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Schedule of Classes

 

Fall Semester 2016

 

Mechanical Engineering
Jeries J Abou-Hanna • Business and Enginee 3252 • 309-677-2725
M E101Foundations of Mechanical Engineering (2 hours)
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor or department chair.
Registration in one lecture and one lab required
 01 MW12:00 PM -12:50 PM JOB306 Jacqueline Henderson  
 02 MW2:00 PM -2:50 PM JOB306 Jacqueline Henderson  
 03 MW3:00 PM -3:50 PM JOB306 Jacqueline Henderson  
 A Tu1:00 PM -2:50 PM JOB306 Jacqueline Henderson  
 B Tu3:00 PM -4:50 PM JOB306 Jacqueline Henderson  
 C Tu11:00 AM -12:50 PM JOB306 Jacqueline Henderson  
 D Tu9:00 AM -10:50 AM JOB306 Jacqueline Henderson  
M E102Engineering Design Graphics (2 hours)
Prerequisite: Enrolled as a mechanical engineering major; Minimum of C in ME 101 or equivalent with consent of instructor.
 01 *R* Tu2:00 PM -2:50 PM JOB308 Kalyani Nair  
 and Tu3:00 PM -5:00 PM     JOB231      
M E200Engineering Co-Op (0 hours)
Prerequisite: Sophomore standing in the College of Engineering and Technology, 2.0 overall grade point average at Bradley, approval of engineering and technology Co-op coordinator and Co-op advisor.
 01 *R* Arr     Jamie Cobb  
M E273Computational Methods in ME (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Minimum grade of C in both PHY 110 and MTH 223.
Corequisite: MTH 224.
 01 TT9:00 AM -10:15 AM JOB200 Dean Kim  
 A Th1:00 PM -2:00 PM JOB231 Dean Kim  
 B Th2:00 PM -3:00 PM JOB231 Dean Kim  
M E301Thermodynamics I (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Minimum grade of C in CHM 110, 111; Minimum grade of C in PHY 201; Minimum grade of C in MTH 223.
 01 MWF9:00 AM -9:50 AM JOB300 Mark Moeckel  
 02 MWF11:00 AM -11:50 AM JOB306 Saeid Vafaei  
M E302Thermodynamics II (2 hours)
Prerequisite: minimum grade of C in ME 301.
 01 MW8:00 AM -8:50 AM JOB306 Mark Moeckel  
 02 MW8:00 AM -8:50 AM JOB215 David Zietlow  
M E303Instrumentation and Measurement (3 hours)
Prerequisite: PHY 201; prerequisites or concurrent enrollment in ME 301, EE 327, ME 273.
 01 *R* TT10:30 AM -11:45 AM BAKB51 Shannon James Timpe  
 LabA Tu8:00 AM -10:00 AM    Shannon James Timpe  
 02 *R* TT10:30 AM -11:45 AM BAKB51 Shannon James Timpe  
 LabB Tu12:00 PM -2:00 PM    Shannon James Timpe  
 03 *R* TT10:30 AM -11:45 AM BAKB51 Shannon James Timpe  
 LabC Tu2:00 PM -4:00 PM    Shannon James Timpe  
 04 *R* TT10:30 AM -11:45 AM BAKB51 Shannon James Timpe  
 LabD Tu4:15 PM -6:15 PM    Shannon James Timpe  
M E308Thermodyn Fluid Flow (4 hours)
Prerequisite: Minimum grade of C in ME 301, MTH 224
 01 MWF1:00 PM -1:50 PM WES130 James O'Connor  
 LabA Th8:00 AM -10:00 AM    James O'Connor  
 02 MWF1:00 PM -1:50 PM WES130 James O'Connor  
 LabB Th1:00 PM -3:00 PM    James O'Connor  
 03 MWF1:00 PM -1:50 PM WES130 James O'Connor  
 LabC Th3:00 PM -5:00 PM    James O'Connor  
M E341Engineering Systems Dynamics (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Minimum grade of C in PHY 201; Minimum grade of C in MTH 224; Minimum grade of C in CE 250.
 01 MW2:00 PM -3:15 PM JOB304 George Romack  
 02 MW2:00 PM -3:15 PM BAKB51 Shannon James Timpe  
M E342Design of Machine Elements (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Minimum grade of C in CE 270 and ME 351; prerequisite or concurrent enrollment in ME 303
 01 TT1:30 PM -2:45 PM BAK458 Jeries J Abou-Hanna  
 02 TT3:00 PM -4:15 PM BAK458 Jeries J Abou-Hanna  
M E344Kinematics and Dynamics of Machines (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 273, CE 250.
