Paper ID #12799An Inexpensive Curve Tracer for Introductory Electronics Laboratory CoursesDr. David M. Beams, University of Texas, Tyler Dr. David Beams first became interested in electrical engineering through a passion for amateur radio in high school. He earned BSEE and MS degrees from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1974 and 1977, respectively, with two years of industrial experience separating the two. He then spent over fourteen additional years in industry before returning to graduate study, receiving the PhD from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1997. In 1997, he became one of the founding
Paper ID #13903The ”Minty Boost R ” as an Exciting Laboratory Experience in Learning PowerElectronics and InstrumentationDr. Herbert L. Hess, University of Idaho, Moscow Herb Hess is Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of Idaho, where he teaches subjects in He received the PhD Degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1993. His research and teaching interests are in power electronics, electric machines and drives, electrical power systems, and analog/mixed signal electronics. He has taught senior capstone design since 1985 at several universities
Paper ID #11868Simultaneous Tracking and Reconstruction of Objects and its Application inEducational Robotics LaboratoriesMr. Mingshao Zhang, Stevens Institute of Technology Mingshao Zhang is currently a Ph.D. student in Mechanical Engineering Department, Stevens Institute of Technology. Before joining Stevens, he received bachelor’s degrees from University of Science and Tech- nology of China. His Current research interests include Microsoft Kinect, Computer Vision, Educational Laboratories, Desktop Virtual Reality and etc.Mr. Zhou Zhang, Stevens Institute of Technology Ph.D Candidate, Mechanical Engineering Department
Paper ID #12906A Hardware Enclosure to Increase Access to, and Reliability of, Data Acqui-sition Hardware while Enhancing the Student Laboratory ExperienceDr. Ventzislav Karaivanov, Colorado School of Mines • Ventzi Karaivanov, Teaching Associate Professor, PhD, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Col- orado School of Mines. Education • PhD – Mechanical Engineering, Swanson School of Engineering at University of Pittsburgh, 2009. ”Life prediction modeling of thermal barrier coated turbine airfoils” Teaching and Professional societies • Teaching Interests: Mechanics of Materials, Computer Aided En- gineering, Dynamics
, Instrumentation, software development, and automation design. Page 26.271.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2015Automated Bode-Magnitude and Bode-Phase Frequency Response Testing ofAnalog Systems and Electronic Circuits Using Standard USB interfaced Test Instruments AbstractThis paper describes the design, operation and use of a PC controlled automated frequencyresponse measurement system using the standard USB-interface-enabled bench-top testinstruments which are now available in most undergraduate electronics laboratories
for a greater diversity oftraining setups to be utilized in a smaller area.IntroductionIn order to effectively teach instrumentation, mechatronic and robotic courses in an Engineeringor Engineering Technology curriculum, a variety of electromechanical laboratory setups aredesirable. [1] Exposing students to an assortment of technologies is also desirable, to give themas broad an experience as is reasonable. Thus, setups containing different sensors, effectors andactuators and indicators are needed. Quite often, the cost of such laboratory setups (or trainers) ishigh, thereby challenging the desire to have numerous full setups.To broaden the students’ programming capabilities, many programs teach such courses acrossboth microcontroller and
Paper ID #12737Towards an Intuitive and Remotely Accessible Control System for Commer-cial NanomanipulatorsMr. Ryan Michael Dunn, Rochester Institute of Technology Ryan M. Dunn is a graduate student at the Rochester Institute of Technology. His research interests include micro- and nanomanipulator control systems and interdisciplinary control development. He holds a B.S. in mechanical engineering from the Rochester Institute of Technology.Dr. Michael G. Schrlau, Rochester Institute of Technology Dr. Schrlau joined the Department of Mechanical Engineering at RIT in 2011 and directs the Nano-Bio Interface Laboratory (NBIL
Paper ID #11218PROGRAMMING A SIX AXIS MOTOMAN HP3C ROBOT FOR INDUS-TRIAL SORTING APPLICATIONMr. Hamza Kadir, Purdue University Calumet (College of Technology) Alumni Hamza Kadir, M.Sc., currently works as a Controls Engineer in the Packaging Machinery OEM indus- try. He completed his Masters from Purdue University Calumet, majoring in Mechatronics Engineering Technology. He conducted his M.Sc. Directed Project at the Nick and Nancy Wilson Mechatronics En- gineering Technology Laboratory. This project involves integration of modern automation tools for an intelligent part sorting system. He has previously worked with use of
