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Schedule of Classes

 

Fall Semester 2022

 

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 lecture and lab required.
 01 M10:00 AM -10:50 AM BEC4170 Mark Moeckel  
 02 M10:00 AM -10:50 AM BEC2254 David Zietlow  
 40 MW12:00 PM -1:50 PM BEC3224 Shannon James Timpe  
 No lab required for Section 40.
 A Tu9:00 AM -10:50 AM BEC1262 Mark Moeckel  
 B Tu11:00 AM -12:50 PM BEC1262 Mark Moeckel  
 C Tu3:00 PM -4:50 PM BEC1262 David Zietlow  
 D Tu1:00 PM -2:50 PM BEC1262 David Zietlow  
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     Rick Smith  
M E273Computational Methods in ME (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Minimum grade of C in both PHY 110 and MTH 223.
Corequisite: MTH 224.
Registration in lecture and lab required.
 01 TT9:00 AM -10:15 AM BEC1150 Kelly R Roos  
 A Canceled
 B Canceled
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 Canceled
 02 MWF1:00 PM -1:50 PM BEC4140 Mark Moeckel  
M E302Thermodynamics II (2 hours)
Prerequisite: minimum grade of C in ME 301.
 01 Canceled
 02 MW10:00 AM -10:50 AM BEC3160 Martin Morris  
M E303Instrumentation and Measurement (3 hours)
Prerequisite: COM 103, ECE 227
Corequisite: M E 273, M E 301
Registration in lecture and lab required.
 01 TT10:30 AM -11:45 AM BEC4160 Dean Kim  
 A Th12:00 PM -1:50 PM BEC3248 Dean Kim  
 B Tu12:00 PM -1:50 PM BEC3248 Dean Kim  
 C *R* Tu2:00 PM -3:50 PM BEC3248 Dean Kim  
M E308Thermodyn Fluid Flow (4 hours)
Prerequisite: Minimum grade of C in ME 301, MTH 224
Registration in lecture and lab required.
 01 MWF1:00 PM -1:50 PM BEC2259 Saeid Vafaei  
 A Canceled
 B Th1:00 PM -2:50 PM BEC0250 Saeid Vafaei  
 C Th3:00 PM -4:50 PM BEC0250 Saeid Vafaei  
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 MWF11:00 AM -11:50 AM BEC1150 Shannon James Timpe  
 02 Canceled
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 BEC3226 Jeries J Abou-Hanna  
M E344Kinematics and Dynamics of Machines (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 273, CE 250.
 01 MW12:00 PM -1:15 PM BEC3226 Jacqueline Henderson  
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 TT12:00 PM -1:15 PM BEC2259 Kalyani Nair  
 02 Canceled
 40 TT1:30 PM -2:45 PM BEC3224 Kalyani Nair  
 Registration in section 40 is for Honors Program students only.
M E403Mechanical Engineering Systems Laboratory (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Minimum grade of C in both ME 303 and CE 270
Corequisite: 300-level English composition, ME 415, ME 441
Registration in lecture and lab required.
 01 MW9:00 AM -9:50 AM BEC3160 Kelly R Roos  
 A M10:00 AM -11:50 AM BEC3261 Kelly R Roos  
 B W10:00 AM -11:50 AM BEC3261 Kelly R Roos  
 C Tu10:00 AM -11:50 AM BEC3261 Kelly R Roos  
M E409Mechanical Engineering Projects (1 to 4 hours)
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.
 01 Arr     Shannon James Timpe  
 02 Arr     Jacqueline Henderson  
 Advanced Mechatronics
 03 *R* Arr     Julie Reyer  
 Maker Space Development
 04 Arr     Martin Morris  
 05 *R* Arr     Julie Reyer  
 Maker Space Development 2
M E410Mechanical Engineering Senior Project I (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Senior standing in ME. Instructor consent may be required.
Registration in lecture and lab required.
 01 TT12:00 PM -12:50 PM BEC1260 Jeries J Abou-HannaCore: WI,EL 
 02 TT12:00 PM -12:50 PM BEC1260 Martin MorrisCore: WI,EL 
 03 TT12:00 PM -12:50 PM BEC1260 Brian BarneyCore: WI,EL 
 A F2:00 PM -3:50 PM BEC1260 Jeries J Abou-HannaCore: WI,EL 
 and               Martin Morris 
M E415Introduction to Heat Transfer (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 302. C or better in ME 308.
 01 Canceled
 02 TT3:00 PM -4:15 PM BEC2174 Ahmad Fakheri  
M E441Mechanical Control Systems (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 341. ECE 227.
 01 MW3:00 PM -4:15 PM BEC2259 Dean Kim  
M E448Computer Aided Design in Mechanical Engineering (3 hours)
Prerequisite: senior standing in ME or consent of instructor.
 01 MW10:30 AM -11:45 AM BEC2180 Abdalla M Elbella  
 02 MW5:00 PM -6:15 PM BEC3225 Abdalla M Elbella  
M E501Advanced Thermodynamics (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 302; or graduate standing.
 01 MW1:30 PM -2:45 PM BEC2132 David Zietlow  
M E502Problems in Advanced Dynamics (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 341; or graduate standing.
 01 TT3:00 PM -4:15 PM BEC2132 Abdalla M Elbella  
M E515Intermediate Heat Transfer (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 415; or graduate standing.
 01 MW3:00 PM -4:15 PM BEC2132 Ahmad Fakheri  
M E556Mechanics of Composite Materials (3 hours)
Prerequisite: CE 270; or graduate standing.
 01 MWF8:00 AM -8:50 AM BEC3226 Shannon James Timpe  
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 Canceled
M E573Methods of Engineering Analysis (3 hours)
Prerequisite: ME 341; ME 273; MTH 224; or graduate standing.
 01 MWF11:00 AM -11:50 AM BEC2132 Saeid Vafaei  
M E577Finite Element Methods in Engineering (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Senior standing in ME or consent of instructor; or graduate standing.
 01 Canceled
M E588Human Centered Design (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Senior or graduate standing and consent of instructor
 01 TT9:00 AM -10:15 AM BEC3226 Jacqueline Henderson  
M E591Topics in Mechanical Engineering (3 to 9 hours)
Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
 01 Arr     Abdalla M Elbella  
M E681Research (0 to 6 hours)
 01 Arr     Kalyani Nair  
M E682Research (0 to 6 hours)
Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
 01 Arr     Kalyani Nair  
 
