Electrical Engineering
Asif Khan, Chair
Professors
Roger A. Dougal, Ph.D., Texas Tech University, 1982, Associate Chair
Jerry L. Hudgins, Ph.D., Texas Tech University, 1985
Paul G. Huray, Ph.D., University of Tennessee, 1968
Asif Khan, Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1979, College of Engineering Distinguished Professor, Carolina Distinguished Professor
Robert O. Pettus, Ph.D., Auburn University, 1971
Tangali Sudarshan, Ph.D., University of Waterloo, 1974, Carolina Distinguished Professor
Associate Professors
Charles W. Brice III, Ph.D., Georgia Institute of Technology, 1977, Undergraduate Director
Yinchao Chen, Ph.D., University of South Carolina, 1992
George J. Cokkinides, Ph.D., Georgia Institute of Technology, 1985
Antonello Monti, Ph.D., Politecnico di Milano, 1994, Graduate Director
Jorge M. Seminario, Ph.D., Southern Illinois University, 1988
Grigory S. Simin, Ph.D., Giricond Science and Research Institute, 1979
Assistant Professors
Mohammod Ali, Ph.D., University of Victoria, 1997
Goutam Coley, Ph.D., Cornell University, 2003
Ferdinanda Ponci, Ph.D., Politecnico di Milano, 2002
Enrico Santi, Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1993
Jixin Yu, Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003
Overview
The Department of Electrical Engineering offers graduate degrees in electrical engineering and emphasizes both research-oriented graduate study through the Ph.D. program and M.S. program and professional development through the M.E. program.
A special program is available by which qualified engineers may earn the M.E. degree while maintaining full-time employment. APOGEE delivers graduate courses through a media-based system incorporating television, videotapes, and periodic visits to campus.
Graduates in electrical engineering can look forward to competing successfully for careers in academia, industry, and government laboratories.
Admission Requirements
In addition to the entry requirements of The Graduate School, prospective students are expected to have a baccalaureate degree in electrical engineering (or a related field) with at least a B average. Students whose undergraduate degree is not from an ABET-accredited program are required to take the GRE and to have scores of at least 500 (verbal), 700 (quantitative), and 600 (analytical). These scores are provided as guidelines and are not conditions for admission. Applicants whose native language is not English are also required to submit a satisfactory score on the TOEFL or the University of Cambridge's IELTS Academic Course Type 2 exam. The minimum acceptable score on the TOEFL is 230 (computer-based) or 570 (paper-based). The minimum acceptable overall band score on the IELTS Academic Course Type 2 exam is 6.5.
New graduate students are normally admitted to the Ph.D. program; continuation in the Ph.D. program is dependent upon meeting departmental requirements for satisfactory academic progress. After admission, students can transfer into the master's program, if they desire.
Fields of Specialization
Areas of specialization include: physical electronics, power systems, high voltage engineering, and semiconductor devices. Research topics in electrical engineering include but are not limited to: power systems; power electronics; microwave power amplifier and MOS devices based on wide bandgap semiconductors; growth, device processing, and characterization of wide bandgap semiconductors--specifically SiC and GanN; electromagnetic scattering; millimeter-wave integrated circuits; antenna design; electronic packaging; software engineering; and modeling and simulation.
Degree Requirements
Master of Engineering and Master of Science
The professional M.E. degree in electrical engineering requires 30 hours of course work beyond the B.S., at least 15 hours of which must be taken in ELCT courses numbered at the 700 level or above. Although the requirements for the M.S. degree correspond in general to those of The Graduate School (24 hours of course work beyond the B.S. plus 6 hours of thesis preparation), it should be noted that at least half of the courses taken must be in ELCT courses numbered at the 700 level or above.
Doctor of Philosophy
The general requirements for the Ph.D. degree are equivalent to those of The Graduate School. The course work requirement is established by the student's committee, but a minimum of 60 hours beyond the B.S. degree is required, including 12 hours of dissertation preparation. The doctoral residency requirement may be satisfied only after admission to a doctoral degree program and must be fulfilled by enrollment in at least 18 graduate credit hours within a span of three consecutive semesters (excluding summers). Enrollment in a summer term is not required to maintain continuity, but credits earned during summer terms will count toward residency. Admission to candidacy in the Ph.D. program requires satisfactory completion of a qualifying examination, a research proposal, and at least 12 hours of graduate work beyond the B.S.
Course Descriptions (ELCT)
- 551 -- Power Systems Design and Analysis. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 331, ELCT 361) Transmission line design, load flow, and short circuit analysis of power systems.
- 553 -- Electromechanical Energy Conversion. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 331, ELCT 301) Analysis and design of electromechanical energy conversion systems, including electrical machines and electronic drives.
- 561 -- Advanced Electromagnetics. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 362) Applications of electromagnetic concepts in high-frequency systems.
- 563 -- Advanced Semiconductor Materials. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 363) Crystal structures, energy-band theory, and charge-carrier physics.
- 566 -- Introduction to Optoelectronics. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 362, ELCT 363) Design and application aspects of optoelectronic devices, including optical fibers, modulators, display devices, lasers, photodetectors, optical communication systems, and fiber sensors.
- 572 -- Power Electronics. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 371, ELCT 331) Basic analysis and design of solid-state power electronic devices and circuitry.
- 573 -- High Speed Digital Systems. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 371, ELCT 361) Introduction to digital system analysis and design.
- 574 -- Semiconductor Electronic Devices. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 363 and ELCT 371) Semiconductor device behavior and design for use in integrated circuits, discrete components, and modules.
