ Handson using software tools as provided by the course instructor
will be part of the course, CIE and SEE.
Text Books:
1. Sergios Theodoridis, Konstantinos Koutroumbas, “Pattern Recognition”, Fourth edition,
Elsevier India Pvt. Ltd., 2009.
2. Christopher M. Bishop, “Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning”, Springer, 2006.
Reference Books:
1. Earl Gose, Richard Johnson Baugh, Steve Jost, “Pattern Recognition and Image
Analysis”, PHI, 2000.
2. TrevoHastie, Robert Tibshirani, Jerome Friedman, “The Elements of Statistical
Learning, Data Mining, Inference, and Prediction”, Second edition, Springer, 2008.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Sub Code: EC7O01 CIE: 50% Marks
Hrs./Week: 02 Hrs SEE: 50% Marks
SEE Hrs: 2 Hrs. Max. Marks: 50
Course Outcome:
IoT Definitions, IoT Frameworks, Internet of things application examples, Identification of IoT
Objects and Services, Structural Aspects of the IoT, Key IoT Technologies, IoT Network
Architecture and Design, Drivers Behind New Network Architectures, Comparing IoT
Architectures, A Simplified IoT Architecture.
9 Hrs
SLE: M2M
Text Books:
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
1. Vijay Madisetti, ArshdeepBahga,“Internet of Things A Hands-On- Approach”,
2014.
2. Pethuru Raj and Anupama C. Raman, "The Internet of Things: Enabling
Technologies, Platforms, and Use Cases".
3. Daniel Minoli, “Building the Internet of Things with IPv6 and MIPv6”,Wiley
Publisher.
Reference Books:
Course Outcomes:
On successful completion of the course, the students will be able to:
1. Summarize on Digital system design.
2. Understanding the concept of programming an embedded system.
3. Identify FPGA architecture, interconnect and technologies.
4. Recognize different FPGAs and implementation methodologies.
Digital system design options and tradeoffs, Number System, Boolean Algebra, Demorgan’s
Theorem, Logic Gates, SOP and POS forms, MVP techniques, Combinational circuits: Adders,
Mux &Demux, Sequential design: Latches, Flip-Flops, Counters (Synchronous and
Asynchronous), state machine design: FSM, Different kinds of programmable logic devices:
Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA), Programmable Logic Device (PLD), FPGA
applications. Adjoining devices. Instruments and software.
8 Hrs
8 Hrs
FPGA Architectural options, granularity of function and wiring resources, coarse V/s fine
grained, Logic block architecture: FPGA logic cells, timing models, power dissipation I/O
block architecture: Input and Output cell characteristics, clock input, Timing, Power
dissipation, Programmable interconnect - Partitioning and Placement, Routing resources,
delays; Applications-Embedded system design using FPGAs.
10 Hrs
Text Books:
1. M Morris Mano and Michael D Ciletti, “Digital Design”, 6th edition,Pearson, 2018.
2. Clive Maxfield, “The Design Warrior's Guide to FPGAs”, Elsevier, 2004
3. D. Amos, Au. Lesea, R. Richter. "FPGA-Based Prototyping Methodology Manual",
2011.
4. Michael Barr, Anthony Massa, “Programming Embedded Systems, 2nd Edition”,
O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2006.
Reference Books:
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
5. P. Chu Pong, “FPGA Prototyping by Verilog Examples”, Xilinx Spartan, 3rd
version, 2008.
6. High-performance ASIC Prototyping Systems (HAPS) Datasheets.
7. Spartan-3A/3AN FPGA Starter Kit Board User Guide, 2010.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Sub Code: EC8E401 CIE: 50% Marks
Hrs./Week: 3 Hrs SEE: 50% Marks
SEE Hrs: 3 Hrs. Max. Marks: 100
Course Outcomes:
Note: YouTube Links are proposed at the time of preparing the Syllabus and might change.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Genetic Algorithm (Optimization), MINMAX Gaming, Alpha-Beta Pruning, Constraint
Satisfaction Problems, Introduction, Nearest Neighbours (kNN), Numeric constraints (Crypto
Arithmetic)
8 Hrs
SLE:Deep Computer Vision (https://tinyurl.com/4yy6vxmb)
Text Books:
1. Stuart Russel and Peter Norvig, “Artificial Intelligence – A Modern
approach”,3rdedidtion, Pearson
2. Peter Harrington, “Machine Learning in Action”,Manning Publications, 2012
Reference Books:
1. Efraim Turban, Ramesh Sharda, DursunDelen,“Decision Support and Business
Intelligence System”, 9th edition,Pearson.
