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R22B.tech.CSECourseStructureSyllabus2 Part 1

The document outlines the syllabus for B.Tech. CSE at JNTU Hyderabad, covering various subjects including programming, electrical engineering, engineering graphics, computer science fundamentals, chemistry laboratory, and problem-solving in programming. Each subject includes course objectives, outcomes, and detailed unit-wise topics along with recommended textbooks and reference materials. The curriculum emphasizes practical skills, theoretical knowledge, and the application of concepts in engineering disciplines.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views

R22B.tech.CSECourseStructureSyllabus2 Part 1

The document outlines the syllabus for B.Tech. CSE at JNTU Hyderabad, covering various subjects including programming, electrical engineering, engineering graphics, computer science fundamentals, chemistry laboratory, and problem-solving in programming. Each subject includes course objectives, outcomes, and detailed unit-wise topics along with recommended textbooks and reference materials. The curriculum emphasizes practical skills, theoretical knowledge, and the application of concepts in engineering disciplines.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 11

R22 B.Tech.

CSE Syllabus JNTU Hyderabad

Recursion: Simple programs, such as Finding Factorial, Fibonacci series etc., Limitations of Recursive
functions Dynamic memory allocation: Allocating and freeing memory, Allocating memory for arrays of
different data types

UNIT - V: Searching and Sorting:


Basic searching in an array of elements (linear and binary search techniques), Basic algorithms to sort
array of elements (Bubble, Insertion and Selection sort algorithms), Basic concept of order of complexity
through the example programs

TEXT BOOKS:
1. Jeri R. Hanly and Elliot B.Koffman, Problem solving and Program Design in C 7th Edition,
Pearson
2. B.A. Forouzan and R.F. Gilberg C Programming and Data Structures, Cengage Learning, (3rd
Edition)

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Brian W. Kernighan and Dennis M. Ritchie, The C Programming Language, Prentice Hall of
India
2. E. Balagurusamy, Computer fundamentals and C, 2nd Edition, McGraw-Hill
3. Yashavant Kanetkar, Let Us C, 18th Edition, BPB
4. R.G. Dromey, How to solve it by Computer, Pearson (16th Impression)
5. Programming in C, Stephen G. Kochan, Fourth Edition, Pearson Education.
6. Herbert Schildt, C: The Complete Reference, Mc Graw Hill, 4th Edition
7. Byron Gottfried, Schaum’s Outline of Programming with C, McGraw-Hill

Page 10 of 154
R22 B.Tech. CSE Syllabus JNTU Hyderabad

EE104ES: BASIC ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING

B.Tech. I Year I Sem. L T P C


2 0 0 2
Prerequisites: Mathematics
Course Objectives:
 To understand DC and Single & Three phase AC circuits
 To study and understand the different types of DC, AC machines and Transformers.
 To import the knowledge of various electrical installations and the concept of power, power
factor and its improvement.

Course Outcomes: After learning the contents of this paper the student must be able to
 Understand and analyze basic Electrical circuits
 Study the working principles of Electrical Machines and Transformers
 Introduce components of Low Voltage Electrical Installations.

Course Program Outcomes


Objectives
PO1 PO2 PO3 PO4 PO5 PO6 PO7 PO8 PO9 PO10 PO11 PO12
To understand 3 2 1 2 0 0 1 2 0 1 2
DC and Single &
Three phase AC
circuits.
To study and 3 2 1 1 3 0 0 0 2 0 1 1
understand the
different types of
DC, AC machines
and
Transformers.
To import the 3 2 0 3 0 0 0 1 2 1 1
knowledge of
various electrical
installations and
the concept of
power, power
factor and its
improvement.

Course Program Outcomes


Outcomes
PO2 PO3 PO4 PO5 PO6 PO7 PO8 PO9 PO10 PO11 PO12
PO1
Understand and 3 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 2 2
analyse basic
Electrical circuits
Study the working 3 2 1 0 3 1 0 1 1 2 1 2
principles of
Electrical
Machines and
Transformers
Introduce 3 2 1 1 3 2 0 0 1 0 2 2
components of
Low Voltage
Electrical
Installations.

Page 11 of 154
R22 B.Tech. CSE Syllabus JNTU Hyderabad

UNIT-I:
D.C. Circuits: Electrical circuit elements (R, L and C), voltage and current sources, KVL&KCL, analysis
of simple circuits with dc excitation. Superposition, Thevenin and Norton Theorems. Time-domain
analysis of first-order RL and RC circuits.

