Revised Syllabus (Effective From 2022-23)
Revised Syllabus (Effective From 2022-23)
Design of Machine
2. ME303 3–1–2 3 100 25 50 175 05
Components
Page 1 of 72
Fluid Machines
L T P Credit
ME301 4 0 2 05
CO1 Illustrate selection and application of various hydraulic and steam turbines
CO2 Explain the working principles of hydraulic pumps, and predict performance curves
CO3 Describe the working principles of steam power cycles
CO4 Explain working principles of steam nozzle
CO5 Explore various steam condenser, and cooling towers
CO6 Describe basic principles of pumps, fans, blowers and compressors
2. Syllabus
FUNDAMENTALS OF FLUID MACHINES (04 Hours)
Classification of fluid machines, Impulse momentum principle, Basic equation of energy transfer
in a fluid machines.
3. Practicals:
1. Study of Modern Steam Power Plant.
2. Estimation of power output & efficiency of a steam turbine.
3. Study of condenser and cooling tower.
4. Impact of jet on vanes.
5. Performance test on gear pump.
6. Performance test on jet pump.
7. Performance test on centrifugal pump.
8. Study and performance of water turbines.
9. Study of compressors.
4. Books Recommended:
1. S. Domkundwar, C.P. Kothandaraman and A.V. Domkundwar, A Course in Thermal
Engineering, Dhanpat Rai and Co, 2018
2. J. Lal, Hydraulic Machines including Fluidics, Dhanpat Rai & Co, 2016.
3. S. K. Som, G. Biswas, S. Chakraborty, Introduction to Fluid Mechanics and Fluid
Machines, McGraw Hill, 2017
4. P.K. Nag, Power Plant Engineering, Tata McGraw Hill Publications, 2017
5. S.M.Yahya, Turbines, Compressors and Fans, Tata McGraw Hill, 2017.
Page 3 of 72
Design of Machine Components
L T P Credit
ME303 3 1 2 05
CO1 Apply design procedures to spur, helical, bevel and worm gear.
CO2 Design gear boxes for various industrial applications.
CO3 Design various types of mechanical brakes and clutches.
CO4 Design the journal and antifriction bearings.
CO5 Design belt drives, pulley, flywheel and power lifting devices
CO6 Apply the design concepts to miscelleneous machine components.
2. Syllabus
Page 4 of 72
3. Practicals:
4. Books Recommended:
Page 5 of 72
Machining Processes
L T P Credit
ME305 3 1 2 05
CO1 Describe and identify machining processes, tool material and geometry and mechanism
CO2 Select, describe
of machine toolsand perform turning and shaping operation using given cutting tools on
identified machine tool
CO3 Select, describe and perform drilling and milling operation using given cutting tools on
identified machine tool
CO4 Calculate machining time and allied characteristics for identified machining process
CO5 Select, describe and perform finishing of parts using standard tools
CO6 Calculate features and fabricate different types of gears using identified process
2. Syllabus
MECHANICS OF MACHINING (10 Hours)
Mechanism of chip formation, types of chips, chip breakers, Marchant circle diagram, cutting
forces and power, tool wear and tool life; machinability; economics of machining; cutting tool
materials; types of tools.
3. Practicals:
1. Machining Practices on lathe for step turning, taper turning, grooving, thread cutting operations.
2. Machining practices on shaping and drilling machine.
3. Machining practices on milling machine to cut spur or helical gear.
Page 6 of 72
4. Calculation of shear plane angle under different machining conditions.
5. Measurement of chip tool interface temperature under different machining conditions.
6. Grinding Practice of single point cutting tool and measure tool angles.
7. Demonstration of Capstan lathe.
8. Demonstration of EDM process.
4. Books Recommended:
1. H.M.T., Production Technology, Tata McGraw-Hill Education, 2004.
2. S. K. Hajra Choudhury, Element of Workshop Technology, Vol. 2, 14th Edition, Media
Promoters and publishers Pvt., 2010.
3. V. K. Jain, Advanced machining processes. Allied publishers, 2009.
4. A. B. Chattopadhyay, Machining and Machine Tools, 2nd Edition, John Wiley & Sons, 2017.
5. S. Kalpakjian, S. R. Schmid, Manufacturing Engineering and Technology, 7th Edition, Pearson,
2018
Page 7 of 72
Plastics and Ceramics L T P Credit
3 0 0 03
ME361
2. Syllabus
INTRODUCTION (06 Hours)
Classification of materials, history of plastic materials, comparison of plastics with other
engineering materials. Classification of plastics, thermoplastic, thermoset plastics, elastomers and
polymers. Polymer structures, polymerization, properties of polymers, additive methods to
modify polymers. National and International organizations dealing with plastic materials.
Page 8 of 72
PROCESSING OF CERAMICS (09 Hours)
Material selection. Powder making processes. Processing of ceramic materials i.e. slip casting
process, ceramic injection molding, tape casting process, etc. Significance of sintering in
ceramics, sintering mechanisms, stages during sintering, Importance of phase equilibrium
diagrams, Gibbs phase rule, silica phase diagram, phase diagrams for other ceramics.
