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Full-Time Diploma Cours E in Electronics & Tele-Comm Unication Engineering

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FULL–TIME DIPLOMA COURS

E IN
ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMM
UNICATION
ENGINEERING

CURRICULAR STRUCTURE
AND
SYLLABUS
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION ETCE

WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF


TECHNICAL EDUCATION
K O L K A T A K A R I G O R I B H A V A N (2ND F L O O
R), 110 S N BANERJEE ROAD
K O L K A T A –– 7 0 0 0 1 3

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FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

F O R E W A R D
The West Bengal State Council of Technical Education is presently offering twenty-five
full-time diploma courses in 43 polytechnics affiliated to it, 42 in West Bengal and 1 in
Tripura. The courses being: —
(i) Architecture,
(ii) Automobile Engineering,
(iii) Chemical Engineering,
(iv) Civil Engineering,
(v) Computer Science & Technology,
(vi) Computer Software Technology,
(vii) Electrical Engineering,
(viii) Electronics & Tele-Communication Engineering,
(ix) Food Processing Technology,
(x) Foot Wear Technology,
(xi) Information Technology,
(xii) Instrumentation Technology,
(xiii) Interior Decoration, Handicrafts & Furniture Design,
(xiv) Marine Engineering,
(xv) Mechanical Engineering,
(xvi) Medical Laboratory Technology,
(xvii) Metallurgical Engineering,
(xviii) Mine Surveying,
(xix) Mining Engineering,
(xx) Modern Office Practice & Management,
(xxi) Photography,
(xxii) Pharmacy,
(xxiii) Printing Technology,
(xxiv) Production Engineering, and,
(xxv) Survey Engineering.

The students coming out of these institutions find employment in the organised and
unorganised sectors and forms backbone of the world of work. They find employment
in the functional areas. However, the most important job functions include: production,
quality control, installation, maintenance, servicing, marketing etc. In order to train
manpower of desired quality and standards, it is essential to provide appropriate
learning experiences to the students for developing requisite competencies in the
respective disciplines.
The Curricular Structure and the relevant syllabi for the above mentioned disciplines
were last revised in 2002. Development in the field of Science & Technology
warranties revision and upgradation of the curriculum at all the three levels of
Engineering & Technology Education, viz. the Degree level, the Diploma level and the
ITI level. It is in this background that the West Bengal State Council of Technical
Education took the decision in early 2002 to update the existing curricular structure
and syllabi of the different full-time diploma programmes in vogue. Accordingly the
Board of Studies of the Council took initiative. Upon the recommendation of the Board
of Studies, the State Council in its meeting held on 9th August 2006 adopted Curricular
Structures for the Diploma Programmes in Engineering & Technology, Applied Arts &
Crafts and Other Disciplines, to be implemented from the 2002-2003 academic
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WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION ETCE

session. These are in accordance to the “NORMS AND STANDARDS” of the All India
Council of Technical Education.

MODE OF CURRICULAR PROGRAMME


A FIXED & LINEAR SEMESTER MODE is introduced in lieu of the FIXED & LINEAR ANNUAL MODE. The
new Curricular Programme consists of three parts, each part consisting of two
semesters. Each semester consists of at least 15 contact weeks excluding internal
assessments, end-semester examinations, preparatory and other holidays.
Weekly Work Schedule
Instead of the present practice of 7 periods per full working day and 4 periods per
Saturday @ 45 minutes per period, 8 periods per full working day and 4 periods per
Saturday @ 50 minutes per period with the following schedule are introduced. The last
two periods of every working day will be of 45 minutes duration.

F U L L W O R K I N G D A Y

1st 2nd 3rd 4th Rece 5th 6th 7th 8th


Period Period Period Period ss Period Period Period Period
10:30 11: 15 12:00 12:45 1:30 1:50 2:35 3:20 4:05
— — — — — — — — —
11:15 12:00 12:45 1:30 1:50 2:35 3:20 4:05 4:50

S A T U R D A Y

1st 2nd 3rd 4th


Period Period Period Period
10:30 11: 15 12:00 12:45
— — — —
11:15 12:00 12:45 1:30
TABLE 1 (a) & (b): WEEKLY PERIOD SCHEDULE

In the Part – I First Semester & Second Semesters, 36 & 40 periods are respectively
allocated for students’ instruction and 8 & 4 periods are respectively allocated for
student centred activities; and, in each of the other four semesters, out of the total 44
periods in a week, 39 periods are allocated for student contact and 5 periods for
student centred activities. This leads to the present 2900 instructional contact hours
per three-year full-time diploma course instead of the old 2430 instructional contact
hours per three year.
Present Past AICTE
Item
Semester Annual Recommend
System System ations
Total Institutional Hours per week 38⅓ hours 31¾ hours 40 hours
Student Contact Hours in Formal Training per 30 – 32½ 27 hours 33 – 36 hours
week hours
Student Centred Activities (Library, Guided 4 - 6⅔ hours 2¼ hours 08 – 10 hours
Studies etc.) per week
TABLE 2: COMPARISON OF WEEKLY WORK SCHEDULE
Generally, it is recommended that the sessional classes be scheduled in the second
half of a day, allocating the theoretical classes in the first half.

DURATION OF PROGRAMME & ENTRY QUALIFICATION


The minimum duration of the full-time diploma programme will be three years after
10+ or entry qualifications as approved by the AICTE from time to time.
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FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

CURRICULAR COMPONENTS OF THE DIPLOMA PROGRAMMES IN ENGINEERING


& TECHNOLOGY
The Diploma Programmes in Engineering & Technology shall consist of curricular
component comprising courses in General Studies, Applied Sciences, Basic Courses in
Engineering & Technology, Interdisciplinary Courses in Engineering & Technology,
Applied Courses in Engineering & Technology (Departmental Core), and, Specialised
Courses in Engineering & Technology (Electives).
General Studies
All disciplines shall contain courses in general studies and communication. These are
related to supervisory/management skills. Further, development of communication
skills appropriate to functions of technicians and also complementary to the main
theme or disciplines of the respective programmes is considered. In addition, courses
offered include areas of social and economic concern like environmental protection,
energy conservation, productivity and quality, safety and entrepreneurial
development. A general course on computer literacy and computer applications is
essentially included.

Applied Sciences
Courses under Applied Sciences include Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Topics
for these courses are chosen depending on their requirement for study of the Basic,
Interdisciplinary and Applied Courses in Engineering & Technology, as well as to help
the students to pursue higher level of studies in chosen areas.
Basic Courses in Engineering & Technology
Courses in basic Engineering & Technology include Engineering Drawing, Workshop
Practice, Engineering Mechanics and Strength of Materials. These are necessary for all
the disciplines as this will help in the study of the Interdisciplinary and Applied Courses
in Engineering & Technology.
Interdisciplinary Courses in Engineering & Technology
Though not included in the recommendations of the AICTE, the State Council, on the
recommendation of the Board of Studies, included this component, viz. the
Interdisciplinary Courses in Engineering & Technology. In the present time, no
discipline of Engineering & Technology can develop of its own, but with the knowledge
& skill taken from allied disciplines. Even there are disciplines, which are itself
interdisciplinary in nature, like Medical Laboratory Technology where knowledge of
Medical Science is amalgamated with that of Electronics. This component is introduced
to expose the students to these areas of interdependence. Examples of such courses
are “Elements of Electrical Engineering” (Mechanical), “Principles & Applications of
Digital Electronics” (Electrical), “Design of Structure” (Architecture), “Computer
Oriented Numerical Methods” (Chemical), “Instrumentation, Automatic Control &
Microprocessor Application” (Production) etc.
Applied Courses in Engineering & Technology (Departmental Core)
These form the core studies relevant to the specific discipline and are meant to
develop competencies required by the profession. One of the courses would be
essentially Project work, which is intended to provide opportunity for students to
develop understanding of the interrelationship between courses and to apply the
knowledge gained in a way that enables them to develop and demonstrate higher
order skills. Project work has been given due weightage in terms of time and credit
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WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION ETCE

allocation. Industry-Institution-Interaction should be an integral component of


curriculum wherever possible.
Specialised Courses in Engineering & Technology (Electives)
Courses under electives are offered to provide an avenue for limited specialisation in
an area of the students’ choice and should cover new and emerging areas. Examples
of such courses are “CAD CAM” (Mechanical), “Process Control & Instrumentation”
(Electrical), “Water Resource Engineering” (Civil), “Alternative Building Technology”
(Architecture), “PC Hardware Maintenance” (Electronics & Tele-Communication
Engineering) etc.
A summary of the new curricular structure for the Diploma Programmes in Engineering
& Technology is illustrated below:

60.00%
Core Engg.
C ore 50.00%
Basic
Engg.
Engg /Te ch
50.22% 40.00%
22.51%
Basic
30.00% Engg./Te ch.
Applied
20.00% Scie nce
Gene ral Elective
Interdisci-
Applie d Inte rdisci- 10.00% Studie s plinary
Scie nce Ge ne ral pli nary
12.12% Elective 3.90% 0.00%
Studie s
4.33%
7.36% Propose d
AIC TE

Fig. 3: Time Distribution of the Different Fig. 4 : Comparison of Time Distribution of


Components of the New Curiculum Different Components of the New Curriculum
with that of the AICTE

AICTE
COMPONENTS Part – Part – Part – Part – Part – Part – TOTAL
RECOMM
OF STUDY I I 2ND II 1ST II 2ND III 1ST III 2ND (%)
EN-
1ST SEM. SEM. SEM. SEM. SEM.
DATIONS
SEM.
GENERAL
03 04 03 04 03 — 17 5 – 10 %
STUDIES
(07.36%)
APPLIED
17 11 — — — — 28 10 – 15 %
SCIENCE
(12.12%)
BASIC
16 24 12 — — — 52 (22.51 20 – 30 %
ENGINEERING
%)
APPLIED
ENGINEERING — — 24 27 32 33 116 40 – 55 %
(DEPT. CORE) (50.22%)
INTERDISCIPLIN — — — 08 — — 08 —
ARY (03.46%)
SPECIALISED
COURSES — — — — 04 06 10 5 – 10 %
(ELECTIVE) (04.33%)
TOTAL 36 39 39 39 39 39 231 —
(100.00%)
TABLE 5: SEMESTER WISE PERIOD ALLOCATION OF DIFFERENT COMPONENTS OF THE CURRICULAR
STRUCTURE

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FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

Distribution of Marks
Taking the two semesters of each part together, the distribution of marks in the three
parts for the theoretical and sessional papers will be as follows: —
PAR THEORETI SESSIO TOT
T CAL NAL AL
I 950 650 1600
II 1050 950 2000
III 950 1050 2000
TOT 2950 2650 560
AL 0
TOTAL THEORETICAL MARKS : TOTAL SESSIONAL MARKS = 52.68 : 47.32

COMPONENTS OF THE CURRICULAR STRUCTURES FOR THE DIPLOMA


COURSES IN APPLIED ARTS & CRAFTS AND OTHER DISCIPLINES
The curricular structures for the disciplines belonging to the “Applied Arts & Crafts”
and “Other Disciplines” categories will have the same ‘Mode of Curricular Programme’
and similar ‘Distribution of Marks’ as those of the Engineering & Technology
disciplines. But as per the AICTE Norms and Standards, the difference of the Curricular
Structures will occur only in the percentage of time allocated towards the different
curriculum components. These are illustrated in the detailed Curricular Structures of
the respective disciplines.

THE METHODOLOGY OF REVISION & UPDATION


At the onset, the Board of Studies made the following policy decisions regarding
formation of the syllabus sub-committees for preparation of the detailed curricular
structure & syllabi of each discipline: —
(i) the convenors of each syllabus sub-committee are normally to be appointed
from within the polytechnic system with certain exception;
(ii) on receiving recommendations from each convenor, the other members of the
syllabus sub-committees are to be appointed and it has to be guaranteed that
each syllabus sub-committee consisted of academicians from the universities /
degree institutions, representatives from the concerned industries and the
statutory councils (if any);
(iii) the syllabus sub-committees should first prepare the curricular structures and
then they should prepare the detailed syllabi of the different courses;
(iv) along with the curriculum, the syllabus sub-committees should also mention the
equipments and the technical personnel required for properly running the
different Sessional classes (Drawing, Workshop, Laboratory, Project & Elective).
Upon scrutiny of the curriculum submitted by the different syllabus sub-committees
and making modifications wherever necessary, the Board of Studies recommended the
same to the West Bengal State Council of Technical Education for its consideration and
formal adoption.

SYLLABUS SUB-COMMITTEES FOR SUBJECTS OFFERED AT PARTS – II & III

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WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION ETCE

1. SYLLABUS SUB-COMMITTEE FOR THE DISCIPLINE OF ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION


ENGINEERING AND THE COMMON SUBJECT “BASIC ELECTRONICS”:
(i) MEMBER CONVENOR: SHRI PIJUSH KANTI CHAKRABARTY, Lecturer in Electronics & Tele-
Communication Engg., Women’s Polytechnic, Jodhpur Park;
(ii) MEMBER: SHRI SANDIP KUNDU, COE, WBSCTE;
(iii) MEMBER: SHRI SUJIT CHATTERJEE, Dy. General Manager, Transmission Maintenance,
BSNL;
(iv) MEMBER: SHRI JAYANTA MUKHOPADHYAY, Sr. Executive Engineer, Power Electronics
Division, APLAB Limited;
(v) MEMBER: DR. BHASKAR GUPTA, Reader, Dept. of Electronics & Tele-Communication
Engg., J.U.;
(vi) MEMBER: DR. (SM.) BIJITA BISWAS, Lecturer in Electronics & Tele-Communication
Engg., Women’s Polytechnic, Jodhpur Park;
(vii) MEMBER: SHRI NABENDU SENGUPTA, Dy. Secretary, WBSCVET;
(viii) MEMBER: DR. (SM.) MERINA DAN, Lecturer in Electronics & Tele-Communication
Engg., EIJE, Dalalpukur, Howrah;
(ix) MEMBER: SM. MANIDIPA ROY, Principal, Women's Polytechnic, Chandannagore
Polytechnic.

2. SYLLABUS SUB-COMMITTEE FOR “COMMUNICATION SKILLS (JOB)”:


(i) MEMBER CONVENOR: SHRI SANKAR NATH GHOSH, formerly, Head of the Dept. & Lecturer
in Humanities, Hooghly Institute of Technology;
(ii) MEMBER: SHRI AMARESH KUMAR MUKHERJEE, formerly, Head of the Dept. & Lecturer in
Humanities, Regional Institute of Printing Technology;
(iii) MEMBER: SHRI PRABIR KUMAR GHOSH, Lecturer in Humanities, Central Calcutta
Polytechnic;
(iv) MEMBER: SM. PURNA BISWAS, Lecturer in Humanities, Women's Polytechnic, Jodhpur
Park;
(v) MEMBER: SHRI SANTANU MITRA, Lecturer in Humanities, J.C. Ghosh Polytechnic;
(vi) MEMBER: SHRI HEMADRI CHATTERJEE, Lecturer in Humanities, R. K. Mission Silpapith,
Belghoria;
(vii) MEMBER: SM. SUKLA MITRA, formerly, English Studies Officer, British Council
Division, Kolkata; and,
(viii) MEMBER: SHRI SANTANU GOSWAMI, Manager Personnel & Industrial Relation Faculty,
Exide Industries.

3. SYLLABUS SUB-COMMITTEE FOR “INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT”:


(i) MEMBER CONVENOR : SHRI SUMON KUMAR ROY, Lecturer in Mechanical Engg., A.P.C. Roy
Polytechnic, Kolkata;
(ii) MEMBER: DR. P.K. DAN, Asst. Professor, IISWBM, Kolkata;
(iii) MEMBER: SHRI APARESH C. BHATTACHARYYA, Member-Convenor, Syllabus Sub-
Committee for the Discipline of Mechanical Engg., and, formerly, Sr. Manager
(Pers. & Admn.), Jessop & Co. Ltd.;
(iv) MEMBER: SHRI A.C. MAJUMDAR, IISWBM, Kolkata.
4. (A) RESOURCE PERSON FOR “INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT”: DR. NIKHIL RANJAN BANERJEA, Vice-
Chancellor, BESU.

5. RESOURCE PERSONS FOR “ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING”:


(i) DR. NIKHIL RANJAN BANERJEA, Vice-Chancellor, BESU; and,
(ii) SHRI RABINDRA CHANDRA BHATTACHARYA, Vice-Chairman, WBSCTE.

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FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

6. RESOURCE PERSON FOR “C PROGRAMMING” & “ ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING”: SHRI PIJUSH KANTI
CHAKRABARTY, Lecturer in Electronics & Tele-Communication Engg., Women’s
Polytechnic, Jodhpur Park.
7. RESOURCE PERSON FOR “COMPUTER NETWORK” & “PC HARDWARE MAINTENANCE”: SRI GAUTAM
MAHAPATRA, Sr. Lecturer & Head, Dept. of Computer Science, Asutosh College,
University of Calcutta.
8. RESOURCE PERSON FOR “MEDICAL ELECTRONICS”: SRI BAIDYA NATH PANDIT, Lecturer & Head,
Dept. of Medical Electronics, Central Calcutta Polytechnic.

THE BOARD OF STUDIES


The members of the Board of Studies, under whose supervision and guidance the work
of syllabus revision took place, are as follows: —
1. Chairman DR. NIKHIL RANJAN BANERJEA, Vice-Chancellor, BESU and Member,
: WBSCTE
2. Member- SHRI GAUTAM BANDYOPADHYAY, Secretary, and Member, WBSCTE
Secretary
:
3. Member: SHRI SAIBAL MUKHOPADHYAY, JOINT Director, Directorate of Technical
Education & Training, Govt. of West Bengal
4. Member: DR. RANJAN DASGUPTA, Professor National Institute of Technical
Teachers’ Training & Research (Eastern Region)
5. Member: PROF. P.K. DAS PODDER, PROFESSOR OF CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY , University of
Calcutta and Member, WBSCTE
6. Member: DR. SIDDHARTA KUMAR DUTTA, Pro-Vice Chancellor., J.U. and Member,
WBSCTE
7. Member: DR. J.N. MAITI, General Manager (Project), WEBEL
8. Member: SHRI UJJWAL GHATAK, Confederation of Indian Industries (Eastern
Region)
9. Member: PROF. (DR.) R.N. BANERJEE, Institution of Engineers (India), West Bengal
Chapter
10. Member: DR. NIL RATAN BANDOPADHYAY, Endowment Scientist, Dr. M. N. Dastur
School of Material Science, B.E. College (D.U.)
11. Member: SHRI MRINAL KANTI BASAK, Indian Society for Technical Education (West
Bengal Chapter)
12. Member: SHRI DIPTENDU CHOWDHURY, Principal, Regional Institute of Printing Tech.,
Kolkata
13. Member: SM. LAHARI GHOSH, Principal, Birla Institute of Technology, Kolkata
14. Member: SHRI ASHOK DEB, Lecturer in Civil Engg., North Calcutta Polytechnic

THE WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION


The members of the West Bengal State Council of Technical Education are as follows:

1. Chairman: SHRI CHAKRADHAR MAIKAP, MIC, Dept. of Technical Education &
Training, Govt. of West Bengal
2. Vice- RABINDRA CHANDRA BHATTACHARYA, VICE-CHAIRMAN, WBSCTE
Chairman:
3. Member SHRI GAUTAM BANDYOPADHYAYA, SECRETARY, WBSCTE
Secretary:
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WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION ETCE

4. Member: SHRI S. C. TEWARI, IAS, Secretary, Dept. of Technical Education &


Training, Govt. of West Bengal
5. Member: SHRI S. DEY, Dy. Secretary, Dept. of Finance, Govt. of West
Bengal
6. Member: DR. N R BANERJEA, Vice-Chancellor, BESU
7. Member: DR. S. ROY. Director, National Institute of Technical Teachers’
Training & Research (Eastern Region)
8. Member: DR. P DEY, Director, Directorate of Technical Education &
Training, Govt. of West Bengal
9. Member: SHRI ARDHENDU SHEKHAR BISWAS, Director of School Education, Govt.
of West Bengal
10. Member: PROF. P.K. DAS PODDER, Professor, Dept. of Chem. Technology,
University of Calcutta
11. Member: DR. SIDDHARTA DUTTA, Pro-Vice-Chancellor, J.U.
12. Member: DR. MADHUSUDAN BHATTACHARYYA, INDIAN SOCIETY FOR TECHNICAL EDUCATION
13. Member: DR. SAMIRAN CHOWDHURY, Institution of Engineers (India)
14. Member: DR. SUJAN CHAKRABORTY, Member, Pharmacy Council of India
15. Member: SHRI GAUTAM ROY, DY. GENERAL MANAGER, CESC
16. Member: SHRI PIJUSH KANTI CHARABORTY, Lecturer in Electronics & Tele-
Communication Engg., Women’s Polytechnic, Jodhpur Park
17. Member: SHRI PRABIR KUMAR GHOSH, Lecturer in Humanities, Central Calcutta
Polytechnic
18. Member: SHRI SANKAR PRASAD DEY, JR. LECTURER, CALCUTTA TECHNICAL SCHOOL
19. Member: SMT. KANIKA GANGULY, Member of the Legislative Assembly, West
Bengal

Sd/-
GAUTAM BANDYOPADHYAY
SECRETARY
30th April, 2007 W. B. State Council
of Technical Education

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FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

C O N T E N T S
1.0 DETAILED CURRICULAR STRUCTURE OF THREE-YEAR FULL-TIME DIPLOMA
COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICARTION ENGINEERING
1. CURRICULAR STRUCTURE FOR PART – I OF THE FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE- 2
1 COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING … … … … … …

1. CURRICULAR STRUCTURE FOR PART – II OF THE FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE- 3
2 COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING … … … … … …

1. CURRICULAR STRUCTURE FOR PART – III OF THE FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE- 4
3 COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING … … … … … …

2.0 DETAILED SYLLABI OF DIFFERENT SUBJECTS OFFERED IN THE PART – II


FIRST & SECOND SEMESTERS
2. ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … 7
1 ………………
2. C PROGRAMMING … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … 9
2 ………
2. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … 1
3 …………… 1
2. NETWORK ANALYSIS … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … 1
4 3
2. ANALOG ELECTRONICS –I…………………………………………………………… 1
5 …… 4
2. DIGITAL ELECTRONICS 1
6 6
2. C PROGRAMMING LAB ……………………………………………………………… 1
7 ………… 8
2. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING LAB ………………………………………………………… 1
8 ……………… 9
2. NETWORK ANALYSIS LAB ………………………………………………………… 1
9 9
2. ANALOG ELECTRONICS LAB –I………………………………………………………… 2
1 ……… 0
0
2. ……………………………………………………………
DIGITAL ELECTRONICS LAB 2
1 …………………. 1
1
2. COMMUNICATION SKILLS (JOB) … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … 2
1 ……………… 2
2
2. COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING – I …………………………………………………… 2
1 ………………… 3
3
2. ANALOG ELECTRONICS – II …………………………………………………………… 2
1 ………… 5
4
2. CONSUMER ELECTRONICS ………………………………………………………… 2
1 7
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WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION ETCE

