Course Meeting Times
Lectures: 5 sessions for 4 weeks, 1.5 hours / session
Labs: 5 sessions for 4 weeks, 4 hours / session
Course Meetings
6.091 is a three-week-long course meeting in January during MIT's Independent Activities Period.
The course consists of five 90-minute lectures with demos and chalkboard discussions. Each lecture is followed by a lab. There are three lab sections with 15 students per section. Each section is staffed by the lecturer and two lab assistants. The student lab staff ratio (5:1) allows for close interaction and one-on-one discussions. Each of the five lab exercises generally requires 2 to 4 hours depending upon the technical background of the student.
Objectives
This course introduces students to both passive and active electronic components (op-amps, 555 timers, TTL digital circuits). Basic analog and digital circuits and theory of operation are covered. The labs allow the students to master the use of electronic instruments and construct and/or solder several circuits. The labs also reinforce the concepts discussed in class with a hands-on approach and allow the students to gain significant experience with electrical instruments such as function generators, digital multimeters, oscilloscopes, logic analyzers and power supplies. In the last lab, the students build an electronic circuit that they can keep. The course is geared to freshmen and others who want an introduction to electronics circuits.
Calendar
SES # | TOPICS |
---|---|
Lecture and Lab 1 |
Electronic components (resistors, capacitors, inductors, diodes) Use of multimeters and oscilloscopes Construction and debugging of simple electronic circuits Soldering exercise |
Lecture and Lab 2 | LEDs, bipolar junction transistors, MOSFETs, optical isolators, op amps |
Lecture and Lab 3 | More integrated circuits: 555 timers, voltage regulators, Zener diodes |
Lecture and Lab 4 | Digital ICs: inverters, counters, flip flops, shift registers, digital to analog converters |
Lecture and Lab 5 | Motors, AD/DA converters, digital design lab, wrap-up |
Grading
Grading is pass/fail. Passing requires the completion of all five labs.