3. Books Recommended:
Page 9 of 72
Theory and Applications of Fluid Machinery L T P Credit
3 0 0 03
ME363
Classify fluid machines and explain the concept and performance parameters of fluid
CO1
machines
Explain the construction and working of fan and blowers and select the appropriate
CO2
machines for different applications
Identify types of compressors, calculate various performance parameters and analyze the
CO3
performance characteristics
Compare the working of different types of pumps and evaluate the performance of pumps,
CO4
Select the appropriate pump for suitable application
Classify hydraulic turbines, investigate velocity triangles and analyze the function of
CO5
various components and cavitation phenomena
Identify measuring and performance parameters, Calculate the performance parameters,
CO6
Evaluate the performance of fluid machines
2. Syllabus
INTRODUCTION TO FLUID MACHINES (08 Hours)
Classification of fluid machines: Positive displacement type and dynamic type machinery;
Impulse type and reaction type machinery; reciprocating, radial, mixed and axial flow machines,
Basic fluid mechanics of fluid machines, The torque momentum and head momentum equations;
one dimensional theory and its limitations, specific work and its representation on T-s and h-s
diagrams; losses and efficiencies; energy transfer in fluid machines
Page 10 of 72
HYDRAULIC TURBINES (08 Hours)
Classification, Pelton, Francis, Kaplan, Propeller turbines, Velocity triangles, power and
efficiency calculations, draft tube, cavitation, Thoma’s cavitation factors
3. Books Recommended:
1. S. R. Gorla Rama, A.A. Khan, Turbomachinery Design and Theory, CRC Press- Taylor and
Francis Group, 2011.
2. S. Ramachandran, R. Devaraj, Y.V.S. Karthick, Fluid Machinery, Airwalk Publications, 2017.
3. S.M.Yahya, Turbines, Compressors and Fans, Tata McGraw Hill, 2017.
4. A.T. Sayers, Hydraulic and compressible flow turbomachines. McGraw-Hill Publishing Co.,
1990.
5. V. Kadambi and M. Prasad, An introduction to energy conversion, New Age International
Private Limited, 2011.
Page 11 of 72
Mechatronics L T P Credit
3 0 0 03
ME365
2. Syllabus
1. D. Shetty, A. R. Kolk, Mechatronic System Design, 2nd Edition, PWS Publicity Boston, 2010.
2. W. Bolton, Mechatronics, 4th Edition, Pearson Education (India), 2011.
3. HMT Ltd., Mechatronics, 1st Edition, Tata McGraw Hill Publication, 2002
4. D. Necsulescu, Mechatronics, Pearson Education (Singapore), 2002.
5. M. Mano, Digital Logic & Computer Design, 4th Edition, Pearson, 2016.
Page 13 of 72
Control Systems
L T P Credit
ME367
3 0 0 03
CO1 Explain the theory and applications of control systems and draw block diagrams techniques,
signal flow graphs of linear systems and their controlling actions.
CO2 Apply the knowledge of control systems components for hydraulic and pneumatic
applications.
CO3 Apply the concept of standard test signals and transient response of first and second order
systems, evaluate the sources of static and dynamic error constant.
CO4 Analyze the stability criteria for frequency response.
CO5 Analyze the behavior of closed loop systems using tools such as root locus, Routh Hurwitz,
Bode, Nyquist, and Matlab.
CO6 Describe the control system design, Fuzzy logic, fuzzy set and fuzzy control, PLC
2. Syllabus
BASIC COMPONENTS OF CONTROL SYSTEM (08 Hours)
Open loop and Closed loop system – Automatic Control System. Mathematical Modeling, Analogous
Models – Mathematical modelling of fluid system and thermal systems – Transfer Function – Block
diagram reduction Techniques, signal flow graphs.
Page 14 of 72
3. Books Recommended:
1. G. F. Franklin, Feedback control of Dynamic Systems, 7th Edition, Pearson Education Asia,
2014
2. I. J. Nagrath and M.Gopal, Control System Engineering, 6th Edition, New Age International
Pvt Ltd, 2018
3. K. Ogata, Modern Control Engineering, 5th Edition, Pearson Education India, 2015.
4. J. W. Webb & R. A. Reis, Programmable Logic Controllers: Principles and Applications, 5th
Ed, PHI Learning, New Delhi, 2002
5. S. Gosh, Theory & application of control systems, Person Education, 2010
Page 15 of 72
Engineering Estimation and Costing L T P Credit
ME369 3 0 0 03
2. Syllabus
ESTIMATING (06 Hours)
Objectives of estimating –constituents of estimate, mechanical estimating – costing and cost
estimation, functions of estimation organization and prerequisites of estimation, estimating such as
design and drafting period, time & motion studies, time allowances etc., estimation of material, labour
cost, production estimate sheet, advantages & elements of costing, classification of cost elements.
COST ACCOUNTING AND CONTROL (06 Hours)
Cost accounting, elements of cost, factors affecting selling price, fixed cost, variable cost, computation
of actual cost, nature of cost, type of cost and cost control
Page 16 of 72
3. Books recommended:
1. J. Heizer, B. Render, C. Munson, and A. Sachan, Operations Management, 12th Edition,
Pearson Education, 2017.
2. M. Mahajan, Industrial Engineering and Production Management, 1st Edition, DhanpatRai
& Co. (P) Limited, 2015.
3. B.P. Sinha, Mechanical Estimating and Costing, 1st Edition, Tata McGraw Hill Publishing
Co. Ltd., 1995.
