Department of Electronics
Mackenzie Building 5170
Telephone: 520-5754
Fax: 520-5708
E-mail: gradinfo@doe.carleton.ca
The Department
Chair of the Department:
J.S. Wight
Associate Chair, Graduate Studies:
R.G. Harrison
Programs of study and research leading to the master’s and Ph.D. degrees
in electrical engineering are offered through the Ottawa-Carleton Institute
for Electrical Engineering. The Institute, established in 1983, combines
the resources of Carleton University and the University of Ottawa. For
further information, including admission and program requirements, see
page 135.
The Department of Electronics is concerned with the fields of applied and
physical electronics. Effort is strongest in four broad areas: computer-aided
design for electronic circuits; physics and fabrication technology for
solid-state electronic and photonic devices; VLSI and high-speed analog
integrated circuits; and microwave and photonic subsystems and circuits.
Specific areas of specialization include:
Computer-Aided Circuit Design
Development of hierarchical simulators for mixed analog/digital circuits;
analysis and design of switched-capacitor networks; analysis and design
of high speed circuits; optimization techniques; synthesis of VLSI circuits
using both algorithmic and knowledge-based approaches; analysis and simulations
of communications systems links; layout synthesis and module generation.
Photonic Devices
Waveguides and holographic optical elements for optical interconnects;
electro-optic modulators and switches; waveguides for sensing applications.
Solid State Devices
Fundamental semiconductor device physics; device design and novel device
structures; device modelling for CAD; new fabrication processes; submicron
and quantum effect devices; photovoltaics; semiconductor sensors and transducers.
Integrated Circuit Engineering
Design and development of linear and digital integrated circuits; fabrication
processes and test techniques; MOS, bipolar and BiCMOS ICs; VLSI; computer-aided
circuit design.
Analog Signal Processing
Switched-capacitor filters, transversal filters, operational amplifiers
and radio frequency functions in analog signal processing applications,
particularly for integrated circuit realization.
Circuits
Active filters; linear and nonlinear circuit design; computer-aided circuit
design; phase-locked circuits, carriers and clock synchronizers; mixers,
modulators and demodulators.
Microwave Electronics
Microwave amplifiers, oscillators, modulators, frequency converters, phase-shifters;
use of FET and bipolar transistors, Schottky barrier, varactor, step recovery
and PIN diodes; design using finline, microstrip, stripline, coax, and
waveguide; monolithic microwave ICs in GaAs; miniature hybrid microwave
ICs.
Communications and Radar Electronics
Circuits for terrestrial and satellite communications; circuit implementation
of digital modulation techniques; antenna and array design; communication
channel characterization; optical communications circuits; radar transmitter
and receiver design.
Biomedical Electronics
Cochlear prosthesis.
NSERC/BNR Chair in CAD
The joint Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council/Bell Northern
Research Chairs in Computer-Aided Design are currently held by Dr. Michel
Nakhla and Dr. Q.J. Zhang. This is part of a planned expansion of the department
in the area of CAD for VLSI.
NSERC/OCRI Chair in High Speed Integrated Circuits
The joint Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council/Ottawa-Carleton
Research Institute Chair in High Speed Integrated Circuits is currently
held by Dr. W.M. Snelgrove.
TRIO
The Department is part of the TRIO (Telecommunications Research Institute
of Ontario) Centre of Excellence. Current research areas of the Centre
with major participation from the Department are: integrated services digital
networks, mobile and portable wireless networks, VLSI in communications,
and millimetre wave/optical antennas and circuits for personal communications.
Micronet
The Department is a member, along with seven other Canadian universities
and several major industrial organizations, of Micronet, the federally-sponsored
network on Microelectronic Devices, Circuits and Systems for ULSI (ultra-large
scale integration). Within the Department Micronet supports research on:
device structures, modelling and fabrication processes for submicron CMOS
and BiCMOS ICs; high-speed filters, phase detectors, A-to-D converters,
frequency synthesizers and other circuit elements for silicon ICs operating
at radio frequencies; analysis and optimization of interconnects for high-speed
ICs; and automated generation of custom cells for VLSI design.
