You are on page 1of 39

Harcourt Butler Technological Institute, Kanpur

Course Structure & Syllabus of 1st Year B.Tech./MCA


w.e.f.
Academic Session 2013-14

Page 1 of 39

Year : I
S.No.

Semester : I
Course Code

Theory
1
2
3

IMA-101
IPH-101/ICY-101
IEE-101/IET-101

IME-101/ICS-101

IHU-101/ICE-101

6
IHU-102/ICE-102
Practical/Training/Project
7
IPH-151/ICY-151
8
IHU-151/ICS-151
9
IEE-151/IWS-151
10
IGP-101
Year : I
S.No.

Semester : II
Course Code

Theory
1
2
3

IMA-201
IPH-201/ICY-201
IEE-201/IET-201

IME-201/ICS-201

IHU-201/ICE-201

6
IHU-202/ICE-202
Practical/Training/Project
7
IPH-251/ICY-251
8
IHU-251/ICS-251
9
IEE-251/IWS-251
10
IGP-201

Branch : Common to all branches


Subject

Periods
L

Evaluation Scheme
Sessional Exam
ESE
CT
TA Total

Mathematics I
Physics/Chemistry
Electrical Engg./Electronics & Instrumentation
Engg.
Engg. Mechanics/ Concepts of Computer and
C programming
Professional communication/ Engineering
Graphics
Remedial English/Environment and Ecology

3
3
3

1
1
1

0
0
0

30
30
30

20
20
20

50
50
50

100
100
100

150
150
150

4
4
4

30

20

50

100

150

30

20

50

100

150

50

50

Audit

Physics/Chemistry
Language Lab/Computer Lab
Electrical Engg./Workshop Practice
General Proficiency

0
0
0

0
0
1

3
3
3

10
10
30

30
30
50

50
50
100
50

1
1
2

Subject
Total

Credit

Branch : Common to all branches


Subject

Periods

10
10
20

20
20
50
50

Subject
Total

Credit

Evaluation Scheme
Sessional Exam
ESE
CT
TA Total

Mathematics II
Physics/Chemistry
Electrical Engg./Electronics & Instrumentation
Engg.
Engg. Mechanics/ Concepts of Computer and C
Programming
Professional Communication/ Engineering
Graphics
Remedial English/Environment and Ecology

3
3
3

1
1
1

0
0
0

30
30
30

20
20
20

50
50
50

100
100
100

150
150
150

4
4
4

30

20

50

100

150

30

20

50

100

150

50

50

Audit

Physics/Chemistry
Language Lab/Computer Lab
Electrical Engg./Workshop Practice
General Proficiency

0
0
0

0
0
1

3
3
3

30
30
50

50
50
100
50

1
1
2

10
10
30

10
10
20

20
20
50
50

Page 2 of 39

Year : I
S.No.

Semester : I
Course Code

Theory
1
IHU-101
2
IHU-103
3
ICA-101
4
IMA-102
5
ICA-102
Practical/Training/Project
6
ICA-151
7
IHU-151
8
IGP-101
Year : I
S.No.

Theory
1
2
3
4

Semester : II
Course Code

ICE-203
IMA-202
ICA-201
IHU-203

5
ICA-203
Practical/Training/Project
6
ICA-251
7
IMA-252
8
IGP-201

Course : MCA
Subject

Periods
L

Evaluation Scheme
Sessional Exam
ESE
CT
TA
Total

Subject
Total

Credit

Professional Communication
Accounting & Financial Management
Computer Concepts & Programming in C
Discrete Structures
Computer Organization

3
3
3
3
3

1
1
1
1
1

0
0
0
0
0

30
30
30
30
30

20
20
20
20
20

50
50
50
50
50

100
100
100
100
100

150
150
150
150
150

4
4
4
4
4

Programming Lab
Language Lab
General Proficiency

0
0

0
0

3
3

30
30

20
20

50
50
50

50
50

100
100
50

2
2

Course : MCA
Subject

Periods

Evaluation Scheme
Sessional Exam
CT
TA
Total

ESE

Subject
Total

Environmental Science & Ethics


Computer Based Numerical & Statistical
Techniques
Data Structures Using C
Organizational Structure & Human Resource
Management
Operating Systems

30

20

50

100

150

30

20

50

100

150

30

20

50

100

150

30

20

50

100

150

30

20

50

100

150

Data Structures Lab


Numerical & Statistical Techniques Lab
General Proficiency

0
0

0
0

3
3

30
30

20
20

50
50
50

50
50

100
100
50

Credit

4
4
4
4
4
2
2

Page 3 of 39

IMA-101
MATHEMATICS-1
(B Tech, Ist Semester)
(Effective from Session 2013-14)

L T P
3 1 0

Unit I- Functions of One Real Variable:


Successive differentiation, Leibnitz theorem, Mean value theorems, Convergence of series, Expansion of
functions, Improper integrals and their convergence.
Unit II- Functions of Several Real Variables:
Limit, Continuity, Partial differentiation, Total differential and approximations, Jacobian, Eulers theorem,
Expansion of functions, Beta and Gamma Functions, Multiple integrals, Change of order, Change of variables,
Applications to area, volume, mass, surface area etc. Dirichlets Integral & Applications.
Unit III- Vector Calculus:
Point functions, differentiation, Gradient, Directional derivative, Divergence and Curl of a vector and their
physical interpretations, Solenoidal & irrotational fields, Integration, Line, Surface and Volume integrals,
Greens, Stokes and Gauss Divergence theorems (without proof) and applications.
Unit IV Matrices and Linear Algebra:
Vector space and subspace, linear dependence, dimensions and basis, Linear transformation and its matrix
representation, Elementary transformations, Echelon form, rank & nullity, Consistency of linear system of
equations and their solutions, characteristic equation, Cayley Hamilton theorem, Real and complex eigenvalues
and eigenvectors, diagonalisation, quadratic forms, complex, orthogonal, and unitary matrices, Cryptography,
An error correcting code, discrete compartmental models, system stability.
Unit V Optimization:
Engineering applications of optimization, statement and classification of optimization problems, optimization
techniques, single variable optimization, multi variable optimization with no constraint, with equality and
inequality constraints, Linear Programming Problems, Graphical method and Simplex method.
Books Recommended:
1. R. K. Jain & S. R. K. Iyengar; Advanced Engineering Mathematics, Narosa Publishing House, 2002.
2. Erwin Kreyszig; Advanced Engineering Mathematics, John Wiley & Sons 8th Edition.
3. Dennis G, Zill & Michael R. Cullen; Advanced Engineering Mathematics, Jones & Bartlett Publishers.
2nd Edition.
4. S. S. Rao; Optimization: Theory & Applications, Wiley Eastern Limited.
5. T. M. Apostol, Calculus, Vol. I, 2nd ed., Wiley 1967.
6. T. M. Apostol, Calculus, Vol. II, 2nd ed., Wiley 1969.
7. Gilbert Strang, Linear Algebra & its applications, Nelson Engineering 2007

Page 4 of 39

IMA-102
DISCRETE STRUCTURES
(MCA, I Semester)
(Effective from Session 2013-14)

LTP
3 1 0

UNIT I: Fundamentals of Logic:


Propositional Logic: Propositions, Basic logic operations and truth tables, Tautologies, Contradictions, Contigency,
Algebra of propositions, Logical equivalence: the laws of logic, Logical implication: Rules of inference, Logical analysis
of arguments, Some computing applications (Normal forms), Functionally complete set of operations, Formal proofs.
First Order Logic:Predicates & quantifiers, Nested quantifiers, Use of quantifiers, Rules of inference, Validity of
arguments.
Notion of Proofs: Proof by counter example, the contraposition, proof by contradiction, inductive proofs.
UNIT II: Set Theory, Relations and Functions
Set Theory: sets & subsets, Venn diagrams, Set operations and laws, countable and uncountable sets, Cartesian product,
Cardinality, Principle of inclusion- exclusion.
Relations: Relation, Representation & properties, n-ray relations and applications, Composition of relations, Closures of
relations, Equivalence relation & partitions, partial orders, compatibility relation.
Functions: Functions and its types, Inverse function, Composition of functions, Special functions, Recursively defined
functions, Computational Complexity, Analysis of algorithms.
Theorem Proving Techniques: Mathematical induction, strong induction, and well ordering, structural induction,
Pigeonhole principle.
UNIT III: Algebraic Structures and Coding Theory
Algebraic Structures: Definition, Properties, Semi group, Monoid, Group, Properties of groups, Subgroup, Cyclic
group, Cosets and Lagranges theorem, Permutation groups, Normal subgroup, Homomorphism and isomorphism of
groups, Congruence relation, Rings and Fields. Example and standard results.
Coding Theory: Elements of coding theory, Hamming matric, Parity-check and generator matrices, Coding and error
detection, Group codes: decoding with coset leaders and error correction, Hamming matrices.
UNIT IV: Partially Ordered Structures
Posets,: Definitions, ordered set, Hasse diagram, isomorphic ordered set, well ordered set, Minimal and Maximal
elements, LUB & GLB etc.
Lattices: Definition & Properties, Product Lattices, Isomorphic Lattices, Applications, Types of Lattices
Boolean Algebras: Definitions & Properties, SOP & POS forms, Logic gates and minimization of circuits, Karnaugh
maps, Quine-McClusky method.
Trees: Definition & Examples and Properties , Rooted tree, Binary tree, Tree traversal, application in computer science
and engineering .
UNIT V: Combinatorics and Graph Theory:
Combinatorics: Basic counting techniques,Discrete numeric functions and properties, Recurrence relations and their
applications (modelling), various methods of solutions, system of recurrence relations, OGF & EGF, properties,
applications: solution of recurrence relations and combinatorial problems. Polyas enumeration theorem and applications.
Graphs: Graphs and graph models, terminology, matrices associated with graphs, Isomorphism, Special types of graphs,
connectedness, Euler and Hamilton graphs with their applications, trees with properties, MST, planer graphs and
applications, criteria of planarity, Graph coloring and coloring models, directed graphs.
Books Recommended:
1. Trembley, J.P. & R. Manohar, Discrete Mathematical Structures with Applications to Computer Science,
McGraw Hill.
2. Kenneth H. Rosen, Discrete Mathematics and its Applications, McGraw Hill.
3. Ralph, P. Garimaldi, Discrete & Combinatorial Mathematics Pearson Publication, Asia.
4. Deo, Narsingh,Graph Theory with applications to Engineering & Computer Science, PHI.
5. Krishnamurthy, V., Combinatorics Theory & Application, East-West Press Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi.

Page 5 of 39

IMA-201
MATHEMATICSII
(B. Tech., II Semester)
(Effective from Session 2013-14)

L T P
3 1 0

Unit I: Ordinary Differential Equations:


First order ordinary differential equations, Existence and uniqueness of solutions of initial value problems, Solution of
higher order linear differential equation with constant coefficients, Solution of second order differential equations by
changing dependent and independent variables, Cauchy- Euler equations, Methods of diagonalization, undetermined
coefficients and variation of parameters, Nonlinear equations, Linear and nonlinear models, Initial value and boundary
value problems, Systems of equations, Application of differential equations as mathematical models, Models from
population dynamics, Newtons Law of cooling, electric circuit, Oscillation of spring.

Unit II: Series Solutions of Ordinary Differential Equations


Ordinary and singular points of an equation, Power series solutions, Frobenius method, Bessels and Legendres equations
and their series solutions, Properties of Legendres polynomials and Bessels functions, Generating functions, FourierBessel series and Fourier-Legendre series expansions, Sturm- Liouville Problem and related theorems.

Unit III: Laplace Transform:


Laplace transform, Existence conditions and ROC, Inverse Laplace transform, Operational properties, Convolution, Unit
step function, Dirac-Delta function, Periodic functions, Applications to solve IVP and BVP, Linear ordinary differential
equations, Transfer function and control system analysis.

Unit IV: Fourier Series and Partial Differential Equations:


Orthogonal functions, Fourier series, existence conditions, Fourier series of even and odd functions, Convergence of
Fourier series, Fourier half range series, Harmonic analysis, Complex Fourier series and frequency spectrum.
Development of partial differential equations and solutions, Solution of first order partial differential equations, Solutions
of linear higher order partial differential equations with constant coefficients, Classification of second order partial
differential equations.

Unit V: Boundary-Value Problems:


Derivation of heat and wave equations, solutions in rectangular coordinates by separation of variable method, solution of
Laplace equation, DAlemberts solution of wave equation, Non-homogeneous equations and boundary conditions,
Orthogonal series expansions, Fourier series in two dimensions, Boundary value problems in polar, cylindrical and
spherical coordinate systems and their solutions.

Books Recommended:
1. E.A. Coddington, An Introduction to Ordinary Differential Equations, Practice Hall, 1995.
2. I.N. Sneddon, Elements of Partial Differential equations, McGraw-Hill 1957.
3. Dennis G, Zill & Michael R. Cullen; Advanced Engineering Mathematics, Jones & Bartlett Publishers. 2nd
Edition.
4. R. K. Jain & S. R. K. Iyengar; Advanced Engineering Mathematics, Narosa Publishing House, 2002.
5. Erwin Kreyszig; Advanced Engineering Mathematics, John Wiley & Sons 8th Edition.

Page 6 of 39

IMA-202
COMPUTER BASED NUMERICAL & STATISTICAL TECHNIQUES
(MCA , II Semester)
(Effective from Session 2013-14)

LT P
3 1 0

UNIT I: Nonlinear Equations and Simultaneous Linear Equations:


Roots of nonlinear equation, Methods of solution, Order of convergence of iterative methods, Simple roots: Bisection,
False position, Secant, Newton-Raphson, Chebyshev, Iteration and multi point iteration methods, Multiple roots: NewtonRaphson and Chebyshev, Complex roots: Newton-Raphson and Mullers method, a system of nonlinear equations:
Newton-Raphson and Iteration methods, Polynomial equations: Bairstows method, convergence analysis of above
methods.
Linear systems: Introduction, Direct methods, Operation count, Pivoting, Ill conditioned linear systems & condition
number, Iteration methods: Jacobi, Gauss-Seidel, SOR methods, convergence conditions. Special system of equations:
Thomas algorithm. Eigen value problems: Givens and Power methods.

UNIT II: Interpolation, Differentiation and Integration:


Curve fitting: Polynomial interpolation, error, Existence and Uniqueness, Truncation error bounds, difference operators,
Newton forward and backward difference interpolations, Lagrange, Newton divided difference and Iterated interpolations,
Stirling and Bessels interpolations, Spline interpolation, Least squares and Chebyshev approximations.
Numerical Differentiation: Methods based on interpolation, Error analysis.
Numerical Integration: Methods based on interpolations (Trapezoidal, Simpsons 1/3 , Simpsons 3/8 rule), Gauss
quadrature methods, Romberg integration, Error bounds and estimates.

UNIT III: Numerical Solution of Ordinary Differential Equations:


Initial-value problems, Single step methods: Taylors, Picards, Eulers, Modified Eulers method and Runge -Kutta
method (Fourth Order), Error estimates, Multi-step methods: Adams-Bashforth and Milnes methods, convergence and
stability analysis, Simultaneous and Higher order equations: RK Fourth order method.

Unit IV: Curve Fitting, Correlation, Regression and Probability:


Curve-fitting, method of least- squares , fitting of straight lines, polynomials, non-linear and exponential curves etc.,
correlation analysis, linear, non-linear and multi-regression analysis, probability, random variables and probability
distributions, expectation, moments and transform methods, Binomial, Poisson and Normal distributions, overview of tdistribution, F-distribution and 2-distribution.

Unit V: Statistical Methods:


Sampling theory (small and large), parameter estimation, confidence intervals, tests of hypotheses and significance; z-, t-,
F-, and 2 tests, goodness of fit test - 2 test, analysis of variance, non-parametric tests (Simple application), time series
analysis, index numbers, quality control charts.

Books Recommended:
1. M.K.Jain, S.R.K. Iyengar & R.K.Jain, Numerical methods for Scientific and Engineering Computation, New age
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

International Publication.
S.S. Sastry, Introductory Methods of Numerical Analysis, Eastern Economy Edition.
S. Rajasekaran, Numerical Method in Science and Engineering, Wheeler Publishing House.
B.S. Grewal, Numerical Method in Engineering & Science, Khanna Publishers.
D. L. Harnett, Statistical methods.
J.N.Kapur and H.C.Saxena, Mathematical Statistics,, S.Chand. & Co., 2001
H.C. Saxena, Practical Mathematical Statistics, S. Chand & Co., 2000.