4. T.R. Banga and S. C. Sharma, Industrial Organization and Engineering Economics, 24th
Edition, Khanna Publishers, 2013.
5. S. K. Sharma and S. Sharma, Industrial Engineering &Organization management, Reprint
Edition, S K Kataria and Sons, 2013.
Page 17 of 72
Computational Fluid Dynamics
L T P Credit
ME321 3 0 0 03
CO1 Develop mathematical model for fluid flow and associated transport processes
CO2 Classify various discretization methods and errors associated with numerical solution
CO3 Discretize the fundamental equations of flow and other transport processes using finite
CO4 difference
Apply finite
method
volume method for numerical modeling of fluid flow
CO5 Solve two-dimensional incompressible viscous flow problems using stream
functionvorticity formulation
CO6 Solve Navier-Stokes equations for incompressible flows using semi-explicit and
semiimplicit algorithms
2. Syllabus
GOVERNING EQUATIONS FOR FLUID FLOW AND HEAT TRANSFER (06 Hours)
Conservation of Mass, Newton’s Second Law of Motion, Expanded Forms of Navier stokes
equations, Conservation of Energy Principle, Special Forms of the Navier Stokes Equations,
Classification of Second order Partial Differential Equations, Initial and Boundary Conditions,
Governing Equations in Generalized Coordinates.
Page 18 of 72
3. Books Recommended:
1. D.A. Anderson, Tannehill J.C., Pletcher R.H., Computational Fluid Mechanics and Heat
Transfer, CRC Press, 2012.
2. K. Murlidhar, T. Sunderarajan, Computational Fluid Flow and Heat Transfer, Narosa
Publisher, 2013
3. J.D. Anderson, Computational Fluid Dynamics, McGraw Hill, 2017.
4. S.V. Patanankar, Numerical Heat Transfer and Flow, Hemispehre Publ. Corporation,
2017.
5. H. K. Versteag, and W. Malalsekara, An Introduction to Computational Fluid Dynamics,
Pearson, 2008
Page 19 of 72
Maintenance and Safety Engineering L T P Credit
3 0 0 03
ME323
CO1 Explain the principles, functions and practices adapted in industry for the successful
management of maintenance activities.
CO2 Apply the knowledge of Predictive maintenance and conditioning monitoring concepts for
industrial applications.
CO3 Use vibration and noise as tools to predict failures for preventive maintenance and help
optimize the lifespan of industrial assets
CO4 Apply the concept of failure pattern, system reliability: Series, Parallel and Mixed
CO5 configurations.
Explain the safety engineering aspects in industry.
CO6 Design and develop safety codes and standards for machines and com
2. Syllabus
Page 20 of 72
3. Books Recommended:
1. P. Gopalakrishnan, Maintenance and Spare Parts Management, 2nd Edition, Prentice Hall of India
Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi, 2013
2. L. S. Srinath, Reliability Engineering, Affiliated East West press, 2005
3. Rolland P. Blake, Industrial Safety, 3rd Edition, Prentice Hall of India Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi, 2003.
4. R. C. Mishra and K. Pathak, Maintenance Engineering and Management, 2nd Edition, Prentice
Hall of India Pvt.Ltd.,New Delhi, 2012.
5. E. Balagurusamy, Reliability Engineering, McGraw Hill Education, 2017.
Page 21 of 72
Powder Processing Techniques
L T P Credit
ME325
3 0 0 03
CO1 Explain the importance of powder processing route of manufacturing process, and
compare powder metallurgy products with cast & wrought products.
CO2 Compare different techniques of production of ceramic, metal, nano-powders and
microencapsulated powders.
CO3 Perform testing and characterization of ceramic and metal powders.
CO4 Describe different methods of conditioning of powders and analyze various techniques
of compactions of powder products.
CO5 Describe mechanism of sintering of green powder compacts and secondary & finishing
CO6 operations in powder
Explain detailed processing.
procedure of manufacturing of selected products by powder processing.
1. Syllabus:
INTRODUCTION (06 Hours)
History, Basic terms related to powder processing, principle and outline of powder processing
techniques, advantages and limitations of powder processing, General characteristics of ceramic
and metal powders. Comparison of powder processed parts with cast and wrought products,
Design considerations in powder metallurgy.
Page 22 of 72
SINTERING & SECONDARY OPERATIONS (10 Hours)
Defects and defect chemistry; Solid state sintering, atomic mechanisms, coarsening,
densification, sintering kinetics: sintering stages, coarsening and grain growth growth kinetics;
Liquid phase sintering: introduction, the different stages, controlling kinetics and thermodynamic
factors; Sintering furnaces and their classifications, batch furnace, continuous furnaces, sintering
atmosphere, vacuum sintering. Finishing, machining, infiltration, Repressing, Resizing,
Impregnation.
3. Books Recommended:
1. R. M. German, Powder Metallurgy and Particulate Materials Processing, MPIF, 2005.
2. K. Hingashitani, H. Makino, S. Matsusaka, Powder Technology Handbook, CRC Press, 2019.
3. A. Upadhyaya, G. S. Upadhyaya, Powder Metallurgy - Science, Technology & Materials,
Universities Press, Taylor & Fracis, 2018.
