Biju Patnaik University of Technology, Odisha: Curriculum and Syllabus
Biju Patnaik University of Technology, Odisha: Curriculum and Syllabus
ROURKELA
3 BS Optimization in 3-0-0 3
100 50
Engineering
Smart and Composite
RME6D001 Materials 3-0-0
Books:
1. Design of Machine Elements, V.B. Bhandari, Tata McGraw Hill
2. Mechanical Engineering Design, J.E.Shigley, C.R.Mischke, R.G.Budynas and K.J.Nisbett,
TMH
3. Machine Design, Pandya and Shah, Charotar Book Stall
4. Fundamentals of Machine Component Design by R.C.Juvinall and K.M.Marshek, John
Wiley & Sons.
5. Machine Drawing by N.Sidheswar, McGraw-Hill
6. Machine Design, P.C.Sharma and D.K.Agrawal, S.K.Kataria& Sons
7. Machine Design, P. Kanaiah, Scietech Publications
8. Machine Design, Robert L. Norton, Pearson Education Asia.
9. Design of Machine Elements by C. S. Sharma and K. Purohit, PHI
Books :
3. Fundamentals of Machining and Machine Tools, G.Boothroyd and W.A.Knight, CRC Press
2. Metal Cutting Principles, M.C.Shaw, Oxford University Press
1. Metal Cutting Theory and Practice, A.Bhattacharya, Central Book Publishers
4. Manufacturing Technology – by P.N.Rao, Tata McGraw Hill publication.
5. Modern Manufacturing Processes, P.C.Pandey, H.S.Shan, Tata McGraw Hill
6. Manufacturing Science, Ghosh and Mallik, East West Press.
7. Metal Cutting Theory and Practice, D.A.Stephenson and J.S.Agapiou, CRC Press
8. Machining Technology; Machine Tools and Operation, H.A.Youssef and H. El-Hofy, CRC Press
9. Machine Tools and Manufacturing Technology, Krar, Rapisarda and Check, Cengage
Learning
10. Technology of Machine Tools, Krar, Gill and Smidt, Tata McGraw Hill
11. Principles of Metal Cutting, G.Kuppuswamy, Universities Press
12. Metal Cutting and Machne Tools, G.T.Reddy, Scitech
13. Fundamentals of tool Engineering Design, S.K.Basu, S.K.Mukherjee, R. Mishra , Oxford & IBH
Pub Co.
14. Machine Tools, R.N.Datta, New Central Book Agency
Queuing models: General characteristics, Markovian queuing model, M/M/1model, Limited queue
capacity, multiple server, Finite sources, Queue discipline.
Books:
[1] Operations Research- Principle and Practice, A. Ravindran, D. T. Philips, J. Solberg,
Second edition, Wiley India Pvt Ltd.
[2] Operation Research, Prabhakar Pai ,Oxford University Press
[3] Optimization for Engineering Design, Kalyanmoy Deb, PHI Learning Pvt Ltd.
[2] Operations Research, H.A.Taha, A.M.Natarajan, P.Balasubramanie, A.Tamilarasi,
Pearson Education, Eighth Edition.
[5] Engineering Optimization, S S Rao, New Age International Pvt Ltd, 2003.
[6] Linear and Non-linear Optimization, Stephen G. Nash, A. Sofer, McGraw
Hill, 2ndEdition.
[7] Engineering Optimization, A.Ravindran, K.M.Ragsdell, G.V.Reklaitis, Wiley India
Pvt. Ltd, Second edition.
[3] Operations Research, F.S.Hiller, G.J.Lieberman, Tata McGraw Hill, Eighth Edition,
2005.
[9] Operations Research, P.K.Gupta, D.S.Hira, S.Chand and Company Ltd, 2014.
MODULE I (7 HOURS)
Introduction: definitions and classifications; natural composites; role of matrix and reinforcement; factors
which determine properties; the benefits of composites.