2. Deep Learning - http://introtodeeplearning.com/2020/index.html
3. Machine Learning and Deep Learning Fundamentals –
https://deeplizard.com/learn/video/OT1jslLoCyA
4. Jason Bell, “Machine Learning Hands-On for Developers and Technical
Professionals”, Wiley 2015.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
SPEECH PROCESSING (3:0:0)
Course Outcome:
On successful completion of the course, the students will be able to:
1. Analyze the basic concepts of speech processing and mathematical foundations needed
for speech processing.
2. Process and visualize speech signals.
3. Apply predictive technique for speech compression.
4. Apply the concepts and algorithms of speech processing for speech and speaker
recognition.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Enhancement: Spectral subtraction & filtering, Harmonic filtering, parametric re-
synthesis. 8 Hrs.
SLE: Adaptive noise cancellation, Enhancement by resynthesize.
Note: Practical assignments as provided by the course instructor will be part of the course.
Text Books:
1. L. R. Rabiner and R. W. Schafer, “Digital Processing of Speech Signals", Pearson
Education, 2004.
2. D. O’Shaughnessy, “Speech Communications: Human and Machine”, Universities
Press, 2001.
Reference Books:
1. Thomas F Quatieri, “Discrete Time Speech Signal Processing, Principles and
Practice”, Pearson Education (Asia) Pte. Ltd., 2004.
2. L. R. Rabiner and B. Juang, “Fundamentals of Speech Recognition”,Pearson
Education, 2004.
Course Outcome:
On successful completion of the course, the students will be able to:
1. Convert a sampled signal to a different sampling rate.
2. Design an adaptive filter.
3. Estimate spectral characteristics of signals.
4. Explain the use of Wavelets and multiresolution.
5. Apply ML algorithm for signal processing.
8Hrs.
Module -4 Wavelets:
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Continuous time wavelets, CWT as operator, inverse CWT, DWT and vector subspaces, MRA,
Formal definition, scaling functions and subspaces Wavelet basis for MRA.
8Hrs.
SLE: CWT as correlation, Direct sum decomposition of MRA.
Text Books:
1. John G Proakis, Dimitris G Manolakis,“Digital Signal Processing, Principles,
Algorithms and applications”,4th Edition, Pearson Education, 2007.
2. Raghuveer Rao and AjitBopardikar,“Wavelet transforms – introduction to theory
and applications”, Pearson education/ Addison-Wesley, Delhi,2000.
3. Michael Beyeler, “Machine learning for OpenCV”, Packt, 2017.
Reference Books/Links:
1. Tarun Kumar Rawat “Digital Signal Processing”, Oxford university press, New Delhi,
2015.
2. Jaideva C Goswami and Andres K Chan, “Fundamentals of Wavelets theory,
algorithms and applications”, Wiley India 2006.
3. Christopher M Bishop “Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning”, Springer,
2011.
4. https://www.deeplearningbook.org/
5. NPTEL Course:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVGW85eGPQQ&list=PLyqSpQzTE6M_h5Ug
ZWpybzBVDGmHGhQQb
6. https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/people/cmbishop/prml-book/
7. https://www.sp4comm.org/
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Sub Code: EC8E501 CIE: 50% Marks
Hrs./Week: 3 Hrs SEE: 50% Marks
SEE Hrs: 3 Hrs. Max. Marks: 100
Course Outcome:
On successful completion of the course, the students will be able to:
1. Inspect the fundamentals of satellite communication.
2. Categorize the several noises and apply signal loss factors in satellite communication.
3. Apply Kepler laws and examine various satellite terminologies.
4. Distinguish between the working of earth segment and space segment of satellite
communication.
5. Examine the various satellite services.
Module 2: ORBITS
Introduction, Kepler laws, definitions, orbital element, apogee and perigee heights, orbit
perturbations, inclined orbits, calendars, universal time, sidereal time, orbital plane and sun
synchronous orbits.
Geostationary orbit: Introduction, antenna look angles, polar mount antenna, limits of visibility,
earth eclipse of satellite, sun transit outage.
8Hrs.
SLE: launching vehicles, polar orbits, polar orbiting satellite.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
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Introduction, power supply units, altitude control, station keeping, thermal control, TT&C
Subsystem, transponders, antenna subsystem.
SPACE LINK: Introduction, EIRP, transmission losses, link power budget Equation, system
noise, CNR, uplink and downlink, combined CNR.
8Hrs.
SLE: Combined CNR, Equipment reliability and space qualification.
Introduction, receive only home TV system, outdoor unit, indoor unit, MATV, CATV, Tx–Rx
earth station.