UNIT-II:
A.C. Circuits: Representation of sinusoidal waveforms, peak and rms values, phasor representation,
real power, reactive power, apparent power, power factor, Analysis of single-phase ac circuits
consisting of R, L, C, RL, RC, RLC combinations (series and parallel), resonance in series R-L-C circuit.
Three-phase balanced circuits, voltage and current relations in star and delta connections.

UNIT-III:
Transformers: Ideal and practical transformer, equivalent circuit, losses in transformers, regulation and
efficiency. Auto-transformer and three-phase transformer connections.

UNIT-IV:
Electrical Machines: Construction and working principle of dc machine, performance characteristics
of dc shunt machine. Generation of rotating magnetic field, Construction and working of a three-phase
induction motor, Significance of torque-slip characteristics. Single-phase induction motor, Construction
and working. Construction and working of synchronous generator.

UNIT-V:
Electrical Installations: Components of LT Switchgear: Switch Fuse Unit (SFU), MCB, ELCB, MCCB,
Types of Wires and Cables, Earthing. Types of Batteries, Important Characteristics for Batteries.
Elementary calculations for energy consumption, power factor improvement and battery backup.

TEXT BOOKS:
1. D.P. Kothari and I. J. Nagrath, “Basic Electrical Engineering”, Tata McGraw Hill, 4 th Edition,
2019.
2. MS Naidu and S Kamakshaiah, “Basic Electrical Engineering”, Tata McGraw Hill, 2nd Edition,
2008.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. P. Ramana, M. Suryakalavathi, G.T. Chandrasheker, “Basic Electrical Engineering”, S. Chand,
2nd Edition, 2019.
2. D. C. Kulshreshtha, “Basic Electrical Engineering”, McGraw Hill, 2009
3. M. S. Sukhija, T. K. Nagsarkar, “Basic Electrical and Electronics Engineering”, Oxford, 1st
Edition, 2012.
4. Abhijit Chakrabarthi, Sudipta Debnath, Chandan Kumar Chanda, “Basic Electrical
Engineering”, 2nd Edition, McGraw Hill, 2021.
5. L. S. Bobrow, “Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering”, Oxford University Press, 2011.
6. E. Hughes, “Electrical and Electronics Technology”, Pearson, 2010.
7. V. D. Toro, “Electrical Engineering Fundamentals”, Prentice Hall India, 1989

Page 12 of 154
R22 B.Tech. CSE Syllabus JNTU Hyderabad

ME105ES: COMPUTER AIDED ENGINEERING GRAPHICS

B.Tech. I Year I Sem. L T P C


1 0 4 3
Course Objectives:
 To develop the ability of visualization of different objects through technical drawings
 To acquire computer drafting skill for communication of concepts, ideas in the design of
engineering products

Course Outcomes: At the end of the course, the student will be able to:
 Apply computer aided drafting tools to create 2D and 3D objects
 sketch conics and different types of solids
 Appreciate the need of Sectional views of solids and Development of surfaces of solids
 Read and interpret engineering drawings
 Conversion of orthographic projection into isometric view and vice versa manually and by using
computer aided drafting

UNIT – I:
Introduction to Engineering Graphics: Principles of Engineering Graphics and their Significance,
Scales – Plain & Diagonal, Conic Sections including the Rectangular Hyperbola – General method only.
Cycloid, Epicycloid and Hypocycloid, Introduction to Computer aided drafting – views, commands and
conics

UNIT- II:
Orthographic Projections: Principles of Orthographic Projections – Conventions – Projections of
Points and Lines, Projections of Plane regular geometric figures. Auxiliary Planes. Computer aided
orthographic projections – points, lines and planes

UNIT – III:
Projections of Regular Solids – Auxiliary Views - Sections or Sectional views of Right Regular Solids –
Prism, Cylinder, Pyramid, Cone – Auxiliary views, Computer aided projections of solids – sectional
views

UNIT – IV:
Development of Surfaces of Right Regular Solids – Prism, Cylinder, Pyramid and Cone, Development
of surfaces using computer aided drafting

UNIT – V:
Isometric Projections: Principles of Isometric Projection – Isometric Scale – Isometric Views –
Conventions – Isometric Views of Lines, Plane Figures, Simple and Compound Solids – Isometric
Projection of objects having non- isometric lines. Isometric Projection of Spherical Parts. Conversion of
Isometric Views to Orthographic Views and Vice-versa –Conventions. Conversion of orthographic
projection into isometric view using computer aided drafting.

