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CODE 80646
ACADEMIC YEAR 2021/2022
CREDITS
SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINARY SECTOR ING-IND/31
LANGUAGE Italian
TEACHING LOCATION
  • GENOVA
SEMESTER 1° Semester
PREREQUISITES
Propedeuticità in ingresso
Per sostenere l'esame di questo insegnamento è necessario aver sostenuto i seguenti esami:
  • Biomedical Engineering 8713 (coorte 2020/2021)
  • MATHEMATICAL ANALYSIS 84362 2020
Propedeuticità in uscita
Questo insegnamento è propedeutico per gli insegnamenti:
  • Biomedical Engineering 8713 (coorte 2020/2021)
  • FUNDAMENTALS OF BIOMEDICAL INSTRUMENTATIONS 80221
TEACHING MATERIALS AULAWEB

OVERVIEW

This subject aims to provide basic elements of electrical circuit theory (resistive elements and networks, transient and steady-state analysis of elementary first-order and second-order linear circuits, analysis of some circuit properties in periodical steady-state conditions) and to apply them to examples. To this end, concepts coming from Mathematics, Physics and Geometry are applied to circuits and some basic mathematical and scientific principles are introduced.

AIMS AND CONTENT

LEARNING OUTCOMES

To be able to analyse a linear time-invariant circuit (transitory and steady-state analysis).

AIMS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES

It is expected that at the end of this subject the student will be able to analyze linear time-invariant resistive circuits and first-order and second-order dynamical circuits (transitory and steady-state analysis), by correctly writing topological equations and descriptive equations. During the lessons a set of tools are proposed; when dealing with a specific problem, the students have to decide what subset of tools can be (or has to be) used to solve it. This capacity of solving non-trivial problems is one of the main elements of the scientific cultural baggage of an engineer.

PREREQUISITES

Basic concepts of mathematics and physics: derivatives and integrals of real functions; elementary linear differential equations; vectors, matrices, systems of algebraic equations; complex numbers; power and energy.

TEACHING METHODS

About 60 classroom hours, taken remotely, through Teams platform. During other practice lessons (with elective participation), further exercises and examples are proposed, by resorting to team-based learning and flipped classroom.

SYLLABUS/CONTENT

Fundamentals of circuit theory (circuit elements; models; elementary electrical variables; graphs and circuits; Kirchhoff's laws; Tellegen's theorem).

Two-terminal resistive elements and elementary circuits (significant two-terminal elements; Thévenin-Norton models; concept of electrical power; series and parallel connections).

Linear resistive two-ports and elementary circuits (six representations and properties; significant two-port elements; cascade, series and parallel connections).

General resistive circuits (Tableau analysis; superposition and substitution theorems; Thévenin-Norton theorems).

Elementary dynamical circuits (significant circuit elements; concept of state; transient and stationary steady-state solutions of first-order circuits with various sources: constant, piecewise-constant, impulsive; stability; generalizations to second- and higher-order circuits).

Sinusoidal steady-state analysis (phasors and sinusoidal solutions; phasor formulations of circuit equations; impedance and admittance of two-terminal elements; sinusoidal steady-state solutions; active, reactive and complex powers).

Periodical steady-state analysis (analysis of circuits with many sinusoidal inputs; periodical signals and Fourier series; mean value; RMS value theorem).

RECOMMENDED READING/BIBLIOGRAPHY

- M. Parodi, M. Storace, Linear and Nonlinear Circuits: Basic & Advanced Concepts, Vol. 1, Lecture Notes in Electrical Engineering, Springer, 2017, ISBN: 978-3-319-61234-8 (ebook) or 978-3-319-61233-1 (hardcover), doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-61234-8.

- M. Parodi, M. Storace, Linear and Nonlinear Circuits: Basic & Advanced Concepts, Vol. 2, Lecture Notes in Electrical Engineering, Springer, 2020, ISBN: 978-3-030-35044-4 (ebook) or 978-3-030-35043-7 (hardcover), doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-35044-4.

- L.O. Chua, C.A. Desoer, E.S. Kuh, Circuiti lineari e non lineari, Jackson, Milano, 1991.

- C.K. Alexander, M.N.O. Sadiku, Circuiti elettrici (3A edizione), MacGraw-Hill, Milano, 2008.

- M. de Magistris, G. Miano, Circuiti, Springer, Milano, 2007.

- G. Biorci, Fondamenti di elettrotecnica: circuiti, UTET, Torino, 1984.

- V. Daniele, A. Liberatore, S. Manetti, D. Graglia, Elettrotecnica, Monduzzi, Bologna, 1994.

- M. Repetto, S. Leva, Elettrotecnica, CittàStudi, Torino, 2014.

TEACHERS AND EXAM BOARD

Exam Board

MARCO STORACE (President)

VALENTINA BARUZZI

MATTEO LODI

MAURO PARODI

ALBERTO OLIVERI (President Substitute)

LESSONS

Class schedule

The timetable for this course is available here: Portale EasyAcademy

EXAMS

EXAM DESCRIPTION

Common score:

The teacher will propose exercises for self-assessment at the end of each topic. Some of these exercises will be studied and solved by small groups of students under the supervision of a tutor (team-based learning). Each student (individually) will solve publicly a part of these exercises during classes (flipped classroom), thus obtaining a max. score of 2.

“Face-to-face” mode:

Written (max. score 17, with threshold of 4 for being admitted to the oral exam) + oral (max score 15).

Reserved to the students that are first registered in the official University list of students of this subject: two partial written examinations, one towards half semester and one just after the end of the semester (max. score 32). Threshold score of the first examination: 3 (out of about 12). If the overall score is sufficient (³ 18), it can be the final score of this subject. Otherwise, a further oral examination (max. score 30) will contribute to the final assessment, by averaging written score and oral score.

“Distance” mode:

Preliminary assessment test (max. score 7), with threshold score of about 3 (it can change based on the difficulty level of the test) + written assessment (max. score 10) + oral assessment (max. score 15). For being admitted to the oral examination, the student must have min. score 5 (preliminary test + written assessment). The final score is given by test + written + oral + flipped classroom.

ASSESSMENT METHODS

For the oral examinations (including flipped classroom interventions), the assessment will be based on:

-) communication skills

-) knowledge and comprehension of the subject topics

-) ability of drawing connections among ideas

For the written examinations, the assessment will be based on:

-) ability of analyzing circuits, by correctly writing topological equations and descriptive equations

-) ability of deciding what subset of tools can be (or must be) used to solve a given circuit problem (i.e., of using information in partially new situations) and of justifying each decision

Exam schedule

Data appello Orario Luogo Degree type Note
07/01/2022 09:00 GENOVA Scritto
20/01/2022 09:00 GENOVA Orale
02/02/2022 09:00 GENOVA Scritto
11/02/2022 09:00 GENOVA Orale
17/06/2022 09:00 GENOVA Scritto
27/06/2022 09:00 GENOVA Orale
12/07/2022 09:00 GENOVA Scritto
20/07/2022 09:00 GENOVA Orale
07/09/2022 09:00 GENOVA Scritto
12/09/2022 09:00 GENOVA Orale