Page 7 of 39

IMA-252
NUMERICAL & STATISTICAL TECHNIQUES LAB
(MCA, II Semester)

LTP

(Effective from Session 2013-14)

0 0 3

Develop Programs of the following techniques in C/C++ Language:


1. To implement iterative methods to solve nonlinear equations.
2. To implement iterative methods to solve a system of linear equations.
3. To implement Newtons divided difference and Lagranges interpolation formulae.
4. To implement Numerical differentiation.
5. To implement Numerical integration using Trapezoidal, Simpson 1/3 and Simpson 3/8 rules.
6. To implement single step/ multi step methods to solve initial value problems.
7. To implement least squares method for curve fitting.
8. To find correlation coefficient, regression coefficients and lines of regression.
9. To implement tests of hypothesis and significance.
10. To implement non parametric tests.
11. To determine the confidence interval to implement ANOVA.

Page 8 of 39

IPH-101 / IPH-201
PHYSICS
Unit -1
Relativistic Mechanics:
Inertial and Non-inertial Frames of reference, Galilean transformation, Michelson-Morley Experiment,
Postulates of special theory of relativity, Lorentz Transformation, Length contraction, Evidences of length
contraction, Time dilation, Evidences for time dilation, Relativistic velocity transformation, Relativistic
variation of mass with velocity, Evidence of mass variation with velocity, Relativistic kinetic energy, Mass
energy equivalence, Examples from nuclear physics, Relativistic energy-momentum relation.
Unit-2
Quantum Mechanics:
De Broglie waves and Group velocity concept, Uncertainty principle and its application, Davisson-Germer
experiment, Derivation of Schrodinger equation for time independent and time dependent cases. Postulates of
quantum mechanics, Significance of wave function, Application of Schrodinger wave equation for a free
particle (one dimensional and three dimensional case), Particle in a box (one dimensional and three
dimensional), Simple harmonic oscillator (one dimensional and three dimensional).
Unit 3
Electodynamics:
Basic concepts of Gauss,s law, Ampere,s law and Faradays law of electromagnetic induction. Correction
of Amperes law by Maxwell (concept of displacement cuurent). Maxwell,s equations, transformation from
integral form to differential form , Physical significance of each equation. Pointing theorem, Maxwell,s
equations in free space, velocity of electromagnetic wave, Transverse character of the wave and orthogonality
of E, H and v vectors, Maxwell ,s equation in dielectric medium and velocity of e. m. wave ,Comparison with
free space, Maxwell,s equations in conducting media, Solution of differential equation in this case and
derivation of penetration depth.
Fiber Optics:
Fundamental ideas of optical fiber, types of optical fibers, acceptance angle and cone ,numerical aperture,
propagation mechanism and communication in fiber, single mode and multimode fiber, step index and graded
index fibers.
Unit-4
Statistical Mechanics:
Phase space, the probability of a distribution, most probable distribution, Maxwell Boltzmann Statistics,
Application to find out energy and velocity distribution among the molecules of an ideal gas, derivation of
average velocity. R.M.S. velocity, and most probable velocity in the above case. Bose Einstein Statistics,
Application to Black body radiation, distribution law of energy, Plancks radiation formula and Stefans law.
Fermi Dirac statistics, Application to electrons in metals (energy distribution, Fermi energy).
Lasers:
Spontaneous and stimulated emission of radiations, Einsteins coefficient and relation between them,
Population inversion, Components of a laser, Ruby laser, He-Ne laser.
Unit-5
Dielectric materials:
Electric field in presence of dielectic medium: Concept of electric polarization, Different types of
polarization, Dielectric in a.c. field: concept of dielectric loss and loss of energy.

Page 9 of 39

Semiconducting Materials:
Concept of energy bands in solids, Carrier concentration and conductivity in intrinsic semiconductors and
their temperature dependence, carrier concentration and conductivity in extrinsic semiconductors and their
temperature dependence. Hall effect in semiconductors, Compound semiconductors.
Nano Materials:
Basic principles of nanoscience and technology, Preparation, structure and properties of fullerene and
carbon nanotubes, graphene. Application of nano technology.

Page 10 of 39

IPH 151 /IPH 251


Physics Practical
List of Experiments for I B.Tech (Engg)
Any ten experiments are to be conducted from the following :
1. To determine the wavelength of monochromatic light by Newton,s ring.
2. To determine the specific rotation of cane sugar solution using polarimeter.
3. To determine the wavelength of spectral lines using plane transmission grating.
4. To verify Brewster,s law using rotating Nicol prism.
5. To determine the specific resistance of a given wire using Carrey Foster,s Bridge.
6. To study the variation of magnetic field along the axis of current carrying circular coil.
7. To verify Stefan,s law by electrical method.
8. To study the Hall effect and to determine Hall coefficient in n type Germanium.
9. To study the energy band gap of n type Germanium using conductivity method.
10. To study the Ballistic constant of a ballistic galvanometer.
11. To determine e/m of electron using Magnetron valve.
12. To determine the Horizontal component of magnetic field using Tangent Galvanometer.
13. To find out thermoelectric power of copper-constantan thermocouple using potentiometer.
14 To draw hysteresis curve of a given sample of ferromagnetic material.

Page 11 of 39

ICY-101/ICY 201
Chemistry
(Common to All Branches of B.Tech.)
Unit I
(8- 10Pds)
Bonding : Hydrogen and Metallic bonds, Classification and Applications of Liquid crystals, Band
Theory of Solids.
Spectroscopy : Basic Principles and Applications of UVVIS, IR and NMR spectroscopy
Unit II
(8-10Pds.)
Chemical Kinetics : Order and molecularity, zero, first and second order reactions. Determination of
order, Temperature effect, Concept of Activated Complex/ Transition State: Energy of activation,
Potential energy surface,
Theories of reaction rate: Collision and Transition State theories.
Unit III
(8-10 Pds)
Electrochemistry: EMF of cell and its relation with thermodynamic parameters; K, H, S & G.
Concentration cells and liquid junction potential, Dry and fuel cells.
Corrosion: Concept of Corrosion, Types of corrosion, Electrochemical theory of corrosion and
Methods for protection of corrosion.
Unit IV
(8-10 Pds)
Reaction Mechanism: Inductive, Electomeric and Mesomeric effects. Stability of reaction
intermediates for(. carbanion, carbocation and free radicals). Mechanism of SN1 and SN2 reactions.
Mechanism and application of following reactions:
(I)
Aldol Condensation
(II)

Beckmann Rearrangement

(III)

Hoffmann Rearrangement

(IV)

Diels-Alder Reaction

Stereochemistry: E-Z nomenclature, R-S configuration and Optical isomerism


Unit V
(8-10 Pds)
Polymers: Polymers and their classifications . Free radical, anionic and cationic polymerization,
Copolymers, Conducting and Biodegradable polymers, Determination of average mol. weight of
polymer.
Water Treatment: Hardness of water, Problems due to use of hard water in boilers, Water softening
methods; Zeolites and Ion exchange processes, Reverse osmosis.
Reference Books:
1. Advance Organic Chemistry by Jerry March, Third Edition Wiley Eastern Limited, New Delhi.
2. Organic Chemistry by Morrision & Boyd , Allyn and Bacon , Inc. Boston.
3. Physical Chemistry by P.C. Rakshit .
Page 12 of 39

4. Textbook of Physical Chemistry by S. Glasstone, Macmillan and Co. Ltd., London.


5. Chemical Kinetics and Reaction Dynamics by S.K. Upadhyay, Springer.
6. Principles of Polymerization by George Odian.
7. Polymer Science by V.R. Gowarikar, N.V. Vishwanathan and J. Shridhar, Wiley Eastern Ltd.,
New Delhi.
8. Principles of Instrumental Analysis by Douglas and Skoog, Saunder College publishing Co.,
New York.
9. Engineering Chemistry by Jain & Jain, Dhanpat Rai Publication Co., New Delhi.
10. Application of Absorption of Spectroscopy of Organic Compounds by John R. Dyer, Prentice
Hall of India Pvt. Ltd. ,New Delhi.

