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Syllabus

This document provides information about the EEE 541 Electromagnetic Fields and Guided Waves course at Arizona State University, including prerequisites, textbook, reference books, course syllabus, approximate number of class periods spent on each topic, and grading policy. The course covers fundamental electromagnetic concepts, electrical properties of materials, solving Maxwell's equations, wave propagation and polarization, auxiliary vector potentials, electromagnetic theorems and principles, and rectangular waveguides and cavities. Students are graded based on homework, tests, and a final exam. Academic integrity is emphasized and violations will be reported and penalized.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
162 views

Syllabus

This document provides information about the EEE 541 Electromagnetic Fields and Guided Waves course at Arizona State University, including prerequisites, textbook, reference books, course syllabus, approximate number of class periods spent on each topic, and grading policy. The course covers fundamental electromagnetic concepts, electrical properties of materials, solving Maxwell's equations, wave propagation and polarization, auxiliary vector potentials, electromagnetic theorems and principles, and rectangular waveguides and cavities. Students are graded based on homework, tests, and a final exam. Academic integrity is emphasized and violations will be reported and penalized.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Arizona State University

School of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering


EEE 541
Electromagnetic Fields and Guided Waves - 3 hour rec.
http://balanis.faculty.asu.edu/EEE541
Prerequisites: EEE 341 or equivalent
Text: Advanced Engineering Electromagnetics (2nd edition, 2012) by C. A. Balanis
Reference Books:

Time-Harmonic Electromagnetic Fields by R. F. Harrington


Fields and Waves in Communication Electronics by S. Ramo,
J.R. Whinnery, and T. Van Duzer
Field and Wave Electromagnetics by D. K. Cheng
Electromagnetics by J. D. Kraus

Course Syllabus:
Polarization and magnetization; dielectric, conducting, anisotropic,
and semiconducting media, duality, uniqueness and image theory; plane wave functions,
waveguides, resonators, and surface guided waves.

I.

II.

III.

Approximate Number
of 75-Minute Periods
Fundamental Concepts
a. Maxwell's Equations
b. Constitutive Parameters and Relations
c. Circuit-Field Relations
d. Boundary Conditions
e. Power and Energy
f. Time-Harmonic EM Fields
Electrical Properties of Matter
a. Dielectrics, Polarization, and Permittivity
b. Magnetics, Magnetization, and Permeability
c. Current, Conductors, and Conductivity
d. Semiconductors
e. Superconductors
f. Metamaterials
g. A.C. Variations in Materials
Wave Equation and Its Solution
a. Wave Equation
b. Solution of Wave Equation
1. Rectangular
2. Cylindrical
3. Spherical

IV.

Wave Propagation and Polarization


a. Transverse ElectroMagnetic Modes (TEM)
b. Polarization
c. Reflection and Transmission
1. Normal Incidence
2. Oblique Incidence
d. Polarization Characteristics on Reflection
e. Metamaterials
V. Auxiliary Vector Potentials and Construction of Solutions
a. Vector Potentials A and F
b. Construction of Solutions
1. Transverse ElectroMagnetic (TEM)
2. Transverse Magnetic (TM)
3. Transverse Electric (TE)
VI. Electromagnetic Theorems and Principles
a. Duality
b. Uniqueness
c. Image
d. Reciprocity and Reaction
e. Volume and Surface Equivalences
f. Induction and Physical Equivalents
VII. Rectangular Waveguides and Cavities
a. Rectangular Waveguide
b. Rectangular Cavity
c. Hybrid (LSE and LSM) Modes

10

Grading:
Final Grade will be determined as follows:
Homework
20%
Tests (2)
50%
Final Exam 30%
Total
100%
Academic integrity refers to each student's obligation to act with honesty and integrity and
to respect the rights of others in carrying out all academic assignments. Violations of the
University Academic integrity policy will not be ignored. Penalties include reduced or no
credit for submitted work, a failing grade in the class, a note on your official transcript that
shows you were punished for cheating, suspension, expulsion and revocation of already
awarded degrees. The University requires that should I implement any penalty for violations
of the academic integrity policy, I must report the matter to the Dean's office. The University
has a Student Academic Integrity Policy, which will be followed in EEE 541.
July 14, 2015

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