4. P. C. Angelo, R. Subramanian, Powder metallurgy - Science, Technology and Applications, PHI
Learning Pvt. Ltd., 2008.
5. B. K. Datta, Powder Metallurgy: An Advanced Technique of Processing Engineering Materials,
2014.
Page 23 of 72
Mechanics of Materials
L T P Credit
ME327 3 0 0 03
2. Syllabus
Page 24 of 72
MEMBERS SUBJECTED TO FLEXURAL LOADS (13 Hours)
Statically determinate beams, support reactions, relationship between load, shear force
and bending moment, shear force and bending moment diagrams; theory of flexure for
initially straight beams, distribution of bending stresses across the beam cross-section,
principal stresses in beams; equation of elastic curve for the loaded beam, relationship
between bending moment, slope and deflection; calculation of deflection by integration,
moment area and unit-load methods, Strain energy in flexure.
ELASTIC STABILITY OF COLUMNS (05 Hours)
Euler’s theory of initially straight columns, critical loads for different end condition of
columns, eccentric loading, columns with small initial curvature, empirical formulae, Short
struts subjected to eccentric loads. Energy methods: principle of virtual work, minimum
potential energy, Introduction to theory of photo-elasticity.
(Total Lecture Hours: 42)
3. Books Recommended:
Page 25 of 72
Additive Manufacturing Processes
L T P Credit
ME329 3 0 0 03
2. Syllabus
Page 26 of 72
3. Books Recommended:
Page 27 of 72
Professional Ethics, Economics and
Business Management L T P Credit
3 1 0 04
HU308
2. Syllabus:
PROFESSIONAL ETHICS (14 Hours)
Introduction To Economics, Micro & Macro Economics, Applications & Scopes Of Economics,
Demand Analysis, Demand Forecasting, Factors Of Production, Types Of Cost, Market
Structures, Break Even Analysis
3. Books Recommended:
1. V. Balachandran and Chandrasekaran, Corporate Governance, Ethics and Social Responsibility,
PHI, 2nd Edition, 2011
2. L.M. Prasad, Principles & Practice of Management, Sultan Chand & Sons, 8th Edition,2015
3. T. R. Banga & S.C. Sharma, Industrial Organization & Engineering Economics, Khanna
Publishers, 25th Edition, 2015
4. Everett E. Adam, Ronald J. Ebert, Production and Operations Management, Prentice Hall of
India, 5th edition, 2012
5. P. Kotler P., K. L. Keller, A. Koshi & M. Jha, Marketing Management – A South Asian
Perspective, Pearson, 14th Edition, 2014
Page 29 of 72
SEMESTER – VI (Effective from AY 2022-2023)
Exam Scheme
Sr.
Subject Code Scheme Theory Tuto. Pract. Total Credit
No.
Hrs. Marks Marks Marks
Page 30 of 72
Tribology and Mechanical Vibrations
L T P Credit
ME302 3 1 2 05
2. Syllabus
Page 31 of 72
UNDAMPED FREE VIBRATIONS OF SINGLE DEGREE OF FREEDOM SYSTEM
Introduction, deviation of differential equations and resolution, equivalent stiffness of spring
combinations, Newton’s method and energy method for problem solutions. (04 Hours)
3. Practicals:
4. Books Recommended:
Page 32 of 72
Production Technology
L T P Credit
ME304 3 0 2 04
CO1 Explain the tool nomenclature, tool materials, cutting forces and heat distribution during
machining.
CO2 Analyze tool life, tool wear and failure analysis of cutting tools.
CO3 Determine the optimum value of parameters by using economics of machining.
CO4 Explain various types of thread and gear manufacturing processes.
CO5 Explain various unconventional machining processes, their capabilities and limitations.
CO6 Apply the knowledge of kinematics of machine tools, machine tool controls and tool
layout for automats.
2. Syllabus
Page 33 of 72
3. Practicals:
4. Books Recommended:
1. A. K. Bewoor and V. A. Kulkarni, Engineering metrology and measurements, Tata McGraw Hill
Education, 2017.
2. N. V. Raghavendra, L. Krishnamurthy, Engineering Metrology and Measurements, Oxford
publishers, 2013.
3. R. K. Jain, Engineering Metrology, Khanna Publishers, 1997.
4. S. Kalpakjian, S. R. Schmid, Manufacturing Engineering and Technology, 7th Edition, Pearson,
2018
5. A. Ghosh and A. K. Mallik, Manufacturing Science, East West Press New Delhi, 2010.
Page 34 of 72
Applied Thermal Engineering
L T P Credit
ME306 4 0 2 05
2. Syllabus
3. Practicals: (Any 5 Practical from S. No. 1 to 7; and other 5 Practical from S. No. 8 to 14)
4. Books Recommended:
1. V. Ganesan, Internal Combustion Engine, Fourth Edition, Tata Mc-Graw Hill, 2017.
2. M.L. Mathur and R.P. Sharma, Internal Combustion Engine, Dhanpat Rai Publications, 2010.
3. R. Stone, Introduction to Internal Combustion Engines, Fourth edition, Palgrave Macmillan,
2012.
4. R. J. Dossat, Principles of Refrigeration, Pearson Education India, 2002.
5. C. P. Arora, Refrigeration and Air conditioning, Tata McGraw Hill, 2017.
Page 36 of 72
Corrosion Engineering
L T P Credit
ME362 3 0 0 03
1. Course Outcomes (COs):
At the end of the course the students will be able to:
CO1 Describe importance of corrosion and various terminology associated with corrosion.