Page 13 of 39

ICY-151/ICY-251
Chemistry Lab

List of Experiments:
1. Determination of alkalinity in given water sample.
2. Determination of temporary and permanent hardness in water sample using EDTA as
standard solution.
3. Determination of available chlorine in bleaching powder.
4. Determination of iron content in given water sample by Mohrs method.
5. Determination of chloride content in water sample by Mohrs method.
6. Determination of strength of supplied ferrous Ammonium Sulphate solution in gm/liter
using external, internal and self indicator.
7. Determination of Viscosity of a given liquid by Ostwald Viscometer.
8. Determination of Surface Tension of a given liquid by Stalagamometer.
9. pH determination of given sample.

Page 14 of 39

IEE 101/IEE 201


ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
L

Unit I
1. DC Circuit Analysis and DC Network Theorems
Circuit Concepts: Concepts of Network, Active and Passive elements, voltage and current sources, concept of
linearity and linear network, unilateral and bilateral elements.
3
DC Circuit Analysis and DC Network Theorems: Kirchhoffs Law, Loop and nodal methods of analysis,
Superposition Theorem, Thevenins Theorem, Nortons Theorem, Maximum Power Transfer Theorem, Source
transformation, Star-delta transformation. (Numerical Problems)
6
Unit II
2. Steady-State Analysis of Single Phase AC Circuits
AC Fundamentals, R L and C as linear elements, Sinusoidal, Square and Triangular waveforms-average and
effective values, form and peak factors, concept of phasors, phasor representation of sinusoidally varying
voltage and current. Analysis of series, parallel, and series parallel RLC Circuits: Apparent, Active &
Reactive Power and Energy, Power factor and its importance, Resonance in Series and Parallel Circuits,
Bandwidth and Quality Factor. (Numerical Problems)
8
Unit III
3. Three-Phase AC Circuits
Introduction to three-phase System, meaning of phase sequence and star and delta connections, balanced supply
and balanced load, line and phase voltage / current relations, three phase power and its measurement.
(Numerical Problems)
3
4. Magnetic Circuit
Magnetic circuit concepts, Analogy between Electric & Magnetic circuits, Magnetic circuits with DC and
AC excitations, Magnetic leakage, B-H curve, Hysteresis and Eddy Current looses, Magnetic circuit
calculations, Mutual coupling. (Numerical problems)
3
5. Single Phase Transformer:
Principle of Operation, Construction, e. m. f. equation, equivalent circuit, Power losses, efficiency.(Numerical
Problems)
3
Unit IV
6. DC Machines
Types of dc machines, e. m. f. equation of generator and torque equation of motor, characteristics and
applications of dc motors. (Numerical Problems)
3
7. Three Phase Induction Motor

Page 15 of 39

Construction and Principle of Operation, Slip torque Characteristics, applications. (Numerical Problems based
on slip)
3
8. Single Phase Induction Motor
Construction and Principle of Operation, Applications.

Unit V
9. Introduction to Power System
Principle of operation of three phase alternator, General layout of Indian electrical power system and functions
of its elements, standard transmission and distribution voltages, concept of grid, Electrical safety, Equipment
earthing
3
10. Measuring Instruments
Introduction to analog and digital instruments, Types of instruments, Construction and Working Principles of
PMMC and Moving Iron type Voltmeter & Ammeters, Introduction to Single Phase Dynamometer Wattmeter
and Induction Type Energy Meter, Introduction to sensors and transducers (Numerical Problems)
4
Text Books:
1. V. Del Toro, Principles of Electrical Engineering Prentice Hall International
2. I.J. Nagarath, Basic Electrical Engineering Tata Mc-Graw Hill
3. D.E. Fitzgerald & A. Grabel Higginbotham, Basic Electrical Engineering Mc-Graw Hill
4. V. N. Mittle/Arvind Mittal, Basic Electrical Engineering, Tata Mc-Graw Hill
Reference Books:
1. Edward Hughes, Electrical Technology Longman
2. T.K. Nagsarkar & M.S. Sukhija, Basic Electrical Engineering Oxford University Press
3. H. Cotton, Advanced Electrical Technology Wheeler Publishing
4. W.H. Hayt & J.E. Kennely, Engineering Circuit Analysis Mc-Graw Hill

Page 16 of 39

IEE 151/ IEE 251


ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING LABORATORY
L
0

T
0

P
2

Note: A Minimum Eight experiments out of the following list.


1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

Verification of Kirchhoffs laws.


Verification of Superposition Theorem.
Verification of Thevenins / Nortons Theorem.
Verification of Maximum Power Transfer Theorem.
Measurement and verification of power and power factor in a 1 ac series / parallel R-L-C circuit.
Measurement and verification of relationships between phase and line voltages and currents for star/delta
connected balanced load.
7. To measure energy by a 1 energy meter and determine error.
8. Measurement of power in 3 circuit by Two Wattmeter method and determination of its power factor.
9. Determination of Voltage Ratio and Efficiency by load test of a 1 Transformer.
10. Determination of equivalent circuit and efficiency of single transformer by OC and SC test.
11. To obtain load characteristics of DC shunt motor.
12. To study running and speed reversal of a 3 induction motor and record its speed in both direction.

Page 17 of 39

IME-101/201
ENGINEERING MECHANICS
L :T :P
3 :1 :0
Unit I
Two Dimensional Force Systems: Basic concepts, Laws of motion, Principle of Transmissibility of forces,
Transfer of a force to parallel position , Resultant of a force system, Simplest Resultant of Two dimensional
concurrent and Non-concurrent Force systems, Distributed force system, Free body diagrams, Equilibrium and
Equations of Equilibrium, Applications.
Friction: Introduction, Laws of Coulomb Friction, Equilibrium of Bodies involving Dry-friction, Belt friction,
Applications.
Unit II
Beam: Introduction, Shear force and Bending Moment, Differential Equations for Equilibrium, Shear force and
Bending Moment Diagrams for Statically Determinate Beams.
Trusses: Introduction, Simple Truss and Solution of Simple truss, Method of Joints and Method of Sections.
Unit III
Centroid and Moment of Inertia: Centroid of plane, curve, area, volume and composite bodies, Moment of
inertia of plane area, Parallel Axes Theorem, Perpendicular axes theorems, Principal Moment Inertia, Mass
Moment of Inertia of Circular Ring, Disc, Cylinder, Sphere and Cone about their Axis of Symmetry.
Unit IV
Simple Stress and Strain: Introduction, Normal and Shear stresses, Stress- Strain Diagrams for ductile and
brittle material, Elastic Constants, One Dimensional Loading of members of varying cross-sections, Strain
energy.
Compound stress and strains: Introduction, state of plane stress, Principal stress and strain, Mohrs stress
circle. Theories of Failure
Unit V
Pure Bending of Beams: Introduction, Simple Bending Theory, Stress in beams of different cross sections.
Torsion: Introduction to Torsion of circular shaft, combined bending & torsion of solid & hollow shafts.

Text books:
1. Engineering Mechanics by Irving H. Shames, Prentice-Hall
2. Mechanics of Materials by E.P.Popov, PHI
3. Engineering Mechanics by R.K.Bansal
4. Strength of Materials by Ryder
5. Mechanics of Material by Gere & Timoshenko
6. Engineering Mechanics by A. Nelson
7. Engineering Mechanics by U.C. Jindal
8. Engineering Mechanics Statics by J.L. Meriam & L.G.Kraige

Page 18 of 39

IWS 151/251
WORKSHOP PRACTICE
L:T:P
0: 1:3
1. Carpentry Shop :
Practice ( I ): To prepare half lap corner joint from given pieces of mango wood.
Practice ( II ) : To prepare mortise and tenon joint from given pieces of mango wood.
Instructions: Description and demonstration of different tools, joints along with advanced Carpentry joints,
classification and definition of timber, wood seasoning, demonstration of wood working lathe and advanced
power tools used in carpentry work, safety precaution during actual working
.
2. Fitting and Bench working Shop :
Practice ( I ): To prepare male- female joint from given pieces of mild steel.
Practice ( II ): To prepare practice work piece involving marking, measuring, sawing, drilling and tapping
operations
Instructions: Classification and description of different tools used in fitting shop e.g. marking and measuring
tools, holding and supporting tools, striking tools and cutting tools etc , safety precaution during actual working.
3. Black Smithy Shop :
Practice ( I ): To prepare L shape job from given piece of mild steel rod by hand forging.
Practice ( II ): To prepare a Ring from given piece of mild steel rod by hand forging.
Instructions: Description of various forging processes done in black-smithy work e.g. upsetting, drawing down,
punching, bending, fullering etc, classification and description of different tools, equipments used in blacksmithy shop, safety precaution during actual working.
4. Welding Shop :
Practice ( I ): To prepare simple butt joint and lap joint by electric arc welding from given pieces of mild steel
Practice ( II ): To prepare simple lap joint by oxy-acetylene gas welding and gas flame cutting practice.
Instructions: Concept of welding, classification and explanation of various types of welding with the help of
flow chart, description of different tools. Equipments required for arc welding and gas welding, demonstration
of various types of flames in Oxyacetylene gas welding, setting of current and selection of electrodes along with
different welding joints, safety precaution during actual working. (As approved in Board of Studies (Mechanical Engg.),
HBTI, Kanpur in its meeting held on 6th July, 2009 Page 4)