2. MICROPROCESSOR – I ……………………………………………………………… 2
1 … 8
6
2. COMMUNICATION SKILLS (JOB) LAB …………………………………………………… 3
1 ……………… 1
7
2. COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING LAB –I………………………………………………… 3
1 ………………… 2
8
2. ANALOG ELECTRONICS LAB – II ………………………………………………………… 3
1 …………… 2
9
2. CONSUMER ELECTRONICS LAB ………………………………………………………… 3
2 3
0
2. MICROPROCESSOR LAB – I …………………………………………………………… 3
2 …… 4
1
3.0 DETAILED SYLLABI OF DIFFERENT SUBJECTS OFFERED IN THE PART – III
FIRST & SECOND SEMESTERS
3. INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … 3
1 …………… 7
3. ELECTRONIC MEASUREMENT … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … 3
2 ………… 8
3. COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING – II 4
3 0
3. INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS –I………………………………………………………… 4
4 ………… 2
3. MICROPROCESSOR – II … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … 4
5 ……… 3
3. COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING LAB – II 4
6 5
3. INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS LAB –I……………………………………………………… 4
7 …………… 6
3. MICROPROCESSOR LAB – II ………………………………………………………… 4
8 ………… 6
3. COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING – III …………………………………………………… 4
9 ………………… 7
3. INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS - II ………………………………………………………… 4
1 ………………… 8
0
3. INSTRUMENTATION & CONTROL ……………………………………………………… 5
1 … 0
1
3. ELECTRONIC MEASUREMENT LAB ……………………………………………………… 5
1 …………… 2
2
2
FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

3. COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING LAB – III ………………………………………………… 5


1 ………………… 2
3
3. INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS LAB - II ……………………………………………………… 5
1 ………………… 3
4
3. COMPUTER NETWORK (ELECTIVE)… … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … 5
1 4
5
3. MEDICAL ELECTRONICS (ELECTIVE ) … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … 5
1 ………… 6
6
3. PC HARDWARE MAINTENANCE (ELECTIVE) … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … 5
1 …………… 9
7
3. ETCE PROJECT WORK… …………………………………………………………… 6
1 …………… 2
8
3. SEMINAR ON ETCE PROJECT WORK ……………………………………………………… 6
1 ………… 2
9
3. GENERAL VIVA-VOCE
……………………………………………………………… 6
2 ………………… 4
0

3
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION ETCE

4
DETAILED CURRICULAR STRUCT
URE OF
THE THREE-YEAR FULL-TIME DI
PLOMA COURSE IN
ELECTRONICS & TELE–COMMUN
ICATION
ENGINEERING
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING

CURRICULAR STRUCTURE FOR PART – I FIRST SEMESTER OF THE


FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN DIPLOMA IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING
EXAMINATION SCHEME FULL
SL. SUBJECT OF STUDY CONTACT PERIODS / WEEK
SUBJECT CODE INTERNAL EXTERNAL MARKS
NO.
THEORETICAL PAPERS LECTURE TUTORIAL SESSIONAL ASSESSMENT ATTENDANCE OBJECTIVE SUBJECTIVE TH. SES.
1 ETCE / 1 / T1 / CSS COMMUNICATION SKILLS (STUDIES) 2 1 — 10 2.5 — 50 50 —
.
2 ETCE / 1 / T2 / PHY1 PHYSICS – I 3 — — 10 2.5 15 35 50 —
.
3 ETCE / 1 / T3 / CHM1 CHEMISTRY – I 2 1 — 10 2.5 15 35 50 —
.
4 ETCE / 1 / T4 / MTHS MATHEMATICS 5 — — 20 5 30 70 100 —
.
5 ETCE / 1 / T5 / EMK ENGINEERING MECHANICS 4 — — 20 5 30 70 100 —
.
SESSIONAL PAPERS LECTURE TUTORIAL SESSIONAL INTERNAL EXTERNAL TH. SES.
6 ETCE / 1 & 2 / S1 / LPHY PHYSICS LAB (GROUP – A) — — 3 12.5 — — —
.
7 CHEMISTRY LAB (GROUP – A) — — 3 12.5 — — —
ETCE / 1 & 2 / S2 / LCHM
.
8 ENGINEERING DRAWING (S) (GROUP – A) — — 6 50 — — —
ETCE / 1 & 2 / S3 / SED
.
9 WORKSHOP PRACTICE — — 6 50 — — —
ETCE / 1 & 2 / S4 / WSPR
.
TOTAL 16 2 18 — — 350 —

CURRICULAR STRUCTURE FOR PART – I SECOND SEMESTER OF THE


FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING
EXAMINATION SCHEME FULL
SL. SUBJECT OF STUDY CONTACT PERIODS / WEEK
SUBJECT CODE INTERNAL EXTERNAL MARKS
NO.
THEORETICAL PAPERS LECTURE TUTORIAL SESSIONAL ASSESSMENT ATTENDANCE OBJECTIVE SUBJECTIVE TH. SES.
1 ETCE / 2 / T1 / BEA BUSINESS ECONOMICS & ACCOUNTANCY 4 — — 20 5 30 70 100 —
.
2 ETCE / 2 / T2 / PHY2 PHYSICS – II 2 — — 10 2.5 15 35 50 —
.
3 ETCE / 2 / T3 / CHM2 CHEMISTRY – II 2 — — 10 2.5 15 35 50 —
.
4 ETCE / 2 / T4 / CA COMPUTER APPLICATIONS 3 — — 10 2.5 15 35 50 —
.
5 ETCE / 2 / T5 / EMTH ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS 3 — — 20 5 30 70 100 —
.
6 ETCE / 2 / T6 / SOM STRENGTH OF MATERIALS 3 — — 20 5 30 70 100 —
.

2
FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION

7 ETCE / 2 / T7 / ETK ELECTRICAL TECHNOLOGY 2 — — 10 2.5 15 35 50 —


.
8 ENGINEERING DRAWING (4 HR. EXAM.) — — — 20 5 30 70 100 —
ETCE / 2 / T8 / ED
.
SESSIONAL PAPERS LECTURE TUTORIAL SESSIONAL INTERNAL EXTERNAL TH. SES.
9 ETCE / 1 & 2 / S1 / LPHY PHYSICS LAB (GROUP – B) — — 2 12.5 25 — 50
.
1 CHEMISTRY LAB (GROUP – B) — — 2 12.5 25 — 50
0 ETCE / 1 & 2 / S2 / LCHM
.
1 ENGINEERING DRAWING (S) (GROUP – B) — — 6 50 100 — 200
1 ETCE / 1 & 2 / S3 / SED
.
1 WORKSHOP PRACTICE — — 6 50 100 — 200
2 ETCE / 1 & 2 / S4 / WSPR
.
1 ETCE / 2 / S5 / LCA COMPUTER APPLICATIONS LAB — — 3 50 50 — 100
3
.
1 ETCE / 2 / S6 / LETK ELECTRICAL TECHNOLOGY LAB — — 2 25 25 — 50
4
.
TOTAL 19 — 21 — — 600 650
st nd
 Each of Part I – 1 & 2 semester is of 17 weeks duration of which 15 weeks are scheduled as contact weeks and 2 weeks are scheduled for holding two Centralised Internal Assessments.
 Part I – 1st & 2nd semester consists of 36 & 40 contact periods per week respectively, and, 8 & 4 periods per week respectively are allocated for Student Centred Activities like Library, Guided Studies etc.
 Marks distribution in Part – I : Theoretical – 950, Sessional – 650; Total – 1600.

CURRICULAR STRUCTURE FOR PART – II FIRST SEMESTER OF THE


FULL-TIME DIPLOMA IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING
EXAMINATION SCHEME FULL
SL. SUBJECT OF STUDY CONTACT PERIODS PER WEEK PAGE
SUBJECT CODE INTERNAL EXTERNAL MARKS
NO. NO.
THEORETICAL PAPERS LECTURE SESSIONAL ASSESSMENT ATTENDANCE OBJECTIVE SUBJECTIVE TH. SES.
1 ETCE / 3 / T1 / ENVE ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING 3 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 7
.
2 ETCE / 3 / T2 / CPG C PROGRAMMING 4 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 9
.
3 ETCE / 3 / T3 / EE ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 3 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 11
.
4 ETCE / 3 / T4 / NWA NETWORK ANALYSIS 4 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 13
.
5 ETCE / 3 / T5 / AE1 ANALOG ELECTRONICS – I 3 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 14
.

3
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING

6 ETCE / 3 / T6 / DE DIGITAL ELECTRONICS 4 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 16


.
SESSIONAL PAPERS LECTURE SESSIONAL INTERNAL EXTERNAL TH. SES. —
7 ETCE / 3 / S1 / LCPG C PROGRAMMING LAB — 4 50 50 — 100 18
.
8 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING LAB — 3 50 50 — 100 19
ETCE / 3 / S2 / LEE
.
9 ETCE / 3 / S3 / LNWA NETWORK ANALYSIS LAB — 4 50 50 — 100 19
.
1 ETCE / 3 / S4 / LAE1 ANALOG ELECTRONICS LAB – I — 3 50 50 — 100 20
0
.
1 ETCE / 3 / S5 / LDE DIGITAL ELECTRONICS LAB — 4 50 50 — 100 21
1
.
TOTAL 21 18 — — 600 500 —

CURRICULAR STRUCTURE FOR PART – II SECOND SEMESTER OF THE


FULL-TIME DIPLOMA IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING
EXAMINATION SCHEME FULL
SL. SUBJECT OF STUDY CONTACT PERIODS / WEEK PAGE
SUBJECT CODE INTERNAL EXTERNAL MARKS
NO. NO.
THEORETICAL PAPERS LECTURE SESSIONAL ASSESSMENT ATTENDANCE OBJECTIVE SUBJECTIVE TH. SES.
1 ETCE / 4 / T1/ CSJ COMMUNICATION SKILLS (JOB) 2 — 10 2.5 — 50 50 — 22
.
2 ETCE / 4 / T2 / CE1 COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING – I 5 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 23
.
3 ETCE / 4 / T3 / AE2 ANALOG ELECTRONICS – II 5 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 25
.
4 ETCE / 4 / T4 / CNE CONSUMER ELECTRONICS 5 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 27
.
5 ETCE / 4 / T5 / MP1 MICROPROCESSOR – I 4 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 28
.
SESSIONAL PAPERS LECTURE SESSIONAL INTERNAL EXTERNAL TH. SES. —
6 ETCE / 4 / S1/ LCSJ COMMUNICATION SKILLS (JOB) LAB — 2 25 25 — 50 31
.
7 ETCE / 4 / S2 / LCE1 COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING LAB – I — 4 50 50 — 100 32
.
8 ETCE / 4 / S3 / LAE2 ANALOG ELECTRONICS LAB – II — 4 50 50 — 100 32
.
9 ETCE / 4 / S4 / LCNE CONSUMER ELECTRONICS LAB — 4 50 50 — 100 33
.

4
FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION

1 ETCE / 4 / S5 / LMP1 MICROPROCESSOR LAB – I — 4 50 50 — 100 34


0
.
TOTAL 21 18 — — 450 450 —
st nd
 Each of Part II – 1 & 2 semester is of 17 weeks duration of which 15 weeks are scheduled as contact weeks and 2 weeks are scheduled for holding two Centralised Internal Assessments.
 Each of Part II – 1st & 2nd semester consists of 39 contact periods per week and 5 periods per week are allocated for Student Centred Activities like Library Studies, Guidance & Counselling etc.
 Marks distribution in Part – I I : Theoretical – 1050, Sessional – 950; Total – 2000.

CURRICULAR STRUCTURE FOR PART – III FIRST SEMESTER OF THE


FULL-TIME DIPLOMA IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING
EXAMINATION SCHEME FULL
SL. SUBJECT OF STUDY CONTACT PERIODS PER WEEK PAGE
SUBJECT CODE INTERNAL EXTERNAL MARKS
NO. NO.
THEORETICAL PAPERS LECTURE SESSIONAL ASSESSMENT ATTENDANCE OBJECTIVE SUBJECTIVE TH. SES.
1 ETCE / 5 / T1 / IMNT INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT 3 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 37
.
2 ETCE / 5 / T2 / EMN ELECTRONIC MEASUREMENT 4 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 38
.
3 ETCE / 5 / T3 / CE2 COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING – II 4 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 40
.
4 ETCE / 5 / T4 / IE1 INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS – I 3 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 42
.
5 ETCE / 5 / T5 / MP2 MICROPROCESSOR – II 4 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 43
.
6 ETCE / 5 / *T6 / CN1 COMPUTER NETWORK – I 54
. 3 — 20 5 30 70 100 —
7 ETCE / 5 / *T7 / ME1 MEDICAL ELECTRONICS – I 56
.
8 ETCE / 5 / *T8 / PHM1 PC HARDWARE MAINTENANCE – I 59
.
SESSIONAL PAPERS LECTURE SESSIONAL INTERNAL EXTERNAL TH. SES. —
9 ETCE / 5 / S1 / LCE2 COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING LAB – II — 4 50 50 — 100 45
.
1 ETCE / 5 / S2 / LIE1 INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS LAB – I — 4 50 50 — 100 46
0
.
1 MICROPROCESSOR LAB – II — 4 50 50 — 100 46
1 ETCE / 5 / S3 / LMP2
.
1 ETCE / 5 & 6 / S4 / ETPW ETCE PROJECT WORK (GROUP – A) — 6 50 — — — 62
2
.
TOTAL 21 18 — — 600 300 —

CURRICULAR STRUCTURE FOR PART – III SECOND SEMESTER OF THE


FULL-TIME DIPLOMA IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING

5
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING

EXAMINATION SCHEME FULL


SL. SUBJECT OF STUDY CONTACT PERIODS / WEEK PAGE
SUBJECT CODE INTERNAL EXTERNAL MARKS
NO. NO.
THEORETICAL PAPERS LECTURE SESSIONAL ASSESSMENT ATTENDANCE OBJECTIVE SUBJECTIVE TH. SES.
1 ETCE / 6 / T1 / CE3 COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING – III 4 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 47
.
2 ETCE / 6 / T2 / IE2 INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS – II 4 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 48
.
3 ETCE / 6 / T3 / INTC INSTRUMENTATION & CONTROL 4 — 20 5 30 70 100 — 50
.
4 ETCE / 6 / *T4 / CN2 COMPUTER NETWORK – II 55
. 2 — 10 2.5 15 35 50 —
5 ETCE / 6 / *T5 / ME2 MEDICAL ELECTRONICS – II 57
.
6 ETCE / 6 / *T6 / PHM2 PC HARDWARE MAINTENANCE – II 60
.
SESSIONAL PAPERS LECTURE SESSIONAL INTERNAL EXTERNAL TH. SES. —
7 ETCE / 6 / S1 / LEMN ELECTRONIC MEASUREMENT LAB — 4 50 50 — 100 52
.
8 ETCE / 6 / S2 / LCE3 COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING LAB – III — 4 50 50 — 100 52
.
9 ETCE / 6 / S3 / LIE2 INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS LAB – II — 4 50 50 — 100 53
.
1 ETCE / 5 & 6 / S4 / ETPW ETCE PROJECT WORK (GROUP – B) — 6 50 100 — 200 62
0
.
1 ETCE / 6 / S5 / SMNR SEMINAR ON ETCE PROJECT WORK — 1 25 25 — 50 62
1
.
1 ETCE / 6 / *S6 / LCN COMPUTER NETWORK LAB 56
2 — 6 50 50 — 100
.
1 ETCE / 6 / *S7 / LME MEDICAL ELECTRONICS LAB 58
3
.
1 ETCE / 6 / *S8 / LPHM PC HARDWARE MAINTENANCE LAB 61
4
.
1 ETCE / 6 / S9 / GVV FINAL VIVA-VOCE — — 50 50 — 100 64
5
.
TOTAL 14 25 — — 350 750 —
 * Each student is required to opt for any one of the following three elective papers offered:
(a) COMPUTER NETWORK (CN1, CN2 & SCN); (b) MEDICAL ELECTRONICS (ME1, ME2 & SME); (c) PC HARDWARE MAINTENANCE (PHM1, PHM2 & SPHM).
 Each of Part III – 1st & 2nd semester is of 17 weeks duration of which 15 weeks are scheduled as contact weeks and 2 weeks are scheduled for holding two Centralised Internal Assessments.
 Each of Part III – 1st & 2nd semester consists of 39 contact periods per week and 5 periods per week are allocated for Student Centred Activities like Library, Guided Studies etc.
 Marks distribution in Part – III : Theoretical – 950, Sessional –1050; Total – 2000.

6
DETAILED SYLLABI OF THE

DIFFERENT COURSES OFFERED


IN

PART – II FIRST & SECOND SEM


ESTERS
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

E N V I R O N M E N T A L E N G I N E E R I N G
Subject Code Course offered in Course 3 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 3 / T1 / Part – II First Duration periods Marks
ENVE Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
Since the Rio-declaration, eco-friendly and sustainable development has become order of the day. Any
individual involved with developmental work is expected to be aware of the environment and its related
facets. The present course on “Environmental Engineering” is aimed at giving the students a comprehensive
idea regarding the different interfaces of environmental pollution, which are — air, water, soil and noise
pollution. On successful completion of the course they will also be aware of the different aspects of
environmental management, viz. environmental legislations, authorities and systems.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 INTRODUCTION 2
2 AIR POLLUTION 3
A 3 ANALYSIS OF AIR POLLUTANTS 3
4 AIR POLLUTION CONTROL MEASURES & 6
EQUIPMENT
5 METHODS & APPROACH OF AIR POLLUTION 6
CONTROL
6 WATER SOURCES 2
B 7 DIFFERENT SOURCES OF WATER POLLUTION 4
8 EFFECT OF WATER POLLUTION & ITS CONTROL 4
9 SOIL POLLUTING AGENCIES & EFFECT OF SOIL 3
C
POLLUTION
10 SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL 4
11 NOISE POLLUTION & CONTROL 2
D
12 ENVIRONMENTAL LEGISLATIONS, AUTHORITIES 6
& SYSTEMS

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 6 TOTAL


PERIODS: 45 PERIODS: 51

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODUL OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP E TO TO BE MARKS TOTA TO TO BE MARKS TOTAL
BE ANSWER PER L BE ANSWERED PER MARK
SET ED QUESTIO MARK SET QUESTIO S
N S N
A 1, 2, 3, 15 FOU FIVE, TAKING AT
4, 5 R LEAST ONE FROM
B 6, 7, 8 7 1 x 30 TWO EACH OF THE 14 X 5
ANY ONE FOURTEE
= 30 GROUPS A & B, = 70
C 9, 10 5 THIRTY ONE N
AND, AT LEAST
D 11, 12 6 ONE ONE FROM THE
GROUPS C & D
TAKEN TOGETHER

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP – A AIR & ENVIRONMENT 20 PERIODS

8
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

Module 1 INTRODUCTION
2
Man & Environment: Overview (socio-economic structure & occupational exposures) – Scope of
Environmental Engineering – pollution problem due to urbanisation & industrialisation
Module 2 AIR POLLUTION
3
Causes of air pollution – types & sources of air pollutants – Climatic & Meteorological effect on air pollution
concentration – formation of smog & fumigation
Module 3 ANALYSIS OF AIR POLLUTANTS 3
Collection of Gaseous Air Pollutants – Collection of Particulate Pollutants – Analysis of Air Pollutants like:
Sulphur dioxide – Nitrogen oxide – Carbon monoxide – Oxidants & Ozone – Hydrocarbons – Particulate
Matter
Module 4 AIR POLLUTION CONTROL MEASURES & EQUIPMENT
6
Control of Particulate Emission – Control of Gaseous Emission – Flue Gas Treatment Methods: Stacks
Gravitational and Inertial Separation, Settling Chambers, Dynamic Separators, Cyclones, Filtration, Liquid
Scrubbing, Spray Chambers, Packed Towers, Orifice and Venturi Scrubbers, Electrostatic Precipitators,
Gas/solid Adsorption, Thermal Decomposition
Module 5 METHODS & APPROACH OF AIR POLLUTION CONTROL
6
Controlling smoke nuisance — Develop air quality criteria and practical emission standards — creating
zones suitable for industry based on micrometeorology of air area — Introducing artificial methods of
removal of particulate and matters of waste before discharging to open atmosphere

GROUP – B WATER & ENVIRONMENT 10 PERIODS


Module 6 WATER SOURCES
2
Origin of wastewater — Type of water pollutants and their effects
Module 7 DIFFERENT SOURCES OF WATER POLLUTION
6
Biological Pollution (point & non-point sources) – Chemical Pollutants: Toxic Organic & Inorganic Chemicals
– Oxygen demanding substances – Physical Pollutants: Thermal Waste – Radioactive waste – Physiological
Pollutants: Taste affecting substances – other forming substances
Module 8 WATER POLLUTION & ITS CONTROL
2
Adverse effects on: Human Health & Environment, Aquatic life, Animal life, Plant life — Water Pollution
Measurement Techniques – Water Pollution Control Equipments & Instruments – Indian Standards for Water
Pollution Control

GROUP – C SOIL & ENVIRONMENT 7 PERIODS


Module 9 SOIL POLLUTING AGENCIES & EFFECT OF SOLUTION
3
Liquid & Solid Wastes – Domestic & Industrial Wastes – Pesticides – Toxic: Inorganic & Organic Pollutants –
Soil Deterioration – Poor Fertility, Septicity, Ground Water Pollution, Concentration of Infecting Agents in Soil
Module 10 SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL
4
Dumping domestic & Industrial Solid Wastes: Advantages & Disadvantages – Incineration: Advantages &
Disadvantages – Sanitary Land Field: Advantages & Disadvantages – Management of Careful & Sanitary
Disposal of Solid Wastes

GROUP – D NOISE & ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM 8 PERIODS

9
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

Module 11 NOISE POLLUTION & CONTROL 2


Noise Pollution: Intensity, Duration – Types of Industrial Noise – Ill effects of Noise – Noise Measuring &
Control – Permissible Noise Limits
Module 12 ENVIRONMENTAL LEGISLATIONS, AUTHORITIES & SYSTEMS 6
Air & Water Pollution Control Acts & Rules (Salient Features only) – Functions of State / Central Pollution
Control Boards – Environmental Management System: ISO 14 000 (Salient Features only)

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Concept of Ecology / Kormondy / Prentice Hall of India, New Delhi
2. Fundamental of Ecology / Odum
3. Environmental Science / J. Turk & A. Turk
4. Human Rights – A Source Book Eds. / R. Dev & S. Das / NCERT
5. Environmental Pollution / Dix
6. Pollution Control Acts, Rules and Notification / Central Pollution Control Board, New Delhi
_______

C P R O G R A M M I N G
Subject Code Course offered in Course 4 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 3 / T2 / Part – II First Duration periods Marks
CPG Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
This course is intended for the students in the three-year electronic and telecommunication diploma program.
This course is designed to have the students become competent in writing C program. Upon successful
completion of this course the students will be able to: —
1. use data types, operators and expressions in writing C program;
2. use function, external variables, multiple source files and also pre-processing;
3. employ the standard library in developing C program;
4. use arrays, structure, unions and pointers and organize data;
5. use file accessing functions comfortably;
6. use ROM BIOS functions for controlling hardware.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 OVERVIEW OF PROGRAMMING 2
2 DATA TYPES & VARIABLES 4
A 3 EXPRESSIONS, OPERATORS & ASSIGNMENT 4
STATEMENTS
4 CONTROL STATEMENTS 6
5 CONSOLE I / O 4
6 ARRAYS 4
7 FUNCTIONS 6
B 8 POINTERS 6
9 STRUCTURES, UNIONS & USER DERFINED 6
VARIABLES
10 FILE HANDLING 8

10
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

11 C PREPROCESSOR 4
C
12 C STANDARD LIBRARY & HEADER FILES 6

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 8 TOTAL


PERIODS: 60 PERIODS: 68

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODULE OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP TO TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
BE ANSWER PER MARKS SET ANSWERED PER MARKS
SET ED QUESTION QUESTION
A 1, 2, 3, 4, 12 THRE FIVE, TAKING
1 X 30 14 X 5
5 ANY 1 E AT LEAST ONE 14
= 30 = 70
B 6, 7, 8, 9, 18 THIRTY FOUR FROM EACH
10 GROUP
C 11, 12 6 TWO

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP – A 20 PERIODS
MODULE 1 OVERVIEW OF PROGRAMMING 2
1.1 STEPS IN PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT: Problem identification – Task analysis – Data analysis inputs and
outputs
1.2 Use of flow chart, program coding, testing, debugging and executing
1.3 Place of C in computer language
MODULE 2 DATA TYPES & VARIABLES 4
2.1 DATA TYPES: Constants – Variables
2.2 Variable declaration
2.3 STORAGE CLASS SPECIFICATION: Auto – Static – Extern – Register
2.4 Type modifiers
MODULE 3 EXPRESSIONS, OPERATORS & ASSIGNMENT STATEMENTS 4
3.1 OPERATORS: Arithmetic – Increment – Decrement – Relational – Logical – Conditional – Bit Wise
3.2 Precedence of operators
3.3 Expressions and type conversion in expressions – Type casting
3.4 Assignment statements
MODULE 4 CONTROL STATEMENTS
6
4.1 If – Nested if – The if-else-if ladder
4.2 The ‘?’ operator as an alternative to ‘if’
4.3 Loop Control Structure: while – for – do-while – Nesting of loops
4.4 Switch
4.5 Break and continue statements
4.6 Exit( ) function
4.7 goto.
MODULE 5 CONSOLE I / O
4
5.1 UNFORMATTED CONSOLE I / O FUNCTIONS: getchar ( ) – getch ( ) – getche ( ) – putchar ( ) – putch ( ) – gets
( ) – puts ( )
5.2 FORMATTED CONSOLE I / O: printf ( ) – sprintf ( ) – scanf ( ) – sscanf ( ).