TEXT BOOKS:
1. Engineering Drawing N.D. Bhatt / Charotar
2. Engineering Drawing and graphics Using AutoCAD Third Edition, T. Jeyapoovan, Vikas: S.
Chand and company Ltd.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Engineering Drawing, Basant Agrawal and C M Agrawal, Third Edition McGraw Hill
2. Engineering Graphics and Design, WILEY, Edition 2020
3. Engineering Drawing, M. B. Shah, B.C. Rane / Pearson.
4. Engineering Drawing, N. S. Parthasarathy and Vela Murali, Oxford
5. Computer Aided Engineering Drawing – K Balaveera Reddy et al – CBS Publishers
Note: - External examination is conducted in conventional mode and internal evaluation to be done by
both conventional as well as using computer aided drafting.

Page 13 of 154
R22 B.Tech. CSE Syllabus JNTU Hyderabad

CS106ES: ELEMENTS OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

B.Tech. I Year I Sem. L T P C


0 0 2 1
Course Objective: To provide an overview of the subjects of computer science and engineering.

Course Outcomes:
1. Know the working principles of functional units of a basic Computer
2. Understand program development, the use of data structures and algorithms in problem
solving.
3. Know the need and types of operating system, database systems.
4. Understand the significance of networks, internet, WWW and cyber security.
5. Understand Autonomous systems, the application of artificial intelligence.

UNIT – I
Basics of a Computer – Hardware, Software, Generations of computers. Hardware - functional units,
Components of CPU, Memory – hierarchy, types of memory, Input and output devices. Software –
systems software, application software, packages, frameworks, IDEs.

UNIT – II
Software development – waterfall model, Agile, Types of computer languages – Programming,
markup, scripting Program Development – steps in program development, flowcharts, algorithms, data
structures – definition, types of data structures

UNIT – III
Operating systems: Functions of operating systems, types of operating systems, Device & Resource
management
Database Management Systems: Data models, RDBMS, SQL, Database Transactions, data centers,
cloud services

UNIT – IV
Computer Networks: Advantages of computer networks, LAN, WAN, MAN, internet, WiFi, sensor
networks, vehicular networks, 5G communication.
World Wide Web – Basics, role of HTML, CSS, XML, Tools for web designing, Social media, Online
social networks.
Security – information security, cyber security, cyber laws

UNIT – V
Autonomous Systems: IoT, Robotics, Drones, Artificial Intelligence – Learning, Game Development,
natural language processing, image and video processing.
Cloud Basics

TEXT BOOK:
1. Invitation to Computer Science, G. Michael Schneider, Macalester College, Judith L. Gersting
University of Hawaii, Hilo, Contributing author: Keith Miller University of Illinois, Springfield.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Fundamentals of Computers, Reema Thareja, Oxford Higher Education, Oxford University Press.
2. Introduction to computers, Peter Norton, 8th Edition, Tata McGraw Hill.
3. Computer Fundamentals, Anita Goel, Pearson Education India, 2010.
4. Elements of computer science, Cengage.

Page 14 of 154
R22 B.Tech. CSE Syllabus JNTU Hyderabad

CH107BS: ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY LABORATORY


B.Tech. I Year I Sem. L T P C
0 0 2 1
Course Objectives: The course consists of experiments related to the principles of chemistry required
for engineering student. The student will learn:
 Estimation of hardness of water to check its suitability for drinking purpose.
 Students are able to perform estimations of acids and bases using conductometry,
potentiometry and pH metry methods.
 Students will learn to prepare polymers such as Bakelite and nylon-6 in the laboratory.
 Students will learn skills related to the lubricant properties such as saponification value, surface
tension and viscosity of oils.

Course Outcomes: The experiments will make the student gain skills on:
 Determination of parameters like hardness of water and rate of corrosion of mild steel in various
conditions.
 Able to perform methods such as conductometry, potentiometry and pH metry in order to find
out the concentrations or equivalence points of acids and bases.
 Students are able to prepare polymers like bakelite and nylon-6.
 Estimations saponification value, surface tension and viscosity of lubricant oils.