8Hrs.
SLE: Hybrid Satellite Terrestrial Network (HSTN), Satellite communication in 5G Mobile
services.
Module 5: DBS, SATELLITE MOBILE AND SPECIALIZED SERVICES
Introduction, orbital spacing, power ratio, frequency and polarization, transponder capacity, bit
rates for digital TV, satellite mobile services, VSAT, RadarSat. GPS: Introduction, GPS
position and location principles, GPS receiver and codes, Orbcomm.
7Hrs.
SLE: Iridium, Satellite Navigation Systems
Text Books:
1. Dennis Roddy, “Satellite Communications”, 4thedition, McGraw-Hill,2006.
Reference books:
1. Louis J. Ippolito Jr., “Satellite Communication Systems Engineering”,2nd edition,
John Wiley & Sons Ltd,2017.
2. Timothy Pratt, Charles Bostian and Jeremy Allnutt, “Satellite Communications”,2nd
Edition, John Wiley Pvt. Ltd & Sons,2008.
3. W. L. Pitchand, H. L. Suyderhoud, R. A. Nelson, “Satellite Communication Systems
Engineering”,2nd edition, Pearson Education, 2007.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Sub. Code: EC08E502 CIE: 50% Marks
Hrs./Week: 3 Hrs SEE: 50% Marks
SEE Hrs: 3 Hrs. Max. Marks: 100
Course Outcome:
On successful completion of the course, the students will be able to:
1. Explain components of wireless communication.
2. Compare and contrast different techniques in mobile communication.
3. Explain the Workflow of Mobile OS.
4. Illustrate various Markup Languages for mobile computing.
5. Program Mobile Apps using architecture like J2ME.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
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Module 3: Mobile OS and Computing Environment
Smart Client Architecture, The Client: User Interface, Data Storage, Performance, Data
Synchronization, Messaging. The Server: Data Synchronization, Enterprise Data Source,
Messaging. Mobile Operating Systems: Android OS, Linux, Proprietary OS Client
Development: The development process, Need analysis phase, Design phase, Implementation
and Testing phase, Deployment phase, Development Tools, Device Emulators.
8 Hrs.
Module 5: J2ME
Introduction, CDC, CLDC, MIDP; Programming for CLDC, MIDlet model, Provisioning,
MIDlet life-cycle, Creating new application, MIDlet event handling, GUI in MIDP, Low level
GUI Components, Multimedia APIs; Communication in MIDP.
7 Hrs.
SLE: Security Considerations in MIDP.
Text Books:
1. Ashok Talukder, Roopa Yavagal, Hasan Ahmed: Mobile Computing, Technology,
Applications and Service Creation, 2nd Edition, Tata McGraw Hill, 2010.
2. Martyn Mallik: Mobile and Wireless Design Essentials, Wiley India, 2003
Reference books:
1. Rappaport Theodore, “Wireless Communications: Principles and Practice” Pearson
Education India, 2009.
Course Outcomes:
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Introduction, wireless PAN architecture, WPAN components, technologies and protocols,
Bluetooth (IEEE 802.15.1), Bluetooth Link Controller basics, IEEE 802.15.1 protocols and
Host Control Interface, standards, WPAN applications.
8 Hrs.
SLE: Zigbee, WPAN applications.
Textbook:
1. Gary J Mullet, “Introduction to Wireless Telecommunications Systems and
Networks”, 1st Edition (India Edition), Cengage Learning,, 2006.
2. Kaveh Pahlavan, “Principles of wireless networks”, 2nd edition Prentice-Hall of
India, 2008.
3. Jochen H.Schiller, “Mobile Communications”, 2/e, Pearson, 2014.
Reference Books:
1. Vijay K Garg,“IS-95 CDMA and CDMA 2000 Cellular/PCS System
Implementation”, 1st edition, Pearson Education, 2000.
Course Outcomes:
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
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2. Understand the power optimization at circuit and logic level.
3. Applying the power optimization approaches to VLSI architecture and systems.
4. Illustrate the different techniques involved in special circuits like memory, adder,
and multiplier with reference to speed and power
5. Analyze various approaches of power dissipation at different levels of abstraction
through simulation for power efficient circuit design
Need for low power VLSI chips, Sources of power dissipation on Digital Integrated circuits.
Emerging Low power approaches, Dynamic dissipation in CMOS, Transistor sizing & gate
oxide thickness, Impact of technology Scaling, Technology & Device innovation.
8Hrs
SLE: Physics of power dissipation in CMOS devices, Low power figure of merits
Transistor and Gate sizing, Equivalent pin ordering, special latches and Flip Flops, network
restructuring and reorganization, low power digital cell library.