GROUP – B 30 PERIODS

11
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

MODULE 6 ARRAYS
4
6.1 Declaration and initialisation – One-dimensional – Two dimensional
6.2 Array element access and display
MODULE 7 FUNCTIONS 6
7.1 Utility of function
7.2 Declaration and prototypes
7.3 Function arguments – The return statement
7.4 FUNCTION CALL: Call by value – Call by reference – Recursive function
7.5 Scope rules of functions
MODULE 8 POINTERS
6
8.1 ‘&’ and ‘*’ operators
8.2 Pointer expressions – Pointer assignments – Pointer arithmetic
8.3 DYNAMIC ALLOCATION FUNCTIONS: Malloc and Calloc
8.4 Pointer versus Array
8.5 Arrays of pointers
8.6 Pointers to pointers.

MODULE 9 STRUCTURES, UNIONS & USER DEFINED VARIABLES


6
9.1 BASICS OF STRUCTURE: Declaring a structure – Referring structure elements – Array of structure
9.2 Passing a structure to a function — Structure within structure
9.3 Structure pointers
9.4 UNION BASICS: Declaration – Referring union elements
9.5 Uses of structure and unions
9.6 Enumerated data type and type definition
9.7 Function returning pointer
MODULE 10 FILE HANDLING
8
10.1 File pointer
10.2 FILE ACCESSING FUNCTIONS: fopen ( ) – fclose ( ) – fputc ( ) – fgetc ( ) – feof ( ) – ferror ( ) – fprintf ( ) –
fscanf ( ) – fgets ( ) – fputs ( ) – fflush ( ).
10.3 fseek ( ) – ftell ( ).

GROUP – C 10 PERIODS
MODULE 11 C PRE-PROCESSOR 4
11.1 Macro directives
11.2 Inclusive directives
11.3 Conditional compilation directives: #ifdef – #ifndef – #else – #endif – #if – #elif
MODULE 12 C STANDARD LIBRARY & HEADER FILES 6
12.1 HEADER FILES: stdio.h – ctype.h – string.h – math.h – stdlib.h – stdarg.h – conio.h (uses of these files)
12.2 Standard library functions (names of the categories and utilities)
12.3 MATHEMATICAL FUNCTIONS: abs ( ) – cos ( ) – sin ( ) – exp ( ) – log ( ) – pow ( ) – sqrt ( ) – tan ( ).
12.4 STRING FUNCTIONS: strcat ( ) – strcmp ( ) – strcpy ( ) – strlen ( ) – strstr ( ) – strrev ( ) – strset ( ) – strupr (
) – strlwr ( ).

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. The C Programming Language / Kernigham & Ritchie / McGraw-Hill

12
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

2. C Programming and Practices / Tim Grady / McGraw-Hill


3. Let us C / Y.T. Kanetkar / BPB
4. C Made Easy / H. Schieldt / McGraw Hill
5. A first course in programming with C / T. Jeyapoovan / Vikash Publishing House
6. Programming in ANSI C (edition 2.1) / E Balaguruswamy / Tata McGraw-Hill
_______

E L E C T R I C A L E N G I N E E R I N G
Subject Code Course offered Course 3 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 3 / T3 / EE in Duration periods Marks
Part – II First 17 weeks per week 100
Semester

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 POLYPHASE CIRCUITS 06
A
2 TRANSFORMERS 10
3 DC GENERATOR 06
B
CHARACERISTICS
4 DIRECT CURRENT MOTOR 13
C 5 THREE PHASE INDUCTION 10
MOTOR

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: TOTAL


PERIODS: 45 6 PERIODS: 51

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO TO BE MARKS TOTAL
SET ANSWERE PER MARKS BE ANSWERED PER MARKS
D QUESTIO SET QUESTION
N
A 1, 2 12 THRE FIVE, TAKING
1 x 30 14 X 5
ANY ONE E AT LEAST ONE FOURTEEN
= 30 = 70
B 3, 4 14 THIRTY THRE FROM EACH
E GROUP
C 5 8 THRE
E

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP – A 16 PERIODS
A. POLYPHASE CIRCUITS

6
1.1 Introduction, difference between two phase and three phase systems.
1.2 Inter connections of three phase systems, Star and delta, Power transmitted by a three phase line.
1.3 Phase sequence of star connected generator with a delta connected load.
B. TRANSFORMERS

10
2.1 Classification based on core construction.
2.2 Elementary theory of an ideal transformer, EMF equation of a transformer, Voltage transformation ratio
(K).
13
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

2.3 Equivalent circuit of transformer


2.4 Transformer tests: Open circuit or no load test, Short circuit or impedance test.
2.5 Voltage regulation in a transformer,
2.6 Losses in a transformer, efficiency of a transformer, condition for maximum efficiency.
2.7 Auto transformer: Principle of operation, Output rating, Limitations of auto transformer, Application of
auto transformer.
2.8 Current transformers,
2.9 Isolation transformers,
2.10 3 phase transformers.

GROUP – B 19 PERIODS
C. DC GENERATOR CHARACTERISTICS

6
3.1 No load, internal and external characteristics of separately excited generator and self excited shunt
series and compound generator.
3.2 Efficiency of DC generator, Losses in a generator, Condition for maximum efficiency
D. DIRECT CURRENT MOTOR

13
4.1 Motor principle: Comparison of generator and motor action
4.2 Significance of back EMF and voltage equation of a motor
4.3 Motor characteristics: Torque Vs Armature current, Speed Vs Torque of a series, Shunt and compound
motor.
4.4 Losses and efficiency of a DC motor
4.5 Various methods adopted to control speed of a DC motor: Electric braking of a shunt motor, Electric
braking of series motor
4.6 Testing of DC machines

GROUP – C 10 PERIODS
E.THREE PHASE INDUCTION MOTOR
5.1 Construction of motor: Principle of operation, Production of rating magnetic field, Reversal of direction
of rotation of the magnetic flux produced by three phase currents.
5.2 Slip frequency of rotor current, factors determining the torque.
5.3 Starting torque of a squirrel cage motor, starting torque of a slip ring motor.
5.4 Condition for maximum starting torque, Variation of torque with change in supply voltage, Rotor EMF
and reactance under running condition.
5.5 Torque under running condition, condition for maximum torque under running condition, Relationship
between torque and slip power stages in an induction motor, speed control of induction motor.
5.6 Different methods adopted for braking of induction motor: (a) Dynamic braking, (b) Plugging Single
Phase Motor
5.7 Construction of a single phase induction motor, making single phase motor self starting, torque speed
characteristics.

TEXT B O O K: Electrical Technology - Volume II / Theraja

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Introduction Circuit Analysis - Edition V & VI / Boylestad.
2. Basic Electronics / Bernad Grob.
3. Electrical & Electronic Principles - Part 3 / S.A. Knight
4. Electricity / Richard J. Fowler
5. Technician’s Electrical Principles - Part 2 / Hodkinson

14
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

_______

N E T W O R K A N A L Y S I S
Subject Code Course offered Course 4 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 3 / T4 / in Duration periods Marks
NWA Part – II First 17 weeks per week 100
Semester

OBJECTIVE
This subject introduces the operations of basic electrical circuits that are the fundamental circuits for
implementation of electronic instruments and electronic communication systems. Upon successful
completion of this course the students will be able to: —
1. know the characteristics of two port networks;
2. be familiar with coupled circuit, filter circuits, attenuator, equalizer and transmission line;
3. understand the switching and steady state response of R-L-C circuits.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 NETWORK FUNDAMENTALS 10
A
2 COUPLED CIRCUITS 8
3 FILTER CIRCUITS 12
B
4 ATTENUATOR & EQUALISER 6
5 TRANSMISSION LINES 12
C
6 TRANSIENT RESPONSE IN ELECTRICAL 12
NETWORK

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 8 TOTAL


PERIODS: 60 PERIODS: 68

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
BE ANSWER PER MARKS SET ANSWERED PER MARKS
SET ED QUESTION QUESTION
A 1, 2 10 THREE FIVE, TAKING AT
ANY 1 x 30 14 X 5
B 3, 4 10 1 THREE LEAST ONE 14
THIRTY = 30 = 70
C 5, 6 13 THREE FROM EACH
GROUP
DETAIL COURSE CONTENT
GROUP – A 18 PERIODS
MODULE 1 NETWORK FUNDAMENTALS
10
1.1 Active and passive network – Balanced and unbalanced network – Symmetrical and asymmetrical
network – T and Π network and their conversion – Simple problems
1.2 Characteristic impedance – Propagation constant and image impedance – Open and short circuit
impedance and their relation to characteristic impedance
1.3 Thevenin’s theorem – Norton’s theorem – Maximum Power Transform theorem – Superposition
theorem – Simple problems
MODULE 2 COUPLED CIRCUITS 8
2.1 Idea of resonance – Series and parallel resonant circuits – Q-value, selectivity, bandwidth
2.2 Principle of coupling – Self-inductance & mutual inductance and their relationship – Co-efficient of
coupling
2.3 Analysis of single tuned and double tuned circuits

15
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

GROUP – B 18 PERIODS
MODULE 3 FILTER CIRCUITS
12
3.1 Definition and relationship between neper and decibel
3.2 Basic idea of passive filter – Definitions of pass band, stop band and cut-off frequency
3.3 CONSTANT-K PROTOTYPE FILTERS: a) Low pass filter, b) High pass filter, c) Band pass filter, and, d) Band
stop filter

MODULE 4 ATTENUATOR & EQUALISER 6


4.1 Basic idea of attenuator – Difference between attenuator and filter – Symmetrical T and Π attenuator
– Field of application of attenuators
4.2 Concept of equalizer – Purpose of equalizer and its classification – Difference between series &
shunt equalizer and their field of applications
GROUP – C 24 PERIODS
MODULE 5 TRANSMISSION LINES 12
5.1 Types of transmission lines: Parallel wire and coaxial cable
5.2 Primary and secondary constants of transmission lines
5.3 Characteristic impedance – Reflection co-efficient – Standing wave ratio and their relationship
5.4 Simple matching methods, single and double stub match for transmission lines
5.5 Losses in transmission lines
5.6 Distortion in transmission line – Causes of distortion and condition for distortionless transmission –
Practical feasibility for distortionless transmission
MODULE 6 TRANSIENT RESPONSE IN ELECTRICAL NETWORK 12
6.1 LAPLACE TRANSFORM: Definition – Condition of existence - Transforms of some elementary functions –
Linearity property – First shifting property – Change of scale property – Inverse Laplace Transform
6.2 Transient response in electrical networks with sinusoidal and step function – Analysis with RL, RC,
RLC circuits, time constant

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Network, Filters and Transmission Lines / Jain & Kaur / Tata McGraw-Hill
2. Circuit and networks / Sudhakar / Tata McGraw-Hill
3. Introduction to network, Filters and Transmission Lines / A. K. Chakraborty / Dhanpat Rai & Sons
4. Network Analysis / V. Valkenburg / Prentice Hall of India, N. Delhi
5. Engineering Circuit Analysis / Hayt / Tata McGraw-Hill
6. Electric Circuits / Edminister / Tata McGraw-Hill
7. Network, Lines and Fields / Ryder / Prentice Hall of India, N. Delhi
_______

A N A L O G E L E C T R O N I C S – I
Subject Code Course offered Course 3 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 3 / T5 / in Duration periods Marks
AE1 Part – II First 17 weeks per week 100
Semester

OBJECTIVE
This course introduces the basic concepts and characteristics of electronic devices, primarily from a static
current viewpoint. The establishment of stable quiescent points of operation of the most popular electronic
devices is analysed from both mathematical and graphical perspectives. Upon successful completion of this
subject the students will be able to: —
1. describe the operation of some of the most basic electronic devices;
2. practice proper laboratory procedures;
3. use basic instruments in the performance of specific tasks;

16
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

4. set operating conditions;


5. describe and analyse the basic building blocks of a practical power supply.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 SEMI-CONDUCTOR DIODES 5
2 SPECIAL SEMICONDUCTOR 4
A DIODES
3 TRANSISTOR 12
4 SMALL SIGNAL TRANSISTOR 6
B
AMPLIFIERS
5 MULTISTAGE AMPLIFIER 5
6 POWER AMPLIFIER 6
C 7 RECTFIER AND POWER SUPPLY 6
8 VOLTAGE MULTIPLIER 1

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 6 TOTAL


PERIODS: 45 PERIODS: 51

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
BE ANSWER PER MARKS SET ANSWERED PER MARKS
SET ED QUESTION QUESTION
A 1, 2 10 THREE FIVE, TAKING AT
ANY 1 x 30 14 X 5
B 3, 4 10 1 THREE LEAST ONE 14
THIRTY = 30 = 70
C 5, 6, 7 13 THREE FROM EACH
GROUP

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP – A 21 PERIODS
MODULE 1 SEMI-CONDUCTOR DIODES 5
1.1 Operation of PN Junction Diode
1.2 V.I. Characteristics of Semi-Conductor Diode
1.3 Zener Diode
1.4 Zener & Avalanche break down
1.5 Characteristics & equivalent circuit of Zener Diode
1.6 Simple Voltage regulator circuit with Zener diode
MODULE 2 SPECIAL SEMICONDUCTOR DIODES 4
GENERAL FEATURES OF: Varactor diode – Pin diode – Tunnel diode – Schottky diode – Their
field of applications
MODULE 3 TRANSISTOR 12
3.1 Construction & operation of NPN & PNP transistors, V.I. Characteristics – Active saturation & cut-
off regions
3.2 CE, CB, CC configuration and their differences.

17
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

3.3 Definitions of α & β and their relationship


3.4 Concept of Q-point, AC and DC load lines
3.5 Stabilization and stability factor
3.6 BIASING: Base bias — Collector feedback bias — Emitter feedback bias — Potential
divider bias.
3.7 Bias compensation circuits using diode and thermistors
3.8 Cosntruction, operation & V.I. Characteristics of JFET, pinch off voltage, drain resistance, trans-
conductance, amplification factor and their relationship
3.9 FET biasing.
3.10 Difference between JFET and BJT.
GROUP – B 11 PERIODS
MODULE 4 SMALL SIGNAL TRANSISTOR AMPLIFIERS 6
3.1 Hybrid model and h-parameters of CB, CE & CC mode transistor amplifiers – Calculation of voltage
gain, current gain, power gain, input and output impedance in terms of h-parameters – Comparison of
the three configurations.
3.2 Small signal FET equivalent circuits – Common source and common drain amplifier – FET application
as VVR, constant current source etc.
MODULE 5 MULTISTAGE AMPLIFIER
5
COUPLING: RC coupled – Direct coupled – Transformer-coupled amplifiers – Effect on Gain
& Bandwidth and Frequency response for cascading – Comparison of different types of
cascading
GROUP –C 13 PERIODS
MODULE 6 POWER AMPLIFIER
6
6.1 Characteristics of Class A, Class B, Class C and Class AB amplifier
6.2 Difference between Voltage and Power Amplifier
6.3 TRANSFORMER COUPLED CLASS A POWER AMPLIFIER: Circuit operation – Calculation of power,
efficiency & distortion
6.4 CLASS B PUSH PULL AMPLIFIER: Circuit operation – Calculation of power, efficiency &
distortion – Crossover distortion – Advantages and disadvantages –
Complementary symmetry and quasi-complementary symmetry Class B Push Pull
Amplifier
MODULE 7 RECTIFIER AND POWER SUPPLY 6
7.1 HALF WAVE AND FULL WAVE RECTIFIERS: Average voltage – rms voltage, efficiency and ripple
factor – Percentage voltage regulation
7.2 Function of filter circuits – Capacitor input filter – Inductive filter – Πtype filter –
Calculation of ripple factor and average output voltage – Function of bleeder
resistor
7.3 Series and shunt regulator using transistor – IC Voltage Regulators: Positive &
Negative, their specifications
MODULE 8 VOLTAGE MULTIPLIER 1
Voltage doublers – Tripler – Quadrupler – Their applications

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Electronic Principles / Malvino / Tata McGraw-Hill
2. Electronic Devices and Circuits / Boylestad & Nashalsky / Prentice Hall of India, N. Delhi
3. Electronic Devices and Circuits / S. Salivanan / Tata McGraw-Hill
4. Electronic Devices and Circuits / Mottershed / Prentice Hall of India, N. Delhi
5. Electronic Devices and Circuits / Millman & Halkias / Tata McGraw-Hill
6. Electronic Fundamentals and Applications / Chattopadhyay & Rakhshit / New Age Int.
7. Basic Electronic & Linear Circuits / Bhargava / Tata McGraw-Hill
8. Electronic Principle / Sahadeb / Dhanpat Rai & Sons
18
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

_______

D I G I T A L E L E C T R O N I C S
Subject Code Course offered Course 4 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 3 / T6 / DE in Duration periods Marks
Part – II First 17 weeks per week 100
Semester

OBJECTIVE
This course features the principles of digital techniques as applied to control and communication systems.
Upon successful completion of this unit the students will be able to: —
1. use digital integrated circuit logic family chips;
2. perform computational and digital activities related to digital technology;
3. analyse, explain and connect both combinational and sequential logic circuits.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 BASIC LOGIC GATES 2
A 2 BOOLEAN ALGEBRA 10
3 COMBINATIONAL LOGIC 10
CIRCUITS
4 SEQUENTIAL LOGIC 12
B
CIRCUITS
5 MEMORY DEVICES 12
6 DATA CONVERTERS 6
C
7 LOGIC FAMILIES 8

CONTACT INTERNAL TOTAL


PERIODS: 60 ASSESSMENT: 8 PERIODS: 68

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL
BE ANSWER QUESTION MARKS SET ANSWERED QUESTION MARKS
SET ED
A 1, 2, 3 12 THREE TWO 14
ANY 1 x 30
B 4, 5 13 ONE THREE TWO 14 70
THIRTY = 30
C 6, 7 8 THREE TWO 7

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP – A 22 PERIODS
MODULE 1 BASIC LOGIC GATES 2
Symbolic representation and truth table for logic gates: BUFFER – NOT – OR – AND – NAND – NOR – XOR
– X-NOR
MODULE 2 BOOLEAN ALGEBRA 10
2.1 Boolean variables – Boolean function – Rules and laws of Boolean algebra – De Morgan’s theorem
2.2 Max. term and min. term – Canonical form of equation – Simplification of Boolean expression
2.3 Karnaugh map technique – Don’t care condition – Prime implicants – Canonical forms – Quine-
McClusky method
2.4 Realization of Boolean expression with logic gates

19
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

MODULE 3 COMBINATIONAL LOGIC CIRCUITS 10


3.1 ARITHMETIC CIRCUITS: Half adder – Full adder – Half subtractor – Full subtractor – Parallel and serial full
adder (1’s complement, 2’s complement and 9’s complement addition)
3.2 Design of circuits using universal gates
3.3 Code converter, encoder and decoder – Multiplexer & demultiplexer
3.4 Parity generator and checker – Comparator
GROUP– B 24 PERIODS
MODULE 4 SEQUENTIAL LOGIC CIRCUITS 12
4.1 Difference between combinational and sequential logic circuits – Triggering of sequential logic circuits
4.2 Difference between flip flop and latch – Construction of RS, D, JK, JK master slave, T flip flops using
basic gates, preset and clear signal
4.3 COUNTERS: Asynchronous and synchronous counter – Ripple counter – Mod-N counter – Up-down
counter – Ring counter – Johnson counter – Programmable counter – Applications
4.4 REGISTERS: Shift registers – Serial in serial out – Serial in parallel out – Parallel in serial out – Parallel
in parallel out – Applications
MODULE 5 MEMORY DEVICES 12
5.1 MEMORY ADDRESSING: Read, Write and Read Only operations
5.2 MEMORY CELLS: ROM, PROM, EEROM, EPROM, CDROM
5.3 Static and dynamic RAM – Refreshing of dynamic RAM
5.4 Volatile and non-volatile memories, PLA, PAL, GAL, FPLA
GROUP– C 14 PERIODS
MODULE 6 DATA CONVERTERS 6
6.1 DIGITAL TO ANALOG CONVERTERS: Binary weighted resistor type – R-2R ladder type – Specifications and
applications of DA converter
6.2 ANALOG TO DIGITAL CONVERTER: Comparator type – Successive approximation type – Dual slope AD
converter – Specifications and applications of AD converter
MODULE 7 LOGIC FAMILIES
8
7.1 Comparative studies of different type of logic families like DTL, TTL, CMOS, and ECL etc. with the
following characteristics: (a) logic levels, (b) power dissipation, (c) fan in and fan out, (d) propagation
delay, and, (e) noise immunity.
7.2 Interfacing of ICs of different logic families – Logic hazards
REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Digital Principles and Applications / Malvino & Leach / Tata McGraw-Hill
2. Modern Digital Electronics / Jain / Tata McGraw-Hill
3. Digital Electronics / Taub & Schilling / Tata McGraw-Hill
4. Digital Electronics / V. K. Puri / Tata McGraw-Hill
5. Digital Circuits and Design / S. Salivahnan & A. Arivazhgan / Vikash Publishing House
6. Digital Logic Applications and Design / Yarbrough / Vikash Publishing House
7. Digital Logic and Computer Design / Morris Mano / Prentice Hall of India, N. Delhi
8. Digital Technology / V. Kumar / New Age Publishers
9. Digital Circuits / D. Ray Chaudhuri / Eureka Publishers
_______

C P R O G R A M M I N G L A B
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 3 / S1 / LCPG Part – II First 17 weeks 100
Semester

CONTACT PERIODS: INTERNAL TOTAL:


60 @ 4 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT: 68 periods
week for 15 weeks 8 periods
OBJECTIVE

20
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject C PROGRAMMING.
EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Second Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Second Year First Semester on
the entire syllabus. One assignment per student from any one of the assignments done is to be
performed. Assignment is to be set by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-
voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. To do exercise on data type conversion, use of variable of different types.
2. To write simple program using expression, assignment statements and different types of operators.
3. To write simple programs using control statements: if, switch, conditional operator, for, while, do-
while, break and continue statements.
4. Familiarity with formatted and unformatted console I / O with simple programs.
5. To write program using 1D and 2D arrays, sorting and matrix manipulation.
6. Write programs on function, using function prototype declaration, function definition, with or without
arguments, returning value or no value, call by value and call by reference, recursive functions.
7. To write program using pointer (int, float and character type) using malloc and calloc functions,
pointer to pointer, pointer to function.
8. To write program using structure, accessing structure elements, array of structure, passing structure
to function and using structure pointers, using unions, accessing union elements, using structure and
union in same function, to write programs on enunciated data type and familiarity with type definition.
9. To write program using different file function.
10. To write program using different macro definition, file inclusion and conditional compilation.
11. To write program using string function and math function.
12. To realize Int86 functions.
_______

E L E C T R I C A L E N G I N E E R I N G L A B
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 3 / S2 / LBET Part – II First 17 weeks 100
Semester
CONTACT PERIODS: INTERNAL TOTAL:
45 @ 3 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT: 51 periods
week for 15 weeks 6 periods

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject BASIC ELECTRONICS.