List of Experiments:
I. Volumetric Analysis: Estimation of Hardness of water by EDTA Complexometry method.
II. Conductometry: Estimation of the concentration of an acid by Conductometry.
III. Potentiometry: Estimation of the amount of Fe+2 by Potentiomentry.
IV. pH Metry: Determination of an acid concentration using pH meter.
V. Preparations:
1. Preparation of Bakelite.
2. Preparation Nylon – 6.
VI. Lubricants:
1. Estimation of acid value of given lubricant oil.
2. Estimation of Viscosity of lubricant oil using Ostwald’s Viscometer.
VII. Corrosion: Determination of rate of corrosion of mild steel in the presence and absence of inhibitor.
VIII. Virtual lab experiments
1. Construction of Fuel cell and its working.
2. Smart materials for Biomedical applications
3. Batteries for electrical vehicles.
4. Functioning of solar cell and its applications.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Lab manual for Engineering chemistry by B. Ramadevi and P. Aparna, S Chand Publications,
New Delhi (2022)
2. Vogel’s text book of practical organic chemistry 5th edition
3. Inorganic Quantitative analysis by A.I. Vogel, ELBS Publications.
4. College Practical Chemistry by V.K. Ahluwalia, Narosa Publications Ltd. New Delhi (2007).

Page 15 of 154
R22 B.Tech. CSE Syllabus JNTU Hyderabad

CS108ES: PROGRAMMING FOR PROBLEM SOLVING LABORATORY

B.Tech. I Year I Sem. L T P C


0 0 2 1
[Note:The programs may be executed using any available Open Source/ Freely available IDE
Some of the Tools available are:
CodeLite: https://codelite.org/
Code:Blocks: http://www.codeblocks.org/
DevCpp : http://www.bloodshed.net/devcpp.html
Eclipse: http://www.eclipse.org
This list is not exhaustive and is NOT in any order of preference]

Course Objectives: The students will learn the following:


● To work with an IDE to create, edit, compile, run and debug programs
● To analyze the various steps in program development.
● To develop programs to solve basic problems by understanding basic concepts in C like
operators, control statements etc.
● To develop modular, reusable and readable C Programs using the concepts like functions,
arrays etc.
● To Write programs using the Dynamic Memory Allocation concept.
● To create, read from and write to text and binary files

Course Outcomes: The candidate is expected to be able to:


● formulate the algorithms for simple problems
● translate given algorithms to a working and correct program
● correct syntax errors as reported by the compilers
● identify and correct logical errors encountered during execution
● represent and manipulate data with arrays, strings and structures
● use pointers of different types
● create, read and write to and from simple text and binary files
● modularize the code with functions so that they can be reused

Practice sessions:
a. Write a simple program that prints the results of all the operators available in C (including pre/
post increment , bitwise and/or/not , etc.). Read required operand values from standard input.
b. Write a simple program that converts one given data type to another using auto conversion and
casting. Take the values from standard input.

Simple numeric problems:


a. Write a program for finding the max and min from the three numbers.
b. Write the program for the simple, compound interest.
c. Write a program that declares Class awarded for a given percentage of marks, where mark
<40%= Failed, 40% to <60% = Second class, 60% to <70%=First class, >= 70% = Distinction.
Read percentage from standard input.
d. Write a program that prints a multiplication table for a given number and the number of rows in
the table. For example, for a number 5 and rows = 3, the output should be:
e. 5 x 1 = 5
f. 5 x 2 = 10
g. 5 x 3 = 15
h. Write a program that shows the binary equivalent of a given positive number between 0 to 255.

Page 16 of 154
R22 B.Tech. CSE Syllabus JNTU Hyderabad

Expression Evaluation:
a. A building has 10 floors with a floor height of 3 meters each. A ball is dropped from the top of
the building. Find the time taken by the ball to reach each floor. (Use the formula s = ut+(1/2)at^2
where u and a are the initial velocity in m/sec (= 0) and acceleration in m/sec^2 (= 9.8 m/s^2)).
b. Write a C program, which takes two integer operands and one operator from the user, performs
the operation and then prints the result. (Consider the operators +,-,*, /, % and use Switch
Statement)
c. Write a program that finds if a given number is a prime number
d. Write a C program to find the sum of individual digits of a positive integer and test given number
is palindrome.
e. A Fibonacci sequence is defined as follows: the first and second terms in the sequence are 0
and 1. Subsequent terms are found by adding the preceding two terms in the sequence. Write
a C program to generate the first n terms of the sequence.
f. Write a C program to generate all the prime numbers between 1 and n, where n is a value
supplied by the user.
g. Write a C program to find the roots of a Quadratic equation.
h. Write a C program to calculate the following, where x is a fractional value.
i. 1-x/2 +x^2/4-x^3/6
j. Write a C program to read in two numbers, x and n, and then compute the sum of this geometric
progression: 1+x+x^2+x^3+………….+x^n. For example: if n is 3 and x is 5, then the program
computes 1+5+25+125.