Course Offerings
The structure of the courses offered allows a well-integrated master’s
or Ph.D. program of study to be chosen that is appropriately related to
the field of thesis research. Device- and integrated-circuit-oriented courses
cover: fabrication, semiconductor device theory, semiconductor device design,
integrated circuit design, and integrated circuit reliability. Circuit-oriented
courses include: signal-processing electronics, micro-processor electronics,
computer-aided circuit design, phase-locked circuits, filter circuits,
RF and microwave circuits, antenna and array design. Systems-oriented courses
cover: optical fibre communications and radar systems.
IC Fabrication Facilities
Excellent facilities are available for the fabrication of solid state devices
and integrated circuits for research purposes. These include a class-100
clean room in which all basic processes required in silicon monolithic
technology can be carried out. The clean room houses facilities for photomask
generation and photolithography, modern diffusion furnaces, a rapid thermal
annealer, low-pressure chemical vapour deposition systems, ECR and reactive
ion etchers, e-beam, RF and magnetron sputtering systems for metal deposition,
and a SEM. Equipment for thick film deposition, scribing, bonding, and
automatic testing is also available. Comprehensive test facilities are
available for IC characterization, including wafer probers, HP4145 Semiconductor
Parameter Analyzers, and an automated C-V measurement station.
Computing Facilities
The Department has excellent computing facilities for software development
and circuit design for integrated circuits and microwave circuits. IC designs
using synthesis, standard cells and layout are supported for fabrication
through the Canadian Microelectronics Corporation or in-house.
The graduate computer network consists of 90 SUN workstations and has access
to the Internet. Industry standard software includes CADENCE, Mentor Graphics,
SYNOPSYS, HSpice, ANACAD, VARILOG, SONNET, EESOF, SUPREM, SEDAN, MEDICI,
MINIMOS, Franz COMMON Lisp, MATLAB, MATHEMATICA, FRAMEMAKER, and others.
Measurement Facilities
Advanced instrumentation is available supporting automated testing of both
analog and digital integrated circuits at frequencies up to 2 GHz. Low
noise test facilities include a phase noise measurement system, dynamic
signal analyzers, spectrum analyzers, network analyzers, arbitrary waveform
generators, digital sampling oscilloscopes, digital data analyzers and
generators, and RF frequency synthesizers, all of which may be controlled
using the IEEE 488 interface.
The Department has up-to-date facilities for circuit development and measurement
at microwave frequencies ranging up to 22 GHz. There are also facilities
for work at optical frequencies. Thin-film microwave integrated circuits
can be fabricated in house; there is provision for the fabrication of GaAs
MMICs through foundry services. Special purpose microwave equipment includes
automated network analyzers, spectrum analyzers and frequency synthesizers,
and a complete microwave link analyzer. Data generators and error-detection
equipment is available for work on digital communications. Industry standard
software, such as SERENADE (SUPERCOMPACT, HARMONICA) and ACADEMY (TOUCHSTONE,
LIBRA) is available for the computer-aided design and layout of microwave
integrated circuits.
The research laboratories maintain extensive collaboration with government
and industrial research and development agencies in the Ottawa area.
Graduate Courses*
The courses offered by the Department of Electronics are as follows:
Engineering 97.551F1 (ELG6351)
Passive Microwave Circuits
Review of EM theory for guided waves; transmission lines and waveguides.
Propagation in ferrites. Characteristics of planar transmission lines,
both single and coupled; stripline, micro-strip, coplanar lines, slotline.
Representation of discontinuities in transmission lines and waveguides.
Scattering-matrix characterization of microwave junctions and discontinuities.
Microwave network analysis. Design theory (including CAD), characteristics,
and use of microwave components such as impedance transformers, filters,
hybrids, directional couplers, isolators and circulators with particular
emphasis on their realization in microwave integrated circuits.
B.A. Syrett.
Engineering 97.552F1 or W1 (ELG6352)
Analog Integrated Filters
The fundamentals and details of analog integrated filters with emphasis
on continuous-time filters and SAW filters. Comparison to switched-capacitor
filters. Review of filter concepts, types of filters, approximations, transformations.
Building blocks such as op amps, transconductance amplifiers, and gyrators.
Design using cascaded second-order sections, multiple loop feedback and
LC ladder simulations. Discussion of issues such as tuning, linearity,
dynamic range, and noise.
Calvin Plett.