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Second Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Second Year First Semester on
the entire syllabus. One job per student from any one of the jobs done is to be performed. Job is to be
set by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


21
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

The students are required to perform at least any five of the following eight jobs:—
Job 1. To draw open circuit characteristics curves for separately excited DC generator.
Job 2. To draw load circuit characteristic curve for a separately excited DC generator.
Job 3. To draw load circuit characteristic curve of a DC generator
Job 4. To perform load test on a self excited DC shunt generator coupled to an identical DC machine (DC
shunt motor).
Job 5. To control speed of DC shunt motor by varying: (a) field current, armature voltage kept constant,
(b) armature voltage, filed current kept constant.
Job 6. To design, wind and test Low Power Transformer.
Job 7. To practice plugging of DC shunt motor with reversal.
Job 8. To practice plugging of three phase induction motor with reversal.
_______

N E T W O R K A N A L Y S I S L A B
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 3 / S3 / Part – II 1st 17 weeks 100
LNWA Semester
CONTACT PERIODS: INTERNAL TOTAL:
60 @ 4 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT: 68 periods
week for 15 weeks 8 periods

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject NETWORK ANALYSIS.

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Second Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Second Year First Semester on
the entire syllabus. One experiment per student from any one of the experiments done is to be
performed. Experiment is to be set by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25,
Viva-voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. To verify Thevenin’s and Norton’s theorems.
2. To verify Maximum Power Transfer theorem.
3. To verify Superposition theorem.
4. To study the series resonant circuit.
5. To study parallel resonant circuit.
6. To measure the characteristic impedance of symmetrical T and Πnetworks.
7. To design, test and to measure the cut –off frequencies of the following: —
(a) constant k-type low pass filter;
(b) constant k-type high pass filter;
(c) constant k-type band pass filter, and,
(d) constant k-type band stop filter.
8. To design and test T and Π attenuator, which attenuate given signal to desired level.
9. To study standing wave pattern for a transmission line of finite length with:
(a) open termination,
(b) shorted termination, and,
(c) matched termination.
10. To measure the attenuation constant and phase shift constant for matched termination.
11. (a) To study the given RC differentiator at different time constant, and,
22
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

(b) To study the given RC integrator at different time constant.


_______

A N A L O G E L E C T R O N I C S L A B - I
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 3 / S4 / LAE1 Part – II First 17 weeks 100
Semester
CONTACT PERIODS: INTERNAL TOTAL:
45 @ 3 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT: 51 periods
week for 15 weeks 6 periods

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject ANALOG ELECTRONICS - I.

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Second Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Second Year First Semester on
the entire syllabus. One job per student from any one of the jobs done is to be performed. Job is to be
set by lottery system. Distribution of marks: ON SPOT JOB – 25, Viva-voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. To study the VI characteristics of a reverse biased Zener diode.
2. To study the input and output characteristics and to find the h-parameters of a BJT for : —
(a) C-E configuration,
(b) C-C configuration,
(c) C-B configuration.
3. To study the FET characteristics.
4. To study the rectifier with and without capacitor filter for : —
(a) Half-wave rectifier,
(b) Full-wave rectifier,
(c) bridge rectifier.
5. To determine frequency response characteristics of RC coupled amplifier circuit and calculation of
bandwidth, midband gain, input impedance and output impedance for : —
(a) Single-stage amplifier,
(b) Double-stage amplifier.
6. To study the output waveform of push-pull amplifier for Class-A, Class-B & Class-AB operations.
7. To study shunt and series regulator and draw the following plots: line regulation and load regulation.
_______

D I G I T A L E L E C T R O N I C S L A B
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 3 / S5 / LDE Part – II First 17 weeks 100
Semester
CONTACT PERIODS: INTERNAL TOTAL:
60 @ 4 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT: 68 periods
week for 15 weeks 8 periods

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject DIGITAL ELECTRONICS.

23
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Second Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Second Year First Semester on
the entire syllabus. One job per student from any one of the jobs done is to be performed. Job is to be
set by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. To verify the truth table of NOT, OR, AND, NAND, NOR, XOR, X-NOR with TTL logic gates and
CMOS logic gates.
2. To realize different Boolean expressions with logic gates.
3. To realize half-adder, full-adder, subtractor, parallel and serial full-adder.
4. To design 1’s complement, 2’s complement and 9’s complement adder-subtractor.
5. To implement encoder, decoder, multiplexer and demultiplexer.
6. To construct parity generator and checker & comparator.
7. To verify the function of SR, D, JK and T Flip-flops.
8. To construct binary synchronous and asynchronous counter.
9. To design programmable up / down counter.
10. To design controlled shift register and study their function.
11. To study different memory ICs.
12. To study DA and AD converters.
13. To interface TTL and CMOS ICs.
_______

C O M M U N I C A T I O N S K I L LS ( J O B )
Subject Code Course offered in Duratio 2 lecture contact Full
ETCE / S4 / T1 / Part – II Second n periods Marks
CSJ Semester 17 per week 50
weeks

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to: —
(i) write letters asking for application forms;
(ii) fill in application forms;
(iii) prepare a resume or a CV;
(iv) write letters of application in response to advertisements;
(v) learn how to write memos;
(vi) learn how to write letters of enquiry, letters of complaint and letters to place orders;
(vii) learn to understand and respond to tender notices.

MODULAR D I V I S I O N O F T H E SY L L A B U S & EXA MINA


TION SCHEME
CONTAC SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS TOTAL MARKS
MODU TOPIC
T TO BE SET TO BE
LE
PERIOD ANSWERED
S

24
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

Modul LOOKING QUESTIONS TO BE SET, FOLLOWING THE SKILLS


12 20
e1 FOR A JOB DEVELOPED FOLLOWING THE UNITS IN THE TEXT

AT THE BOOK: “ENGLISH SKILLS FOR TECHNICAL


Modul 18 30
e2 WORKPLAC STUDENTS – TEACHERS’ HANDBOOK”

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 4 TOTAL


PERIODS: 30 PERIODS: 34

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT

MODULE - I LOOKING FOR A JOB 12 PERIODS


Asking for an Application Form — Filling in Application Forms — Writing a Covering Letter — Writing a
Curriculum Vitae — Letters of Application: Reporting to an Advertisement

M O D U L E - II AT THE WORKPLACE 18 PERIODS


Writing Memos — Business Letters: General Features — Letters of Enquiry — Letters to Place Orders

TEACHING INSTRUCT IONS


There should be no difference between the teaching methodology of the lecture classes of the subject
COMMUNICATION SKILLS (JOB) and those of the sessional classes of the subject COMMUNICATION
SKILLS (JOB) LAB, since all the modules are practical oriented.
Things to be followed by the polytechnics for effective teaching of the subject: —
(i) L R U C Room to be used for the classes;
(ii) English newspapers be made available on a regular basis to the students;
(iii) samples of different Application Forms be available the students.

TEXT BOOK
ENGLISH SKILLS for Technical Students – TEACHERS’ HANDBOOK / West Bengal State Council of
Technical Education in collaboration with THE BRITISH COUNCIL / Orient Longman
_______

C O M M U N I C A T I O N E N G I N E E R I N G – I
Subject Code Course offered in Course 5 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 4 / T2 / Part – II Second Duration periods Marks
CE1 Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
This course concentrates on the field of analog communication and pulse code modulation. It also includes
the advantages and disadvantages of digital and analog communications. After passing through the course
the students will be acquainted with the basic telephony systems. Upon successful completion of this course
the students will be able to: —
1. know the basic requirements of an analog communication system;
2. understand analog modulation including PAM, PWM and PPM;
3. know the functioning of transmitter and receiver;
4. explain the difference between digital and analog communication;
5. discuss the basic ideas of information theory;
6. discuss the ideas dealing with the operation of the systems like telephony.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROUP MODULE TOPIC CONTACT

25
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

PERIODS
1 INTRODUCTION TO ELECTRONIC 10
A COMMUNICATION
2 ANALOG MODULATION 15
3 TRANSMITTING SYSTEMS 8
4 DEMODULATION 6
B
5 RECEIVING SYSTEM 10
6 BASIC TELEPHONY 14
C
7 PULSE CODE MODULATION 12

CONTACT PERIODS: INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 10 TOTAL


75 PERIODS: 85

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
BE ANSWERE PER MARKS SET ANSWERED PER MARKS
SET D QUESTION QUESTION
A 1, 2, 3 15 FOUR FIVE, TAKING
ANY 1 x 30 14 X 5
B 4, 5 7 1 TWO AT LEAST ONE 14
THIRTY = 30 = 70
C 6, 7 11 THRE FROM EACH
E GROUP

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP – A 33 PERIODS
MODULE 1 INTRODUCTION TO ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATION 10
Importance of communication – Elements of a communication system – Types of electronic communication -
Electromagnetic spectrum – Bandwidth – Basic idea of Fourier series and Fourier transform
MODULE 2 ANALOG MODULATION
15
2.1 Concept and necessity of modulation
2.2 Definition of amplitude, frequency and phase modulation
2.3 Derivation of sidebands in AM systems – Evaluation of power – Sideband depth – Percentage of
modulation
2.4 METHODS OF AM: Principles of operation of plate modulated Class C amplifier – Balanced modulator
2.5 Expression of sidebands in FM and PM systems and its interpretation – Modulation index and
bandwidth requirement
2.6 Principles of operation of varactor diode modulation
2.7 Comparison of AM, FM and PM
2.8 Basic ideas of Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM), Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) and Pulse
Position Modulation (PPM) – Principle of generation and reception of PAM, PWM & PPM with block
diagram and their applications
MODULE 3 TRANSMITTING SYSTEMS
8
3.1 Block diagram and function of different stages of AM and FM broadcast transmitter
3.2 WORKING PRINCIPLES OF SSB SYSTEMS WITH BLOCK DIAGRAM: Filter Method – Phase Shift Method – Third
Method

26
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

GROUP – B 16 PERIODS
MODULE 4 DEMODULATION
6
4.1 Principle of detection with diode detector
4.2 AGC circuit delayed AGC
4.3 Foster-Seeley discriminator – Ratio Detector – Limiter – Standard AFC Circuits (basic principles only,
no derivation)
MODULE 5 RECEIVING SYSTEM 10
6.1 Block diagram and principle of operation of super heterodyne receiver – IF amplifier and choice of IF
– Mixer and converter – Alignment and tracking – Tone and volume control – Band spreading –
Receiver characteristics – Testing
6.2 Block diagram and principle operation of FM receiver – Pre-emphasis and de-emphasis – AFC and
alignment of FM receiver

GROUP – C 26 PERIODS
MODULE 6 BASIC TELEPHONY
14
6.1 Telephone transmitter – Receiver – Dial tone, side tone and antisidetone circuits – Handset – Ringer
– Switch hook – Hybrid – Local loop – Tone dialling – DTMF
6.2 ELECTRONIC EXCHANGE: Space division switching, time division switching, block diagram of electronic
exchange – concept of PBX and EPABX
MODULE 7 PULSE CODE MODULATION
12
7.1 Idea of digital communication – Advantages of digital communication over analog communication
7.2 BASIC STEPS IN PCM SYSTEM: Filtering – Sampling – Quantizing – Encoding – Line coding (HDB3, AM1,
CM1, NRZ, RZ)
7.3 Block schematic description of transmitter and receiver of PCM system
7.4 Principles of linear and non-linear quantization – Companding

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Communication Electronics / Frenzel / Tata McGraw-Hill
2. Electronic Communication System / Kennedy / Tata McGraw-Hill
3. Principles of Communication System / Taub & Schilling / Tata McGraw-Hill
4. Electronic Communication / Roddy & Coolen / Prentice Hall of India, N. Delhi
5. Communication System / Simon Haykin / WI Ltd.
6. Telemetry Principles / D. Patranabis / Tata McGraw-Hill
7. Electronic Communication System / Dungan / Vikash Publishing House
_______

A N A L O G E L E C T R O N I C S – I I
Subject Code Course offered in Course 5 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 4 / T3 / Part – II Second Duration periods Marks
AE2 Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
This course begins with tuned amplifier and concept of feedback and its effect on amplifiers. Differential
amplifier is then treated, with the main portion of the course spent on the study of op-amps and their
applications in the field of electronics and telecommunications. Upon successful completion of this course
the student will be able to: —
1. describe an operational amplifier,
2. explain how its operation in a circuit depends on certain parameters,
3. recognize various op-amp circuit and its applications,
27
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

4. be familiar with microelectronic technology,


5. observe, measure and record various types of waveforms through the use of applicable measuring
instruments, and,
6. perform essential tests, diagnosis & repairs.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 TUNED AMPLIFIER 6
A
2 FEEDBACK AMPLIFIER 8
3 OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER 20
B
4 OSCILLTORS 10
5 RELAXATION OSCILLATOR 8
C 6 SWEEP CIRCUITS 8
7 MICROELECTRONICS 15
TECHNOLOGY

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: TOTAL


PERIODS: 75 10 PERIODS: 85

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
BE ANSWER PER MARKS SET ANSWERED PER MARKS
SET ED QUESTION QUESTION
A 1, 2 7 TWO FIVE, TAKING AT
ANY 1 x 30 14 X 5
B 3, 4 13 ONE FOUR LEAST ONE 14
THIRTY = 30 = 70
C 5, 6, 7 13 FOUR FROM EACH
GROUP

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP –A 14 PERIODS
MODULE 1 TUNED AMPLIFIER 6
1.1 Circuit operation of single tuned and double tuned amplifiers

MODULE 2 FEEDBACK AMPLIFIER 8


2.1 Basic idea of positive and negative feedback – Effect of negative feedback on gain, gain stability,
distortion, noise, bandwidth, phase shift, input and output impedances
2.2 Voltage and current, series and shunt feedback
2.3 Performance of emitter follower circuit – Calculation of gain and input & output impedances –
Darlington pair

GROUP – B 30 PERIODS
MODULE 3 OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER
23
3.1 Circuit operation of differential amplifier – single & double ended
3.2 INTRODUCTION TO OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER: Inverting and non-inverting mode and their gain calculation –
Common mode rejection ratio – Bias current – Offset voltage and current – Slew rate – Open loop
and closed loop gain – Input and output impedance – Frequency response and virtual ground

28
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

3.3 APPLICATIONS OF OPAMP: Adder – Subtractor – Voltage Follower – Integrator – Differentiator –


Comparator – Schmitt Trigger – Voltage Limiter – Log Amplifier – Clipper – Clamper
3.4 Concept of Active Filter
MODULE 4 OSCILLATORS
10
4.1 Concept of oscillation – Barkhausen criteria
4.2 Operation of following oscillators: —
a) tuned collector, b) Hartley, c) Colpitt, d) Wein-bridge, e) Phase Shift, and, F) Crystal.

GROUP – C 31 PERIODS
MODULE 5 RELAXATION OSCILLATOR
8
5.1 Operation of monostable, astable and bistable multivibrator with waveforms
5.2 Schmitt trigger circuits
5.3 IC-555, internal block diagram and pin function, construction of different multivibrators with IC-555
MODULE 6 SWEEP CIRCUITS
8
6.1 Fundamentals of sweep circuit operation – Difference between voltage time base generator and
current time base generator
6.2 Operation of Miller and Bootstrap circuits – Applications of Sweep Circuits
MODULE 7 MICROELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGY
12
7.1 Advantages of ICs over discrete elements
7.2 TYPES OF ICS: Linear and Digital – Monolithic and Hybrid
7.3 PLANAR TECHNOLOGY: Crystal growth of wafer – Epitaxial growth – Oxidation – Photolithography –
Chemical etching – Diffusion – Ion implantation and metallisation (ideas only)
7.4 Fabrication of BJT, diode, resistor and capacitor (salient features)

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Microelectronics / Millman & Grabel / Tata McGraw-Hill
2. Electronic Devices and Circuits / Millman & Halkias / Tata McGraw-Hill
3. Electronic Principles / Malvino / Tata McGraw-Hill
4. Electronic Devices and Circuits / Boylestad & Nashalsky / Prentice Hall of India, N. Delhi
5. Electronic Devices and Circuits / S. Salivanan / Tata McGraw-Hill
6. Electronic Devices and Circuits / Mottershed / Prentice Hall of India, N. Delhi
7. Electronic Devices and Circuits / Millman & Halkias / Tata McGraw-Hill
8. Electronic Fundamentals and Applications / Chattopadhyay & Rakhshit / New Age International
9. Basic Electronic & Linear Circuits / Bhargava / Tata McGraw-Hill
10. Electronic Principle / Sahadeb / Dhanpat Rai & sons
11. Microelectronics / Rashid
12. Opamp and Linear Integrated Circuits / Gayakwad / Prentice Hall of India, N. Delhi
13. Pulse Digital and Switching waveforms / Millman & Taub / Tata McGraw-Hill
_______

C O N S U M E R E L E C T R O N I C S
Subject Code Course offered in Course 5 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 4 / T5 / Part – II Second Duration periods Marks
CE Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
This course is designed to provide required knowledge and skills in the communication systems such as
microphone and loudspeakers. The students will also be acquainted with the systems like tape recorder,
audio CD player, B/W TV, colour TV, VCR, VCP etc. Also covered in this are some of the home appliances
29
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

like washing machine, electronic cooker etc. Upon successful completion of this course the students will be
able to: —
1. discuss the basic concept dealing with the operations of microphone, loudspeakers and tape
recorder;
2. discuss the basic concepts dealing with the operation of B/W TV circuits, Colour TV circuits, VCR
circuits and audio CD player;
3. understand the function of cable TV system, washing machine, microwave oven etc.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 MICROPHONES 5
2 LOUDSPEAKERS 5
A
3 TAPE RECORDERS 5
4 STEREOS 5
5 BLACK AND WHITE TV 15
B
SYSTEM
6 COLOUR TV SYSTEM 14
7 CD PLAYER 6
8 CABLE TV SYSTEM 6
C
9 VIDEO CASSETTE 6
RECORDER
10 HOME APPLIANCES 8

CONTACT INTERNAL TOTAL


PERIODS: 75 ASSESSMENT: 10 PERIODS: 85

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODUL OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP E TO TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL
BE ANSWERE QUESTION MARKS SET ANSWERED QUESTION MARKS
SET D
A 1, 2, 3, 9 THREE TWO 7
ANY 1 x 30 14 X 5
4 ONE
THIRTY = 30 = 70
B 5, 6 13 THREE TWO 14
C 7, 8, 9, 11 THREE TWO 14
10

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP – A 20 PERIODS
MODULE 1 MICROPHONES
5
CONSTRUCTION, WORKING PRINCIPLE AND FREQUENCY RESPONSE OF: Carbon Microphone – Variable Reactance
Microphone – Capacitance Microphone – Piezo-Electric Microphone – Moving Coil Microphone
MODULE 2 LOUDSPEAKERS
5
Frequency ranges of musical instruments – Intensity and Dynamic Range – Constructions and working
principles of Moving Coil Loudspeaker – Impedance and Power Level of loudspeaker – Frequency
characteristics of Practical Loudspeakers: Woofer, Tweeter, Squawker – Loudspeaker Enclosure

30
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

MODULE 3 TAPE RECORDERS


5
Principle of magnetic recording and playback – Requirement of bias – Working principle with block schematic
diagram of a tape recorder system
MODULE 4 STEREOS
5
DETAILS OF STEREO COMPONENTS: Tone, Bass, Treble, Balance & Control – Crossover Networks – Graphic
Equalizer – Noise Reduction Techniques

GROUP – B 55 PERIODS
MODULE 5 BLACK AND WHITE TV SYSTEM
15
5.1 Working principle with block diagram of TV transmitter and receiver
5.2 Brief description with circuit diagram: TV Tuner – Video IF stage – Sound stage – Picture tube & its
associated circuit – Synchronizing circuits – Automatic Gain Control (AGC) – Horizontal & vertical
deflection circuits – EHT section – Remote control of a TV receiver
MODULE 6 COLOUR TV SYSTEM 14 + 8
Colour technology – Working principle of V id ico n camera – Block schematic description of a colour encoder
and decoder – RGB drivers of a colour picture tube – Colour picture tube & its associated circuits
MODULE 7 CD PLAYER
6
Working principle of CD recording and CD playing – Working principle of VCD and DVD player
MODULE 8 CABLE TV SYSTEM 12
Channel and cable type of cable TV system – Head end processor – Trunk & cable distribution system with
block diagram – Scrambling

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. A ud io an d V ide o Syst e ms / R. G. G up ta / Ta t a McG ra w- Hill
2. Mo no ch ro me an d Co lou r TV / G u lat i / Ne w Ag e I nt e rna t io na l
3. B oo k V id e o / Ne wn e ss / B PB
4. V CR- P rin cip le Ma in te na n ce a nd Rep a ir / S. P. Sh a rma / Ta ta McG ra w- Hill
5. Ca b le TV Te ch no lo g y a nd Op e rat io n / B a rt le t t / Tat a McG ra w-Hill
6. E le ct ro n ic I nst ru me nt s a nd Syst e ms / R. G . G up t a / Tat a McG ra w-Hill
7. E le ct ro n ic Co mmu n icat io n / Rud d y an d Co o le n / P ren t ice Ha ll of In d ia, N. De lh i
_______