Arrays, Pointers and Functions:


a. Write a C program to find the minimum, maximum and average in an array of integers.
b. Write a function to compute mean, variance, Standard Deviation, sorting of n elements in a
single dimension array.
c. Write a C program that uses functions to perform the following:
d. Addition of Two Matrices
e. Multiplication of Two Matrices
f. Transpose of a matrix with memory dynamically allocated for the new matrix as row and column
counts may not be the same.
g. Write C programs that use both recursive and non-recursive functions
h. To find the factorial of a given integer.
i. To find the GCD (greatest common divisor) of two given integers.
j. To find x^n
k. Write a program for reading elements using a pointer into an array and display the values using
the array.
l. Write a program for display values reverse order from an array using a pointer.
m. Write a program through a pointer variable to sum of n elements from an array.

Files:
a. Write a C program to display the contents of a file to standard output device.
b. Write a C program which copies one file to another, replacing all lowercase characters with
their uppercase equivalents.
c. Write a C program to count the number of times a character occurs in a text file. The file name
and the character are supplied as command line arguments.
d. Write a C program that does the following:
It should first create a binary file and store 10 integers, where the file name and 10 values are
given in the command line. (hint: convert the strings using atoi function)
Now the program asks for an index and a value from the user and the value at that index should
be changed to the new value in the file. (hint: use fseek function)
The program should then read all 10 values and print them back.

Page 17 of 154
R22 B.Tech. CSE Syllabus JNTU Hyderabad

e. Write a C program to merge two files into a third file (i.e., the contents of the first file followed
by those of the second are put in the third file).

Strings:
a. Write a C program to convert a Roman numeral ranging from I to L to its decimal equivalent.
b. Write a C program that converts a number ranging from 1 to 50 to Roman equivalent
c. Write a C program that uses functions to perform the following operations:
d. To insert a sub-string into a given main string from a given position.
e. To delete n Characters from a given position in a given string.
f. Write a C program to determine if the given string is a palindrome or not (Spelled same in both
directions with or without a meaning like madam, civic, noon, abcba, etc.)
g. Write a C program that displays the position of a character ch in the string S or – 1 if S doesn‘t
contain ch.
h. Write a C program to count the lines, words and characters in a given text.

Miscellaneous:
a. Write a menu driven C program that allows a user to enter n numbers and then choose between
finding the smallest, largest, sum, or average. The menu and all the choices are to be functions.
Use a switch statement to determine what action to take. Display an error message if an invalid
choice is entered.

b. Write a C program to construct a pyramid of numbers as follows:


1 * 1 1 *
12 ** 23 22 **
123 *** 456 333 ***
4444 **
*
Sorting and Searching:
a. Write a C program that uses non recursive function to search for a Key value in a given
b. list of integers using linear search method.
c. Write a C program that uses non recursive function to search for a Key value in a given
d. sorted list of integers using binary search method.
e. Write a C program that implements the Bubble sort method to sort a given list of
f. integers in ascending order.
g. Write a C program that sorts the given array of integers using selection sort in descending order
h. Write a C program that sorts the given array of integers using insertion sort in ascending order
i. Write a C program that sorts a given array of names

TEXT BOOKS:
1. Jeri R. Hanly and Elliot B.Koffman, Problem solving and Program Design in C 7th Edition,
Pearson
2. B.A. Forouzan and R.F. Gilberg C Programming and Data Structures, Cengage Learning, (3rd
Edition)

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Brian W. Kernighan and Dennis M. Ritchie, The C Programming Language, PHI
2. E. Balagurusamy, Computer fundamentals and C, 2nd Edition, McGraw-Hill
3. Yashavant Kanetkar, Let Us C, 18th Edition, BPB
4. R.G. Dromey, How to solve it by Computer, Pearson (16th Impression)
5. Programming in C, Stephen G. Kochan, Fourth Edition, Pearson Education.
6. Herbert Schildt, C: The Complete Reference, Mc Graw Hill, 4th Edition
7. Byron Gottfried, Schaum’s Outline of Programming with C, McGraw-Hill