Engineering 97.554F1 or W1 (ELG6354)
Analysis of High-Speed Electronic Packages and Interconnects
Introduction to techniques of modelling, simulation and optimization in
designing high-speed VLSI packages and systems; models for IC packages,
interconnects and ground/power planes; lumped element models, distributed
models and EM based models for high-speed VLSI interconnects; delay, crosstalk
and switching noise analysis; simulation of multiconductor transmission
line networks; asymptotic waveform evaluation (AWE) and moment matching
techniques; concurrent thermal and electrical analysis of IC packages and
boards; optimization of signal integrity in IC packages and printed circuit
boards; macromodelling of linear and nonlinear components and circuits.
Q.J. Zhang and M.S. Nakhla.
Engineering 97.555F1 (ELG6355)
Passive Circuit Theory
General description of networks, leading to matrix representation of n-terminal
lumped and distributed networks. Elements of matrix algebra as applied
to networks. Properties of network functions; poles and zeros of driving
point and transfer functions. Foster and Cauer canonic forms. Synthesis
of lossless two-ports, single and double-terminated. Modern filter theory;
approximation of characteristics by rational functions; Butterworth and
Chebyshev approximations. General parameter filters;
graphical design. Elliptic filters, predistortion. Phase response and group
delay; all-pass and Bessel filters.
P.D. van der Puije.
Engineering 97.556W1 (ELG6356)
Simulation and Optimization of Electronic Circuits
Introduction to computer simulation and optimization of electrical circuits.
Time- and frequency-domain formulations for simulation, sensitivity analysis
and optimization. Optimization techniques for performance-, cost- and yield-driven
analysis of electronic circuits. Optimization approaches to modelling and
parameter extraction of active and passive elements. Advanced techniques
include statistical modelling, tolerance and reliability optimization,
computer-aided tuning and analog diagnosis, and large-scale optimizations.
Examples and case studies include FET modelling, optimization of amplifiers,
filters, multiplexers, mixers, high-speed VLSI packages/interconnects,
signal-integrity in high-speed ICs, printed circuit boards and multichip
modules.
Q.J. Zhang.
Engineering 97.557W1 (ELG6357)
Active Circuit Theory
Characterization of negative resistance one-port networks, signal generation
and amplification. Active two-ports; y, z, h, k, chain and scattering parameters.
Measurement of two-port parameters. Activity and passivity; reciprocity,
non-reciprocity, and anti-reciprocity. Gyrator as a circuit element. Stability,
inherent and conditional; power gain of conjugate and mismatched two-port
amplifiers. Amplifier gain sensitivity. Oscillators, maximal loading, and
frequency sensitivity. Active filter design; gyrator, negative immittance
converter (NIC) and operational amplifier used as functional elements.
Practical realization of gyrators and NICs. Active network synthesis.
Prerequisite: Engineering 97.555 or equivalent.
P.D. van der Puije.
Engineering 97.558F1 (ELG6358)
Computer Methods for Analysis and Design of VLSI Circuits
Basic principles of CAD tools used for analysis and design of VLSI circuits
and systems. Formulation of circuit equations. Sparse matrix techniques.
Frequency and time-domain solutions. Relaxation techniques and timing analysis.
Noise and distortion analysis. Transmission line effects in high-speed
designs. Interconnect analysis and crosstalk simulation. Numerical inversion
techniques. Asymptotic waveform estimation. Mixed frequency/time domain
techniques. Sensitivity analysis and its application in optimizing circuit
performance.
M.S. Nakhla.
Engineering 97.559F1 (ELG6359)
Integrated Circuit Technology
Survey of technology used in silicon VLSI integrated circuit fabrication.
Crystal growth and crystal defects, oxidation, diffusion, ion implantation
and annealing, gettering, chemical vapour deposition, etching, materials
for metallization and contacting, and photolithography. Structures and
fabrication techniques required for submicron devices. Applications in
advanced CMOS and BiCMOS processes.
N.G. Tarr.
Engineering 97.560F1 or W1 (ELG6360)
Digital Integrated Circuit Testing
Production testing of digital integrated circuits. Cost and difficulty
of testing. Outline of methods of testing used in production. Testing schemes
and design for testability. Specific topics are: faults and fault models,
yield estimates, testability measures, fault simulation, test generation
methods, sequential testing, scan design, boundary scan, built-in self
test, CMOS testing.
J.P. Knight.