M I C R O P R O C E S S O R – I
Subject Code Course offered in Course 4 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 4 / T6 / Part – II Second Duration periods Marks
MP1 Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
This course is designed to introduce the student to the field of microprocessor and microcomputers. Topics
covered include organization of a computer, the architecture of typical 8 bit and 16 bits microprocessors, its
function and its instruction set. Machine language of the 8085 and 8086 microprocessors is covered in
details and the students are given the opportunity of writing programs and controlling devices using an 8085
and 8086 based system development kit. Upon successful completion of this course the students will be able
to: –
1. identify the main function and application of microprocessor and microcomputers;
2. describe the basic organization of a computer;
3. describe the architecture of 8 bit microprocessor;
4. write machine language program for an 8085 based microcomputer;
5. describe memory and I/O interfacing technique;
6. describe I/O interfacing scheme and devices;
31
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

7. program I/O interface devices;


8. describe the architecture and instruction set of 8086 and write program.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 INTRODUCTION TO 1
MICROPROCESSOR
A
2 ARCHITECTURE OF 5
MICROPROCESSOR
3 TIMING CYCLE OF 8085 4
4 PROGRAMMING OF 8085 10
5 MEMORY INTRRFACING 4
B 6 I / O INTERFACING 4
7 I / O DATA TRANSFER SCHEME 8
8 I / O INTERFACING DEVICES 12
C
9 INTRODUCTION TO 8086 12

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 8 TOTAL


PERIODS: 60 PERIODS: 68

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
BE ANSWER PER MARKS SET ANSWERED PER MARKS
SET ED QUESTION QUESTION
A 1, 2, 3, 11 THREE FIVE, TAKING AT
ANY 1 x 30 14 X 5
4 1 LEAST ONE 14
THIRTY = 30 = 70
B 5, 6, 7 9 THREE FROM EACH
C 8, 9 13 THREE GROUP

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP – A 20 PERIODS
MODULE 1 INTRODUCTION TO MICROPROCESSOR 1
Generation and evolution of microprocessors
MODULE 2 BASIC ARCHITECTURE OF 8-BIT MICROPROCESSOR 5
2.1 Tristate register and switch
2.2 Architecture of intel-8085- registers, timing and control, add buffer and add data, interrupts control,
serial input and output control
2.3 Pin out configuration
2.4 Demultiplexing and buffering the system bus
MODULE 3 TIMING CYCLE OF 8085
4
3.1 Machine cycle, instruction cycle
3.2 Instruction fetch cycle, read cycle and write cycle
3.3 Bus idle cycle
3.4 Hold and Halt state
32
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

MODULE 4 PROGRAMMING OF 8085


10
4.1 Addressing modes of 8085A
4.2 Classification of instruction and Instruction set of 8085A
4.3 Concept of assembly language programming- basic assembler directives and labels

GROUP – B 16 PERIODS
MODULE 5 MEMORY INTERFACING & I / O INTERFACING
8
5.1 Basic bus interface
5.2 Address decoding
5.3 Interfacing ROM, static RAM and dynamic RAM
5.4 Address space provided by 8085A
5.5 Address decoding
5.6 Interfacing I/O devices
5.7 Isolated I/O versus memory mapped I/O

MODULE 6 I / O DATA TRANSFER SCHEME


8
6.1 Synchronous and asynchronous data transfer
6.2 Interrupt driven data transfer, single interrupt, multiple interrupt- polling, priority interrupt controller, dairy
chaining
6.3 Interrupts in 8085A – Software and hard ware – Vectored
6.4 Enabling, disabling and masking of interrupts
6.5 Direct memory access – Block transfer DMA – Cycle stealing DMA

GROUP – C 24 PERIODS
MODULE 7 I / O INTERFACING DEVICES
12
7.1 Functional block diagram and programming of : —
a) 8253(programmable counter), b) 8255(PPI), c) 8279(Keyboard and display controller)
7.2 Functional block description and control word development of :—
a) 8237(programmable DMA controller), b) 8259 (programmable interrupt controller)
7.3 Interfacing DAC & ADC with 8085
MODULE 8 INTRODUCTION TO 8086
12
8.1 FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM OF 8086: Bus interface unit, execution unit, general purpose register, flag
register, pointer and index register
8.2 Memory address space and generating a memory address
8.3 Dynamically allocable relocatable code
8.4 Dedicated and reserved memory location
8.5 Pin configuration of 8086- minimum and maximum mode
8.6 Addressing mode of 8086
8.7 Instruction set of 8086

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Microprocessors Architectures and Applications / Gaonkar / New Age International
2. Introduction to microprocessors / A. P. Mathur / Tata McGraw-Hill
3. Microprocessors: Principles and Applications / A. K. Pal / Tata McGraw-Hill
4. Microprocessors Principle and Applications / C. M. Gilmore / Tata McGraw-Hill
5. Microprocessors and its applications / Leventhal
6. Advanced Microprocessor and Interfacing / Badri Ram / Tata McGraw-Hill
33
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

7. Microprocessor and Interfacing / Hall / Tata McGraw-Hill


_______

C O M M U N I C A T I O N S K I L L S ( J O B ) L A
B
Subject Code Course offered in Duratio 2 sessional contact Full
ETCE / 4 / S1 / Part – II Second n periods Marks
LCSJ Semester 17 per week 50
weeks

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to: —
(i) look for suitable jobs by skimming through job advertisement;
(ii) scan advertisements for specific information about particular jobs;
(iii) develop aural-oral skills, recognition and interpretation of linguistic and non-linguistic forms which
relate to job interviews;
(iv) prepare for an interview;
(v) respond appropriately and politely at an interview;
(vi) take part in group discussions;
(vii) learn all kinds of communication needed at the workplace, including telephone calls.

MODULAR D I V ISI ON OF T H E S Y L L A B US & E X A M I N AT I O


N SCHEME
CONTACT
MODULE TOPIC MARKS ALLOTTMENT
PERIODS
LOOKING 6 CONTINUOUS INTERNAL ASSESSMENT OF 25 MARKS IS
Module 1
FOR A JOB TO BE CARRIED OUT THROUGHOUT THE SECOND YEAR
JOB 16 SECOND SEMESTER, WHICH SHOULD BE BASED ON THE
Module 2
INTERVIEWS STUDENTS’ PERFORMANCE OF THE TASKS GIVEN BY THE
AT THE 8 SUBJECT TEACHER. THE TASKS WOULD INCLUDE: (A)
Module 3
WORKPLACE DIFFERENT KINDS OF BUSINESS LETTERS – AT LEAST TWO; (B)
MEMO – AT LEAST TWO; (C) JOB APPLICATION – AT LEAST TWO;
CONTACT INTERNAL TOTAL
(D) REPORT WRITING – TEACHERS’ DISCRETION.
PERIODS: ASSESSME PERIODS:
EXTERNAL ASSESSMENT OF 25 MARKS SHALL BE HELD AT
30 NT: 4 34
THE END OF THE SECOND YEAR SECOND SEMESTER.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT

MODULE I LOOKING FOR A JOB


6
Identifying Sources — Skimming Newspapers for Information
MODULE II JOB INTERVIEWS * 16
Preparing for an interview — Responding Appropriately — Group Discussions — Using Language Effectively
for Interaction
* Mock interviews are to be arranged and to be conducted by any suitable person
MODULE III AT THE WORKPLACE
8
Communicating using the telephone

TEACHING INSTRUCTIONS

34
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

There should be no difference between the teaching methodology of the lecture classes of the subject
COMMUNICATION SKILLS (JOB) and those of the sessional classes of the subject COMMUNICATION
SKILLS (JOB) LAB, since all the modules are practical oriented.
Things to be followed by the polytechnics for effective teaching of the subject: —
(a) L R U C Room to be used for the classes;
(b) English newspapers be made available on a regular basis to the students;
(c) samples of different Application Forms be made available to the students.

TEXT BOOK
ENGLISH SKILLS for Technical Students – TEACHERS’ HANDBOOK / West Bengal State Council of
Technical Education in collaboration with THE BRITISH COUNCIL / Orient Longman
_______

C O M M U N I C A T I O N E N G I N E E R I N G L A
B – I
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 4 / S2 / LCE1 Part – II Second 17 weeks 100
Semester

CONTACT PERIODS: INTERNAL TOTAL:


60 @ 4 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT: 68 periods
week for 15 weeks 8 periods

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING – I.

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Second Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Second Year First Semester on
the entire syllabus. One assignment per student from any one of the assignments done is to be
performed. Assignment is to be set by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-
voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. To study the amplitude modulation and demodulation technique.
2. To study the frequency modulation and demodulation technique.
3. To study the frequency spectrum of AM and FM with the help of spectrum analyzer.
4. To study the analog signal sampling and reconstruction of the effect of: —
(a) different sampling frequencies on reconstructed signals;
(b) varying duty cycle of sampling frequency on the amplitude of reconstructed signal.
5. To study some radio receiver measurements: (a) sensitivity, (b) selectivity and (c) fidelity.
6. To study EPABX:
(a) to study the electrical behaviour of different tones – dial tone, ringing tone, ring back tone and
busy tone (both subscriber and exchange);
(b) to study some extension features-redial, burgling, extension privacy, call forwarding, follow me
etc.
_______

A N A L O G E L E C T R O N I C S L A B - I I

35
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks


ETCE / 4 / S3 / LAE2 Part – II Second 17 weeks 100
Semester

CONTACT PERIODS: INTERNAL TOTAL:


60 @ 4 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT: 68 periods
week for 15 weeks 8 periods

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject ANALOG ELECRTONICS – II.

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Second Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Second Year First Semester on
the entire syllabus. One assignment per student from any one of the assignments done is to be
performed. Assignment is to be set by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-
voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. To determine the frequency response characteristics of a tuned amplifier.
2. To determine the frequency characteristics of a negative feedback amplifier and compare with that of
an amplifier without feedback.
3. To study the waveforms and measure the frequency of : —
a) Wien bridge, b) Hartley, c) Colpitt, d) tuned collector, e) RC phase shift, and, f) crystal oscillator
circuit.
4. To study the waveform of UJT as relaxation oscillator.
5. To study the characteristics of IC555 timer connected as:
a) astable multivibrator, b) monostable multivibrator.
6. To observe the waveform at the input and output of clipping circuits in different clipping configuration.
7. To study the operation of positive and negative clamper circuit.
8. To study the characteristic parameters of differential amplifier in single ended and double ended
versions: —
a) input impedance, b) common mode voltage gain, c) differential mode voltage gain, d) CMRR.
9. To determine the following characteristics of op-amp: —
a) input offset voltage, b) slew rate, c) non-inverting gain, d) inverting gain.
10. To study the following applications of op-amp using IC741: —
a) adder, b) subtractor, c) differentiator, d) integrator, and, e) voltage follower.
_______

C O N S U M E R E L E C T R O N I C S L A B
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 4 / S4 / LCE Part – II Second 17 weeks 100
Semester

CONTACT PERIODS: INTERNAL TOTAL:


60 @ 4 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT: 68 periods
week for 15 weeks 8 periods

OBJECTIVE

36
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject CONSUMER ELECTRONICS.

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Second Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Second Year First Semester on
the entire syllabus. One assignment per student from any one of the assignments done is to be
performed. Assignment is to be set by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25,
Viva-voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. To study the internal layout of black and white TV receiver.
2. To study the Internal adjustment, control and fault finding procedure of Black & White TV.
3. To study the internal layout of colour television.
4. To study the internal adjustments control and simple troubleshooting techniques of Colour TV.
5. To study the electronic parts, internal switching and control of Videocassette recorder.

_______

M I C R O P R O C E S S O R L A B – I
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 4 / S5 / LMP1 Part – II Second 17 weeks 100
Semester

CONTACT PERIODS: INTERNAL TOTAL:


60 @ 4 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT: 68 periods
week for 15 weeks 8 periods

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject MICROPROCESSOR – I.

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Second Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Second Year First Semester on
the entire syllabus. One assignment per student from any one of the assignments done is to be
performed. Assignment is to be set by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-
voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. To be familiar with 8085-system development kit.
2. To write, test and debug (if necessary) assembly and machine language programs using instruction
set of 8085. A list of sample problems is given below.
3. To practice on EPROM programming using SDK8085.
4. To write programs to execute the following: —
(a) display digits through seven-segment display using 8255.
(b) rolling display-using 8255.
(c) display hexadecimal digits using 8279.
(d) development of a counter by 8255 and 8253.
(e) developments of waveforms using 8255 and 8253.
(f) receive on-line data through ADC and display.

37
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

(g) develop interfacing program using DAC.


5. To develop program to serve the interrupts of 8055 using SDK.
6. To develop a keyboard interface using 8255.

LIST OF SAMPLE PROBLEMS FOR MICROPROCESSOR


LAB - I
1. Write a program which loads Reg. A, B, C and D with the same constant (example AA), optimise the
program in such a way that the least number of program bytes are used. Test the program in single-
step mode. After each step test the register of interest.
2. Assume that six types of data are stored at consecutive memory locations, starting at location X. Write
a program which loads register E with (X), that is with data contained in memory location X,D with
(X+1),c with (X+2) and A(X+3). [A] Use direct addressing; [b] Use indirect addressing.
3. Assume that one byte of a data is stored at memory location X. Write a program which tests bit five of
(X), write 00 into (X+1), if bit five is 0, and write FF at the same location if bit five is 1. Test the program
in single step and run mode.
4. Write a program which tests the zero condition of a data-byte specified at memory location X. If it is 0,
00 should be stored at location (X+1), and if non-zero FF should be stored at the same location.
5. Write a program which tests the all-one condition of a data- byte specified at memory location X. If all
bytes are one, store FF at (X+1), else store 00 at the same location.
6. Four bytes of data are specified at consecutive memory starting at X. Write a program which increments
the value of all four bytes by two.
7. Two data bytes are stored at location X and Y. Interchange the data at the two locations using indirect
addressing.
8. Two binary numbers are stored at data-memory locations X and (X+1). Add the two numbers and store
the result at (X+2)
9. Four unsigned binary numbers are stored at consecutive memory location starting at X. Compute the
sum of the four numbers ignoring the possible overflow and store it at location Y. Use indirect
addressing.
10. Two unsigned binary numbers are stored at consecutive memory location X and (X+1). Compute the
difference (X+1) -(X) and store the result at and the sign (00 if positive, 01 if negative) at (Y+1).
11. A double precision number (that is a sixteen bit unsigned number) is stored at X and (X+1), low order
byte at X. Another double precision number is stored at Y and (Y+1).Subtract the two numbers and
store the result in W and (W+1)
12. Two 2-digit BCD numbers are stored in consecutive memory locations X and (X+1). Write a program for
computing the sum and store the result at location Y (use decimal adjust).
13. Two 2-digit BCD numbers are stored at consecutive memory locations X and (X+1). Compute the
difference of the two and store the result at location Y. Use decimal subtraction with the aid of DAA and
10’s compliment arithmetic.
14. Implement a time-delay loop (counter) for the generation of milliseconds delay. Determine the exact
time- delay by adding up the states of the instructions executed by the program.
15. Write a program for a decimal counter which counts from 00 to a given decimal number with a
programmable clock frequency and display the count in the data-field using the corresponding monitor
subroutine. The frequency is specified at data memory location X.
16. N binary numbers are stored at consecutive data memory locations starting at X and N is defined at
memory location Y. Find the largest number and display it in the data field.
17. N binary numbers are stored at consecutive data memory locations starting at X and N is defined at
memory location Y. Rearrange the numbers in ascending and descending order.
18. Write a program for moving a data block, starting from address X to address Y. The addresses X, Y as
well as the length of the block are specified at some suitable memory locations.

38
PART II FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

19. Write a program for displaying (in address field) the hex-character which is depressed. The program
should be such that the data can be entered through the keyboard indefinite number of times and
at every key depression the display characters get shifted 1 digit to left as the new digit is entered
an the least significant digit. A small part of the monitor-program is thus implemented. For this
program, use the keyboard’s subroutine.
20. Write the following program:
If key GO command is depressed (Byte 12H will be entered into the accumulator) the subsequent
hexadecimal key entries will be displayed in the address field and if key single step command is
pressed (15H), subsequent hexadecimal key entries will be displayed in the data field. This problem
demonstrates a part of a possible monitor function.
21. Two unsigned binary numbers are stored at data memory locations X and (X+1). Find the product and
display in the address field. Find the product by successive addition that is the multiplier is added as
often to itself and as corresponds to the value of multiplicant.
22. Divide a sixteen bit number by an eight bit number and display the result in the data field.
[A] Use successive subtraction method.
[B] Use the common for division (shift right and subtract)
[C] Compare [A] with [B].
23. A 2-digit BCD number is stored in memory location X. Convert the number into binary and display the
result in the data field.
24. Divide the contents of a memory location X into two 4-bit sections and store them in the memory
locations (X+1) and (X+2). Place the 4 most significant bits of memory locations X in the 4 least
significant bit positions of memory location (X+1), place the 4 least significant bit positions of
memory location ( X+2 ). Clear the 4 most significant bit positions of memory locations (X+2) and
(X+2).
25. Add the 16-bit numbers in memory locations X and (X+1) in the memory location (X+2) and (X+2). The
most significant 8-bits of the two numbers to be added are in memory locations (X+1) and (X+3). Store
the result in memory locations (X+4) and (X+5) with most significant byte in memory location (X+5).
26. Place the larger of the contents of the memory locations X and (X+1) in the memory location (X+2).
Assume that the contents of the memory location X contain a number between 0 and 7 inclusive.
27. Calculate the square of the contents of the memory locations X using a table and place the result in the
memory location (X+1). Assume memory locations X contain a number between 0 and 7 c.
28. Place the 1’s complement of a 16-bit number in memory locations X and (X+1) in memory locations
(X+2) and (X+3). The most significant bytes in locations (X+1) and (X+3).
29. Add the 24-bit number in memory locations X,(X+1) and (X+2) to the 24-bit number in memory
locations ( X+3 ), ( X+4 ) and ( X+5 ), the least significant 8-bits in memory locations X and ( X+3 ).
Store the result in memory locations (X+6) and (X+7) and (X+8) with the most significant bits in (X+8)
and the least significant bit in (X+6).
30. Calculate the squares of contents of memory locations X and (X+1) and add them together. Place the
result in memory location (X+2). Assume that the memory locations X and (X+1) both contain a number
between 0and 7 inclusive.
31. Calculate the sum of a series of numbers. The length or the series is in memory location (X+2) and the
series itself begins in memory location (X+2).Store the sum in memory location X and (X+1) eight most
significant bits in (X+1).
32. Determine the number of negative elements in a block of data. The length of block is in memory
location (X+1) and the block itself starts in memory location (X+2). Store the number of negative
elements in the memory location X.
33. Find the largest element in a block of data. The length of the block is in memory location (X+1) and
block itself starts in memory location (X+2). Store the maximum in memory location X. Assume that the
numbers in the block are all 8-bit unsigned binary numbers.
34. Shift the contents of memory location X left until the most significant bit of the number is 1. Store the
result in memory location (X+1) and the numbers of the left shifts required in the memory location
(X+2). If the contents of the memory location X are 0, clear both (X+1) and (X+2).

39
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

35. Determine the numbers of zeroes, positive (most significant zero but entire number not zero) and
negative elements (most significant 1) in block. The length of the block is in memory location (X+3) and
the block itself starts in memory location (X+4). Place the number of negative elements in the memory
location X, the number of zero elements in memory location (X+1) and the number of positive elements
in memory location (X+2).
36. Find the smallest element in a block of data. The length of the block is in memory location ( x + 1 )
and the block itself begins in memory location ( x+2 ). Store the minimum in memory location X.
Assume the numbers in the block to be 8-bit unsigned binary numbers.
37. Convert the contents of memory location X to a 7-segment code in memory location (X+1). If the
memory location X dopes not contain a single decimal digital, clear memory location (x+1).
38. Convert the contents of memory location X from an ASCII character to a decimal digit and
store the result in memory location (X+1 ). If the contents of memory location X is not the
ASCII presentation of the decimal digit, set the content of the memory location (x+1) to FF (hex).
39. Convert two BCD digits in memory location X and (X+1) to a binary number in memory location(x+2).
The most significant BCD digit is the one in memory location X.
40. Convert a string of 8 ASCII characters into a binary number and store the result in memory location X.
If any of the characters are not either ASCII zero or ASCII one, set memory location(x+1) to FF (hex),
otherwise, clear memory location(X+1). The string of characters is in memory location (X+2)
through(X+9) with the most significant bit in memory location (x+2).
41. Convert the contents of memory location X to a hexadecimal digit and store the result in memory
location (X+1). Assume that the memory location X contains the ASCII representation of hexadecimal
digit.
42. Add even parity to a string of 7-bit ASCII characters. The length of the string is in memory location X,
and the string starts from (X+1) onwards. Place even parity in the most significant bit of each character,
i.e. set MSB if that makes the total number of 1 bit in the word even.
43. Add two multiple word binary numbers. The length of the numbers (in byte) is in memory location Z, the
starting addresses of the numbers are in registers DE and HL, and the starting address of the result is
in register BC. All the numbers begin with least significant bits.
44. Write a program segment for 8085 that could be used to generate a delay (a) 100s. (b) 10 ms.
This means that in a program, before execution of a specific instruction, if a delay of at least 100s is
required, one should be able to obtain it by placing this segment just before that instruction.
45. Write a program which will subtract the number in address XX01 by adding the complement of the
number to be subtracted. The result should be stored in address in XX02.
46. Write a program which will put two single digit hexadecimal numbers together. The first single digit
hexadecimal or hex would be the MSB and the second would be LSB.
47. Write a program which will test bit-3 of hex number with the location of bet-3 in XX00. If bit-3 is high
(“1”), no action is taken and the data address location will be in null state.
48. Write a program which will determine if the parity of the number in memory location XX00 is odd or
even. If the number is odd a 00 will be stored in XX01 and if the number is even an EE will be stored in
XX01.
_______

40
DETAILED SYLLABI OF THE

DIFFERENT COURSES OFFERED


IN

PART – III FIRST & SECOND SE


MESTERS
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART II – ETCE

42
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

I N D U S T R I A L M A N A G E M E N T
Subject Code Course offered in Course 3 lecture contact Full
INST / 5 / T1 / Part – III First Duration periods Marks
IMNT Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
This subject provides the students of polytechnics with an exposure to the art and science of management
principles, functions, techniques and skills that are essential for maximising attainment of the organisational
goals with the available manpower and resources. Upon successful completion of this subject, the students
shall be equipped with the fundamental knowledge of management which should make them confident in
facing the challenges of their responsibilities in the different organisational scenarios.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT 5
A SCIENCE
2 ORGANISATIONAL BEHAVIOUR 6
3 HUMAN RESOURCES 8
MANAGEMENT
4 PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT 9
B 5 MATERIALS MANAGEMENT 3
6 FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT 3
7 MARKETING & SALES 5
C
MANAGEMENT
8 QUANTITATIVE TECHNIQUES 6

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 6 TOTAL


PERIODS: 45 PERIODS: 51

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
SET ANSWER PER MARK SET ANSWERED PER MARKS
ED QUESTION S QUESTION
A 1, 2, 3 14 FOUR FIVE, TAKING
ANY 30 x 1 5 X 14
B 4, 5, 6 11 ONE THRE AT LEAST ONE 14
THIRTY = 30 = 70
E FROM EACH
C 7, 8 8 TWO GROUP

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP - A 19 PERIODS
Module 1 INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT SCIENCE 5
Principles & functions of management — Contributions of F.W. Taylor, Henry Fayol, Max Weber and Elton
Mayo & Roethlisburger in development of the theories of management science.
Module 2 ORGANISATIONAL BEHAVIOUR 6
Objectives — Brief introduction to: Motivation & Morale – Perception – Leadership & Leadership Styles –
Communication – Team Building – Work Culture.
Module 3 HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENT 8
Scope & Functions – Human Resources Planning – Selection & Recruitment – Training & Development –
Performance Appraisal – Industrial Safety.