separated for convenience ratherthan some requirement of mechanics. Constitutive stress-strain relationships can be skillfullyapplied in a numerical model developed using the finite element method or finite differencemethod to reasonably predict the behavior of soil and soil-structure interaction1; however, astudent needs to believe what they are seeing is “true” in order for the teaching tool to beeffective. Soil behavior previously observed in the field or in the laboratory can be expressed in avariety of ways including charts, as shown in Figure 1, and photographs, as shown in Figure 2.These ways of illustrating soil behavior can help student appraise the reasonableness of theories
system was designed via collaboration with the FederalAviation Administration (FAA) Oklahoma Communications Engineering Team (OKCET)Laboratory and has found an immediate application as a large-scale switching system. Thefundamental hardware unit for this system is the National Instruments (NI) PXI chassis with a NISwitchBlock populated with matrix relay cards. The chassis can be deployed in any location,contributing to the robust nature of the design. The advantage of using an integrated NI system ismodularity; the hardware can be easily tailored to the specific needs of each end user. Expansionand customization is accomplished with the addition of a wide spectrum of matrix relay cards.Matrix cards are available with a varying number of relays
Society for 15 years at various capacities. He served as chair ofManufacturing Systems Development Applications Department (MSDAD) of IEEE/IAS. Currently, he isserving a two-year term as the chair of the Instrumentation of ASEE (American Society of EngineeringEducation). He authored over 29 refereed journal and conference publications. In 2009 he as PI receivedNSF-CCLI grant entitled A Mechatronics Curriculum and Packaging Automation Laboratory Facility. In2010 he as Co-PI received NSF-ATE grant entitled Meeting Workforce Needs for Mechatronics Tech-nicians. From 2003 through 2006, he was involved with Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, IL indeveloping direct computer control for hydrogen powered automotives. He is also involved in
or other active experiences may increaseretention of material by up to 90% [25]. Richard Felder and Linda Silverman recommend severalteaching techniques to address all learning styles, one of which is to provide demonstrations forstudents with sensing and visual learning styles and hands-on experiments for students with ac-tive learning styles [26]. According to Moore, there is a direct correlation between in-class per-formance, laboratory attendance, and performance [27]. In capstone related project, active Page 26.972.11learning can be achieved through a variety of activities that include lab and project experimentswith hands-on projects
Paper ID #13389UTILIZING THE EFFECT OF AIR SPEED TO IMPROVE AUTOMOBILEMOVING PERDORMANCEDr. Masoud Fathizadeh, Purdue University Calumet (College of Technology) Masoud Fathizadeh – PhD, PE Professor Fathizadeh has been with the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Technology Purdue University Calumet since 2001. He has worked over 15 years both for private industries and national research laboratories such as NASA, Argonne and Fermi National Laboratories. Dr. Fathizadeh has established his own consulting and engineering company in 1995 spe- cializing in power system, energy management and automation systems
and microcontrollers.In the LabVIEW programming portion of the course, students became familiar with developingcode to communicate with USB and RS232 connected devices. Students also developed userinterfaces for controlling serial communication and displaying information. The skills acquiredthrough these exercises were very useful for the Pitot-static probe project.PIC® microcontrollers manufactured by Microchip Technology were used for the embeddedprocessor part of the course. A custom trainer PCB for the 18F13k22 8-bit microcontroller wasused in the laboratory exercises to develop and debug C code. The free Integrated DesignEnvironment (IDE), MPLAB, and the C compiler, xc8, from Microchip Technology were usedfor all code development and
asignificant improvement in understanding of the theory and positive attitudes regarding the expe-rience.IntroductionOur university’s philosophy is that students learn best through a combination of lecture and labexperiences and industry feedback indicates that our undergraduates are unparalleled at hittingthe ground running and working with real world problems. While many have reported on theeffectiveness of including hands-on laboratory exercises to enhance learning [1], these labs areexpensive and there is pressure to eliminate them in the times of increasing budget pressure.This study suggests that the cost is justified because learning outcomes are significantly im-proved compared to a lecture only course.Mechanical Controls is a four unit