CO2 Identify various types of corrosion, significance, causes and remedies.
CO3 Interpret corrosion issues of various grades of materials.
CO4 Analyze effect of different environments and conditions on corrosion behavior.
CO5 Predict and test corrosion rate of materials from available data.
CO6 Apply design guidelines and preventive methods to minimize corrosion of materials.
2. Syllabus
INTRODUCTION TO CORROSION (04 Hours)
Definition, corrosion damage, statistics/summary of losses due to corrosion, importance of
corrosion control, corrosion rate expressions, standards/societies related to corrosion, NACE
terminology, origin of Pourbaix diagram.
TYPES OF CORROSION (07 Hours)
General corrosion, galvanic corrosion, crevice corrosion, pitting corrosion, intergranular
corrosion, selective leaching, erosion corrosion, stress corrosion, overview of hydrogen cracking,
high temperature corrosion. Case studies of failures due to various types of corrosion.
Page 37 of 72
3. Books Recommended:
Page 38 of 72
Energy Efficiency and Industrial Utilities L T P Credit
ME364 3 0 0 03
CO1 Apply various energy conservation techniques to estimate energy saving potential
CO2 Provide solutions for energy conservation in boiler systems and furnaces through analysis and
applications of improved refractories and insulations
Compare various appliances/utilities based on their stars and labelling, benchmarking values
CO3
Calculate the usage of energy for a given industrial utility and suggest suitable way to
CO4
minimize energy bill
Relate the significance of energy usage in buildings and understand the ways to reduce energy
CO5
bill
CO6 Compute various performance parameters of HVAC systems and suggest suitable ways for
improving energy efficiency
2. Syllabus
GLOBAL AND NATIONAL ENERGY SCENARIO (05 Hours)
Energy consumption in various sectors, Energy resources like Coal, Oil and Natural Gas –their
demand and supply management, Indian energy scenario, Indian Coal & LPG scenario, Primary
and Secondary Sources of Energy, Commercial and Non Commercial Sources, India’s installed
energy capacity, per capita energy consumption, General aspects of Energy conservation and
management, Roles of energy auditors, Roles of energy manager, Energy policy of industry,
Energy Conservation Act and its amendments
Page 39 of 72
ENERGY EFFICIENCY IN HVAC AND REFRIGERATION UNITS (04 Hours)
Performance assessment of refrigeration units, Factors affecting energy efficiency in refrigeration
plants, Energy saving opportunities in cold storage systems, Heat Pumps and Applications,
Standards and Labelling of Room Air-conditioners.
3. Books Recommended:
1. General Aspects of Energy Conservation, Management and Audit: Guide Book for Energy
Managers and Energy Auditors; Bureau of Energy Efficiency, Ministry of Power
2. Energy Efficiency in Electrical Utilities: Guide Book for Energy Managers and Energy
Auditors; Bureau of Energy Efficiency, Ministry of Power
3. Energy Efficiency in Thermal Utilities: Guide Book for Energy Managers and Energy
Auditors; Bureau of Energy Efficiency, Ministry of Power
4. S. A. Roosa, Energy Management Handbook, Fairmont Press, 2018
5. A. Thumann, Handbook of Enegry Audits, Fairmont Press, 2012
Page 40 of 72
Product Design and Development
L T P Credit
ME366 3 0 0 03
2. Syllabus
MOTIVATION/OBJECTIVE OF PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT (14 Hours)
Customers’ need analysis, Market research & feasibility study, New Product Development (NPD)
or improving the existing product, Product Design Specifications (PDS), Quality Function
Deployment (QFD) technique
DESIGN ENGINEERING (18 Hours)
Conceptual design; concept generation, selection, and testing. Creating design ideas & Problem
solutions. Methodologies; brain storming, lateral thinking, Theory of Inventive Problem Solving
(TRIZ), Use of available products and literature (patents & copy rights),
Preliminary design; design considerations, product architecture, functional dimensions and useful
life for the application. Concept of reverse engineering, Design for X (DfX), manufacturing,
assembly, material selection, reliability & value engineering, Industrial design (human factors);
ergonomics safety, aesthetics,
Detail design & documentation; parts and assembly drawings, design and review reports.
Modeling/Prototyping and performance testing.
LAUNCHING AND LIFE CYCLE MANAGEMENT (10 Hours)
Reaching out to customers; Marketing, advertising, promoting, servicing etc, Product life cycle
and management.
(Total Lecture Hours: 42)
3. Books Recommended:
CO1 Explain basics of lubricants, primary roles, their types, performance properties and
evaluation methods.
CO2 Apply the conceptual selection criteria of lubricants in the industrial applications.
CO3 Identify oil degradation; role of various additives; selection criteria for lubricants in
various situations; various regimes of lubrication and Stribeck curve
CO4 Explain the theory of lubrication in industrial applications.
CO5 Explain the general safety considerations for lubrication storage and handling of the
plants.