Reinforcements and the reinforcement matrix interface: natural fibers; synthetic organic fibers – aramid,
polyethylene; and synthetic inorganic fibers – glass, alumina, boron, carbon, silicon based fibers; particulate
and whisker reinforcements, reinforcement-matrix interface – wettability, interfacial bonding, methods for
measuring bond strength.
MODULE II (8 HOURS)
Metal matrix composites: Introduction, important metallic matrices; metal matrix composite processing: solid
state processing – diffusion bonding, powder metallurgy; liquid state processing – melt stirring, compocasting
(rheocasting), squeeze casting, liquid infiltration under gas pressure; deposition – spray co-deposition and
other deposition techniques like CVD and PVD; in situ processes. Interface reactions. Properties of MMCs –
physical properties; mechanical properties like elastic properties, room temperature strength and ductility,
properties at elevated temperatures, fatigue resistance. Processing, structure of multifilamentary
superconductors, properties of aluminium reinforced with silicon carbide particles
Books:
[1] Composite Materials: Engineering and Science, by Matthews and Rawlings, CRC Press.
[2] An Introduction to composite material, by D.Hull and T.W. Clyne, Cambridge University
press.
[3] Metal Matrix Composites, Thermomechanical Behaviour by M.Taya, and R.J.Arsenault,
Pergamon Press, Oxford.
[4] Fundamentals of Metal Matrix Composites by S.Suresh, A.Martensen, and A.Needleman,
Butterworth, Heinemann
[5] Mechanics of composite materials, R. M. Jones, Mc Graw Hill Book Co.
[6] Mechanics of composite materials and structures, M Mukhopadhay, Universities Press.
Module I: (9 hours)
Fundamentals of Fluid dynamics and Thermodynamics: continuity equation, Momentum
equation, Energy equation of incompressible flow Introduction to compressible flow:
Introduction, Isentropic flow in a stream tube, speed of sound, Mach waves; One dimensional
Isentropic Flow: Governing equations, stagnation conditions, critical conditions, maximum
discharge velocity, isentropic relations
Module II: (9 hours)
Normal Shock Waves: Shock waves, stationary normal shock waves, normal shock wave
relations in terms of Mach number; Oblique Shock Waves: Oblique shock wave relations,
reflection of oblique shock waves, interaction of oblique shock waves, conical shock waves;
Expansion Waves: Prandtl-Meyer flow, reflection and interaction of expansion waves, flow
over bodies involving shock and expansion waves
Module III: (9 hours)
Variable Area Flow: Equations for variable area flow, operating characteristics of nozzles,
convergent-divergent supersonic diffusers Adiabatic Flow in a Duct with Friction: Flow in a
constant area duct, friction factor variations, the Fanno line; Flow with Heat addition or
removal: One-dimensional flow in a constant area duct neglecting viscosity, variable area
flow with heat addition, one-dimensional constant area flow with both heat exchanger and
friction
Module IV: (9 hours)
Generalized Quasi-One-Dimensional Flow: Governing equations and influence coefficients,
solution procedure for generalized flow with and without sonic point; Two-Dimensional
Compressible Flow: Governing equations, vorticity considerations, the velocity potential,
linearized solutions, linearized subsonic flow, linearized supersonic flow, method of
characteristics.
Books
1. P. H. Oosthuizen and W. E. Carscallen. Compressible Fluid Flow. NY, McGraw-Hill,
1997.
2. H. W. Liepmann, and A. Roshko, Elements of Gas Dynamics, Dover Pub, 2001.
3. A. H. Shapiro, Compressible Fluid Flow 1 and 2. Hoboken NJ: John Wiley.
4. M. A. Saad, Compressible Fluid Flow. 2nd ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall,
1993.
5. F. M. White, Viscous Fluid Flow. 2nd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1991.
Books :
1. Automation, Production Systems and Computer Integrated Manufacturing: M.P. Groover,
Pearson Publication.