5. Sheet Metal Shop :


Practice ( I ): To prepare a funnel complete with soldering from given G.I. sheet.
Practice ( II ): To fabricate tray / tool box or electric panel box from given G.I. sheet.
Instructions: Classification and description of different types of tools, equipments used in sheet metal work,
different types of metals used in sheet metal shop e.g. Galvanized iron, black iron, copper, aluminum etc,
concept of development of surfaces along with different types of joints in sheet metal work, safety precaution
during actual working
6. Machine Shop :
Practice ( I ): To prepare a job by plain turning, facing, step turning and chamfering operation from given mild
steel rod.
Practice ( II ): To prepare a job by taper turning, threading, knurling operations from given mild steel rod.
Instructions: Classification of lathe machines, different parts of lathe machine, tools and equipments used,
explanation and demonstration of various operations on lathe machine, tool geometry of single point cutting
tool, cutting speed, feed and depth of cut in turning, safety precaution during actual working.

Page 19 of 39

7. Foundry Shop :
Practice ( I ) : To prepare a simple mould of given pattern in Green Sand.
Practice ( II ) : To prepare a mould with two step pulley with Runner and Riser.
Instructions : Description and use of various foundry tools, showel, flat rammer, hand rammer, strike off bars,
vent wire, trowels, hand riddle etc. Types of various moulding sands, types of patterns, pattern materials, pattern
allowances, safety precautions during actual working.

Page 20 of 39

ICS-101/201
CONCEPTS OF COMPUTER & C PROGRAMMING
LT P
3 1 0
Unit I
Introduction To Computers: Computer hardware Components, peripherals and their functions, Number
Systems and conversion methods, Concept of an algorithm; termination and correctness.
Algorithms to programs: specification, top-down development and stepwise refinement. Introduction to
Programming Environment, Use of high level programming language for the systematic development of
programs. Introduction to the design and implementation of correct, efficient and maintainable programs,
Structured Programming, Trace an algorithm to depict the logic.
Unit II
Basic operating System Concepts: Introduction of MS-DOS, WINDOWS, and LINUX Operating Systems,
Functional Knowledge of these operating systems. Introduction of Basic Commands of LINUX and Editors,
Managing Files and Directories in LINUX, Programming Environment in LINUX, Writing and executing
programs in LINUX.
Unit III
Programming in C: History, Introduction to C Programming Languages, Structure of C programs, compilation
and execution of C programs, Debugging Techniques, Data Types and Sizes, Declaration of variables,
Modifiers, Identifiers and keywords, Symbolic constants, Storage classes (automatic, external, register and
static), Enumerations, command line parameters, Macros, The C Preprocessor.
Unit IV
Operators: Unary operators, Arithmetic & logical operators, Bit wise operators, Assignment operators and
expressions, Conditional expressions, Precedence and order of evaluation.
Control statements: if-else, switch, break, and continue, the comma operator, goto statement.
Loops: for, while, do-while. Functions: built-in and user-defined, function declaration, definition and function
call, and parameter passing: call by value, call by reference, recursive functions, Multi file programs. Arrays:
linear arrays, multidimensional arrays, passing arrays to functions, Arrays and strings.
Unit V
Structure and Union: definition and differences, self-referential structure. Pointers: value at (*) and address
of (&) operator, pointer to pointer, Dynamic Memory Allocation, calloc and malloc functions, array of pointers,
function of pointers, structures and pointers. File Handling in C: opening and closing a data file, creating a
data file, read and write functions, unformatted data files.
Text and References Books:
1. Kernighan, Ritchie, The C Programming Language, PHI
2. V. Rajaraman, Fundamentals of Computers, PHI
3. Peter Nortons, Introduction to Computers, TMH
Page 21 of 39

4. Gottfried, Programming in C, Schaums Series, Tata McGraw Hill


5. Yashwant Kanitkar, Working with C, BPB
6. E. Balagurusamy, Programming in ANSI C, TMH

Page 22 of 39

ICS-151/251
COMPUTER LAB
LTP
0 03
1. Write C program to find largest of three integers.
2. Write C program to check whether the given string is palindrome or not.
3. Write C program to find whether the given integer is
(i). a prime number
(ii). an Armstrong number.
4. Write C program for Pascal triangle.
5. Write C program to find sum and average of n integer using linear array.
6. Write C program to perform addition, multiplication, transpose on matrices.
7. Write C program to find fibbonacci series of iterative method using user-defined function.
8. Write C program to find factorial of n by recursion using user-defined functions.
9. Write C program to perform following operations by using user defined functions:
(i) Concatenation
(ii) Reverse
(iii) String Matching
10. Write C program to find sum of n terms of series:
n n*2/2! + n*3/3! - n*4/4! + ...............
11. Write C program to interchange two values using
(i). Call by value.
(ii).Call by reference.
12. Write C program to sort the list of integers using dynamic memory allocation.
13. Write C program to display the mark sheet of a student using structure.
14. Write C program to perform following operations on data files:
(i)
read from data file.
(ii)
write to data file.
15. Write C program to copy the content of one file to another file using command line argument.

Page 23 of 39

IHU-101/201
Professional Communication
(I B Tech & I MCA)
UNIT I Fundamentals of Technical Communication : process of communication, language as a tool of
communication, levels of communication , flow of communication, barriers to communication, communication
across cultures; Technical Communication: meaning, significance, characteristics, difference between technical
and general communication.
UNIT II Elements of Written Communication: words and phrases, word formation, synonyms and antonyms,
homophones, one word substitution, sentence construction, paragraph construction,
UNIT III Forms of Technical Communication: (A) business letters, job application letter and resume,
business letters: sales & credit letters, letters of enquiry, letters of quotation, order, claim and adjustment letters,
official letters: D.O. letters, government letters, letters to authorities, etc. ,
(B) Technical Reports: general format of a report, formal and informal reports, memo report, progress report,
status report, survey report, trip report, complaint report, laboratory report, research papers, dissertations and
theses.
Technical Proposals: purpose, characteristics, types, structure.
UNIT IV Presentation Strategies: defining the subject, scope and purpose, analysing audience & locale,
collecting materials, preparing outlines, organising the contents, visual aids, nuances of delivery,
extemporaneous, manuscripts, impromptu, memorization and non- verbal strategies.
UNIT V Value-based Text Reading:
(A) Study of the following essays from the text book with emphasis on writing skills:
1. Man and Nature
by J. Bronowski
2. The Language of Literature and Science
by Aldous Huxley
3. The Aims of Science & The Humanities
by Moody E Prior
4. Gods in this Godless Universe
by Bertrand Russell
5. Science and Survival
by Barry Commoner
(B) Readings of selected short stories:
1. The Renunciation
by Rabindranath Tagore
2. The Lament
by Anton P. Chekhov
3. The Barbers Trade Union
by Mulk Raj Anand
4. The Eyes Are Not Here
by Ruskin Bond
Text Books:
1. Improve Your Writing ed. By V N Arora and Laxmi Chandra, Oxford University Press, New Delhi
2. An Anthology of English Short Stories, edited by R P Singh, Oxford University Press.
3. Technical Communication- Principles and Practices by Meenakshi Raman & Sangeeta Sharma, Oxford
University Press,
New Delhi.
Reference Books:
1. Effective Technical Communication, by Barun K Mitra, Oxford University Press
2. Business Correspondence & Report Writing by R.C. Sharma & Krishna Mohan, Tata McGraw Hill, N.D.
3. Developing Communication Skills by Krishna Mohan & Meera Benerjee, Macmillan India
4. Technical Communication- Principles and Practices by M R S Sharma, Oxford University Press, New Delhi.

