Circuits and Electronics

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Course Features

Course Description

6.002 is designed to serve as a first course in an undergraduate electrical engineering (EE), or electrical engineering and computer science (EECS) curriculum. At MIT, 6.002 is in the core of department subjects required for all undergraduates in EECS.

The course introduces the fundamentals of the lumped circuit abstraction. Topics covered include: resistive elements and networks; independent and dependent sources; switches and MOS transistors; digital abstraction; amplifiers; energy storage elements; dynamics of first- and second-order networks; design in the time and frequency domains; and analog and digital circuits and applications. Design and lab exercises are also significant components of the course. 6.002 is worth 4 Engineering Design Points. The 6.002 content was created collaboratively by Profs. Anant Agarwal and Jeffrey H. Lang.

The course uses the required textbook Foundations of Analog and Digital Electronic Circuits. Agarwal, Anant, and Jeffrey H. Lang. San Mateo, CA: Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Elsevier, July 2005. ISBN: 9781558607354.

Recommended Citation

For any use or distribution of these materials, please cite as follows:

Anant Agarwal and Jeffrey Lang, course materials for 6.002 Circuits and Electronics, Spring 2007. MIT OpenCourseWare (http://ocw.mit.edu/), Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Downloaded on [DD Month YYYY]

Video Lectures

The course materials for 6.002 were last updated in Spring 2007. However, the lecture notes, demos, and videos presented in this section are taken from the Fall 2000 version.

 

LEC # TOPICS
1 Introduction and lumped abstraction
2 Basic circuit analysis method (KVL and KCL mMethod)
3 Superposition, Thévenin and Norton
4 The digital abstraction
5 Inside the digital gate
6 Nonlinear analysis
7 Incremental analysis
8 Dependent sources and amplifiers
9 MOSFET amplifier large signal analysis - part 1

MOSFET amplifier large signal analysis - part 2
10 Amplifiers - small signal model
11 Small signal circuits
12 Capacitors and first-order systems
13 Digital circuit speed
14 State and memory
15 Second-order systems - part 1

Second-order systems - part 2
16 Sinusoidal steady state
17 The impedance model
18 Filters
19 The operational amplifier abstraction
20 Operational amplifier circuits
21 Op amps positive feedback
22 Energy and power
23 Energy, CMOS
24 Power conversion circuits and diodes
25 Violating the abstraction barrier