GROUP - B 15 PERIODS
43
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

Module 4 PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT 9


PRODUCTION PLANNING: Routing – Loading – Scheduling — PRODUCTION CONTROL: Expediting – Dispatching —
Materials Handling — Work Study — Productivity — QUALITY MANAGEMENT: Tools & Techniques – Quality
Management System.
Module 5 MATERIALS MANAGEMENT 3
OBJECTIVES & FUNCTIONS: Purchase function – Stores function — INVENTORY MANAGEMENT: ABC, VED analyses.
Module 6 FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT 3
Financial Ratios — Elements of Costing — Auditing

GROUP - C 11 PERIODS
Module 7 MARKETING & SALES MANAGEMENT 5
Objectives & Functions — Marketing of products & Services — Advertising & Sales Promotion — Consumer
Behaviour
Module 8 QUANTITATIVE TECHNIQUES 6
Linear programming (graphical method only) — NETWORK ANALYSIS: PERT – CPM

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Essentials of Management / Kontz / McGraw-Hill of India
2. Organization & Behaviour / M. Banerjee / Allied Publishers
3. Human Behaviour at Work: Organizational Behaviour / Keith Davis & Newstrom / McGraw-Hill of India
4. Human Resources Management / Mirza Saiyatain / Tata McGraw-Hill
5. Production Management & Control / Nikhil Barat / U.N. Dhar & Co.
6. Production Management / Keith Lockyer / ELBS
7. Marketing Management / Philip Kolter / Prentice Hall of India
8. Lectures on Management Accounting / Dr. B.K. Basu / Basusri Bookstall, Kolkata
9. An Insight into Auditing: A Multi-dimensional Approach / Dr. B.K. Basu / Basusri Bookstall, Kolkata
10. Business Strategies, Financial Management & Management Accounting / S.K. Poddar / The
Association of Engineers (India)
_______

E L E C T R O N I C M E A S U R E M E N T
Subject Code Course offered in Course 4 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 5 / T2 / Part – III First Duration periods Marks
EMN Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
After successful completion of this course the students will be able to get familiar with the measurement
fundamentals and instruments like electronic voltmeter, Multimeter, Q-meter, CRO, signal generator,
spectrum analyzer etc.
MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS
GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 MEASUREMENT FUNDAMENTALS 6
A 2 PERMANENT MAGNET MOVING COIL METER 6
3 MEASUREMENT OF VOLTAGE, CURRENT, 8
ENERGY & POWER
4 ELECTRONIC VOLTMETER & MULTIMETER 6
B 5 IMPEDANCE BRIDGE & Q-METER 6
6 CATHODE RAY OSCILLOSCOPE 10
7 TIME & FREQUENCY MEASUREMENT 6
8 SIGNAL GENERATOR 5
C
9 RF POWER MEASUREMENT 2
44
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

10 FREQUENCY SPECTRUM, DISTORTION AND 5


WAVE ANALYSIS

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 8 TOTAL


PERIODS: 60 PERIODS: 68

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODUL OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP E TO TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
BE ANSWER PER MARKS SET ANSWERED PER MARKS
SET ED QUESTION QUESTION
A 1, 2, 3 12 THRE FIVE, TAKING AT
ANY 30 x 1 5 X 14
ONE E LEAST ONE FROM 14
THIRTY = 30 = 70
B 4, 5, 6 12 THRE EACH GROUP
E
C 7, 8, 9, 12 THRE
10 E

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP - A 20 PERIODS
Module 1 MEASUREMENT FUNDAMENTALS 6
1.1 Explanation of accuracy, precision, sensitivity, resolution, dynamic range, response and repeatability of
measuring instruments.
1.2 Role of Units in measurements and different types of units – Definition of Errors and type of errors –
Definition of Primary and Secondary Standards – Concept of Calibration.
Module 2 PERMANENT MAGNET MOVING COIL METER 6
2.1 Theory of operation, working principle and construction of PMMC.
2.2 Measurement of voltage, current and resistance.
2.3 Loading effect, extension of range and PMMC Multimeter.
Module 3 MEASUREMENT OF VOLTAGE, CURRENT, ENERGY & POWER 8
3.1 Principle of rectifier type instrument – Average reading and peak reading – Advantages and limitations.
3.2 Compensated thermocouple type instruments – Construction and working principle of electrodynamic
wattmeter.

GROUP - B 22 PERIODS
Module 4 ELECTRONIC VOLTMETER & MULTI METER 6
4.1 Advantages of electronic voltmeter over ordinary voltmeter.
4.2 Working principle of Digital Multi Meter – Different types of DMM: Integration and successive
approximation type.
4.3 Advantages of DMM over Conventional Multi Meter.
Module 5 IMPEDANCE BRIDGE & Q-METER 6
5.1 DC Wheatstone Bridge and its application – AC bridge-balance – Detection and source of excitation –
Maxwell’s induction bridge – Hay’s bridge – Capacitance comparison bridge – Wien Bridge.
5.2 Basic principle of Q-Meter and its working circuit.
5.3 Basic principle and operation of RLC meter.
Module 6 CATHODE RAY OSCILLOSCOPE 10
6.1 Block diagram of CRO, constructional features of CRT and principle of operation.
6.2 Block schematic description of:
(a) Vertical Amplifier, (b) Time Base Generator, (c) Trace Synchronization, (d) Triggering Modes, (e)
Front Panel Controls, (f) Probe Characteristics.
6.3 Features of dual trace oscilloscopes, chopper beam switch, alternate beam switch.
6.4 Block schematic description of digital storage oscilloscope.
6.5 Measurement of amplitude, frequency, time period, phase angle and delay time by CRO.
45
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

GROUP - C 18 PERIODS
Module 7 TIME & FREQUENCY MEASUREMENT 6
7.1 Measurement of frequency by heterodyne method – Block schematic description of digital frequency
counter.
7.2 Measurement of frequency, time period and time interval through frequency counter.
Module 8 SIGNAL GENERATOR 5
Block schematic descriptions, specifications and uses of: Audio & Radio Frequency Signal Generator –
Function Generator – Pulse Generator.
Module 9 RF POWER MEASUREMENT 2
Bolometer – Method of power measurement – Balance Bridge Bolometer.
Module 10 FREQUENCY SPECTRUM, DISTORTION & WAVE ANALYSIS 5
10.1 Basic working principle of Heterodyne Wave Analyzer
10.2 Block schematic description of Harmonic Distortion Analyzer.
10.3 Block schematic description of Spectrum Analyzer and its use.

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Electronic Measurement and Measurement Technique / Cooper / Prentice Hall of India
2. Electronic Instrumentation / Kalsi / Tata McGraw-Hill
3. A Course in Electrical and Electronic Measurement and Instrumentation / A.K. Sawhney / Dhanpat Rai
& Sons
4. Electronic Measurement and Instrumentation / Oliver Cage / McGraw Hill
5. Students Reference Manual for Electronic Instrumentation Lab / Wolf and Smith / Prentice Hall of India
_______

C O M M U N I C A T I O N E N G I N E E R I N G – I
I
Subject Code Course offered in Course 4 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 5 / T3 / Part – III First Duration periods Marks
CE2 Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
This course is continuation of the one titled ‘COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING – I’, offered in Part – II
Second Semester. After completion of this course, the students will be able to get some idea about modern
digital communication techniques like delta modulation, multiplexing, ASK, FSK, PSK etc. They will also
know the basics of radar system, microwave amplifiers and antenna wave guide.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 DELTA MODULATION 6
A
2 MULTIPLEXING 12
3 RF MODULATION FOR BASE BAND SIGNAL 6
B 4 PERFORMANCE & TESTING OF DIGITAL 8
COMMUNICATION LINK
5 PROPAGATION OF WAVES 4
6 RADAR SYSTEMS 6
C 7 MICROWAVE AMPLIFIERS 3
8 ANTENNA & WAVEGUIDES 15

46
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 8 TOTAL


PERIODS: 60 PERIODS: 68

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
SET ANSWER PER MARK SET ANSWERED PER MARK
ED QUESTION S QUESTION S
A 1, 2 11 THRE FIVE, TAKING
ANY 30 x 1 5 X 14
ONE E AT LEAST ONE 14
THIRTY = 30 = 70
B 3, 4, 5 11 THRE FROM EACH
E GROUP
C 6, 7, 8 14 FOUR

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP - A 18 PERIODS
MODULE 1 DELTA MODULATION 6
1.1 Block schematic description of delta modulation technique
1.2 Limitations of delta modulation – Slope overload and granular noise.
1.3 Concept of adaptive delta modulation technique.
MODULE 2 MULTIPLEXING 12
2.1 IDEA of multiplexing and its necessity.
2.2 TYPES of multiplexing: TDM and FDM
2.3 TDM: Principles of time division multiplexing and synchronization in a digital communication system.
2.4 PCM – TDM in modern applications (plesiochronous digital hierarchy and synchronous digital
hierarchy).
2.5 Frequency division multiplexing with practical examples, phase locked loop.
2.6 Merits and demerits of TDM and FDM.

GROUP - B 18 PERIODS
MODULE 3 RF MODULATION FOR BASE BAND SIGNAL 6
3.1 Concepts of binary modulation techniques.
3.2 Principles of amplitude shift keying, frequency shift keying and phase shift keying.
3.3 Comparison between ASK, FSK and PSK.
MODULE 4 PERFORMANCE & TESTING OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATION LINK 8
4.1 INFORMATION THEORY: Relationship between data speed and channel bandwidth – Shannon-Hartley
theorem – Theory of line coding.
4.2 Error Correction Techniques: Parity checking and cyclic redundancy check.
4.3 Brief description of inter-symbolic interference and interpretation of eye pattern.
MODULE 5 PROPAGATION OF WAVES 4
5.1 Elementary concepts about propagation of waves.
5.2 Propagation of ground wave, space wave and sky wave.
5.3 Iono-spheric layers – Skip distance – Plasma frequency – Critical frequency – MUF – Virtual height.

GROUP - C 24 PERIODS
MODULE 6 RADAR SYSTEMS 6
6.1 Block schematic description of simple radar system – Plan position indicator, frequency and power
range of radar system – Operation of duplexer – RADAR range equation.
6.2 Block schematic description of pulsed radar system and moving target indicator including Doppler
Effect, blind speed.
MODULE 7 MICROWAVE AMPLIFIER 3
7.1 Problems associated with conventional tubes at microwave frequency.

47
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

7.2 Basic idea of amplification with velocity and density modulation in case of MULTI-CAVITY KLYSTRON, REFLEX
KLYSTRON AND TRAVELLING WAVE TUBE – Their efficiency, power output & frequency range of operation (no
deduction) – Field of applications.
7.3 General features of GUNN diode and IMPATT diode – their field of applications
MODULE 8 ANTENNA & WAVEGUIDE 15
8.1 BASIC PRINCIPLES of antenna — Different types of antenna: Dipole antenna – Half wave and folded,
microwave antenna – Horn antenna, parabolic antenna
8.2 PROPERTIES of antenna: Gain – Bandwidth – Beam Width – Impedance – Radiation Pattern.
8.3 ANTENNA ARRAYS: general idea of antenna array.
8.4 WAVE GUIDES: Rectangular – Circular Wave Guide Modes.
8.5 MICROWAVE COMPONENTS: Directional Coupler – Attenuator – Isolator – Circulator.

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Communication Electronics / Frenzel / Tata McGraw-Hill
2. Electronic Communication System / Dungan / Vikash Publishing House
3. Electronic Communication System / Kennedy / Tata McGraw-Hill
4. Principles of Communication System / Taub & Schilling / Tata McGraw-Hill
5. Electronic Communication / Roddy & Coolen / Prentice Hall of India
6. Communication System / Simon Haykin / W.I. Ltd.
7. Telemetry Principles / D. Patranabis / Tata McGraw-Hill
8. Analog and Digital Communication System / M.S. Roden / Shroff Pub. & Distrib. Pvt. Ltd.
_______

I N D U S T R I A L E L E C T R O N I C S – I
Subject Code Course offered in Course 3 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 5 / T4 / Part – III First Duration periods Marks
IE1 Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
This course is introduced to have the students become familiar with the high power electronic devices and
components like power diode, IGBT, power transistor, SCR, power transformer etc.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 POWER DEVICES 6
A 2 POWER TRANSISTOR 6
3 THYRISTOR 6
B 4 PROTECTION OF POWER SEMICONDUCTOR 5
DEVICES
5 LOSSES IN POWER SEMICONDUCTOR 3
DEVICES
6 MOUNTING & COOLING OF 5
C
SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES
7 SINGLE PHASE & POLYPHASE CONTROLLED 8
RECTIFIER

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 6 TOTAL


PERIODS: 45 PERIODS: 51

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
SET ANSWER PER MARK SET ANSWERED PER MARKS
ED QUESTION S QUESTION
48
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

A 1, 2 14 THRE FIVE, TAKING


ANY 30 x 1 5 X 14
ONE E AT LEAST ONE 14
THIRTY = 30 = 70
B 3, 4, 5 12 THRE FROM EACH
E GROUP
C 6, 7 10 THRE
E

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP-A 15 PERIODS
Module 1 POWER DEVICES 6
1.1 Switching characteristics of power diodes and its specifications.
1.2 Characteristics of fast recovery diodes.
1.3 Choice of diodes depending upon frequency of operations.
1.4 Series and parallel operations of diodes.
1.5 Thermal characteristics.
Module 2 POWER TRANSISTOR 9
2.1 Principle of operation of power BJT and its characteristics.
2.2 Base drive circuits and Darlington configuration.
2.3 Enhancement & deflation type MOSFET
2.4 Concepts of VMOS & CMOS
2.5 Precautions in handling MOSFET
2.6 Switching characteristics power MOSFET and its rating.
2.7 MOSFET gate drive circuits – Comparison of MOSFET and power BJT.
2.8 IGBT characteristics and its property.

GROUP - B 17 PERIODS
Module 3 THYRISTORS 9
3.1 Switching characteristics and ratings of SCR.
3.2 Two transistors method of SCR.
3.3 Triggering circuits of SCR.
3.4 Series parallel methods of SCR.
3.5 Photo sensitive SCRS, GTO, SCS, TRIAC & DIAC – Operating principles and their uses
3.6 Construction, operation & characteristics of UJT – equivalent circuits – field of applications.
3.7 Losses in power semi-conductor devices
Module 4 PROTECTION OF POWER SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES 5
4.1 Overload Protection – Fuse – Circuit Breaker – Transient Protector.
4.2 Protection by RC networks, MOV and snubber.
4.3 Transient voltage suppressors.
4.4 dV/dT and dI/dT protection of SCR
Module 5 COMMUTATION CIRCUITS 3
5.1 Commutation circuits of SCR – natural and forced commutation – class A, B, C, D & E

GROUP - C 13 PERIODS
Module 6 MOUNTING & COOLING OF SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES 5
6.1 Heat transfer fundamentals: Conduction – Convection – Radiation.
6.2 Thermal resistance – Transient thermal impedance.
6.3 Use of heat sink and heat sink compound.
6.4 Mounting principles and types of cooling (natural, forced air, forced liquid).
Module 7 SINGLE PHASE & POLYPHASE CONTROLLED RECTIFIER 8
7.1 Single phase control rectifier circuit – Principle of operation with resistive and inductive load – Use of free
wheel diode.
7.2 Three phase half wave and full wave control rectifier – Operation with inductive and resistive load – Use of
free wheel diode.
7.3 Calculation of Vdc, Vrms, ripple factor, PIV and efficiency of single phase & three phase control rectifier.
7.4 Concept of full control and half control rectifier.

49
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Power Electronics / P.C. SEN / Tata McGraw-Hill
2. Industrial Electronics & Control / S.K. Bhattacharya (TTTI) / Tata McGraw-Hill
3. Power Electronics / Singh & Kanchandani / Tata McGraw-Hill
4. Power Electronics & Control / S.K. Dutta / Prentice Hall of India
5. Industrial Electronics / S.N. Biswas / Dhanpat Rai
6. Industrial Electronics / Biswanath Pal / Prentice Hall of India
7. Power Electronics Converter Application and Design / Mohon / W. I. Ltd.
_______

M I C R O P R O C E S S O R – I I
Subject Code Course offered in Course 4 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 5 / T5 / Part – III First Duration periods Marks
MP2 Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
This course is continuation of the one entitled ‘MICROPROCESSOR – I’, offered in Part – II Second
Semester. In this course, the modern Pentium processor is introduced to make the students familiar with the
processors of modern computer. Also idea of interfacing and micro controller is given to make them
acquainted with the PC connection and microprogramming.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 INTERFACING TECHNIQUES OF CPU 10
A
SUPPORT CHIPS
2 INTERRUPTS & DMA CONTROLLER 8
3 ADVANCED MICROPROCESSORS 12
B 4 SERIAL INPUT OUTPUT INTERFACE 6
5 PARALLEL INTERFACE 4
6 BUS STANDARDS 4
C
7 SINGLE CHIP MICROCONTROLLER 16

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 8 TOTAL


PERIODS: 60 PERIODS: 68

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO BE TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL
SET ANSWERE QUESTION MARKS SET ANSWERED QUESTION MARKS
D
A 1, 2 11 THRE FIVE, TAKING AT
ANY 30 x 1 5 X 14
ONE E LEAST ONE FROM 14
THIRTY = 30 = 70
B 3, 4, 5 13 THRE EACH GROUP
E
C 6, 7 12 THRE
E

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP - A 18 PERIODS
MODULE 1 INTRODUCTION TO 8086
12
1.1 FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM OF 8086: Bus interface unit, execution unit, general purpose register, flag
register, pointer and index register
1.2 Memory address space and generating a memory address
50
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

1.3 Dynamically allocable relocatable code


1.4 Dedicated and reserved memory location
1.5 Pin configuration of 8086- minimum and maximum mode
1.6 Addressing mode of 8086
1.7 Instruction set of 8086
1.8 Internal block diagram of 8088

MODULE 2 INTERFACING TECHNIQUES OF CPU SUPPORT CHIPS 10


2.1 Comparison between 8086 and 8088.
2.2 Interfacing system clock 8284.
2.3 Interfacing bus controller 8288.
2.4 Floating point process of 8087 and its interfacing.
MODULE 3 INTERRUPTS & DMA CONTROLLER 8
3.1 Interfacing of a DMA controller 8257.
3.2 Interfacing of an interrupt controller 8257.
3.3 Interrupt vector table.
3.4 INTERRUPT TYPES: Software interrupt – External maskable interrupt – Non-maskable hardware interrupt.
3.5 Priority in interrupt.

GROUP - B 22 PERIODS
MODULE 4 ADVANCED MICROPROCESSORS 12
4.1 80286: Architecture – Real address mode – Protected virtual address mode.
4.2 MULTI-TASKING & MULTI-USER OPERATING SYSTEM: Prescribing the environment – Accessing resources –
Need for protection - 80386: Basic features of 80386 compared to 80286 - Concept of virtual and cache
memory.
4.3 Memory management - 80486: Features of 80486 – Internal cache memory support – Comparison with
80386 – basic concept of virtual memory and GUI
4.4 MEMORY MANAGEMENT SCHEME: Descriptors – Accessing segments – Selecting address translation register
– Physical address - PENTIUM PROCESSOR: Concept of super scalar – Dual pipeline architecture –
Comparison with 80486.
4.5 Protection schemes – Task switching – Gates.
MODULE 5 SERIAL INPUT OUTPUT INTERFACE 6
5.1 Concept of Universal Serial Bus.
5.2 Functional description – Interfacing of 8250(USART)
5.3 Communication: Simplex – Duplex – Full duplex.
5.4 Serial I/O Bus Standard and RS232 signals.
MODULE 6 PARALLEL INTERFACE 4
6.1 Centronics interface standard for parallel communication.
6.2 Bi-directional standard for parallel ports (SPP & EPP).

GROUP - C 20 PERIODS
MODULE 7 BUS STANDARDS 4
7.1 RS422 standard.
7.2 RS423 standard.
7.3 IEEE488 standard.
7.4 VME BUS.
MODULE 8 SINGLE CHIP MICROCONTROLLER 16
8.1 Programming model of 8051: CPU – Address bus – Data bus – Control bus – Register – Internal RAM
and ROM – Ports (serial and parallel) – Timers – Interrupts.
8.2 ADDRESS MODES: Immediate – Register – Direct – Indirect – Indexed.
8.3 INSTRUCTION TYPES: Arithmetic – Logical – Data Transfer (Internal/External) – Boolean.
8.4 Control Transfer and Special Function Register.

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Advanced Microprocessors and Interfacing / Badri Ram / Tata McGraw-Hill
51
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

2. Microprocessors and Interfacing / Hall / Tata McGraw-Hill


3. Microprocessor System: 8086/8088 Family / Liu & Gibson / Prentice Hall of India
4. Microprocessor Comprehensive Study: Architecture, Programming & Interfacing / Naresh Grover /
Dhanpat Rai & Co.
_______

C O M M U N I C A T I O N E N G I N E E R I N G L A B
– II
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 5 / S1 / LCE2 Part – III First 17 weeks 100
Semester

CONTACT PERIODS INTERNAL TOTAL


60 @ 4 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT 68 periods
week for 15 weeks 8 periods

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING – II.