Page 24 of 39

IHU-103
Accounting and Financial Management
(I MCA)
UNIT I Introduction to Accounting: concept and objectives of accounting and bookkeeping; financial and
management accounting; ledger and ledger page, ledger entries: debit and credit entries; double entry principle;
trial balance and its use; journal and journal entries; accounting of sole proprietorship, partnership and limited
companies.
UNIT II Types of Final Accounts: Trading account and profit-loss account; closing of ledger accounts; and
balance sheet of companies.
UNIT III Cost Accounting: classification of costs: primary and secondary costs; determination of unit cost;
methods of charging overhead: marginal costing & break-even analysis and standard costing methods and
analysis of variance.
UNIT IV Introduction to Finance: meaning, objectives and functions of financial management; capital
structure of companies: shares, debentures and bonds; financial analysis: balance sheet and income statement;
Profitability, Activity & Financial Ratios: liquidity, debt, profitability and coverage ratios; common size and
index analysis.
UNIT V Capital Budgeting: concept and procedures of capital budgeting, cash flow analysis, methods of
evaluation of projects- average return method, payback period method, internal rate of return method, net
present value method, cost of capital and estimation of required rate of return.
************************
References:
Favell, A J , Practical Bookkeeping and Accounts, Harper Collins Publishers, 1985
Horne, James C Van, Fundamentals of Financial Management, Prentice-Hall of India Private Limited, New Delhi
Armstrong, Michel, A Handbook Of Management Techniques, Kogan Page Limited
Pandey, I M , An Introduction to Financial Management Vikash Publishing House, New Delhi.

Page 25 of 39

IHU-151 / 251
Language Lab
(I B Tech. & I MCA)

Interactive practical sessions with emphasis on oral presentations/ spoken communication:


Practical Sessions on:
1. Group Discussions: selected topical issues to be discussed in groups.
2. Mock interviews
3. Communication skills for seminars/conferences/workshops with emphasis on non-verbal skills.
4. Presentation skills for technical papers/project reports/professional reports.
5. Theme presentation/ key note presentation based on correct argumentation methodologies.
6. Argumentative skills
7. Role play
8. Comprehension skills based on reading and listening practice, Asking questions.
9. Introduction to International Phonetics Alphabets
10. Audio Visual demonstration of effective communicative strategies
References:
Sethi and Dhamija, A Course in Phonetics and Spoken English, Prentice Hall of Inida, New Delhi.
Joans Daniel, English Pronouncing Dictionary, Cambridge University Press.
R. K. Bansal & J.B. Harrison, Spoken English for India, Orient Longman

Page 26 of 39

IHU-102/202
Remedial English
(I B. Tech.)
UNIT I Basic Applied Grammar and Usage- Sentence structure-1: constituent of a sentence- noun, verb,
adjective, preposition, etc.; use of articles, adjectival forms, prepositions, adverbs; verb forms; finite and nonfinite verbs, gerund and participles, auxiliary verbs. Tense and mood. Subject- verb concord, pronoun concord.
UNIT II Sentence Structure-2: (i) adverb clause, adjective clause, noun-clause; (ii) negation and interrogation;
(iii) passive; (iv) exclamatory; (v) transformations; (vi) tense forms; (vii) varieties of sentences; (viii) placement
of modifiers.
UNIT III Paragraph Writing: Structure of Paragraph, Topic Sentence, Construction of Paragraph, Technique
of Paragraph writing, Unity, Coherence, Emphasis
UNIT IV Comprehension and Prcis Writing
Reading and listening comprehension, improving comprehension skills, prcis writing,
UNIT V Short Essay Writing
Dimension of essay writing- literary, scientific, sociological, narrative, descriptive, reflective, expository,
argumentative and imaginative.
***********************
References:
1. Das, B K and A David, A Remedial Course in English for Colleges, (Book -1,2,3) Oxford University Press, New Delhi.
2. Sinha, R P, Current English Grammar and Usage with Composition, Oxford University Press, New Delhi.
3. Wren, P C & Martin, English Grammar and Composition, S Chand & Co Ltd. New Delhi.
4. A.S.Horne, Guide to Pattern and usage in English, Oxford University Press, N.D.
5. M.L. Tickoo & A.E.Subramanian, Intermediate Grammar, usage & composition, Orient Longman
6. J.C.Nesfield, English Grammar Composition & usage, Macmillan India

Page 27 of 39

IHU-203
Organizational Structure and Human Resource Management
(I MCA)
UNIT I Basic Concept of Organization: definition of organization and organizational structure, line and staff
authority, centralization and decentralization, span of control, formal and informal organization, forms of
organization- function based, product based, geography based, project based, organization design,
organizational change, mechanistic and organic structure, virtual and network organization structure.
UNIT II Introduction to Human Resource Management: meaning, objectives and functions of human
resource management, difference between HRM and Personnel Management, HRM models, duties and
responsibility of HR managers, challenges & emerging trend in human resource management.
UNIT III Human Resource Acquisition: definition, importance and processes; job analysis- definition and
processes, job enrichment and job enlargement, recruitment and selection: definition, sources of recruitment,
selection processes, interview methods.
Performance Management: appraisal system, key performance indicators & factors
UNIT IV Motivation: definition and importance, motivation and behaviour, theories of motivation: Maslows
Need Hierarchy, Two Factor Theory, McClellands Need Theory, Theory X and Theory Y.
UNIT V Training and Development: definition, importance and nature of training, training and development,
types of training, training processes, inputs of training, training for international assignment, emerging trends.
*******************
References:
Fred Luthans, Organizational Behaviour, McGraw Hill Education, Asia, 2007.
Robbins, S. P., Organisational Behaviour, Prentice hall of India, 1998
Armstrong, Michel, A Handbook Of Management Techniques, Kogan Page Limited
Mamoria, C.B., Personnel Management, Himalayan Publishing, India
Dwivedi, R S , Human Relations and Organizational Behaviour: a Global Perspective, Macmillan India Ltd., Delhi

Page 28 of 39

ICE 101/201
ENGINEERING GRAPHICS
L T P
3 1 0
Unit 1
Graphics as a tool to communicate ideas, Lettering and dimensioning,
Plain and Diagonal Scales, Construction of geometrical figUres like pentagon and hexagon.

Unit 2
Principles of orthographic projections, Principal and auxiliary planes, Fi~ and Third angle
projections ,Projection of points. Pictorial view.

Unit 3
Projection of lines parallel to both the planes. Parallel to one and inclined to other, Inclined to
both the planes. Application to practical problems.

Unit 4
Projection of solid in simple position, Axis or slant edge inclined to one and parallel to other
plane, Solids lying on a face or generator on a plane.
Sectioning of solids lying in various positions, True shape of the section.

Unit 5
Development of lateral surfaces, sheet metal drawing.
Principles of isometric projection, Problems using box & offset methods.

Page 29 of 39

ICE 102/202
ENVIRONMENT AND ECOLOGY
L T P
2 0 0
Unit-l
Definition, Scope and Importance, Need for Public awareness, Environment definition, Ecosystem,
Concept of ecosystem, Structure and function of an ecosystem, Energy flow in ecosystem, Ecological
succession, Balanced ecosystem, Human activities, Food shelter, Economic and Social Security.
Effects of Human Activities on environment-Agriculture, Housing, Industry, Mining and Transportation
Activities, Basic of Environmental Impact Assessment, Sustainable Development.
Unit-2
Natural Resources: Water Resources -Availability and Quality Aspects, Conservation of water, Water
Borne Diseases, Water Induced Diseases, Fluoride Problem in Drinking Water; Mineral Resources,
Forest Wealth, Material Cycles-Carbon, Nitrogen and Sulphur Cycles.
Energy -Different Types of Energy, Electro-magnetic Radiation, Conventional and Non-Conventional
Sources, Hydro Electric Fossil Fuel Based, Nuclear, Solar, Biomass, Bio-gas, Hydrogen as an
Alternative Future Source of energy.
Unit-3
Environmental Pollution and their Effects, Water Pollution, Land Pollution, Noise Pollution,
Public Health aspects, Air Pollution, Solid Waste Management.

Current Environmental Issue of Importance: Population Growth, Climate Change and Global
Warming-Effects, Urbanization, Automobile Pollution.
Acid Rain, Ozone Layer Depletion.