- 575 -- Advanced Electronics. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 371) Application of electronic design automation tools to the design of electronic circuits.
- 580 -- Audio Engineering. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 321, 371) Acoustic and electrical fundamentals for the design of systems for detection, measurement, and reproduction of sound with emphasis on high-quality audio systems and their environment.
- 751 -- Advanced Power Systems Analysis. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 551) Network analysis methods suitable for computer implementation. System studies, including load-flow analysis, short-circuit analysis, and state estimation.
- 752 -- Power System Grounding and Transients. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 551) Modeling and analysis techniques used in the design of electric power grounding systems, power system fault analysis, numerical techniques for power system transient analysis.
- 753 -- Electrical Drives. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 553) Dynamics of electrical machine and space phasor theory. Analysis and design of control architecture for electrical motors.
- 761 -- Fundamental Electromagnetics. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 361) Theorems and principles of EM theory, Maxwell's equations, vector and scalar potentials. Solution to Maxwell's equation in one-, two-, and three-dimensions. Green's functions and theorems with applications to radiation and guided-wave propagation.
- 762 -- Signal Integrity for High Speed Circuits. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 561 or equivalent) The concept of signal integrity for high speed circuits, signal parameters, transmission lines, I/O buffer models, clock schemes, serial data, package/die/connector modeling, I/O power delivery, and measurement.
- 766 -- Electrooptics. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 566) Review of EM theory, rays and beams, resonators, atomic radiation, laser oscillation, laser systems.
- 771 -- Optical Communications: Devices and Systems. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 361, 363, and 581) Principles of optical communications, optical signal modulation, optoelectronic devices for optical communications.
- 772 -- Advanced Power Electronics. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 572) Advanced topics in power electronics to include rectifiers, inverters, resonant and soft switching converters, power converter system stability issues.
- 775 -- Plasma Electronics. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 363) Gaseous electronics and plasma behavior in electronic systems.
- 780 -- Semiconductor Physics. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 363) Properties of semiconductor materials.
- 781 -- Pulsed Power Systems. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 362, 363) Components and systems for electrical energy storage, pulse forming, energy transport, and shielding. Diagnostic techniques for fast, high-power pulses.
- 782 -- Power Semiconductor Devices. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 363) The function and theory of operation of power semiconductor devices.
- 797 -- Research. (1-12) Individual research to be arranged with the instructor. Pass/Fail grading.
- 799 -- Thesis Preparation. (1-12)
- 837 -- Modern Control Theory. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 331) The analysis and synthesis of linear, nonlinear, and discrete control systems employing the state space approach.
- 838 -- Optimal Control and Estimation. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 331) Optimal filtering, prediction, and smoothing in the presence of uncertainty.
- 861 -- Advances in Electromagnetics. (3) Designate as special topics course.
- 862 -- Antennas and Radiation. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 561) Radiation mechanism and fundamental parameters. Dipoles, monopoles, and loop antennas. Antenna arrays. Microstrip, helical, biconical, sleeve, spiral, and log-periodic dipole antennas. Horn and reflector antennas. Antenna measurement and modeling.
- 863 -- Computational Electromagnetics. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 761 or PHYS 703) Electric and magnetic field integral equations, the moment method (MM). Finite element method (FEM), discretization and interpolation, system of equations. Finite difference time domain (FDTD) method, stability, dispersion, incident wave, absorbing boundary conditions (ABCs).
- 864 -- Microwave Devices and Circuits. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 521 and 581) Microwave semiconductor diodes and transistors; active and passive microwave circuits.
- 865 -- Signal Integrity on System Bus Technology. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 762) System analysis for industry buses, budget making, cost performance trade-off, system bussing block diagrams, case studies for specific bus systems, and industry direction on new buses.
- 866 -- Laser Physics, Beams, and Dynamics. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 766) Basic laser physics and optical beams and resonators, Rabi frequency, nonlinear optical pulse propagation, unstable resonators, mode-locking, Q-switching, hole burning, laser cavity equations.
- 867 -- Advances in Quantum Electronics. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 766) Current topics in nonlinear optics and laser research.
- 870 -- Computational Simulation. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 761, 766, 771, 775) Computational tools and techniques for simulation of physical systems with emphasis on excitation, diffusion, and scattering problems.
- 871 -- Advances in Semiconductor Devices. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 771) Current topics in semiconductor devices.
- 873 -- Advances in Physical Electronics. (3) Topics of current interest in physical electronics.
- 878 -- High Power Generation and Diagnostic Techniques. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 362) DC power supplies, transformers, pulsed sources, and fast switches. Diagnostics for fast pulsed events. Grounding and shielding considerations.
- 881 -- Advances in Pulsed Power. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 781) Current topics in pulsed power.
- 882 -- High-Speed Semiconductor Devices. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 581 or PHYS 512) Physics of Negative Differential Resistance devices, 2D-electron gas and quantum wells; principles and characteristics of heterostructure field-effect transistors and bipolar transistors, heterostructure light-emitting diodes, lasers, and photodetectors.
- 883 -- Power Systems Stability and Control. (3) (Prereq: ELCT 751) Power system transient and dynamic stability analysis. Power system control, including excitation systems, automatic generation control and boiler-turbine-generator models.
- 891 -- Selected Topics in Electrical Engineering. (3)
- 897 -- Directed Individual Study. (1-3) Approved plan of study must be filed.
- 899 -- Dissertation Preparation. (1-12)
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