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Third Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Third Year First Semester on the
entire syllabus. One job per student from any one of the jobs done is to be performed. Job is to be set
by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. Study of PCM transmission and reconstruction:—
(a) To study the TDM and sampling of analog signal and its PCM form in the transmitter and the
demultiplexing and reconstruction at the receiver section; and,
(b) to study the AD and DA conversion.
2. To study the radiation patterns and to obtain polar plots of :—
(a) ½ λ , λ , 3/2 λ and folded ½ λ dipole antenna;
(b) 3-element, 5-element, 7-element and 3-element folded yagi-uda antenna;
(c) loop and log periodic antenna;
(d) horn antenna.
3. Study of the microwave components :—
(a) to study the following parameters of multi-hole directional coupler-mainline and auxiliary line
VSWR, coupling factor and the directivity of the coupler;
(b) to study: magic tee, isolator and attenuator.
4. To study the working of Reflex / Multi-Cavity Klystron.
5. To generate and detect ASK, FSK and PSK.
6. To be familiar with rectangular and circular wave guide.
7. Working of GUNN diode
_______

I N D U S T R I A L E L E C T R O N I C S L A B – I

52
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks


ETCE / 5 / S2 / LIE1 Part – III First 17 weeks 100
Semester

CONTACT PERIODS INTERNAL TOTAL


60 @ 4 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT 68 periods
week for 15 weeks 8 periods

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS – I.
EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Third Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Third Year First Semester on the
entire syllabus. One job per student from any one of the jobs done is to be performed. Job is to be set
by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-voce – 25.
DETAIL COURSE CONTENT
1. To measure the reverse recovery time of switching diode and power BJT.
2. To study drive circuits of power BJT.
3. To study drive circuit of SCR.
4. To study a single phase rectifier—output waveform with phase control circuit.
5. To study a polyphase rectifier.
_______

M I C R O P R O C E S S O R L A B – I I
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 5 / S3 / LMP2 Part – III First 17 weeks 100
Semester

CONTACT PERIODS INTERNAL TOTAL


60 @ 4 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT 68 periods
week for 15 weeks 8 periods

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject MICROPROCESSOR – II.
EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Third Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Third Year First Semester on the
entire syllabus. One job per student from any one of the jobs done is to be performed. Job is to be set
by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-voce – 25.
DETAIL COURSE CONTENT
1. To practice assembly language programming with 8086 / 8088 using PC only.
2. To practice programming using serial interface 8251.
3. To practice programming using interrupt controller 8259.
4. To practice programming using DMA controller 8237.
5. To develop stepper motor control interface with 8086.
6. To practice programming with 8051SDK.
7. To develop sample I/O program using RS232.
8. To develop sample I/O program using parallel port.
9. To study FDC and CRT controller card and its interface with a PC system.
______
53
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

C O M M U N I C A T I O N E N G I N E E R I N G – I
I I
Subject Code Course offered in Course 4 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 6 / T1 / Part – III Second Duration periods Marks
CE3 Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
This is an extension of the earlier courses in Communication Engineering. In this course, idea of long
distance communication system is introduced. After successful completion of the course the students will be
able to know the principles of satellite communication, optical communication, computer network and modern
telephony.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 SATELLITE 12
A
COMMUNICATION
2 OPTICAL 12
COMMUNICATION
B 3 COMPUTER NETWORK 20
C 4 MODERN TELEPHONY 16

CONTACT INTERNAL TOTAL


PERIODS: 60 ASSESSMENT: 8 PERIODS: 68

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
SET ANSWER PER MARK SET ANSWERED PER MARKS
ED QUESTION S QUESTION
A 1, 2 14 FOUR FIVE, TAKING
ANY 30 x 1 5 X 14
B 3 12 ONE THRE AT LEAST ONE 14
THIRTY = 30 = 70
E FROM EACH
C 4 10 TWO GROUP

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP - A 24 PERIODS
Module 1 SATELLITE COMMUNICATION 12
1.1 Kepler’s Law – Artificial Satellite – Orbits – Geostationary Orbit – Satellite Speed
1.2 Transponder and satellite frequency allocations – Frequencies reuse.
1.3 Block schematic description of communication satellite – Elementary idea of FDMA
and TDMA.
Module 2 OPTICAL COMMUNICATION 16
2.1 Concept of fibre optic communication system – Advantages and limitations of
optical fibre communication – Construction of optical fibre – Optical fibre types:
Monomode and Multimode.
2.2 OPTICAL FIBRE PERFORMANCE: Bandwidth-distance product – Transmission loss.
2.3 OPTICAL SOURCES: LED and LASER – Modulation of LED and LASER – Functions of
optical detectors.
2.4 Elementary ideas of LED, LCD, PHOTO-DIODES, PHOTO-TRANSISTORS and SOLAR
CELL
2.5 Block schematic description of optical fibre communication system.
2.6 Components of optical fibre – Coupler connector splice.
2.7 Synchronous optical network.

54
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

2.8 Multiplexing on optical fibre cable – Wavelength division multiplexing (basic idea
only)
2.9 Applications of fibre optics.

GROUP - B 16 PERIODS
Module 3 COMPUTER NETWORK
3.1 Network Architecture – Network Topology – Routing – Flow Control – Error Control (Basic idea only).
3.2 Connection of Networks: Bridge – Router – Gateway : Basic idea
3.3 Categories of Network: LAN – MAN – WAN – File Server Network – Client Server Network – Peer to
Peer Network.
3.4 Idea of network protocol – Idea of layered protocol – Ethernet – CSMA/CD – Token ring – Token bus.
3.5 Circuit Switched and Packet Switched network.
3.6 Characteristics of modem.
3.7 Basic principles of Internet and E-mail – ISDN

GROUP - C 16 PERIODS
Module 4 MODERN TELEPHONY
4.1 Working of facsimile or fax – Idea of image processing by Charged Coupled Device.
4.2 Concept of cordless telephony.
4.3 CELLULAR TELEPHONE SYSTEM: Concept – Mobile Telephone Switching Office – Cellular telephone unit –
Frequency synthesizer – Number Assignment Module – Mobile Identification Number – Digital cellular
telephone system – Global System for Mobile communication – Concept of CDMA.

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Communication Electronics / Frenzel / Tata McGraw-Hill
2. Electronic Communication System / Dungan / Vikash Publishing House
3. Electronic Communication System / Kennedy / Tata McGraw-Hill
4. Principles of Communication System / Taub & Schilling / Tata McGraw-Hill
5. Electronic Communication / Roddy & Coolen / Prentice Hall of India
6. Communication System / Simon Haykin / W.I. Ltd.
7. Telemetry Principles / D. Patranabis / Tata McGraw-Hill
8. Analog and Digital Communication System / M.S. Roden / Shroff Pub. & Distrib. Pvt. Ltd.
_______

I N D U S T R I A L E L E C T R O N I C S – I I
Subject Code Course offered in Course 4 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 6 / T2 / Part – III Second Duration periods Marks
IE2 Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
In this course the applications of the high power electronic devices in instruments like SMPS and UPS are
introduced. This course also includes choppers & inverters and speed control of different types of motors.
After successful completion of this course the students will be familiar with different kinds of power supply
and different methods of speed control of motors.

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 SWITCH MODE POWER 6
A SUPPLY
2 AC POWER REGULATOR 8
3 UNINTERRUPTED POWER 6
SUPPLY
4 CHOPPERS 6
B 5 INVERTERS 8
55
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

6 DC MOTOR CONTROL 6
7 VARIABLE SPEED DRIVE 8
C SYSTEM
8 AC MOTOR CONTROL 6
9 STEPPER MOTOR CONTROL 6

CONTACT INTERNAL TOTAL


PERIODS: 60 ASSESSMENT: 8 PERIODS: 68

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
SET ANSWER PER MARK SET ANSWERED PER MARKS
ED QUESTION S QUESTION
A 1, 2, 3 THRE FIVE, TAKING
ANY 30 x 1 5 X 14
ONE E AT LEAST ONE 14
THIRTY = 30 = 70
B 4, 5, 6 THRE FROM EACH
E GROUP
C 7, 8, 9 THRE
E

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP - A 20 PERIODS
Module 1 SWITCH MODE POWER SUPPLY 6
1.1 Principle of SWITCHING REGULATOR.
1.2 Principle of operation of buck converter, boost converter and buck-boost CONVERTER.
1.3 Control circuit consideration of switching regulator.
1.4 Principle of operation of a switching regulator using linear switching regulator and negative voltage
switching regulator.
1.5 Protection circuit and component layout requirement in switching regulator.
1.6 Advantage and disadvantage of switching regulator in comparison with linear regulator.
Module 2 AC POWER REGULATOR 8
2.1 Concept of Automatic AC Regulator.
2.2 Principle of operation of: Step Regulator – Solid State Changer – Servo Regulator.
2.3 Principle of operation of Phase Control AC Regulator.
2.4 Principle of operation of CVT and Solid State Regulator.
Module 3 UNINTERRUPTED POWER SUPPLY 6
3.1 Block schematic description of uninterrupted power supply.
3.2 Principle of operation of ON line UPS, standby UPS, utility of static switch.
3.3 Use of storage devices and working principle of battery charger.
GROUP -B 20 PERIODS
Module 4 CHOPPERS 6
4.1 Principle of operation of chopper and its application.
4.2 Functional operation of forced, commutated and Jone’s chopper and their areas of applications.
4.3 Principle of operation of 4-quadrant chopper.
4.4 Principle of operation of Cycloconverter and its applications.
Module 5 INVERTERS 8
5.1 Principle of operation of self-oscillating and driving inverter.
5.2 Principle of operation of voltage driver, current driver, half bridge and full bridge inverter.
5.3 Inverter loads.
5.4 Three phase inverter.
5.5 Applications of inverter.
Module 6 DC MOTOR CONTROL 6
6.1 TYPES OF SPEED CONTROL: Armature Volt – Field Current Control.
6.2 DRIVE SYSTEM: Controlled Rectifier Drive – Reversible Drive – Quadrant Drive – Dual Converter.

56
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

GROUP - C 20 PERIODS
Module 7 VARIABLE SPEED DRIVE SYSTEM 8
7.1 Principle of variable speed drives.
7.2 Load characteristics.
7.3 Different types of load, fan load, transportation load, selection of motor depending upon loads.
7.4 Drive characteristics and speed changes.
Module 8 AC MOTOR CONTROL 6
8.1 SPEED CONTROL OF AC MOTOR: Types of speed variation – Frequency variation – Stator volt variation –
Closed loop control – Types of feedback.
8.2 TYPES OF BREAKING: Regenerative breaking – Plugging.
Module 9 STEPPER MOTOR CONTROL 6
9.1 Types and principle of operation of stepper motor.
9.2 STEPPER MOTOR CONTROL: Stepper Drive – Dual Voltage Drive – Chopper Drive.
REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Power Electronics / P.C. SEN / Tata McGraw-Hill
2. Industrial Electronics & Control / S.K. Bhattacharya (TTTI) / Tata McGraw-Hill
3. Power Electronics / Singh & Kanchandani / Tata McGraw-Hill
4. Power Electronics & Control / S.K. Dutta / Prentice Hall of India
5. Industrial Electronics / S.N. Biswas / Dhanpat Rai & Sons
6. Industrial Electronics / Biswanath Pal / Prentice Hall of India
7. Power Electronics Converter Application and Design / Mohon / W. I. Ltd.
_______

I N S T R U M E N T A T I O N & C O N T R O L
Subject Code Course offered in Course 4 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 6 / T3 / Part – III First Duration periods Marks
IC Semester 17 weeks per week 100

OBJECTIVE
Measurement of different physical quantity can be done with the help of some instruments constructed of
some electrical and electronic devices. The students will be familiar with the principle of operation of different
transducer processing of signals of different instrument like LVDT, strain gauge, thermocouple, thermistors
etc. The students will also be acquainted with the basics of control system after successful completion of this
course.
MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS
GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 TRANSDUCER FUNDAMENTALS 14
A
2 POSITION & DISPLACEMENT 6
MEASUREMENT
3 PRESSURE OF FORCE & VIBRATION 8
B MEASUREMENT
4 TEMPERATURE MEASUREMENT 6
5 SIGNAL CONDITIONING 6
6 INTRODUCTION TO CONTROL 6
C ENGINEERING
7 SYSTEM ELEMENT BEHAVIOUR 6
8 CLOSED LOOP SYSTEM 8

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 8 TOTAL


PERIODS: 60 PERIODS: 68

EXAMINATION SCHEME

57
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS


UP LE TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
SET ANSWER PER MARK SET ANSWERED PER MARKS
ED QUESTION S QUESTION
A 1, 2 12 THRE FIVE, TAKING
ANY 30 x 1 5 X 14
ONE E AT LEAST ONE 14
THIRTY = 30 = 70
B 3, 4, 5 12 THRE FROM EACH
E GROUP
C 6, 7, 8 12 THRE
E

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP - A 20 PERIODS
Module 1 TRANSDUCERS FUNDAMENTALS 14
1.1 Input-Output Specification – Sensitivity – Accuracy – Repeatability – Resolution – Hysterisis.
1.2 Principle of operation of transducer and sensor.
1.3 Measurement of physical quantities with transducer, displacement, potentiometer, LVDT, strain
gauge, piezoelectric crystal.
1.4 Tachogenerator, resolution counters.
1.5 TEMPERATURE: RTD – Thermistors – Thermocouple.
1.6 FLOW: Positive displacement – Electromagnetic heat – Thermal heat.
1.7 Other applications like measurement of pH and conductivity.
1.8 Transducer as system components.
1.9 Factors for choice of transducer.
Module 2 POSITION & DISPLACEMENT MEASUREMENT 6
2.1 Principle of Potentiometric Transducer.
2.2 Capacitance Transducer.
2.3 Linear Variable Differential Transformer.

GROUP - B 20 PERIODS
Module 3 PRESSURE OF FORCE & VIBRATION MEASUREMENT 8
3.1 Representative unit of pressure of force.
3.2 Primary pressure of force sensing alignments.
3.3 Electrical transducer alignments — Electrical strain gauges: Types – Gauge Factor – Temperature
Specification.
3.4 SEMICONDUCTOR STRAIN GAUGES: Properties of piezoelectric alignments, application.
Module 4 TEMPERATURE MEASUREMENT 6
4.1 Basic types of temperature transducer: Resistance detectors, thermistors, thermocouple — Principle
of operation, specifications, features and applications.
4.2 Application of platinum thin film and sensors.
Module 5 SIGNAL CONDITIONING 6
5.1 Signal conditioning requirements for AC and DC transducer signal.
5.2 Transducer circuit modification.
5.3 Specification and characteristics of instrumentation amplifier.
5.4 Signal processing.
5.5 Features and advantages of computerized data acquisition.

GROUP - C 20 PERIODS
Module 6 INTRODUCTION TO CONTROL ENGINEERING 6
6.1 Examples of control system.
6.2 Classification of control system.
58
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

6.3 Representation of control system.


6.4 Transfer function.
6.5 Block diagram of a feedback control system.
6.6 Simplification of a feedback control system.
Module 7 SYSTEM ELEMENT BEHAVIOUR 10
7.1 Standard test.
7.2 The steady state and transient response.
7.3 Steady State Error – Rise Time – Delay Time – Settling Time.
7.4 DAMPING: Over damped – Under damped – Critically damped.
7.5 First order and second order response – Examples.
Module 8 CLOSED LOOP SYSTEM 4
8.1 Introduction to Routh stability and Nyquist criteria.

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Electronic instrumentation / Kalsi / Tata McGraw-Hill
2. Industrial Instrumentation and Control / S.K. Singh / Tata McGraw-Hill
3. Numericals / Y. Koren & J. BEN / URI
4. Programmable Controllers Hardware, software and applications / G.L. Battin / McGraw Hill
5. Electronic Instrumentation and Measurement / D.A. Bell / Prentice Hall of India
_______

E L E C T R O N I C M E A S U R E M E N T L A B
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 6 / S1 / LEMN Part – III Second 17 weeks 100
Semester

CONTACT PERIODS INTERNAL TOTAL


60 @ 4 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT 68 periods
week for 15 weeks 8 periods

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject ELECTRONIC MEASUREMENT.

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Third Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Third Year First Semester on the
entire syllabus. One job per student from any one of the jobs done is to be performed. Job is to be set
by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. To study the operation and to use:
(a) Multimeter, and, (b) Oscilloscope.
2. To study the operation and to use:
(a) AF signal generator; and, (b) RF signal generator.
3. To study the operation and to use:
(a) frequency counter; and, (b) function generator.
4. To measure L & Q by Maxwell method.
5. To measure the unknown capacitance by Schering bridge.
6. To measure the unknown frequency by Wein Bridge.

59
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

7. To measure the distortion in a given waveform.


8. To construct and test a Q-meter.
9. To study the spectrum analyzer.
_______

C O M M U N I C A T I O N E N G I N E E R I N G L A
B – I I I
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 6 / S2 / LCE3 Part – III Second 17 weeks 100
Semester

CONTACT PERIODS INTERNAL TOTAL


60 @ 4 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT 68 periods
week for 15 weeks 8 periods

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING – III.

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Third Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Third Year First Semester on the
entire syllabus. One job per student from any one of the jobs done is to be performed. Job is to be set
by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. To study the function of fibre optic analog link.
2. To study the frequency response of optical receiver at various load conditions.
3. To study the losses in optical fibre:—
(a) propagation loss, (b) bending loss.
4. To study the numerical aperture of optical fibre.
5. To be familiar with the following network components:—
Cables – Connectors – Hubs – Network Interface Card.
6. To be familiar with installation of modem.
7. To be familiar with fax, cordless telephone, mobile telephone and pager system.
_______

I N D U S T R I A L E L E C T R O N I C S L A B – I
I
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 6 / S3 / LIE2 Part – III Second 17 weeks 100
Semester

CONTACT PERIODS INTERNAL TOTAL


60 @ 4 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT 68 periods
week for 15 weeks 8 periods

OBJECTIVE
On satisfactory completion of the course, the students should be in a position to develop the skills
corresponding to the knowledge acquired in the theoretical subject INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS – II.

60
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Third Year First Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Third Year First Semester on the
entire syllabus. One job per student from any one of the jobs done is to be performed. Job is to be set
by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. To study SMPS with PWM regulator chip
2. To study a phase control AC regulator
3. To study a Jones chopper
4. To study a servo regulator
5. To study an Online UPS system.
6. To study a single-phase bridge inverter with resistive load.
7. To study the speed control of DC motor by: —
(a) varying field current keeping armature voltage constant; and,
(b) varying armature voltage keeping field current constant.
8. To study the speed control of DC motor by controlled rectifier.
9. To study torque / speed characteristics of DC motor fed from single-phase rectifier.
10. To study speed control of induction motor by voltage and frequency variation.
11. To study stepper motor control system.
12. To study a chopper drive for stepper motor control.
13. To study of buck converter and boost converter.
_______

C O M P U T E R N E T W O R K
( ONE OF THE OPTIONS OFFERED AS ELECTIVE )

OBJECTIVE
Modern age is the age of computer. Global communication can be done within few seconds with the help of
computer network. Preliminaries like network structure, flow and error control, LAN, internetworking, network
security etc. are included in this course so that the students know about the fundamentals of computer
networking.
COMPUTER NETWORK – I
Subject Code Course offered in Course 3 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 5 / T6 / Part – III First Duration periods Marks
CN1 Semester 17 weeks per week 100

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 NETWORK BASICS 5
2 BASIC CONCEPT OF DATA 12
A
COMMUNICATION
3 NETWORK STRUCTURES 10
4 FLOW & ERROR CONTROL 10
B
5 LOCAL AREA NETWORK 8

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 6 TOTAL


PERIODS: 45 PERIODS: 51

EXAMINATION SCHEME
61
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS


UP LE TO BE TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL TO TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL
SET ANSWER QUESTION MARKS BE ANSWERED QUESTION MARKS
ED SET
A 1, 2, 3 20 FIVE FIVE, TAKING AT
ANY 30 x 1 5 X 14
ONE LEAST ONE FROM FOURTEEN
B 4, 5 14 THIRTY = 30 FOUR = 70
EACH GROUP

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP - A 13 PERIODS
Module 1 NETWORK BASICS 5
Definition of computer network – Network components – Categories of networks – Classification of NETWORKS:
LAN, MAN & WAN – Connection of networks – Application of Network System – General applications like
ATM Banking etc with modern approach to Distributed Computing System – Mobile Computing System.
Module 2 BASIC CONCEPT OF DATA COMMUNICATION 12
2.1 Signals – Different kind of analog and digital signals for communication – Wave Spectra – Mode of
Signals: Simplex, duplex, half & full duplex – Resultant of superposition of signals – Application of
Fourier Transformation.
2.2 Classification of COMMUNICATION CHANNEL: Guided media and unguided media – Characteristics of different
TRANSMISSION MEDIA: Twisted Pair Cable, Coaxial Cable, Optical Fibre, Terrestrial Communication, Micro-
waves – Short Wave Communication – Satellite Communication.
2.3 Encoding techniques – Modulation techniques – Application in modem.
2.4 Broadband and base band systems.

GROUP-B 14 PERIODS
Module 3 NETWORK STRUCTURES 10
3.1 Network topology.
3.2 CHANNEL SHARING TECHNIQUES: FDM – TDM – WDM – Inverse Multiplexing.
3.3 SWITCHING: Circuit Switching – Message Switching – Packet Switching.
3.4 Layered architecture of network system – Seven layer OSI model – Functions of each OSI layer – Other
ISO structure – TCP / IP Layer Structure.
3.5 X.25 protocol.
Module 4 FLOW CONTROL & ERROR CONTROL 10
4.1 FLOW CONTROL: Congestion control – Necessity of flow control – Poll / select method – Stop and wait
method – Sliding window method.
4.2 ERROR CONTROL: Error detection & correction – Types of error – Checksum – Forward error control –
Automatic repeat request – Cyclic redundancy check.
4.3 ALGORITHMS: Routing, Fixed and Adaptive.

GROUP - C 18 PERIODS
Module 5 LOCAL AREA NETWORK 8
5.1 Basic concepts.
5.2 IEEE 802 family of standards.
5.3 ETHERNET: CSMA / CD – Frame formats.
5.4 Token Bus – Token Ring – Frame Formats.
5.5 FDDI: Access method – Frame format.
5.6 Hubs – Switches – Bridges – Transceivers – Repeaters.
5.7 Wireless LAN.

COMPUTER NETWORK – II
Subject Code Course offered in Course 2 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 6 / T4 / Part – III Second Duration periods Marks
CN2 Semester 17 weeks per week 50

62
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


MODULE TOPIC CONTACT
PERIODS
1 INTERNET WORKING 25
2 NETWORK SECURITY 5

CONTACT INTERNAL TOTAL


PERIODS: 30 ASSESSMENT: 4 PERIODS: 34

EXAMINATION SCHEME
MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
LE TO BE TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL
SET ANSWER QUESTION MARKS SET ANSWER QUESTION MARKS
ED ED
1 14 ANY 1 x 15 = 5X7=
ONE EIGHT ANY FIVE SEVEN
2 4 FIFTEEN 15 35

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


Module 1 INTERNET WORKING 25
1.1 Gateway – Routers – VSAT.
1.2 Structure and Objectives of Intranet & Internet.
1.3 INTERNET SERVICES: Email – telnet – FTP – World Wide Web – Internet Telephony – Short Messaging
Services (SMS) – Internet Fax – Video Conferencing: VoIP – HTML – DHTML – XML – ASP – Network
programming concepts with Java / PHP – Concepts of Web Site Design and Hosting.
1.4 ISDN – ATM.
1.5 TCP / IP suite of protocols and IP addressing with subnet and network address detection – Internet
addressing schemes.
1.6 Mobile / Cellular Communication.
Module 2 NETWORK SECURITY 5
2.1 Different aspects of SECURITY: Privacy – Authentication – Integrity – Non-Repudiation.
2.2 ENCRYPTION / DECRYPTION: Data Encryption System – Secret key method – Public key method.
2.3 Digital signature.

COMPUTER NETWORK LAB


Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 6 / S6 / LCN Part – III Second Semester 17 weeks 100

CONTACT PERIODS INTERNAL TOTAL


90 @ 6 sessional contact periods per week for ASSESSMENT 102
15 weeks 12 periods periods

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Part – III Second Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Part – III Second Semester on the
entire syllabus. One job per student from any one of the jobs done is to be performed. Job is to be set
by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


The laboratory works will be performed on the following areas:—
1. LAN card (MB and GB range) installation and cabling, demonstration on Hub, Switches and wireless
LAN card.
2. Optical fibre based LAN- Transceiver, commissioning of optical fibre tools.