CO6 Design and develop lubricants for novel and diverse applications
2. Syllabus
Page 42 of 72
3. Books Recommended:
1. Hand Book of Lubrication and Tribology, Vol. I – Vol. III, CRC Press Inc., 2006
2. D. D. Fuller, Theory and practice of lubrication for engineers,2nd Edition, John Wiley & sons.,
1984
3. A. Cameron, Basic Lubrication Theory, Prentice Hall Press, 1971
4. Raymond G. Gunther, Lubrication, Chipton Book Co., 1971
5. A. R. Lansdown, Lubrication &Lubricants selection, 3rd Edition, ASME Press, 2003
Page 43 of 72
Plant Layout and Material Handling
L T P Credit
ME372 3 0 0 03
CO1 Demonstrate the capabilities of selecting suitable plant location considering various
criteria.
CO2 Demonstrate the knowledge of factory buildings used in industries and its importance.
CO3 Explain the various types of plant layouts used in industries
CO4 Analyze various types of plant layouts used in industries and solve the related problem
CO5 Evaluate the optimum
using various layouts
evaluation using optimization techniques.
techniques.
CO6 Analyze and identify suitable material handling equipment used in industries as per the
requirement.
2. Syllabus
INTRODUCTION (04 Hours)
Need of plant layout; basic objectives of plant layout; types of plant layouts; types of production
systems.
Page 44 of 72
conveyers, cranes and hoists, industrial trucks, elevators, storage equipment, etc.; material
handling equipment selection.
(Total Lecture Hours: 42)
3. Books Recommended
Page 45 of 72
Risk, Reliability and Life Testing
L T P Credit
ME374 3 0 0 03
CO1 Examine the reliability of any product or system which ultimately maintains the
customers’ base of any industry.
CO2 Explain the components and systems through its life cycle.
CO3 Evaluate the probabilistic time analysis of products’ successes and failures.
CO4 Predict reliability of any component or system which is essential before we put it into
any use.
CO5 Estimate the life of a system and their components with concepts of highly accelerated
life testing.
CO6 Improve reliability of a system using different reliability improvement techniques.
+
2. Syllabus
Page 46 of 72
ACCELERATED LIFE TESTING (10 Hours)
Introduction, basic concepts, data qualification. accusations faster, stress combination methods,
limitations, Accelerated Stress Testing (AST), step stress method for AST, various AST models,
recent development recommended approach. Highly Accelerated Life Testing (HALT), Highly
Accelerated Stress Screening (HASS).
3. Books Recommended:
1. L. S. Srinath, Mechanical Reliability, East-West Press Pvt. Ltd, New Delhi, 2002
2. L. S. Srinath, Reliability Engineering, 4th edition, East-West Press Pvt. Ltd, New Delhi, 2005
3. V. N. A. Naikan, Reliability Engineering and Life Testing, PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd. New Delhi,
2008
4. E. Balagurusamy, Reliability Engineering, TMH, New Delhi, 2017
5. D. T. Patrick, Practical Reliability Engineering, 4th edition, Wiley Publishing company, 2008
.
Page 47 of 72
Materials Management L T P Credit
ME376 3 0 0 03
CO4 Apply deterministic and probabilistic inventory control models and selective inventory
control to ensure a steady supply of materials to meet the needs of the organization
CO5 Evaluate the budget and material requirement plan to insure a steady supply of materials
to meet the needs of the organization
CO6 Develop key characteristics of fundamental and specialized purchasing aspects, store
keeping, the public and international purchases.
2. Syllabus
3. Books Recommended:
1. J. R. T. Arnold, S. N. Chapman and L. M. Clive, Introduction to Materials Management, 7th
Edition,Pearson Education, 2010.
2. A. K. Chitale and R. C. Gupta, Materials Management: A Supply Chain Perspective, 3rd Edition,
PHI learning Private Limited, 2014.
3. J. Heizer, B. Render, C. Munson and A. Sachan, Operations Management, 12th Edition, Pearson
Education, 2017.
4. P. Gopalakrishnan and A. Haleem, Handbook of Materials Management, 2nd Edition, Prentice Hall
India Learning Private Limited, 2015.
5. P. Gopalakrishnan and M. Sundaresan, Materials Management: An Integrated Approach by
Gopalakrishanan, 1st Edition, Prentice Hall India Learning Private Limited, 1977.
Page 49 of 72
Advanced Engineering Materials
L T P Credit
ME322 3 0 0 03
CO1 Explain major types of special steels, their properties and applications
CO2 Find out metals that can be used for high temperature applications
CO3 Select cast-irons for specific engineering applications
CO4 Correlate metallurgical aspects and application of light metals
CO5 Select nanomaterials for different industrial applications
CO6 Describe material properties and select the suitable material for biological, space and
cryogenic service applications
2. Syllabus:
Page 50 of 72
Shape memory alloys, Piezoelectric materials, Electro-rheological fluid, Magneto-
rheological fluids,biocompatibility, bio functionality, Important bio metallic alloys like: Ni-
Ti alloy and Co-Cr-Mo alloys. Applications.
3. Books Recommended:
Page 51 of 72
Energy and Exergy Analysis of Thermal
Systems L T P Credit
ME324 3 0 0 3
1. Course Outcomes (COs):
At the end of the course the students will be able to:
CO1 Explain the importance of the exergy and its difference from energy analysis
CO2 Apply the first law and second law of thermodynamics to various thermal systems
CO3 Determine the physical and chemical exergy of a given system
CO4 Illustrate pictorial representation of exergy balance
CO5 Perform exergy analysis of different thermal systems
CO6 Apply exergy analysis knowledge to thermal systems to improve the overall performance
of plant.