2. Automation, Production systems & Computer Integrated Manufacturing, M.P Groover, PHI.
3. CAD/CAM/CIM, P.Radhakrishnan, S.Subramanyam and V.Raju, New Age International
4. Flexible Manufacturing Systems in Practice, J Talavage and R.G. Hannam, Marcell Decker
5. CAD/CAM Theory and Practice, Zeid and Subramanian, TMH Publication
6. CAD/CAM Theory and Concepts, K. Sareen and C. Grewal, S Chand publication
7. Computer Aided Design and Manufacturing, L. Narayan, M. Rao and S. Sarkar, PHI.
8. Principles of Computer Integrated Manufacturing, S.K.Vajpayee, PHI
9. Computer Integrated Manufacturing, J.A.Rehg and H.W.Kraebber, Prentice Hall
Module-III: (6 hours)
UNCERTAINTY – Acting under Uncertainty, Basic Probability Notation, The Axioms of Probability,
Inference Using Full Joint Distributions, Independence, Bayes’ Rule and its Use, PROBABILISTIC
REASONING – Representing Knowledge in an Uncertain Domain, The Semantics of Bayesian
Networks, Efficient Representation of Conditional Distribution, Exact Inference in Bayesian
Networks, Approximate Inference in Bayesian Networks
Books:
[1] Elaine Rich, Kevin Knight, & Shivashankar B Nair, Artificial Intelligence, McGraw
Hill,3rd ed.,2009
[2] Stuart Russell, Peter Norvig, Artificial Intelligence -A Modern Approach, 2/e, Pearson,
2003.
MODULE – I (12HOURS)
Electrical energy conservation: Energy economics- discount rate, payback period, internal
rate of return, net present value, and life cycle cost. Energy generation, energy distribution,
energy usage by processes, technical and economic evaluation, understanding energy costs,
classification of energy conservation measures, plant energy performance, benchmarking and
energy performance, matching energy usage to requirement, maximizing energy system
efficiency, optimizing the input energy requirements, fuel and energy substitution, and energy
balancing.
EB billing- HT and LT supply, transformers, electric motors- motor efficiency computation,
energy efficient motors, pumps, fans, blowers, compressed air systems, refrigeration and air
conditioning systems, cooling towers, electric heaters (space and liquid), DG-sets,
illuminating devices, power factor improvement, and harmonics.
Module I: (5 hours)
Industrial Control examples. Mathematical models of physical systems. Control hardware and
their models. Transfer function models of linear time-invariant systems. Feedback Control:
Open-Loop and Closed-loop systems. Benefits of NegativeFeedback. Block diagram algebra.
Signal Flow Graph and Mason’sGain formula.
Books:
[1] I. J. Nagrath and M. Gopal, “Control Systems Engineering”, New Age International,
2009.
[2] K. Ogata, “Modern Control Engineering”, Prentice Hall, 1991
[3] M. Gopal, “Control Systems: Principles and Design”, McGraw Hill Education, 1997.
[4] B. C. Kuo, “Automatic Control System”, Prentice Hall, 1995.
The course aims at imparting basic principles of thought process, reasoning and inferencing.
Sustainability is at the core of Indian Traditional Knowledge Systems connecting society and
nature.Holistic life style of Yogic-science and wisdom capsules in Sanskrit literature are also
important in modern society with rapid technological advancements and societal disruptions.
The course focuses on introduction to Indian Knowledge System, Indian perspective of
modern scientific world-view and basic principles of Yoga and holistic health care system.
Course Outcomes:
Course Content:
• Case Studies.
Books:
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS:
1. Design of any one working model related to Design of machine elements i.e.,
Module I and II.
2. Design of any one working model related to Design of machine elements i.e.,
Module III and IV.
