Engineering
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Embedded Systems - Shape The World: Microcontroller Input/Output

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Course Features

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Duration

8 weeks

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Delivery Method

Online

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Available on

Limited Access

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Accessibility

Mobile, Desktop, Laptop

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Language

English

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Subtitles

English

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Level

Intermediate

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Effort

10 hours per week

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Teaching Type

Self Paced

Course Description

Learn how electronic gadgets are designed, developed, and built as embedded systems that shape the world.

This is part one of a two part sequence. Together these are hands-on, learn-by-doing courses that show you how to build solutions to real-world problems using embedded systems. In this course, we take a bottom-up approach to problem solving, building gradually from simple interfacing of switches and LEDs to complex concepts like a microcontroller-based pacemaker, digital lock, and a traffic light controller. We will present both general principles and practical tips for building circuits and programming the microcontroller in the C programming language. You will develop debugging skills using oscilloscopes, logic analyzers, and software instrumentation. Laboratory assignments are first performed in simulation, and then you will build and debug your system on the real microcontroller. At the conclusion of this part 1 you will possess the knowledge to build your own traffic light controller from the ground up.

This is the fourth time we have offered this course. Since the reviews have been overwhelmingly positive we do not plan major changes over the previous offerings of the course. We did however break the large class into two smaller classes. There are eight labs in part 1 and six labs in part 2. Students can pick and choose a subset of labs to achieve certification. The three labs that students found most rewarding in this part were designing the software algorithm for a demand pacemaker, interfacing switches and LEDS, and the finite state machine traffic light controller.

To complete this course, you will be required to purchase a Texas Instruments TM4C123 microcontroller kit and a few electronic components.

This microcontroller has a state-of-the-art ARM Cortex-M4 processor.

Course Overview

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Skills You Will Gain

Prerequisites/Requirements

High school physics course covering current, voltage, resistance, and power.

Computer programming course in any language with exposure to variables, arithmetic, logic, loops, and functions

What You Will Learn

Build and test circuits with switches, LEDs, resistors, potentiometers, and liquid crystal displays

C programming: considering both function and style

Construct traffic light controller

Debug using oscilloscopes, logic analyzers, and software instrumentation

Learn how to read a data sheet

Learn how to solve problems using a finite state machine

Synchronizing hardware and software input/output with switches, lights, sound, sensors. motors, and liquid crystal displays

Understanding of embedded systems using modular design and abstraction

Course Instructors

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Jonathan Valvano

Professor, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin

Dr. Jon Valvano is a professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin and holds the Engineering Foundation Centennial Teaching Fellowship in Ele...
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Ramesh Yerraballi

Distinguished Senior Lecturer, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin

Dr. Ramesh Yerraballi is a Senior Lecturer in the Departments of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Biomedical Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin. He received his Bachelors degree ...
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