2. Syllabus
Introduction (05 Hours)
Fundamentals of mass, energy and entropy balance, and requirement of exergy analysis
3. Books Recommended:
1. A. Bejan, G. Tsatsaronis, M. J. Moran, M. Moran, Thermal Design and Optimization,
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.. 1996
2. I. Dincer Marc A. Rosen, Exergy, Energy, Environment and Sustainable Development,
Elsevier Science, 2013
3. A. Bejan, Advanced Engineering Thermodynamics, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New
York. 2016
4. T. J. Kotas, The exergy Method of Thermal Plant Analysis, Butterworth-Heinemann,
2013
5. M. J. Moran, Availability Analysis – A Guide to Efficient Energy Use, ASME, 1989
Page 52 of 72
Machine Tool Design L T P Credit
ME326 3 0 0 03
2. Syllabus
Page 53 of 72
3. Books Recommended:
1. N. K.Mehta, Machine Tool Design, 3re Edition, Tata McGraw Hill, 2017
2. S. K.Basu and D. K.Pal, Design of Machine Tools, 5th Edition, Ox ford and IBH, 2005
3. N. Achertan, Machine Tool Design, University Press of the Pacific, 2000
4. F. Koenigsberger, Design Principles of Metal Cutting Machine Tools, Pergamon Press, 2013
5. G. C.Sen and A.Bhattacharyya, Principles of Machine Tools, 2nd Edition, New Central Book
Agency,2009
Page 54 of 72
Micro-Hydro Power Plant L T P Credit
3 0 0 03
ME328
Explain the concepts of hydro-electric power plant and classify different hydro-electric and
CO1
micro hydro-electric power plant
Analyze flow prediction methods and evaluate flow transfer systems required based on site
CO2
conditions
Identify different types of turbines and analyze the performance characteristics of various
CO3
turbines
Explain the working of different components of governing systems, and select the
CO4
appropriate governing and drive for suitable application
CO5 Compare the working of different electrical power sources
Prepare maintenance schedule of components of micro hydro plant and carry out fault
CO6
diagnosis
2. Syllabus
INTRODUCTION (06 Hours)
Classification of Hydro-Electric Power Plant, micro hydro power plant overview and
components.
3. Books Recommended:
Page 56 of 72
Micro and Nano-Manufacturing
L T P Credit
ME332 3 0 0 03
CO1 Categorize and describe micro- and nano- manufacturing processes based on given
application.
CO2 Explain and select suitable micro machining/ micro forming/ MEMS processes based on
given parameters and constraints.
CO3 Distinguish between the requirements for micro and nano manufacturing processes
CO4 Recommend a suitable nano- manufacturing process for a given application
CO5 Propose suitable metrological technique for measuring micro and nano features
CO6 Perform photo lithography, chemical etching and LIGA methods.
2. Syllabus
Page 57 of 72
3. Books Recommended:
Page 58 of 72
Finite Element Methods L T P Credit
ME334 3 0 0 03
CO1 Explain the fundamental concepts of the theory of the finite element method
CO2 Develop element characteristic equation and generation of global equation.
CO3 Determine stress, strain, loads and potential energy for flexure components
CO4 Apply suitable boundary conditions to a global equation for bars, trusses and beams
CO5 Evaluate the governing FE equations for solving 1D and 2D problems
CO6 Apply the FE method for thermal, potential flow and transient problems
2. Syllabus
Page 59 of 72
3. Books Recommended:
1. R.D. Cook, Concepts and Applications of Finite Element Analysis, 4th Edition, John Wiley &
Sons, 2007.
2. D.L. Logan, A first course in the finite element method, 5th Edition, Cenage Learning, 2012.
3. J.N. Reddy, an Introduction to the Finite Element Method, 5th edition, McGraw Hill, x 2017.
4. T.R. Chandrupatla & A.D Belagundu, Finite Elements in Engineering, 4th Edition, Pearson,
2015.
5. O.C. Zienkiewicz, R.L Taylor and J.Z Zhu, The finite element method its basis and
fundamentals, 7th edition, Elsevier,2013
Page 60 of 72
L T P Credit
Renewable Energy Systems
ME431 3 0 0 03
2. Syllabus
Page 61 of 72
Processing Techniques; Source Reduction, Biological Conversion Products: Compost and Biogas,
Incineration pyrolysis and Energy Recovery, waste plastic, RDF utilization, Govt. Policies
3. Books Recommended:
1. J. A. Duffie and W.A. Beckman, Solar Engineering and Thermal Processes, John Wiley and
Sons., 2013.
2. G. N. Tiwari, Solar Energy, Narosa Publishing House Pvt. Ltd., 2012.
3. H. S. Mukunda, Understanding Clean Energy and fuels from biomass. Wiley India Pvt. Ltd,
2011
4. K. M. Mital, Biogas Systems, Principle and Applications. New Age International Ltd, 1996
5. G. D. Rai, Non-Conventional Energy Sources, Khanna Publication, 1988
Page 62 of 72
3. Books Recommended:
Page 64 of 72
Gas Dynamics L T P Credit
ME435 3 0 0 03
CO1 Predict the effect of compressibility and flow behavior in the field of gas dynamics
CO2 Solve 1-D design problems based on Isentropic, Fanno and Rayleigh flow
CO3 Evaluate the different possible conditions for flow without chocking in 1-D duct with
variable area, friction and heat transfer.