Unit-4
Environmental Protection-Role of Government, Legal Aspects, Initiatives by Non-Governmental
Organizations (NGO), Environmental Education, Women Education.
Field Work: Visit to local area to document environmental assets-rivers/forest/grassland/hill/mountain,
Visit to a local polluted site-Urban/Rural/Industries/Agricultural, Study of common plants, insects,
birds, Study of simple ecosystems-ponds, river, hill slopes etc.

Page 30 of 39

IET 101/ IET 201


Electronics and Instrumentation Engineering
P-N Junction Diode, V-I Characteristics, Diode Application as Rectifier (Half Wave & Full Wave), Zener
Diode and its Applications.
Introduction of Bipolar Junction Transistor, FET: Applications, demo, explanation,
OPAMP and its Applications
Boolean Algebra, Logic Gates, Concept of Universal Gate.
Basic Combinational Circuits: Adder, Subtractor.
Sequential Circuits: Flip-Flops, Registers.
Functional Elements of Instruments, Classification & Characteristics, Types of Errors,
Active and Passive Transducers and their Characteristics, LVDT
Display Devices: Seven Segment Display, Alphanumeric Display, LCD, Dot Matrix Displays.
Electronic Ammeter and Voltmeter, Digital Multi-meter, Cathode Ray Oscilloscope.

Text Books:
1. Malvino, A.P. / Electronics Principles / Tata McGraw-Hill / 6th Ed.
2. Boylestad, Robert & Nashelsky, Louis / Electronic Devices & Circuit Theory / Prentice Hall of India /
8th Ed.
3. H.S. Kalsi / Electronic Instrumentation / Tata McGraw-Hill
4. Malvino & Leach / Digital Principles & Applications / Tata McGraw-Hill / 5th Edition
Reference Books:
1. Sedra, Adel S., Smith, Kenneth C. / Microelectronic Circuits/ Oxford University Press / 5th Edition
2. Sawhney AK/ Electrical and electronic Measurement and Instrumentation/ Dhanpat Rai & sons.
3. Lectures of NPTEL

Page 31 of 39

ICA-101
CONCEPTS OF COMPUTER & PROGRAMMING IN C
LT P
3 1 0
Unit I
Introduction To Computers: Computer hardware Components, peripherals and their functions, Number
Systems and conversion methods, Concept of an algorithm; termination and correctness.
Algorithms to programs: specification, top-down development and stepwise refinement. Introduction to
Programming Environment, Use of high level programming language for the systematic development of
programs. Introduction to the design and implementation of correct, efficient and maintainable programs,
Structured Programming, Trace an algorithm to depict the logic.
Unit II
Basic operating System Concepts: Introduction of MS-DOS, WINDOWS, and LINUX Operating Systems,
Functional Knowledge of these operating systems. Introduction of Basic Commands of LINUX and Editors,
Managing Files and Directories in LINUX. Programming Environment in LINUX, Writing and executing
programs in LINUX.
Unit III
Programming in C: History, Introduction to C Programming Languages, Structure of C programs, compilation
and execution of C programs, Debugging Techniques, Data Types and Sizes, Declaration of variables,
Modifiers, Identifiers and keywords, Symbolic constants, Storage classes (automatic, external, register and
static), Enumerations, command line parameters, Macros, The C Preprocessor.
Unit IV
Operators: Unary operators, Arithmetic & logical operators, Bit wise operators, Assignment operators and
expressions, Conditional expressions, Precedence and order of evaluation.
Control statements: if-else, switch, break, and continue, the comma operator, goto statement.
Loops: for, while, do-while. Functions: built-in and user-defined, function declaration, definition and function
call, and parameter passing: call by value, call by reference, recursive functions, Multi file programs. Arrays:
linear arrays, multidimensional arrays, passing arrays to functions, Arrays and strings.
Unit V
Structure and Union: definition and differences, self-referential structure. Pointers: value at (*) and address
of (&) operator, pointer to pointer, Dynamic Memory Allocation, calloc and malloc functions, array of pointers,
function of pointers, structures and pointers. File Handling in C: opening and closing a data file, creating a
data file, read and write functions, unformatted data files.
Text and References Books:
7. Kernighan, Ritchie, The C Programming Language, PHI
8. V. Rajaraman, Fundamentals of Computers, PHI
9. Peter Nortons, Introduction to Computers, TMH
10. Gottfried, Programming in C, Schaums Series, Tata McGraw Hill
11. Yashwant Kanitkar, Working with C, BPB
12. E. Balagurusamy, Programming in ANSI C, TMH

Page 32 of 39

ICA-102
COMPUTER ORGANIZATION
LTP
310
Unit-I (Representation of Information and Basic Building Blocks)
Introduction to Computer, Computer hardware generation, Number System: Binary, Octal, Hexadecimal,
Character Codes (BCD, ASCII, EBCDIC), Logic gates, Boolean Algebra, K-map simplification, Half Adder,
Full Adder, Subtractor, Decoder, Encoders, Multiplexer, Demultiplexer, Carry lookahead adder, Combinational
logic Design, Flip-Flops, Registers, Counters (synchronous & asynchronous), ALU, Micro-Operation.
ALU- chip, Faster Algorithm and Implementation (multiplication & Division)
Unit-II (Basic Organization)
Von Neumann Architecture, Operational flow chart (Fetch, Execute), Instruction Cycle, Organization of Central
Processing Unit, Hardwired & micro programmed control unit, Single Organization, General Register
Organization, Stack Organization, Addressing modes, Instruction formats, data transfer & Manipulation, I/O
Organization, Bus Architecture, Programming Registers
Unit-III (Memory Organization)
Memory Hierarchy, Main memory (RAM/ROM chips), Auxiliary memory, Associative memory, Cache
memory, Virtual Memory, Memory Management Hardware, hit/miss ratio, magnetic disk and its performance,
magnetic Tape etc.
Unit-IV (I/O Organization)
Peripheral devices, I/O interface, Modes of Transfer, Priority Interrupt, Direct Memory Access, Input-Output
Processor, and Serial Communication. I/O Controllers, Asynchronous data transfer, Strobe Control,
Handshaking.
Unit-V (Processor Organization)
Basic Concept of 8-bit micro Processor (8085) and 16-bit Micro Processor (8086), Assembly Instruction Set,
Assembly language program of (8086): Addition of two numbers, Subtraction, Block Transfer, find greatest
number, Table search, Numeric Manipulation, Introductory Concept of pipeline, Flynns and Fengs
Classification, Parallel Architectural classification, Concept of Pipelining and Multi-Core.
Text and Reference Books:
1. William Stalling, Computer Organization & Architecture, Pearson education Asia
2. Mano Morris, Computer System Architecture, PHI
3. Zaky & Hamacher, Computer Organization, McGraw Hill
4. B. Ram, Computer Fundamental Architecture & Organization, New Age
5. Tannenbaum, Structured Computer Organization, PHI.

Page 33 of 39

ICA-151
PROGRAMMING LAB
LTP
0 03
16. Write C program to find largest of three integers.
17. Write C program to check whether the given string is palindrome or not.
18. Write C program to find whether the given integer is
(iii).
a prime number
(iv).
an Armstrong number.
19. Write C program for Pascal triangle.
20. Write C program to find sum and average of n integer using linear array.
21. Write C program to perform addition, multiplication, transpose on matrices.
22. Write C program to find fibbonacci series of iterative method using user-defined function.
23. Write C program to find factorial of n by recursion using user-defined functions.
24. Write C program to perform following operations by using user defined functions:
(iv) Concatenation
(v) Reverse
(vi) String Matching
25. Write C program to find sum of n terms of series:
n n*2/2! + n*3/3! - n*4/4! + ...............
26. Write C program to interchange two values using
(iii).
Call by value.
(iv).
Call by reference.
27. Write C program to sort the list of integers using dynamic memory allocation.
28. Write C program to display the mark sheet of a student using structure.
29. Write C program to perform following operations on data files:
(i)
read from data file.
(ii)
write to data file.
30. Write C program to copy the content of one file to another file using command line argument.