REFERENCE BOOKS
63
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

1. Data Communication and Networking / B.A. Forouzan / Tata McGraw-Hill


2. Communication Network / Leon, Garcia, Widjaja / Tata McGraw-Hill
3. Computer Network / Tanenbaum / Prentice Hall of India
4. Data Communications / F. Halsall / Pearson Edu.
5. Computer Network/ U. Black / Prentice Hall of India
6. Peter Norton’s Introduction to Computer / P. Norton / Tata McGraw-Hill
7. Computer Network / Stallings / Prentice Hall of India
8. Local Area Network / Ahuja / Tata McGraw-Hill.
9. Computer Communication ISDN Systems / Dr. D.C. Agarwal
10. Elements of Computer Science & Engineering / Prof. A.K. Mukhopadhyay
11. Computer Networks Fundamentals and Applications / Rajesh, Easwarakumar & Balasubramanian.
_______

M E D I C A L E L E C T R O N I C S
( ONE OF THE OPTIONS OFFERED AS ELECTIVE )
OBJECTIVE
At present application of many electronics instruments are found in medical science. After successful
completion of this course interested students will be able to know about radiology, ultrasound, ICU/CCU
system, cardiac pacemaker, foetal system etc.

MEDICAL ELECTRONICS – I
Subject Code Course offered in Course 3 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 6 / T7 / Part – III First Duration periods Marks
ME1 Semester 17 weeks per week 100

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 RADIOLOGY & MICROSCOPY 13
A INSTRUMENTS
2 ULTRASOUND 2
3 MICROSCOPY 2
B 4 ANALYTICAL & LABORATORY 10
INSTRUMENTS
C 5 I.C.U. / C.C.U. SYSTEMS 18

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 6 TOTAL


PERIODS: 45 PERIODS: 51

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL
SET ANSWER PER MARK SET ANSWERED PER MARK
ED QUESTION S QUESTION S
THRE FIVE, TAKING
A 1, 2, 3 13
ANY E AT LEAST ONE
ONE 30 x 1 FOURTEEN 5 X 14
B 4 8 THIRTY TWO FROM EACH
= 30 = 70
C 5 13 FOUR GROUP

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP - A 17 PERIODS
Module 1 RADIOLOGY & MICROSCOPY INSTRUMENTS 13

64
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

1.1 Properties of X-ray – Production of X-ray – Types of X-ray machine photoelectric effect – Crompton
effect.
1.2 Bremostrate lung X-ray tubes – High voltage power sources – Typical X-ray machine, care,
maintenance and troubleshooting designs variations.
1.3 Scatter reductions – Image intensifiers – C.T. scan.
Module 2 ULTRASOUND
2
Ultrasonic Pulse Echo techniques – Time Motion Ultrasonography.
Module 3 MICROSCOPY
2
Electron microscopy – Light microscope – Their comparison

GROUP - B 10 PERIODS
Module 4 ANALYTICAL & LABORATORY INSTRUMENTS
4.1 Introduction & basic principles of PH meter.
4.2 Blood gas analysis – Densitometers – Electrophoresis.
4.3 Filter and flame photometers – Spectrometers.

GROUP - C 18 PERIODS
Module 5 I.C.U. / C.C.U. SYSTEMS
5.1 Introduction – System configuration – System connection – Recording instrument – Alarm modules –
Displaying.
5.2 Information and servicing considerations in control systems.
5.3 Strip chart recorder – Introduction recording technique.
5.4 PMMC Galvanometer – Electronic Recorder – Adjustment & typical faults – Servo recorders.

MEDICAL ELECTRONICS – II
Subject Code Course offered in Course 2 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 6 / T5 / Part – III Second Duration periods Marks
ME2 Semester 17 weeks per week 50

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


MODULE TOPIC CONTACT
PERIODS
1 CARDIAC PACEMAKER & DEFIBRILLATOR 10
2 BLOOD PRESSURE MEASUREMENT 6
3 FOETAL MONITOR 8
4 EMBEDDED COMPUTER & COMPUTER 6
INTERFACING
CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 4 TOTAL
PERIODS: 30 PERIODS: 34

EXAMINATION SCHEME
MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
LE TO BE TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL TO TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL
SET ANSWER QUESTION MARKS BE ANSWERED QUESTION MARKS
ED SET
1 6 TWO
2 4 TWO FIVE, TAKING AT
ANY 1 x 15 5 X 14
ONE LEAST ONE FROM 14
3 5 FIFTEEN = 15 TWO = 70
EACH MODULE
4 4 TWO

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


Module 1 CARDIAC PACEMAKER & DEFIBRILLATOR 10
1.1 Types and principle of cardiac pacemaker.
1.2 D.C. defibrillator – External pacemaker – ECG recording – Block diagram – Troubleshooting –
Respiration measurement.
65
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

Module 2 BLOOD PRESSURE MEASUREMENT 6


Principle of Blood Pressure meter – Direct and indirect measurement.
Module 3 FOETAL MONITOR 8
Principle of foetal monitor and Electro Cardio Graphy.
Module 4 EMBEDDED COMPUTER & COMPUTER INTERFACING 6

MEDICAL ELECTRONICS LAB


Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 6 / S7 / LME Part – III Second 17 weeks 100
Semester

CONTACT PERIODS INTERNAL TOTAL


90 @ 6 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT 102 periods
week for 15 weeks 12 periods

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Part – III Second Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.
2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Part – III Second Semester on the
entire syllabus. One job per student from any one of the jobs done is to be performed. Job is to be set
by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. To study inverting and non-inverting amplifiers, and, to measure the gain.
2. To measure the CMRR, input impedance, output impedance, open loop gain, offset input current and
bias current with opamp.
3. To study the opamp as — (i) waveform generator, and, (ii) instrumentation amplifier.
4. To measure and to study the characteristics of SMPS and UPS.
5. To study the use of SID and SOD lines.
6. To study D/A and A/D conversion, multiplexing A & D, memory mapped ADC multiplex.
7. To study the following features of an X-ray machine: Production, Characteristics, Exposure, Timing, X-
ray plates and its developing.
8. To study the operations and control of an E.C.G. machine and to practice its troubleshooting.
9. To study the following features of an USG machine: Operation, Control, Troubleshooting and function of
Camera.
10. To study the following features of a PH meter: Electrodes, Meter, Buffer Solution, Application; and, also
to study the ways & means of its maintenance.

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Handbook of Biomedical Instrumentation / R.S. Khandpur / Tata McGraw Hill
2. Handbook of Biomedical Instrumentation and Measurement / H.E. Thomas / Prentice Hall of India
3. Biomedical instrumentation and Measurement / L. Cromwell, F.J. Weibell & E.A. Peiffer / Prentice Hall
of India
4. Electronics for Biomedical Personnel / E.J.B. Buckstein / Taraporewala
5. Biomedical Instrumentation / Can & Brown
6. X-ray techniques for students / M.O. Chasney
7. Recent Advances in Biomedical Engineering / Reddy
_______

P C H A R D W A R E M A I N T E N A N C E
( ONE OF THE OPTIONS OFFERED AS ELECTIVE )

OBJECTIVE

66
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

The complete PC hardware system is embedded in electronics industry. Every card and every module of a
PC system is consisting of a number of Integrated Circuits or discrete electronic components. While
maintaining PCs the competency levels of maintenance in the form of installation, preventive and corrective
measures, maintenance of different devices, use of software & system maintenance, measure for virus
detection & protection and finally provision for upgradation of PC system should be well thought for overall
PC maintenance. The above reason justifies the utility of this course.

PC HARDWARE MAINTENANCE – I
Subject Code Course offered in Course 3 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 6 / T8 / Part – III Second Duration periods Marks
PHM Semester 17 weeks per week 100

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


GROU MODUL TOPIC CONTACT
P E PERIODS
1 PC HARDWARE OVERVIEW 12
A
2 MAIN MEMORY SYSTEM & STORAGE 14
DEVICES
3 KEYBOARD, MONITOR, PORT & 10
B
SMPS
4 PERIPHERAL DEVICES 9

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 6 TOTAL


PERIODS: 45 PERIODS: 51

EXAMINATION SCHEME
GRO MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS
UP LE TO BE TO BE MARKS TOTAL TO TO BE MARKS TOTAL
SET ANSWER PER MARK BE ANSWERED PER MARKS
ED QUESTION S SET QUESTION
A 1, 2 20 FIVE FIVE, TAKING
ANY 30 x 1 5 X 14
B 3, 4 13 ONE FOU AT LEAST TWO FOURTEEN
THIRTY = 30 = 70
R FROM EACH
GROUP

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


GROUP - A 26 PERIODS
Module 1 PC HARDWARE OVERVIEW
12

1.1 EVALUATION
OF PC FROM IBM PC-8088 TO PENTIUM-IV, DEVELOPMENT, UPGRADES AND
COMPARISON CHART
1.2 INSIDE THE SYSTEM UNITS, BLOCK DIAGRAM OF PC SYSTEM BOX TYPES, MAIN COMPONENTS AND THEIR OVERVIEW
INCLUDING REARSIDES

Module 2 BUILDING BODIES OF THE PC SYSTEM

67
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

2.1 MOTEHR BOARD, FORM FACTORS, FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION OF EACH BLOCK & THEIR INTERCONNECTIONS
3
2.2 EXPANSION BUS SLOTS – DIFFERENT BUS ARCHITECTURE FEATURES – ISA, VESA, PCI, PCIX. – THEIR
COMPARISON & AREAS OF APPLICATION
4
2.3 PROCESSORS, P-II, P-III, CELERON, P-IV – COMPETING PROCESSOR FROM AMD ATHLON 64, COMPARISON
AMONG DIFFERENT PROCESSORS AND APPLICATIONS 8
2.4 CHIPSETS, NORTH-BRIDGE, SOUTH-BRIDGE
AND SUPER-IO CHIPS – THEIR FUNCTIONS, INTEL HUB
P-III , P-IV
ARCHITECTURE CHIPSETS FOR 3
2.5 MEMORY CHIPS – DRAM, SRAM - TYPES OF DRAM INCLUDING EDO, SDRAM, RDRAM & DDR FEATURES &
PERFORMANCE. - MEMORY PACKAGES – SIMM & DIMM 5
2.6 Memory Organisation – low memory , high memory, extended memory, cache memory,
virtual memory 2
2.7 BIOS – basic ROM BIOS organisation, interaction between different bays of the system,
ROM CHIPS , EEPROM, AND FLASH 2
2.8 CMOS set up – Configuration and utility 1
GROUP - B 26 PERIODS
Module 3 KEYBOARD, MOUSE, MONITOR AND SMPS 12
3.1 Keyboard: types, key-switches, key-board interface, keyboard controller and maintenance. 3
3.2 Mouse: Types, principles of operation, signal, connectors, controllers, installation & maintenance. 2
3.3 Monitor: Types, principles of operation and block diagram. Features – resolutions, control (basic &
advanced) LCD front panel and plasma, Working of display adapter – CGA, VGA, SVGA, XGA –
standards, vide card, memory and AGP 4
3.4 SMPS: Types, principles of operation and block diagram, form factor – AT an ATX. 3

GROUP - C 19 PERIODS
Module 4 PERIPHERAL DEVICES 10
4.1 DOT MATRIX PRINTER: Types, Sub-assemblies, block diagram and description, control, self-test installation
and maintenance. 3
4.2 INKJET PRINTER: Type, principle of operation, block diagram, features, installation, interface requirement
and maintenance. 2
4.3 LASER PRINTER: Block diagram, printing mechanism, self-test, installation, resolution
and speed. 2
4.4 SCANNER: Type, principle of operation, resolution, installation, OCR 1

PC HARDWARE MAINTENANCE – II
Subject Code Course offered in Course 2 lecture contact Full
ETCE / 6 / T6 / Part – III Second Duration periods Marks
PHM Semester 17 weeks per week 50

MODULAR DIVISION OF THE SYLLABUS


MODULE TOPIC CONTACT
PERIODS
1 PC ASSEMBLING & TROUBLE 15
SHOOTING
2 SOFTWARE INSTALLATION & 15
NETWORK

CONTACT INTERNAL ASSESSMENT: 4 TOTAL


PERIODS: 30 PERIODS: 34

EXAMINATION SCHEME

68
PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

MODU OBJECTIVE QUESTIONS SUBJECTIVE QUESTIONS


LE TO BE TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL TO TO BE MARKS PER TOTAL
SET ANSWER QUESTION MARKS BE ANSWERED QUESTION MARKS
ED SET
1 9 FOUR FIVE, TAKING AT
ANY 1 x 15 7x5=
ONE LEAST TWO FROM SEVEN
2 9 FIFTEEN = 15 FOUR 35
EACH MODULE

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT

GROUP-A
Module 1 STORAGE DRIVES

1.1 FLOPPY DRIVES : – TYPES, CAPACITIES OF FDD,


FLOPPY DISKETTES BLOCK DIAGRAM SUB-ASSEMBLIES, DATA
COOLING TECHNIQUE (MF, MFM), FDD CONTROLLER, AND INSTALLATION 3

1.2 HARD DISK DRIVE : TYPE – IDE AND SCSI, BLOCK DIAGRAM, CHARACTERISTICS, DATA ENCODING (RLL), NRZI,
HDD CONTROLLER, INTERFACE TYPES AND INSTALLATION, DISK ORGANISATION, SECTOR, CLUSTER, DBR, MBR,
FAT, ROOT DIRECTORY, 6

1.3 OPTICAL DRIVE : CD-ROM, CDR, CDRW MEDIA, BLOCK DIAGRAM OF CDROM DRIVE, TYPES, INERFACE, CD-
WRITER, DVD ROM , DVD, RAM DRIVE – CHARACTERISTICS – FEATURES AND CAPABILITIES 4

1.4 REMOVABLE DRIVES : ZIP DRIVES, REMOVABLE HARD DRIVES 1


1.5 CARTRIDGE TAPE DRIVES -: TYPES AND CAPABILITIES AND APPLICATIONS 2

GROUP-B
Module 2 MULTIMEDIA DEVICES 10
2.1 Sound Cards – block diagram of sound blaster – card – concepts of audio compression and
decompression – surround sound – speakers, microphones and headphone – DOLBY audio
standard 4.
2.2 VIDEO capture : principle and method – capture, formats, and comparison, TV tuner cards,
video conferencing, digital camera, 3D graphics, graphic acceleration 4

GROUP-C
Module 3 NETWORKING & SOFTWARE INSTALLATION 6
3.1 OS Installation –Win 98, Win XP, WIN 2000, Linux 2
3.2 Building LAN — features and specifications, cabling / Cable laying, HUB and Switch Installation
2
3.3 LAN Commissioning with Performance functioning with IP address configuration, 2
3.4 Computer Virus- types, nature, impact and prevention of virus, anti-virus installation & fire-wall
installation 3
3.5 MODEM – block diagram and installation 1

PC MAINTENANCE LAB
Subject Code Course offered in Course Duration Full Marks
ETCE / 6 / S8 / Part – III Second 17 weeks 100
LPHM Semester

CONTACT PERIODS INTERNAL TOTAL


90 @ 6 sessional contact periods per ASSESSMENT 102 periods
week for 15 weeks 12 periods

EXAMINATION SCHEME
1. Continuous Internal Assessment of 50 marks is to be carried out by the teachers throughout the
Part – III Second Semester. Distribution of marks: Performance of Job – 35, Notebook – 15.

69
WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

2. External Assessment of 50 marks shall be held at the end of the Part – III Second Semester on the
entire syllabus. One job per student from any one of the jobs done is to be performed. Job is to be set
by lottery system. Distribution of marks: On spot job – 25, Viva-voce – 25.

DETAIL COURSE CONTENT


1. To be able to locate and identify the most common components of a modern PC (PC, PCAT to
Pentium)
2. To be familiar with keyboard components, preventive maintenance practice and troubleshooting of
keyboards.
3. To be familiar with installation of FDD and HDD, and, to be able configure drive.
4. To be familiar with monitor assembly, installation and troubleshooting of the same.
5. To be familiar with motherboard and troubleshooting of the same.
6. To be familiar with SMPS and troubleshooting of the same.
7. To be familiar with installation of video card, LAN card, sound card etc.
8. To be familiar with installation of CDROM and mouse.
9. To be familiar with installation of DMP, inkjet and laser printer, and, be familiar with preventive
maintenance practice & troubleshooting of DMP.
10. To be able to disassemble and reassemble a total PC system.
11. To practice with QAPLUS and Norton utility as diagnostic tools.
12. To practice antivirus software installation and virus removal.
13. To be familiar with installation of Windows 95 / 98.
14. To be familiar with network components—cables, connectors, hubs, NIC (network interface card)
15. To be familiar with installation of Windows / UNIX / Linux.
16. To build a window based LAN and install the OS and firewall antivirus.

REFERENCE BOOKS
1. IBM PC troubleshooting & repair guide / Brenner / BPB
2. PC Hardware a Beginner’s Guide / R. Gilster / Tata McGraw Hill
3. IBM PC Clone / Govindrajalu / Tata McGraw Hill
4. Peter Norton’s Problem / Norton / Prentice Hall of India
5. Upgrading and repairing PC / Mueller / Prentice Hall of India
6. Troubleshooting, maintaining and repairing PCs / Biglow’s / Tata McGraw Hill
7. Complete PC Upgrade and Maintenance Guide / Mark Minasy / BPB
8. PC Hardware in a Nutshell / Thompson and Thompson / Shroff Pub. & Distrib. Pvt. Ltd.
9. A to Z of PC Hardware Maintenance / Subhodeep Chowdhury / Dhanpat Rai & Co.
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E T C E P R O J E C T W O R K &
S E M I N A R O N E T C E P R O J E C T W O R K
Courses offered in Part – III

OBJECTIVE
Project Work is intended to provide opportunity for students to develop understanding of the
interrelationship between different courses learnt in the entire diploma programme and to apply the
knowledge gained in a way that enables them to develop & demonstrate higher order skills. The basic
objective of a project class would be to ignite the potential of students’ creative ability by enabling them to
develop something which has social relevance, aging, it should provide a taste of real life problem that a
diploma-holder may encounter as a professional. It will be appreciated if the polytechnics develop interaction
with local industry and local developmental agencies viz. different Panchayet bodies, the municipalities etc.
for choosing topics of projects and / or for case study. The course further includes preparation of a Project
Report which, among other things, consists of technical description of the project. The Report should be

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PART III FULL-TIME DIPLOMA COURSE IN ELECTRONICS & TELE-COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING WBSCTE

submitted in two copies, one to be retained in the library of the institute. The Report needs to be prepared in
computer using Word and CADD software wherever necessary.
Seminar on Project Work is intended to provide opportunity for students to present the Project Work in front
of a technical gathering with the help of different oral, aural and visual communication aids which they learnt
through different courses in the Parts – I & II of the diploma course. In the Seminar, students are not only
expected to present their Project Work, but also to defend the same while answering questions arising out of
their presentation.

GENERAL GUIDELINE
Project Work is conceived as a group work through which the spirit of team building is expected to be
developed. Students will be required to carry out their Project Works in groups under supervision of a
lecturer of their core discipline who will work as a Project Guide. It is expected that most of the lecturers of
the core discipline will act as project guide and each should supervise the work of at least two groups.
Number of students per group will vary with the number of lecturers acting as Project Guide and student
strength of that particular class.
In the Part – III First Semester six sessional periods will be utilised for performing Project Work. In the Part
– III Second Semester, for the first twelve weeks the six sessional periods allocated to ‘Project Work’ along
with the single sessional period allocated to ‘Seminar on Project Work’ will be together utilised for Project
work; whereas in the last three weeks of the Part – III Second Semester all these seven sessional periods
allocated to ‘Project Work’ and ‘Seminar on Project Work’ will be utilised for performing Seminar. In
‘Seminar’ classes all the teachers who are involved with imparting knowledge and skill to the students in their
“Project” classes should be present along with all the students.

C O U RS E & EXAMINATION SCHEDULE


SUBJEC NAME OF COURSE COURSE CONTACT MARKS
T THE S DURATIO PERIODS ALLOTTED
CODE COURSES OFFERED N
IN
60 contact Continuous Internal Assessment of 100 marks is
ETCE Project Part – III periods @ 4 to be carried out by the teachers throughout the two
Work First 15 Weeks sessional semesters where marks allotted for assessment of
(Group – A) Semester contact periods sessional work undertaken in each semester is 50.
per week Distribution of marks: Project Work – 50, Project
ETCE / 5 84 contact Report – 25, Viva-voce –25.
& 6 / S4 / ETCE Project Part – III periods @ 7 External assessment of 100 marks shall be held
ETPW Work Second First 12 sessional at the end of the Part – III Second Semester on the
(Group – B) Semester Weeks contact periods entire syllabi of ETCE Project Work. The external
per week examiner is to be from industry / engineering
college / university / government organisation.
Distribution of marks: Project Work – 25, Project
Report – 25, Viva-voce – 50.
Seminar on 21 contact Continuous Internal Assessment of 25 marks for
ETCE Project Part – III Last 3 periods @ 7 a particular group is to be awarded by their
ETCE / 6 /
Work Second Weeks sessional concerned Project Guide. External Assessment of
S5 /
Semester contact periods 25 marks is to be awarded by all the other Project
SMNR
per week Guides present in the Seminar.

T HE PROJECT
The students should be made aware of the factors influencing the selection of a particular product and its
available design, viz. selection of components for assembling, harnessing, testing and quality control of the
same. They should also be aware of the workability of the product. Each group will take at least one project
in a semester.
PROJECT REPORT
Each project work should be accompanied by a ‘Project Report’ which should cover the following:—
(a) General description;
(b) Product specification;

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WEST BENGAL STATE COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION PART III – ETCE

(c) Hardware description;


(d) Operating instruction;
(e) Installation requirement, if any;
(f) Circuit diagrams;
(g) Layout diagrams;
(h) List of components;
(i) Costing;
(j) Study of marketability;
(k) Scope for future development;
(l) A brief outline of the maintenance procedure may also be included in the report (if possible).
SUGGESTED LIST OF PROJECT WORKS
The project works are generally selected depending upon the objective of the course and the infrastructural
facilities available at a particular institution. Some of the popular items are listed below as guideline for
selection:—
(i) regulated power supply;
(ii) AC voltage stabilizer;
(iii) inverter;
(iv) battery charger;
(v) FM receiver;
(vi) bar level indicator;
(vii) digital thermometer;
(viii) field strength meter;
(ix) digital clock;
(x) solid state relay;
(xi) stereo amplifier;
(xii) programmable interval time;
(xiii) analog trainer kit;
(xiv) digital trainer kit;
(xv) circuit theory trainer kit;
(xvi) microprocessor trainer kit;
(xvii) telephone line / status monitor;
(xviii) MICROPROCESSOR BASED APPLICATIONS: (a) temperature controller, (b) alarm, (c) moving display, (d) speed
control of motor, (e) programmable logic controller etc.;
(xix) one project on computer application ;
(xx) one project on any one of the elective subjects;
(xxi) a report on a short visit to a local electronic industry / organization may be regarded as one of the
projects;
(xxii) a particular project may be a part of a bigger project depending upon the complexity.
_______

G E N E R A L V I V A – V O C E
Subject Code Course offered in Full Marks
ETCE / 6 / S9 / GVV Part – III Second Semester 100

COURSE CONTENT
The syllabi of all the theoretical and sessional subjects taught in the three years of diploma education.

EXAMINATION SCHEME
The Final Viva-Voce Examination shall take place at the end of the Part – III Second Semester. It is to be
taken by one External and one Internal Examiner. The External Examiner is to be from industry /
engineering college / university / government organisation and he / she should give credit out of 50 marks;
whereas, the Internal Examiner should normally be the Head of the Department and he / she should give
credit of 50 marks. In the absence of the Head of the Department the senior most lecturer will act as the
Internal Examiner.
_______

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