 01 Canceled
 02 *R* MW11:00 AM -12:15 PM BR032 George Romack  
M E351Engineering Materials Science I (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Minimum grade of C in PHY 110; Minimum grade of C in CHM 112 or Minimum grade of C in CHM 116.
Corequisite: PHY 201.
 01 MW2:00 PM -3:15 PM BR222 Robert J Podlasek  
 02 MW4:00 PM -5:15 PM BR046 Robert J Podlasek  
M E403Mechanical Engineering Systems Laboratory (2 hours)
Prerequisite: COM 103; minimum grade of C in ME 303, CE 270, ME 308; Prerequisites or concurrent enrollment in 300-level English composition, ME 302, ME 341, ME 415.
 01 *R* MW9:00 AM -9:50 AM BR145 Richard T Johnson  
 and               Richard T Johnson 
 LabA M10:00 AM -12:00 PM JOB133 Richard T Johnson  
 02 *R* MW9:00 AM -9:50 AM BR145 Richard T Johnson  
 and               Richard T Johnson 
 LabB W10:00 AM -12:00 PM JOB133 Richard T Johnson  
 03 *R* MW9:00 AM -9:50 AM BR145 Richard T Johnson  
 and               Richard T Johnson 
 LabC M2:00 PM -4:00 PM JOB133 Richard T Johnson  
 04 *R* MW9:00 AM -9:50 AM BR145 Richard T Johnson  
 and               Richard T Johnson 
 LabD W2:00 PM -4:00 PM JOB133 Richard T Johnson  
 05 *R* MW9:00 AM -9:50 AM BR145 Richard T Johnson  
 LabE F10:00 AM -12:00 PM JOB133 Richard T Johnson  
M E409Mechanical Engineering Projects (1 to 4 hours)
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.
 01 *R* Arr     Kelly R Roos  
 02 *R* Arr     Shannon James Timpe  
 03 *R* Arr     Julie Reyer  
 04 *R* Arr     Julie Reyer  
 05 *R* Arr     Kelly R Roos  
 06 *R* Arr     David Zietlow  
 07 *R* Arr     James O'Connor  
 08 *R* Arr     Jacqueline Henderson  
 09 *R* Arr     Staff  
M E410Mechanical Engineering Senior Project I (2 hours)
Prerequisite: Senior standing in ME and consent of instructor
 01 TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 02 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 03 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 04 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 05 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 06 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 07 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 08 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 09 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 10 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 11 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 12 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 13 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 14 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 15 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 16 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 17 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 18 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 19 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 20 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 21 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 22 *R* TT12:00 PM -1:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
 A F2:00 PM -4:00 PM BAKB51 Julie Reyer  
M E415Introduction to Heat Transfer (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 301, ME 308
 01 TT9:00 AM -10:15 AM JOB330 Saeid Vafaei  
 02 MW2:00 PM -3:15 PM BR046 Ahmad Fakheri  
M E441Mechanical Control Systems (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 341.
Corequisite: EE 328.
 01 TT3:30 PM -4:45 PM JOB300 Dean Kim  
M E448Computer Aided Design in Mechanical Engineering (3 hours)
Prerequisite: senior standing in ME or consent of instructor.
 01 MW10:00 AM -12:00 PM JOB231 Kalyani Nair  
 02 MW1:00 PM -3:00 PM JOB231 Kalyani Nair  
M E491Special Topics in Mechanical Engineering (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor
 03 *R* Arr     Staff  
M E502Problems in Advanced Dynamics (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 341; or graduate standing.
 01 TT5:00 PM -6:15 PM JOB306 Abdalla M Elbella  
M E507Nuclear Energy (3 hours)
Prerequisite: consent of instructor; senior or graduate standing; PHY 201.
 01 TT1:30 PM -2:45 PM JOB302 John Engdahl  
M E515Intermediate Heat Transfer (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 415; or graduate standing.
 01 MW3:30 AM -4:45 AM JOB231 Ahmad Fakheri  
M E534Environmental Engineering-Air Conditioning (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 301.
 01 MW2:00 PM -3:15 PM BR026 David Zietlow  
M E537Building Energy Management (3 hours)
 01 *R* TT3:00 PM -4:15 PM JOB330 Desh Paul Mehta  
M E540Advanced Mechanical Vibrations (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 341; MTH 224; or graduate standing.