Page 18 of 154
R22 B.Tech. CSE Syllabus JNTU Hyderabad

EE109ES: BASIC ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING LABORATORY

B.Tech. I Year I Sem. L T P C


0 0 2 1
Prerequisites: Basic Electrical Engineering
Course Objectives:
 To measure the electrical parameters for different types of DC and AC circuits using
conventional and theorems approach.
 To study the transient response of various R, L and C circuits using different excitations.
 To determine the performance of different types of DC, AC machines and Transformers.

Course Outcomes: After learning the contents of this paper the student must be able to
 Verify the basic Electrical circuits through different experiments.
 Evaluate the performance calculations of Electrical Machines and Transformers through
various testing methods.
 Analyze the transient responses of R, L and C circuits for different input conditions.

Course Objectives Program Outcomes


PO1 PO2 PO3 PO4 PO5 PO6 PO7 PO8 PO9 PO10 PO11 PO12
To measure the 3 2 1 2 0 0 1 2 0 1 2
electrical
parameters for
different types of
DC and AC circuits
using conventional
and theorems
approach
To study the 3 2 1 1 3 0 0 0 2 0 1 1
transient response
of various R, L and
C circuits using
different excitations
To determine the 3 2 0 3 0 0 0 1 2 1 1
performance of
different types of
DC, AC machines
and Transformers

Course Outcomes Program Outcomes


PO1 PO2 PO3 PO4 PO5 PO6 PO7 PO8 PO9 PO10 PO11 PO12
Verify the basic 3 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 2 2
Electrical circuits
through different
experiments
Evaluate the 3 2 1 0 3 1 0 1 1 2 1 2
performance
calculations of
Electrical Machines
and Transformers
through various
testing methods

Page 19 of 154
R22 B.Tech. CSE Syllabus JNTU Hyderabad

Analyse the 3 2 1 1 3 2 0 0 1 0 2 2
transient
responses of R, L
and C circuits for
different input
conditions

List of experiments/demonstrations:
PART- A (compulsory)
1. Verification of KVL and KCL
2. Verification of Thevenin’s and Norton’s theorem
3. Transient Response of Series RL and RC circuits for DC excitation
4. Resonance in series RLC circuit
5. Calculations and Verification of Impedance and Current of RL, RC and RLC series
circuits
6. Measurement of Voltage, Current and Real Power in primary and Secondary Circuits of a
Single-Phase Transformer
7. Performance Characteristics of a DC Shunt Motor
8. Torque-Speed Characteristics of a Three-phase Induction Motor.

PART-B (any two experiments from the given list)


1. Verification of Superposition theorem.
2. Three Phase Transformer: Verification of Relationship between Voltages and Currents
(Star-Delta, Delta-Delta, Delta-star, Star-Star)
3. Load Test on Single Phase Transformer (Calculate Efficiency and Regulation)
4. Measurement of Active and Reactive Power in a balanced Three-phase circuit
5. No-Load Characteristics of a Three-phase Alternator

TEXT BOOKS:
1. D.P. Kothari and I. J. Nagrath, “Basic Electrical Engineering”, Tata McGraw Hill, 4th Edition,
2019.
2. MS Naidu and S Kamakshaiah, “Basic Electrical Engineering”, Tata McGraw Hill, 2nd Edition,
2008.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. P. Ramana, M. Suryakalavathi, G.T.Chandrasheker,”Basic Electrical Engineering”, S. Chand,
2nd Edition, 2019.
2. D. C. Kulshreshtha, “Basic Electrical Engineering”, McGraw Hill, 2009
3. M. S. Sukhija, T. K. Nagsarkar, “Basic Electrical and Electronics Engineering”, Oxford, 1st
Edition, 2012.
4. Abhijit Chakrabarthi, Sudipta Debnath, Chandan Kumar Chanda, “Basic Electrical
Engineering”, 2nd Edition, McGraw Hill, 2021.
5. L. S. Bobrow, “Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering”, Oxford University Press, 2011.
6. E. Hughes, “Electrical and Electronics Technology”, Pearson, 2010.
7. V. D. Toro, “Electrical Engineering Fundamentals”, Prentice Hall India, 1989.

Page 20 of 154

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