Nature of mechanical engineering as a profession and as a technological response to human needs. Emphases: design process, problem solving, and engineering experimentation.
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.
Team based investigations of open-ended engineering design problems. Each project will place an emphasis on problem definition, planning, analysis, synthesis, evaluation, and teamwork. The projects may involve experimentation and/or construction of models. Students enrolled in this course are required to be within 3 semesters of graduation and have a minimum ME GPA 2.25.
Steady state and transient conduction; external and internal forced convection and free convection; radiation; heat exchanger design.
Linear feedback control design and analysis for dynamic systems with applications; examples taken from applications encountered by mechanical and manufacturing engineers. Time and frequency response techniques. System performance analysis.
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.
Laws and concepts of classical thermodynamics: real gases and equations of state; availability; irreversibility; property relations; potential functions; equilibrium; multicomponent systems.
Application of analytical and graphical methods to problems involving velocities, accelerations, working and inertia forces.
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.
Mechanical behavior, analysis, and design of various advanced composite materials: introduction to composite materials and their applications; elasticity of anisotropic solids; micromechanics of fiber reinforced composites and particulate composites; short fiber composites; macromechanics of laminated composites; thermal stresses; failure criteria; fracture and fatigue, reliability, testing, and design of composite materials. Emphasis on developing simple microcomputer programs for analysis. Projects involve curing and testing composites.
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.
Application of principles of analog and digital computers and numerical methods to solve mechanical engineering problems.
Theory of finite element methods and applications in mechanical engineering: review of matrix algebra and basic theorem of elasticity. Direct formulation of plane truss element and variational formulations of plane stress/strain, axisymmetric solids, flexural beam, and flat plate elements. Element analysis and isoparametric formulation. Applications to problems of stability, vibrations, thermal stress analysis, and fluid mechanics. Computer programming techniques.
Principles and practices of biomedical engineering for integration into design. The focus on human limits including physical, visual, cognitive and medical will serve as the basis for technology evaluations and case studies. Design and analysis with team-based, open ended client specific project.
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
This course meets a Core Curriculum requirement.
OC - Communication - Oral Communication
W1 - Communication - Writing 1
W2 - Communication - Writing 2
FA - Fine Arts
GS - Global Perspective - Global Systems
WC - Global Perspective - World Cultures
HU - Humanities
NS - Knowledge and Reasoning in the Natural Sciences
SB - Knowledge and Reasoning in the Social and Behavioral Sciences
MI - Multidisciplinary Integration
QR - Quantitative Reasoning
This section meets a Core Curriculum requirement.
EL - Experiential Learning
IL - Integrative Learning
WI - Writing Intensive
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