 01 MW5:00 PM -6:15 PM JOB306 Sam M Kherat  
M E554Fracture of Solids (3 hours)
Prerequisite: M E 354 and C E 270; or graduate standing.
 01 TT3:30 PM -4:45 PM JOB215 Abdalla M Elbella  
M E557Advanced Design of Machine Elements (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 342 and ME 351, with a minimum grade of C; or graduate standing in ME. Requires consent of instructor if non-ME Student.
 01 MW3:30 PM -4:45 PM BAK255 Jeries J Abou-Hanna  
M E560Principles of Robotic Programming (3 hours)
Prerequisite: graduate or senior standing in engineering or computer science.
 01 TT5:00 PM -6:15 PM JOB302 Sam M Kherat  
 02 *R* TT5:00 PM -6:15 PM JOB308 Matthew West  
M E573Methods of Engineering Analysis (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 341; ME 273; MTH 224; or graduate standing.
 01 TT10:00 AM -12:00 PM JOB341 Kelly R Roos  
 02 *R* TT8:00 AM -10:00 AM JOB231 Kelly R Roos  
M E580Biomechanics (3 hours)
Prerequisite: senior or graduate standing in engineering or consent of instructor.
 01 TT9:00 AM -10:15 AM JOB300 Kalyani Nair  
M E582Medical Imaging (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Senior standing in engineering or consent of instructor.
 01 TT10:30 AM -11:45 AM JOB330 John Engdahl  
M E591Topics in Mechanical Engineering (3 to 9 hours)
Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Registration is for 3 credit hours.
 01 *R* Arr     Shannon James Timpe  
 02 *R* Arr     Ahmad Fakheri  
 03 *R* Arr     Kelly R Roos  
M E681Research (0 to 6 hours)
 01 *R* Arr     Jeries J Abou-Hanna  
 02 *R* Arr     Abdalla M Elbella  
 03 *R* Arr     Ahmad Fakheri  
 04 *R* Arr     Jacqueline Henderson  
 05 *R* Arr     Richard T Johnson  
 06 *R* Arr     Dean Kim  
 07 *R* Arr     Desh Paul Mehta  
 08 *R* Arr     Martin Morris  
 09 *R* Arr     Kalyani Nair  
 10 *R* Arr     Robert J Podlasek  
 11 *R* Arr     Saeid Vafaei  
 12 *R* Arr     Julie Reyer  
 13 *R* Arr     Shannon James Timpe  
 14 *R* Arr     David Zietlow  
M E682Research (0 to 6 hours)
Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
 01 *R* Arr     Staff  
 02 *R* Arr     Staff  
 03 *R* Arr     Staff  
M E699Thesis (0 to 6 hours)
Prerequisite: consent of department.
 01 *R* Arr     David Zietlow  
 02 *R* Arr     Martin Morris  
 03 *R* Arr     Ahmad Fakheri  
 04 *R* Arr     Kalyani Nair  
 05 *R* Arr     Staff  
 
Nature of mechanical engineering as a profession and as a technological response to human needs. Emphases: design process, problem solving, and engineering experimentation.
Principles and methods of graphic communications, integrated with creative design problem solving: multi-view projections; pictorial drawing; fundamentals of descriptive geometry, sections, and dimensioning.
Full-time cooperative education assignment for mechanical engineering students who alternate periods of full-time school with periods of full-time academic or career-related work in industry. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory.
Computational techniques and programming methods for mechanical engineering problems.
Emphasis on concepts, laws, and problem solving methodology; properties of materials, especially gases and vapors; simple equations of state; 1st and 2nd laws; introduction to cycles and systems.
Continuation of ME 301 with emphasis on engineering applications: including more detailed analysis of vapor cycles, power cycles, refrigeration cycles, and heat pump cycles, enhanced second law analysis, and more complex processes that include mixtures, humidification, combustion, and equilibrium.
Theory and practice of measurements and instrumentation. Definition of a measurement system that meets specified needs: identification, selection, and specification of instrumentation components. Weekly laboratory.
Thermodynamics of fluid flow. Basic concepts of fluid mechanics; utility of the control volume approach to solving conservation equations governing the behavior of compressible and incompressible fluid flows. Design applications in thermal systems, aerodynamics, and convective heat transfer.