Page 34 of 39

ICA-201
DATA STRUCTURES USING C
LTP
3 1 0
Unit - I
Introduction: Basic Terminology, Elementary Data Organization, Structure operations, Algorithm Complexity
and Time-Space trade-off.
Arrays: Array Definition, Representation and Analysis, Single and Multidimensional Arrays, address
calculation, application of arrays, Character String in C, Character string operation, Array as Parameters,
Ordered List, Sparse Matrices and Vectors.
Stacks: Array Representation and Implementation of stack, Operations on Stacks: Push & Pop, Array
Representation of Stack, Linked Representation of Stack, Operations Associated with Stacks, Applications of
stack: Conversion of Infix to Prefix and Postfix Expressions, Evaluation of postfix expression using stack,
Applications of recursion in problems like Tower of Hanoi.
UNIT - II
Queues: Array and linked representation and implementation of queues, Operations on Queue: Create, Add,
Delete, Full and Empty, Circular queues, D-queues and Priority Queues.
Linked list: Representation and Implementation of Singly Linked Lists, Two-way Header List, Traversing and
Searching of Linked List, Overflow and Underflow, Insertion and deletion to/from Linked Lists, Insertion and
deletion Algorithms, Doubly linked list, Linked List in Array, Polynomial representation and addition,
Generalized linked list, Garbage Collection and Compaction.
UNIT III
Trees: Basic terminology, Binary Trees, Binary tree representation, algebraic Expressions, Complete Binary
Tree, Extended Binary Trees, Array and Linked Representation of Binary trees, Traversing Binary trees,
Threaded Binary trees, Traversing Threaded Binary trees, Huffman algorithm.
Searching and Hashing: Sequential search, binary search, comparison and analysis, Hash Table, Hash
Functions, Collision Resolution Strategies, Hash Table Implementation.
UNIT IV
Sorting: Insertion Sort, Bubble Sort, Quick Sort, Two Way Merge Sort, Heap Sort, Sorting on Different Keys,
Practical considerations for Internal Sorting.
Binary Search Trees: Binary Search Tree (BST), Insertion and Deletion in BST, Complexity of Search
Algorithm, Path Length, AVL Trees, B-trees.
UNIT - V
Graphs: Terminology & Representations, Graphs & Multi-graphs, Directed Graphs, Sequential
Representations of Graphs, Adjacency Matrices, Traversal, Connected Component and Spanning Trees,
Minimum Cost Spanning Trees.
File Structures: Physical Storage Media File Organization, Organization of records into Blocks, Sequential
Files, Indexing and Hashing, Primary indices, Secondary indices, B+ Tree index Files, B Tree index Files,
Indexing and Hashing Comparisons.
Text and Reference Books:
1. A. S. Tenenbaum, Data Structures using C & C++, Prentice-Hall of India Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi.
2. Horowitz and Sahani, Fundamentals of data Structures, Galgotia Publication Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi.
3. R. Kruse et. al, Data Structures and Program Design in C, Pearson Education Asia, Delhi-2002
4. K Loudon, Mastering Algorithms with C, Shroff Publisher & Distributors Pvt. Ltd.
5. Bruno R Preiss, Data Structures and Algorithms with Object Oriented Design Pattern in C++, Jhon
Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Page 35 of 39

ICA-203
OPERATING SYSTEM
LTP
3 1 0
Unit-I
Introduction: Definition and types of operating systems, Batch Systems, multi programming, timesharing
parallel, distributed and real-time systems, Operating system structure, Operating system components and
services, System calls, system programs, Virtual machines.
Unit-II
Process Management: Process concept, Process scheduling, Cooperating processes, Threads, Interprocess
communication, CPU scheduling criteria, Scheduling algorithms, Multiple-processor scheduling, Real-time
scheduling and Algorithm evaluation.
Unit-III
Process Synchronization and Deadlocks: The Critical-Section problem, synchronization hardware,
Semaphores, Classical problems of synchronization, Critical regions, Monitors, Deadlocks-System model,
Characterization, Deadlock prevention, Avoidance and Detection, Recovery from deadlock, Combined
approach to deadlock handling.
Unit-IV
Memory Management: Memory Management-Logical and Physical Address Space, Swapping, Contiguous
Allocation, Paging, Segmentation with paging in MULTICS and Intel 386, Virtual Memory, Demand paging
and its performance, Page replacement algorithms, Allocation of frames, Thrasing, Page Size and other
considerations, Demand segmentation.
Unit-V
File System and I/O Management: File systems, secondary Storage Structure, File concept, access methods,
directory implementation, Efficiency and performance, recovery, Disk structure, Disk scheduling methods, Disk
management, Recovery, Disk structure, disk scheduling methods, Disk management, Swap-Space management,
Disk reliability.
Security Issues: Protection and Security-Goals of protection, Domain of protection, Access matrix,
Implementation of access Matrix, Revocation of Access Rights, language based protection, The Security
problem, Authentication, One Time passwords, Program threats, System threats, Threat Monitoring,
Encryption.
Text and Reference Books:
1. Abraham Siberschatz and Peter Baer Galvin, Operating System Concepts, Fifth Edition, AddisionWesley
2. Milan Milankovic, Operating Systems, Concepts and Design, McGraw-Hill.

Page 36 of 39

ICA 251
DATA STRUCTURES LAB
LTP
0 0 3
Write Program in C or C++ for following:
1. Sorting programs: Bubble sort, Merge sort, Insertion sort, Selection sort, and Quick sort.
2. Searching programs: Linear Search, Binary Search.
3. Array implementation of Stack, Queue, Circular Queue, Linked List.
4. Implementation of Stack, Queue, Circular Queue, Linked List using dynamic memory allocation.
5. Implementation of Binary tree.
6. Program for Tree Traversals (preorder, inorder, postorder).
7. Program for graph traversal (BFS, DFS).
8. Program for minimum cost spanning tree, shortest path.

Page 37 of 39

IGP - 101/201/301/401/501/601/701/801
General Proficiency
50 Marks of General Proficiency are to be awarded as detailed below:

20 Marks based on extracurricular activities in which 5 marks per activity be awarded to those
participating in Institute level activity and 10 marks per activity for those representing Institute
outside with upper limit of 20 marks. These will be awarded by the Chairman, Council of Student
Activities.
10 Marks based on participation of student in the department level extracurricular and
academic/research activities in which 2 marks per activity shall be awarded for those participating in
department level activities with upper limit of 10 marks. These marks will be awarded by the
concerned Head of Department.
20 Marks based on conduct and discipline of the student to be awarded by Dean of Student Welfare
considering the inputs from Chief Proctor.

Page 38 of 39

ICE 203
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND ETHICS
L T P
3 1 0
Unit-l
Introduction to Environmental Science: Definition, scope and need for public awareness
Ecosystem: Concept of ecosystem, Structure and function of an ecosystem, Energy flow in ecosystem,
Ecological succession,
Biogeochemical cycles: Carbon nitrogen, phosphorus, sulpher
Biodiversity: definition, threats and conservation, Balanced ecosystem,
Unit 2
Impact of man on environment: Human population and growth, population explosion, growth
curve, migration, :
Social issues related to environment: urban problems such as water, energy conservation, waste management,
pollution, congestion, resettlement and rehabilitation, environmental ethics
Human activities, Food shelter, Economic and Social Security
Unit-3
Environmental Pollution and their Effects, Water Pollution-quality aspects, water borne diseases, Air Pollution,
Land Pollution, Solid Waste Management, Noise Pollution, Public Health aspects.
Current Environmental Issue of Importance: Population Growth, Climate Change and Global WarmingEffects, Urbanization, Automobile Pollution.
Acid Rain"Ozone Layer Depletion.
Unit-4
Natural Resources: Water Resources, Mineral Resources, Forest resources, Agricultural resources, energy
resources
Environment protection- Role of the government, legal aspects, environmental education, women education.
Unit -5
Environmental legislation- Introduction of various legislation related to water, air biodiversity, ozone depletion
at nation and international level- conventions and treaties, enforcement of laws, issue involved in effective
implementation of laws, initiatives by NGOs, global efforts in environmental protection.
Books
1. Dhamija, S.K. (2006). "Environmnetal Studies", S.K. Katariya and Sons, New Delhi
2. Anjanayelu, Y. (2002). "Environmental Studies" B.S. Publishers, Hydrerabad.
3. Odum, E.P., "Ecology", 2nd edition, Oxford and IBH publishing Co.Pvt.Ltd, 1975.
4. D.J.M anjunath (2007). "Environmental Science", Pearson education, India, New Delhi
5. B. Joseph, "Environmental Studies", 2nd edition, Tata Mcgraw, Hill New Delhi

Page 39 of 39

You might also like