Laboratory Exercises for Electronic Devices

Laboratory Exercises for Electronic Devices
Author: Thomas L. Floyd
Publisher: Prentice Hall
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2019-10-25
Genre: Electronic apparatus and appliances
ISBN: 9780132545198

This is a student supplement associated with: Electronic Devices (Conventional Current Version), 9/e Thomas L. Floyd ISBN: 0132549867 Electronic Devices (Electron Flow Version), 9/e Thomas L. Floyd ISBN: 0132549859

16/32 Bit Microprocessors

16/32 Bit Microprocessors
Author: Wunnava V. Subbarao
Publisher: Merrill Publishing Company
Total Pages: 490
Release: 1991
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

An integrated, practical introduction to 16-bit and 32-bit microprocessors using the Motorola 68000 family as examples for electronics engineering, computer science, and technology students.

Digital Electronics Through Project Analysis

Digital Electronics Through Project Analysis
Author: Ronald A. Reis
Publisher: Prentice Hall
Total Pages: 570
Release: 1991
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN:

An introductory text to digital circuits for beginning electronics students which provides coverage of basic digital concepts and includes 46 actual digital projects that illustrate concrete applications. Coverage encompasses digital, combinational and sequential logic circuits.

A First Lab in Circuits and Electronics

A First Lab in Circuits and Electronics
Author: Yannis Tsividis
Publisher: Jossey-Bass Publishers
Total Pages: 148
Release: 2002
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN:

* Experiments are linked to real applications. Students are likely to be interested and excited to learn more and explore. Example of experiments linked to real applications can be seen in Experiment 2, steps 6, 7, 15, and 16; Experiment 5, steps 6 to 10 and Experiment 7, steps 12 to 20. * Self-contained background to all electronics experiments. Students will be able to follow without having taken an electronics course. Includes a self-contained introduction based on circuits only. For the instructor this provides flexibility as to when to run the lab. It can run concurrently with the first circuits analysis course. * Review background sections are provided. This convenient text feature provides an alternative point of view; helps provide a uniform background for students of different theoretical backgrounds. * A "touch-and-feel" approach helps to provide intuition and to make things "click". Rather than thinking of the lab as a set of boring procedures, students get the idea that what they are learning is real. * Encourages students to explore and to ask "what if" questions. Helps students become active learners. * Introduces students to simple design at a very early stage. Helps students see the relevance of what they are learning, and to become active learners. * Helps students become tinkerers and to experiment on their own. Students are encouraged to become creative, and their mind is opened to new possibilities. This also benefits their subsequent professional work and/or graduate study.