Engineering systems dynamics, including mechanical, electrical, fluid, and thermal elements. Concepts of modeling. Mathematical methods for understanding and creating desired response behavior of linear systems.
Application of stress analysis, deflection analysis, dynamic analysis, and materials to the design of mechanical components and machines. How available manufacturing processes influence nature of machine elements.
Kinematic and dynamic analysis and synthesis of mechanisms and machines; kinematics of linkages, cams and gearing systems; different analysis methods. Static and dynamic forces; balancing of rotating and reciprocating machines. Integration of these topics in solving open-ended design problems.
Understanding how atomic and crystalline structure influences the mechanical properties of metals, polymers, ceramics, composite, and biomedical materials. Thermal processes that influence the underlying structure of solids. Using materials in the engineering design process.
Student team investigations of thermal and mechanical systems emphasizing definition, planning, design, and execution of experiments involving system modeling and analysis. Written reports and oral presentations are required.
Special topics or projects of an experimental, analytical, or creative nature. May be repeated up to 16 credit hours.
Individual or small team investigation of open-ended engineering problems. Emphasis on problem definition, planning, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation. May involve experimentation and/or construction of models. Students enrolled in this course are expected to be within 3 semesters of graduation.
Steady state and transient conduction; external and internal forced convection and free convection; radiation; heat exchanger design.
Sequencing control theory of linear feedback control systems; examples taken from applications encountered by mechanical and manufacturing engineers. Time and frequency response techniques. Analysis and design of fluid powered control systems. Microprocessors and computer control applications.
Design of mechanical systems and components enhanced by applications of computer graphics. Computer graphics hardware characteristics; transformation and projection geometry; space curves and surface presentations; solid geometric representations. User application CAD packages for finite element analysis and mechanisms and systems simulation.
Topics of special interest which may vary each time course is offered. Topic stated in current Schedule of Classes. Undergraduate students may repeat the course under different topic names up to a maximum of 9 credits.
Application of analytical and graphical methods to problems involving velocities, accelerations, working and inertia forces.
Introduction to nuclear reactors, the physics of nuclear radiations and interactions, the effects of radiation on people, and the issues and potentials that will govern the future use of nuclear energy.
In-depth treatment of the three modes of heat transfer; design applications. Development of analytical and specific numerical skills needed for solving design problems involving heat transfer.
Heating and cooling of moist air; solar radiation; computation of heating and cooling loads; study of heating, ventilating, and cooling systems and equipment; design project.
The energy problem. Energy consumption patterns in existing and new buildings. Analysis of energy saving strategies for existing buildings; developing designs for new, energy efficient buildings, including reliability, comfort, and economic considerations. Formal oral presentations.
Principles of vibrations in one or more degrees of freedom; application to machine members.
Mechanical failure caused by stresses, strains, and energy transfers in mechanical parts: conventional design concepts and relationship to occurrence of fracture; mechanics of fracture; fracture toughness; macroscopic and microscopic aspects of fracture; high and low cycle fatigue failures; creep; stress rupture; brittle fracture; wear; case studies of failure analysis. Emphasis on time-dependent failures.
Review of mechanical testing, 3-D stress-strain relationship, complex and principal states of stress, yielding and fracture under combined stresses, fracture of cracked members, stress and strain based approaches to fatigue, creep damage analysis, and plastic damage analysis as applied to the design of machine elements.
Programming of industrial robotic manipulators with external inputs, tactile sensing, and vision sensing. A design project is required. Cross-listed as IME 560.
Application of principles of analog and digital computers and numerical methods to solve mechanical engineering problems.
Human body as a mechanical system. Biomechanics of cells, soft issue and hard tissue Biomechanics of movement. Laboratory exercises on design and analysis of implants.
Introduction to the common methods and devices employed for medical imaging, including conventional x-ray imaging, x-ray computed tomography (CT), nuclear medicine (single photon planar imaging), single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), and positron emission tomography (PET), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and ultra-sound imaging. The physics and design of systems, typical clinical applications, medical image processing, and tomographic reconstruction. Cross-listed as EE 582.
Topics of special interest which may vary each time course is offered. Topic stated in current Schedule of Classes. Graduate students may repeat the course under different topic names up to a maximum of 9 credits.
Research on a project selected by student and advisor.
Individual study on a topic selected by the student with advisor approval. Integration and application of research. Student must produce a product such as a software program or journal article
Maximum of 6 semester hours total of research and/or thesis may be applied toward the master s degree.
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