3. Design & drawing of Riveted joint
4. Design and drawing of Cotter joint
5. Design and drawing of Knuckle joint
6. Design of shafts subjected to combined loading
7. Design and drawing of Flange coupling
8. Design of spring
9. Design of bearing
Total no. of Drawing: 6
3 in drawing sheets
3 in AutoCad/Pro-E/CATIA/ANSYS
B. Tech (Mechanical Engineering) Syllabus from Admission Batch 2018-196th Semester
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS:
(Minimum 08 Experiments/Studies)
1. Job on lathe with tapper turning, thread cutting, knurling and groove cutting (3
experiments).
2. Gear cutting (with index head) on milling machine
3. Working with shaper, Planner and slotting machine.
4. Working with surface and cylindrical grinding.
5. Determination of cutting force using Lathe tool dynamometer.
6. Determination of cutting force in drilling using drill tool dynamometer.
7. Study of Non-traditional machining processes.(USM, AJM, EDM, ECM)
8. Study of CNC Lathe and demonstration of making job in CNC lathe.
9. Study of CNC Milling machine and demonstration of making job in CNC Milling machine
B. Tech (Mechanical Engineering) Syllabus from Admission Batch 2018-196th Semester
th
6 Semester Future-ready L-T-P 2 Credits
Contributor Program 0-0-3
Laboratory
The Program content is also designed to expose students to real-world workplace scenarios
and sensitize them to some of the challenges faced in society around them, especially in the
local communities around them and in their own state of Odisha.
The Contributor Program syllabus has been evolved and fine-tuned over several years, to –
a) address the changing need and contemporary challenges being faced by industry and what
employers of today are looking for in the people they hire;
b) working extensively with universities and students and an appreciation of their challenges
and concerns;
c) guided by the higher ideas and principles of practical Vedanta in work.
B. Tech (Mechanical Engineering) Syllabus from Admission Batch 2018-196th Semester
Engaging Deeply
The environment we live in is becoming
increasingly complex because more and more
things are getting interconnected, new fields
are emerging, technologies are rapidly
changing, capabilities and knowledge one is
trained in will become fast obsolete. In such a
9 scenario, the student’s ability to quickly Same as above
understand and master what is going on, dive
deep, get involved in any area, rapidly learn
new capabilities that a job demands, is
important. In this topic, students learn how to
engage deeply. Learning how to dive deep, to
quickly understand what is going on, get
involved in any area, and rapidly learn.
Enlightened self-interest & collaboration at
work
The changing nature of work in organizations
and in the global environment, is increasingly
demanding that people work more
collaboratively towards shared goals and
more sustainable goals. A key to working
10 Same as above
successfully when multiple stakeholders are
involved, is “thinking in enlightened self-
interest”. In this topic, students learn how to
widen their thinking from “narrow self-
Part 4 : interest” to “enlightened self-interest” to
Building work more effectively in teams &
ability to work collaboratives.
collaboratively Human-centered thinking & Empathy
and as good In this topic, students learn to recognize &
11 citizens of respond to human needs and challenges – the Same as above
organizations way of thinking at the heart of user-centric
and the designs & customer-centricity.
country Trust Conduct
The biggest currency in a sustainable career
is “trust” i.e. being trusted by team members,
bosses, customers. When we are trusted,
people listen to us, they are willing to give us Same as above
12
the chance to grow, give us the space to make
mistakes, and work seamlessly with each
other without always having to “prove
ourselves”. In this topic, students learn how
to build trust with people they engage with.
3 Contribution projects that help them apply
contributor thinking. After students complete 9 hrs (3 hr lab
Contribution Project Lab
their project work (beyond the classroom), sessions for each of 3
Sessions
each project ends with this 3 hr lab session projects)
where they build their project output and
B. Tech (Mechanical Engineering) Syllabus from Admission Batch 2018-196th Semester
present.
Lab Sessions:
• Students will have to attend twelve discovery-based lab sessions to build new models
of thinking & capacities (3 hrs per module)
• They will work closely with their peers to discuss and understand these new models
of thinking.
• Their learning will be facilitated by trained college faculty.
Contribution Projects
Each ends with a 3 hr lab session where they build their project output