Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Undergraduate-New Brunswick
 
About the University
Undergraduate Education in New Brunswick
Programs of Study and Courses for Liberal Arts Students
School of Arts and Sciences
School of Environmental and Biological Sciences
Mason Gross School of the Arts
Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy
Rutgers Business School: Undergraduate-New Brunswick
School of Communication and Information
School of Engineering
General Information
Fields of Study
Facilities
Bioenvironmental Engineering
Biomedical Engineering
Chemical and Biochemical Engineering
Civil and Environmental Engineering
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Industrial and Systems Engineering
Materials Science and Engineering
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Computers
Libraries
Academic Policies and Procedures
Degree Requirements
Programs of Study
Four-Year Engineering Curricula
Five-Year Engineering Curricula
Transfer Program with Camden and Newark
Other Academic Programs
Course Listing
Administration and Faculty
Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy
School of Management and Labor Relations
General Information
Divisions of the University
Camden Newark New Brunswick/Piscataway
Catalogs
New Brunswick Undergraduate Catalog 2013–2015 School of Engineering Facilities Electrical and Computer Engineering  

Electrical and Computer Engineering


Departmental Computer Facilities.  The Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering has two general purpose computer labs available at all times to students studying electrical and computer engineering. The EE103 and EE105 computer labs have 25 Sun Unix workstations and 25 PCs with network printers. PC-based software includes PSpice for drawing schematic diagrams and electronic circuit simulation and analysis, Matlab for mathematical programming, Visual C++ and Java for computer programming, and Microsoft Office for writing lab reports and research papers. Unix-based software includes the full suite of software packages from Cadence Design Systems and Synopsys. Using these software packages, students are taught the design, simulation, and testing of VLSI (Very Large Scale Integrated) integrated circuit devices. More specialized instructional labs associated with the digital signal processing (DSP), virtual reality, and computer architecture classes also have dedicated computer lab rooms. A dedicated VLSI computer lab also supports our instruction in VLSI design.

Communication Systems Laboratory.  This laboratory contains equipment for the study of analog, pulse, and digital modulation methods. Facilities include multimeters, wideband signal generators, oscilloscopes, and spectrum analyzers. The range of topics involve communication circuit and system design, using breadboarded components through the sophisticated subsystem module interconnection. In addition, computer simulation methods are used to verify system performance. A graphics-based communication systems simulator software package is available. System performance can be investigated for amplitude, phase, and frequency modulation techniques, including pulse position, width, and amplitude data transmission schemes; binary and M-ary digital modulation and receiver structures; and spectral occupancy versus power constraints.

Computer Architecture Laboratory.  This laboratory consists of experimental stations that provide students with opportunities to gain experience with the internal workings of a microcomputer, learn assembly programming for a standard commercial microprocessor, and learn how to interface input/output memory, serial I/O, and parallel I/O chips to a standard microprocessor.

Digital Logic Design Laboratory.  This laboratory provides practical experience with the design and hardware implementation of digital circuits for sophomore students. The laboratory is based on the understanding of basic waveforms to simulate and debug a circuit that is then implemented in hardware using SSI and MSI ICs. The experiments cover all the relevant topics about combinational and sequential logic with circuits of increasing complexity.

Digital Signal Processing Laboratory.  This laboratory is available for undergraduate instruction and special projects. Microprocessor-based workstations provide flexibility in the design and analysis of various real-time digital filtering operations. Experiments in speech and audio signal processing demonstrate digital methods used in processing analog signals. Other facilities include a digital image-processing laboratory and a variety of special-purpose signal processors.

Electronics Laboratory.  This laboratory contains equipment for the study of solid-state devices and circuits. Experiments involve studies of biasing and low-frequency operations of discrete solid-state devices, frequency response, and the effect of feedback on single- and multistage BJT and MOSFET amplifiers. Further studies include OP-AMP parameters, frequency response, and OP-AMP linear and nonlinear circuits and systems. The laboratory is well equipped for a range of student projects in electronic circuit designs.

Microelectronics Research Laboratory (MERL).  MERL provides students an opportunity to familiarize themselves with the integrated circuit fabrication and semiconductor device processing techniques in a modern, clean-room environment. Students become familiar with the photolithography, oxidation, and diffusion processes, ion implantation, metallization, plasma etching, silicon micromachining, interconnects, and fabrication of different devices. In addition, a well-equipped simulation laboratory is used for the modeling of circuits, devices, and processes related to the experimental and theoretical aspects of semiconductor technology.

Power Electronics Laboratory.  This laboratory provides opportunities for students to gain hands-on experiences with devices and circuits used in power electronics applications. Students become familiar with the practical aspect of various topics including modern power semiconductor devices, power inductor design, thermal management methods, power rectification, and DC/DC converter design.

Solid-State Electronics Laboratory.  In addition to the facilities provided by the microelectronics research laboratory (MERL), facilities exist for the study of microwave devices; high-current switching devices; electro-optical modulation; heterojunction lasers; and electrical characterization of materials, as well as their use in communications, different solar cells, and related devices.

The Applied Software Systems Laboratory (TASSL).  The primary focus of the research and education program at TASSL is the development of conceptual and implementation models based on the theoretical foundations of high-performance (parallel) computing, distributed systems, and networking for solving real-world problems in science and engineering on very large distributed systems (e.g., pervasive information and computational grid). Research includes the design, development, and deployment of data-structures, algorithms, programming systems, runtime environments, and software infrastructures. Broad research areas include pervasive computational ecosystems and information/data-driven science, autonomic grid computing, decentralized content-based middleware, adaptive/asynchronous computation engines, interactive computational collaboratories, proactive and reactive runtime systems, and software engineering for computational infrastructures and scientific computing. A number of applications domains include subsurface and seismic modeling, computational fluid dynamics, numerical relativity, fusion, plasma physics, structural biology, bio- and medical informatics, and computational finance.

Virtual Reality Laboratory.  This laboratory provides facilities for students to gain hands-on experience with several virtual reality (VR) specific interfaces, such as stereo glasses, 3-D trackers, force feedback joysticks, and sensing gloves. It also trains students in the intricacies of 3-D graphics and authoring real-time simulation programming.

VLSI Design Laboratory.  This laboratory consists of Sun and Hewlett-Packard engineering workstations, a color plotter, automatic test equipment for VLSI chip testing, and a laser printer. Students are able to design integrated circuits and in some cases may be able to have them fabricated and tested. The laboratory has the Generator Development Tool industrial chip design software that supports silicon compilation mixed-level circuit simulation (including SPICE), automatic chip layout generation from circuit schematics, and the VHDL hardware description language.

In addition to the above-mentioned laboratories, students interested in special projects in electrical and computer engineering may take advantage of the many well-equipped, faculty-supervised research laboratories, available in such specialties as robotics, computer graphics, computer database design, speech processing, image processing, machine vision, and software engineering.

Wireless Information Network Laboratory (WINLAB).  WINLAB is an industry-university collaborative research center that provides facilities for undergraduate and graduate research in the area of wireless communications and networking. Experimental resources at WINLAB include the RF/Modem Lab, Mobile Networking Lab, and Wireless System-on-chip lab, covering a range of hardware and software design/prototyping. Current lab equipment includes radio propagation measurement tools, a DSP/FPGA software radio setup, and the NSF-sponsored open architecture wireless network testbed (ORBIT). The center supports undergraduate research on topics such as radio propagation studies, modem signal processing, wireless local area networks, and mobile computing applications.

 
For additional information, contact RU-info at 732-445-info (4636) or colonel.henry@rutgers.edu.
Comments and corrections to: Campus Information Services.

© 2013 Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. All rights reserved.