Engineering 97.562W1 (ELG6362)
Microwave Semiconductor Devices and Applications
Review of basic semiconductor physics, PN junction, Schottky barrier, and
heterojunction. Discussion of the characteristics and applications of the
following microwave diodes: varactor diode and p-i-n diode (tuning, switches,
limiters, attenuators, phase shifters); Gunn diode and IMPATT diode (negative
resistance amplifiers and oscillators). Discussion of the characteristics,
small-signal models and applications of the following microwave transistors:
silicon BJT; GaAs HBT; SiGe HBT; GaAs MESFET; GaAs HEMT. Large-signal model
for the GaAs MESFET. Design of transistor amplifiers: low-noise; small-signal;
high-power. Design of transistor oscillators. Discussion of device/circuit
fabrication technology with emphasis on monolithic microwave integrated
circuits (MMICs).
B.A. Syrett.
Engineering 97.563W1 (ELG6363)
Electromagnetic Wave Propagation
Review of groundwave, skywave and transionospheric propagation modes relevant
to radar, communications and other systems operating in the medium frequency
to extra high frequency bands. The occurrence and magnitude of various
types of electromagnetic noise: physical principles involved, modelling
and prediction techniques, and limitations of such techniques in practical
situations.
Engineering 97.564W1 (ELG6364)
Radar Systems
Fundamentals; range equation, minimum detectable signal, radar cross-section,
pulse repetition frequency, range ambiguities. Classes of Radar; CW, FM-CW,
MTI, tracking, air surveillance, SSR, PAR, MLS, SAR, SLAR, OTH, 3D and
bistatic radars. Radar subsystems; transmitters, antennas, receivers, processors,
displays, detection criteria; CFAR receivers, noise, clutter, precipitation.
Waveform design; ambiguity functions, pulse compression. Propagation characteristics;
Earth’s curvature, refraction, diffraction, attenuation.
P.C. Strickland.
Engineering 97.565F1 (ELG6365)
Optical Fibre Communications
Transmission characteristics of and design considerations for multi-mode
and single-mode optical fibre waveguides; materials, structures, and device
properties of laser light sources; properties and performance of p-i-n
and avalanche photodiodes; types of optical fibre signal formats, preamplifier
topologies and noise, receiver sensitivity, transmitter design, link design
for digital systems.
D. Beckett, J. Goodwin, L. Tarof, K. Visvanatha.
Engineering 97.566F1 (ELG6366)
Phase-Locked Loops and Receiver Synchronizers
Phase-locked loops; components, fundamentals, stability, transient response,
sinusoidal operation, noise performance, tracking, acquisition and optimization.
Receiver synchronizers: carrier synchronizers including squaring loop,
Costas loop, and remodulator for BPSK, QPSK BER performance; clock synchronizers
including early/late gate, inphase/midphase, and delay line multiplier;
direct sequence spread spectrum code synchronizers including single dwell
and multiple dwell serial PN acquisition, delay locked loop and Tau-Dither
loop PN tracking; frequency hopped spread spectrum time and frequency synchronization.
Calvin Plett.
Engineering 97.567F1 (ELG6367)
Antennas and Arrays
Terminology and definitions; radiation patterns, beamwidth, beam efficiency,
gain, effective area, aperture efficiency, polarization. Basic antenna
categories; pencil, defocused, split, multiple, shaped, scanning beam.
Basic antenna types; dipole, horns, paraboloid, offset gridded multi-beam,
beam-waveguide Cassegrain, Yagi, log-periodic, helix, lens, array. Aperture
fundamentals: Fourier transform, phase errors, stationary phase, Rayleigh
range, PWS, Woodward synthesis. Field fundamentals; Maxwell’s equations,
dipoles, radiation and mutual impedance, duality, slotted waveguide. Reflector
antennas; GO, Fermat’s principle, GO synthesis, physical optics. Paraboloids,
dual-polarized reflector, shaping, Cassegrainian feed, profile errors,
multi-beam reflectors. Phased array fundamentals; space factor and immersed
element pattern, Z-transform, grating lobe diagram, blind spots, thinned
arrays, series/corporate/matrix feed, feed systems and phase shifter design.
P.C. Strickland.
Engineering 97.568W1 (ELG6368)
Fourier Optics
The theory and applications of diffractive and non-diffractive coherent
optics, with emphasis on holograms, tomography and high-speed optical computing.
Mathematical basis: generalized 2-D Fourier transforms, transfer function
of an optical system, 2-D sampling theory, Helmholtz equation, Green’s
theorem, and the classical diffraction theories. Eikonal equations; the
lens as an optical Fourier transformer; optical imaging and filtering.
Bragg cells and their applications in optical correlators and spectrum
analyzers. Computed axial tomography (CAT scans) with non-diffractive and
diffractive sources: Fourier Slice theorem, Filtered Backprojection, Born
and Rytov approximations. Physical and computer-generated holograms, volume
holograms, holographic optical elements. Optical computing: spatial filtering,
holographic memory, optical processors, optical pattern recognition.
R.G. Harrison.
Engineering 97.569W1 (ELG6369)
Nonlinear Microwave Devices and Effects
The physical basis and mathematical modelling of a variety of microwave/millimeter-wave
devices, (some of which exhibit the most extreme nonlinear behaviour known),
how they can be exploited in practical circuits and systems, and how the
resulting device/circuit interactions can be analyzed. Devices include
two-terminal non-linear-resistance elements (varistors) and two-terminal
nonlinear-reactance devices (varactors) based on classical, heterostructure
and superconducting technologies: pn and Schottky-barrier diodes, tunnel
and resonant-tunneling diodes, BIN and BNN varactor diodes, single-barrier-varactor
diodes, high-electron-mobility varactor diodes, Josephson-junction diodes,
and SIS quasiparticle tunneling junctions. Three-terminal nonlinear devices
include MESFETs, HBTs, HEMTs and RHETs. Circuit applications encompass
direct radiation detectors; frequency mixers; resistive, reactive, and
active frequency multipliers; as well as reactive and regenerative frequency
dividers. Emphasis will
be placed on analytical approaches that provide global insight into the
nonlinear phenomena.
R.G. Harrison.
Engineering 97.572F1 (ELG6372)
Optical Electronics
Generation, manipulation and transmission of optical radiation, with emphasis
on fundamental principles. Applications in optical sensing, optical communications
and optical computing. Electromagnetic wave propagation in crystals; review
of geometric optics; Gaussian beam propagation; optical fibres; dielectric
waveguides for optical integrated circuits; optical resonators; optical
properties of materials; theory of laser oscillation; specific laser systems;
electro-optic modulators; photorefractive materials and applications; holography;
optical interconnects.
B.A. Syrett.
Engineering 97.573F1 or W1 (ELG6373)
Advanced Topics in Solid State Devices and IC Technology
Recent and advanced topics in semiconductor device physics, modelling,
and integrated circuit fabrication technology. Topic varies from year to
year according to departmental research interests. Students may be expected
to contribute lectures or seminars on selected topics.
Engineering 97.574F1 or W1 (ELG6374)
Advanced Topics in CAD
Recent and advanced topics in computer-aided techniques for the design
of VLSI and telecommunications circuits. Topics will vary from year to
year according to the departmental research interests. Students may be
expected to contribute lectures or seminars on selected topics.
Engineering 97.575F1 or W1 (ELG6375)
Advanced Topics in VLSI
Recent and advanced topics in the design of very large scale integrated
circuits, with emphasis on mixed analog/digital circuits for telecommunications
applications. Topic varies from year to year according to departmental
research interests. Students may be expected to contribute lectures or
seminars on selected topics.
Engineering 97.576F1 or W1 (ELG6376)
Submicron CMOS and BiCMOS Circuits for Sampled Data Applications
The analog aspects of digital CMOS and BiCMOS circuit design in submicron
technologies including reliability; sampled analog circuits, including
amplifier non-ideal characteristics and switch charge
injection; CMOS/BiCMOS amplifier design considerations, leading up to standard
folded-cascode and two-stage circuits.
W.M. Snelgrove.
Engineering 97.577W1 (ELG6377)
Microelectronic Sensors
This course is concerned with the fabrication and physical principles of
operation of microelectronic sensors. A large variety of sensors will be
studied and the basic fabrication methods used in their production reviewed.
The devices discussed will include optical sensors, fibre optic sensors,
magnetic sensors, temperature sensors and, briefly, chemical sensors. A
substantial portion of the course will be devoted to micro-mechanical sensors.
T.J. Smy.
Engineering 97.578F1 (ELG6378)
ASICs in Telecommunications
The definition of Application Specific Integrated Circuits is given along
with current ASIC technology trends. CMOS and BiCMOS fabrication technologies
are compared for their potential use in communications circuits. Circuit
building blocks such as amplifiers, switched-capacitor filters and analog
to digital converters are briefly overviewed in the context of their communications
applications. An overview of vendor technologies is followed by application
examples such as line drivers, pulse shaping and equalization circuits,
high-speed data transmission over twisted pair copper cables and mobile
radio components and implementation issues. Students are required to submit
a related literature study and design a communications integrated circuit
component using a standard cell library environment.
T.A. Kwasniewski.
Engineering 97.579W1 (ELG6379)
Advanced Topics in Electromagnetics
Recent and advanced topics in electromagnetics, antennas, radar systems,
microwave devices and circuits, or optoelectronics. The subject material
will vary from year to year according to research interests in the department
and/or expertise provided by visiting scholars or sessional lecturers.
Engineering 97.580F1 (ELG6380)
Theory of Semiconductor Devices
Review of solid state physics underlying device mechanisms. Equilibrium
and non-equilibrium conditions in a semiconductor. Carrier transport theory.
Physical theory of basic semiconductor device structures and aspects of
design: PN junctions and bipolar transistors, field effect devices. Current
transport relationships for transistors. Charge control theory.
Modelling of device mechanisms. Performance limitations of transistors.
T.J. Smy.
Engineering 97.582W1 (ELG6382)
Surface-Controlled Semiconductor Devices
Fundamentals of the MOS system: MOS capacitors. Long channel behaviour:
theory, limitations and performance of the SPICE level 1 and 2 models.
Small geometry effects: theory, limitations and performance of the SPICE
level 3 model. Subthreshold operation and modelling. Hot electron effects
and reliability. Advanced analysis: the MISNAN model.
D.J. Walkey.
Engineering 97.583F1 (ELG6383)
Silicon Compilers: Automated IC Synthesis
Various topics related to computer analysis and synthesis of integrated
circuits including automatic programable logic array/finite state machines
compilers, silicon compilers and automatic test plan generators.
Prerequisite: Some IC design knowledge as given, for example, by Engineering
97.469.
J.P. Knight.
Engineering 97.584F1 (ELG6384)
VLSI Design
An integrated circuit design course with a strong emphasis on design methodology,
to be followed by 97.585 in the second term.The design philosophies considered
will include Full Custom design, standard cells, gate-arrays and sea-of-gates
using CMOS and BiCMOS technology. State-of-the-art computer-aided design
tools are available on a network of SUN workstations.
Engineering 97.585W1 (ELG6385)
VLSI Design Project
Using state-of-the-art CMOS and BiCMOS technologies, students will initiate
their own design of an integrated circuit using tools in the CAD lab and
submit it for fabrication where the design warrants.
Engineering 97.588F1 (ELG6388)
Signal Processing Electronics
Signal processing from the viewpoint of analog integrated circuit design.
CCDs, transversal filters, recursive filters, switched capacitor filters,
with particular emphasis on integration of analog signal processing techniques
in monolithic MOS ICs. Detailed op amp design in CMOS technology. Implications
of nonideal op amp behaviour in filter performance. Basic sampled data
concepts, detailed Z transform analysis of switched capacitor filters,
oversampled A/D converters and more complex circuits. Noise in analog and
sampled analog circuits, including calculation of dynamic range and signal
to noise ratio.
Engineering 97.590F1, W1, S1
Engineering Project I
A one-term course, carrying 0.5 credit, for students pursuing the course
work M.Eng. program. An engineering study, analysis and/or design project
under the supervision of a faculty member. Results will be given in the
form of a written report and presented orally. This course may be repeated
for credit.
Engineering 97.591F2, W2, S2
Engineering Project II
A one-term course, carrying full-course credit, for students pursuing the
course work M.Eng. program or the cooperative M.Eng. program. An engineering
study, analysis and/or design project under the supervision of a faculty
member. Results will be given in the form of a written report and presented
orally. This course may be repeated for credit.
Engineering 97.596F1, W1, S1
Directed Studies
Various possibilities exist for pursuing directed studies on topics approved
by a course supervisor, including the above listed course topics where
they are not offered on a formal basis.
Engineering 97.599F4, W4, S4
M.Eng. Thesis
Engineering 97.699F, W, S
Ph.D. Thesis