CO4 Estimate the position and effect of shock within the 1-D duct.
CO5 Explore the shock phenomenon and learn to use shock polar diagram for 2-D flows.
2. Syllabus
Page 65 of 72
3. Books Recommended:
1. S.M. Yahya, Fundamental of Compressible Flow with Aircraft & Rocket Propulsion, New Age
International Ltd., 2016
2. E. Rathakrishnan, Gas Dynamics, PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd., 2017
3. A. H. Shapiro, Compressible Fluid Dlow, Ronald Press Company, 1953
4. M. J Zucrow and J.D. Hoffman, Gas Dynamics, John Wiley & Sons, 1976
5. R. D. Zucker and Oscar Biblarz, Fundamental of Gas Dynamics, Wiley, 2002
Page 66 of 72
Fatigue, Fracture and Failure Analysis L T P Credit
3 0 0 03
ME437
2. Syllabus
Page 67 of 72
3. Books Recommended:
1. S.P Timoshenko and J.N Goodier , Theory of Elasticity, 3rd Edition, McGraw Hill , 2017.
2. R.B Charlie and A Chaudhary, Failure Analysis of Engineering Materials, McGraw Hill, New York,
2001.
3. K Hellan, Introduction to Fracture Mechanics, McGraw-Hill, 1984.
4. S Mohammadi, Extended finite element method, 1st Edition, Blackwell, 2007.
5. P Kumar, Elements of fracture mechanics, Tata McGraw Hill, New Delhi, 2017.
Page 68 of 72
Robotics L T P Credit
3 0 0 03
ME438
2. Syllabus
Page 69 of 72
ROBOT PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES (02 Hours)
Introduction, Characteristics of robot level languages, Characteristics of task level languages.
3. Books Recommended:
1. A. Ghosal, Robotics: Fundamental Concepts and Analysis, 1st Edition, Oxford University Press, 2006.
2. K.S. Fu, R.C. Gonzalez, C.S.G. Lee, Robotics: Control, Sensing, Vision, and Intelligence, 1st Edition,
McGraw-Hill, 2008.
3. J. J. Craig, Introduction to Robotics: Mechanics and Control, 4th Edition, Pearson, 2018.
4. S. K. Saha, Introduction to Robotics, 2nd Edition, McGraw-Hill, 2015.
5. N. Odrey, M. Weiss, M. Groover, R. N. Nagel, A. Dutta, Industrial Robotics: Technology, Programming and
Applications, 2nd Edition, McGraw-Hill, 2012.
Page 70 of 72
Innovation, Incubation and Entrepreneurship
L T P Credit
HU 406 3 0 0 03
_ _
2. Syllabus:
CONCEPTS OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP (10 Hours)
Scope of Entrepreneurship, Definitions of Entrepreneurship and Entrepreneur, Characteristics of an
Entrepreneur, Entrepreneurial Development models and Theories, Entrepreneurs Vs Managers
Classification of Entrepreneurs; Major types of Entrepreneurship – Techno Entrepreneurship,
Women Entrepreneurship, Social Entrepreneurship, Intrapreneurship (Corporate entrepreneurship),
Rural Entrepreneurship, Family Business etc.; Problems for Small Scale Enterprises and Industrial
Sickness; Entrepreneurial Trait Tests; Entrepreneurial Environment – Political, Legal,
Technological, Natural, Economic, Socio – Cultural etc. ; Motivation; Business Opportunity
Identification
Page 60 of 61
Innovation and Entrepreneurship, Creativity, Green Technology Innovations, Grassroots
Innovations, Issues and Challenges in Commercialization of Technology Innovations, Introduction
to Technology Business Incubations, Process of Technology Business Incubation
3. Books Recommended:
1. Vasant Desai, Dynamics of Entrepreneurial Development and Management, Himalaya Publishing House,
India, 6th Revised Edition, 2011
2. P. M. Charantimath, Entrepreneurial Development and Small Business Enterprises, Pearson
Education, 3rd Edition, 2018
3. H. David, Entrepreneurship: New Venture Creation, Pearson Education, 2016
4. P. Chandra, Projects: Planning, Analysis, Selection, Financing, Implementation and Review, Tata
McGraw Hill, 9th Edition, 2019
5. T. R. Banga & S. C. Shrama, Industrial Organisation & Engineering Economics, Khanna Publishers,
25th Edition, 2015
Further Reading:
1. L. M. Prasad, Principles & Practice Of Management, Sultan Chand & Sons, 8th Edition,2015
2. Everett E. Adam, Ronald J. Ebert, Production and Operations Management , Prentice Hall of India, 5th
edition, 2012
3. P. Kotler, K. L. Keller, A. Koshi & M. Jha, Marketing Management – A South Asian Perspective, Pearson,
14th Edition, 2014
4. P. C. Tripathi, Personnel Management & Industrial Relations, Sultan Chand & sons, 21st Edition, 2013
5. P. Chandra, Financial Management, Tata McGraw Hill, 9th Edition, 2015
Page 72 of 72