Low Power Design at logic level: Gate reorganization, signal gating, logic encoding,
state machine encoding. 8Hrs
Power and performance management, switching activity reduction, parallel architecture with
voltage reduction, flow graph transformation
Algorithmic low power methods: Introduction, design flow, Algorithmic level analysis
and optimization.
8Hrs
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
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Introduction, sources and reductions of power dissipation in memory subsystems, sources of
power dissipation in SRAM, DRAM, low power SRAM and DRAM circuits.
Low power Arithmetic components: Introduction. Circuit design style, adders,
multipliers, division.
8Hrs
SLE: Battery aware task scheduling, adiabatic computation
Text Books:
1. Gary K. Yeap, “Practical Low Power Digital VLSI Design”, KAP, 2002.
2. Rabaey, Pedram, “Low Power Design Methodologies”, Kluwer Academic, 1997.
Reference Books:
1. Kaushik Roy, Sharat Prasad, “Low-Power CMOS VLSI Circuit Design”, Wiley,
2000.
2. Anantha P. Chandrakasan& Robert W. Brodersen, “Low Power Digital CMOS
Design”, Kluwer AcademicPublications, 1994.
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRONICS(3:0:0)
Course Outcome:
On successful completion of the course, the students will be able to:
1. Explain the need of electronics in Automobiles.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
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2. Identify the sensors and actuators used in modern vehicles.
3. Measure and control Electronic Engines.
4. Apply the networking and communication concepts for Automotive systems.
5. Analysis of various battery systems and Diagnostics techniques used in automobiles.
6. Paraphrase the performance and configuration of Electric, Hybrid and Fuel cell
vehicles.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Automotive communication/networking: Automotive networking, cross system function,
Requirements for bus systems, Classification of bus systems, Applications in the vehicle,
Coupling of networks, Examples of networked vehicles. Bus systems: CAN, LIN.
8 Hrs.
SLE: EGR control and MOST bus.
Text Books:
1. William B. Ribbens,“Understanding Automotive Electronics”,6thEdition,
SAMS/Elsevier Publisher, 2010.
2. Robert Bosch Gambh, “Automotive Electrics Automotive Electronics Systems and
Components”, 5thEdition, John Wiley& Sons Ltd., 2007.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
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3. Mehrdad Ehsani, Yimin Gao, Sebastien E. Gay, Ali Emadi, “Modern Electric,
Hybrid Electric, and Fuel Cell Vehicles- Fundamentals, Theory, and Design”,
CRC Press, 2004.
4. Iqbal Husain, “Electric and Hybrid Vehicles Design Fundamentals”, 2ndedition,
CRC press.
Course Outcome:
On successful completion of the course the students will be able to:
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
1. Apply the concepts of nanotechnology and new trends in microelectronics and opto-
electronics.
2. Understand the basic concepts of nano-electronic devices.
3. Demonstrate the Fabrication process flow of nano-devices.
4. Characterize the nano-electronic devices.
5. Apply the basic concepts of Quantum mechanics
Text Book:
1. T. Pradeep,“Nano: The Essentials: Understanding Nanoscience and
Nanotechnology”, Tata McGraw-Hill Publishing Company Limited, New Delhi,
2008.
2. 2. Robert W. Kelsall, Ian W. Hamley and MarkGeoghegan, “Nanoscale Science and
Technology”,John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., UK, 2005
Reference Books:
RECONFIGURABLE COMPUTING(3:0:0)
Course Outcomes:
On successful completion of the course the students will be able to:
1. Understand the fundamental principles and practices in reconfigurable architecture.
2. Simulate and synthesize the reconfigurable computing architectures.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
3. Illustrate the FPGA design principles, and logic synthesis.
4. Integrate hardware and software technologies for reconfiguration computing focusing
on partial reconfiguration design.
5. Design digital systems for a variety of applications on signal processing and system on
chip configurations.
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering
The National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru 2022-23
Reconfigurable computing for DSP, DSP application building blocks, Examples:
Beamforming, Software Radio, Image and video processing, Local Neighbourhood functions,
Convolution.
7 Hrs.
SLE: SOPC
Text Books:
1. M. Gokhale and P. Graham, “Reconfigurable Computing: Accelerating
Computation with Field-Programmable Gate Arrays”, Springer, ISBN: 978-0-387-
26105-8, 2005.
2. C. Bobda, “Introduction to Reconfigurable Computing: Architectures,
Algorithms and Applications”, Springer, ISBN: 978-1-4020-6088-5, 2007
Reference Books:
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Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering