Seminar Topics-How to select a good one?

November 12th, 2011 by admin | 2 Comments | Filed in Electronics Seminar Topics

For engineering students, for whom this website is meant for, seminar season starts by the end of sixth semester. By the end of the fifth semester you will be asked to find a good seminar topic for the coming semester. I was an engineering student so I know that most students take this silly. But only once you get out of your college with you engineering degree you realize the importance of the seminar topic you selected. Most interviewers ask about your project and seminars. If you had presented an interesting seminar topic there is a good chance that you get selected. So I request all my visitors not to take your seminar presentation lightly. Give it the importance it deserves.

In most cases your professors will give you a couple of seminar topics to select from. Make sure that you add topics of your choice as well. Make sure that you choose a topic that you are seriously interested in. Always give more attention to new evolving technologies and learn about their scope. This will not only give you an interesting topic to present but also may help you to find a good career.

While preparing slides for your presentation DO NOT add heavy graphics. Light borders look good but avoid heavy color tones. Do not write lengthy sentences so you can just read them to your audience. Instead include only points and explain them to your listeners. For a great presentation you should be able to teach them your seminar topic.

While presenting make sure that you really understand the seminar topic you selected. Only then you will be able to present it well, otherwise you will be stuttering all along the presentation also boring your audience.

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ECE Seminar Topics List

July 5th, 2011 by admin | 1 Comment | Filed in Electronics Seminar Topics

Given below is the list of all ECE seminar topics (Electronics and Communication Engineering) we have.

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We can expect Brain like computers soon in reality

June 30th, 2011 by admin | 21 Comments | Filed in Electronics Seminar Topics

The computers that are used in high-tech research labs and military applications are in the high end zone. But, the technology is still limited to the extent that they could not reduce the size of such computers with the increasing speed. These computers may be able to perform multiple operations and carry out several instructions at the same time, but they are not portable. Besides, no one has ever been able to develop a computer that resembles the biological systems of a brain.

Lately, a device that is more energy efficient than any other processor used now, and that too with the capability of processing multiple instructions at the same time, has been developed. The details and study was explained in the latest edition of the journal called “Advanced Materials”. The article explains about a device that uses phase changed materials for the multiple and simultaneous processing and storage of information. All the team work and effort for this device was given by researchers at the University of Exeter.

All conventional computers present now have a separate processor and memory. Thus, when a data is to be processed, it has to be identified from its memory, selected, taken to the processor, processed and then sent back to the same memory address. Since multiple data processing happens in a very small time, a huge time loss occurs. When the same processing mechanism occurs inside a human brain, the whole case becomes different. The brain is equipped to process and store the information and the same place. Thus, the time required to search for the information, retrieve it, and send it back after processing is saved. In order to design a device with the same characteristics, the researchers used a material that would resemble the properties explained above called phase changed materials.

Phase change materials are able to process and store the information at the same place and also at the same time. The material was first experimented with basic processing methods like addition, subtraction and so on. To their surprise, they found out that the material was able to reproduce artificial neurons and synapses. Thus, an artificial system that is made only from phase-change devices could potentially learn and process information in a similar way to our own brains.

The figure shown below represents a graphic prototype of a biologically similar, extremely efficient, fast ‘brain-like’ computing system.

Professor David Wright, a professor at the University of Exeter, who leaded the research process, said that their invention has major implications for the development of extreme forms of computing, including ‘brain-like’ computers. They have also tried to develop a new form of ‘brain-like’ computer system that can be used to learn, adapt and change over time. Such an invention will have a huge scope in the market as the size of such devices will be a way smaller than the conventional computers with similar speeds.

The study of this technology, being in its initial stage, the whole focus was given on a single phase change cell. Since the results were way better than they expected, they have started expanding their research on the building systems of interconnected cells. They are trying to experiment with small processes like identifying an object among many, and so on.

The project and its funding was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council.

To know more about this seminar – visit this website on Electronics projects

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Ovonic Unified Memory

August 28th, 2009 by admin | 9 Comments | Filed in Electronics Seminar Topics

This  Electronics Engineering Seminar Topic deals with the following:

We are now living in a world driven by various electronic equipments. Semiconductors form the fundamental building blocks of the modern electronic world providing the brains and the memory of products all around us from washing machines to super computers. Semi conductors consist of array of transistors with each transistor being a simple switch between electrical 0 and 1. Now often bundled together in there 10’s of millions they form highly complex, intelligent, reliable semiconductor chips, which are small and cheap enough for proliferation into products all around us.

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Optical Switching

August 21st, 2009 by admin | 48 Comments | Filed in Electronics Seminar Topics

This  Electronics Engineering Seminar Topic deals with the following:

Explosive information demand in the internet world is creating  enormous needs for capacity expansion in next generation telecommunication networks. It is expected that the data- oriented network traffic will double every year.

Optical networks are widely regarded as the ultimate solution to the bandwidth needs of future communication systems. Optical fiber links deployed between nodes are capable to carry terabits of information but the electronic switching at the nodes limit the bandwidth of a network. Optical switches at the nodes will overcome this limitation.

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Optical Computing Technology

August 20th, 2009 by admin | 16 Comments | Filed in Electronics Seminar Topics

This  Electronics Engineering Seminar Topic deals with the following:

With the growth of computing technology the need of high performance computers (HPC) has significantly increased. Optics has been used in computing for a number of years but the main emphasis has been and continues to be to link portions of computers, for communications, or more intrinsically in devices that have some optical application or component (optical pattern recognition etc.)

Optical computing was a hot research area in 1980’s.But the work tapered off due to materials limitations that prevented optochips from getting small enough and cheap enough beyond laboratory curiosities. Now, optical computers are back with advances in self-assembled conducting organic polymers that promise super-tiny of all optical chips.

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NavBelt and GuideCane

August 18th, 2009 by admin | 12 Comments | Filed in Electronics Seminar Topics

This  Electronics Engineering Seminar Topic deals with the following:

Recent revolutionary achievements in robotics and bioengineering have given scientists and engineers great opportunities and challenges to serve humanity.  This seminar is about “NavBelt and GuideCane”, which are two computerised devices based on advanced mobile robotic navigation for obstacle avoidance useful for visually impaired people.  This is “Bioengineering for people with disabilities”.

NavBelt is worn by the user like a belt and is equipped with an array of ultrasonic sensors.  It provides acoustic signals via a set of stereo earphones that guide the user around obstacles or displace a virtual acoustic panoramic image of the traveller’s surroundings.  One limitation of the NavBelt is that it is exceedingly difficult for the user to comprehend the guidance signals in time, to allow fast work.

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Multisensor Fusion and Integration

August 17th, 2009 by admin | 10 Comments | Filed in Electronics Seminar Topics

This  Electronics Engineering Seminar Topic deals with the following:

Sensor is a device that detects or senses the value or changes of value of the variable being measured. The term sensor some times is used instead of the term detector, primary element or transducer.

The fusion of information from sensors with different physical characteristics, such as light, sound, etc enhances the understanding of our surroundings and provide the basis for planning, decision making, and control of autonomous and intelligent machines.

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MOCT

August 6th, 2009 by admin | 10 Comments | Filed in Electronics Seminar Topics

This  Electronics Engineering Seminar Topic deals with the following:

An accurate electric current transducer is a key component of any power system instrumentation. To measure currents power stations and substations conventionally employ inductive type current transformers with core and windings. For high voltage applications, porcelain insulators and oil-impregnated materials have to be used to produce insulation between the primary bus and the secondary windings. The insulation structure has to be designed carefully to avoid electric field stresses, which could eventually cause insulation breakdown. The electric current path of the primary bus has to be designed properly to minimize the mechanical forces on the primary conductors for through faults. The reliability of  conventional high-voltage current transformers have been questioned because of their violent destructive failures which caused fires and impact damage to adjacent apparatus in the switchyards, electric damage to relays, and power service disruptions.

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MEMS Switches

August 6th, 2009 by admin | 2 Comments | Filed in Electronics Seminar Topics

This  Electronics Engineering Seminar Topic deals with the following:

Compound solid state switches such as GaAs MESFETs and PIN diodes are widely used in microwave and millimeter wave integrated circuits (MMICs) for telecommunications applications including signal routing, impedance matching networks, and adjustable gain amplifiers. However, these solid-state switches have a large insertion loss (typically 1 dB) in the on state and poor electrical isolation in the off state. The recent developments of micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) have been continuously providing new and improved paradigms in the field of microwave applications. Different configured micromachined miniature switches have been reported.  Among these switches, capacitive membrane microwave switching devices present lower insertion loss, higher isolation, better nonlinearity and zero static power consumption.

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