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FROM THE EDITOR’S DESK
Dear IFETians,
June 2015 has been a memorable month for all our faculty members. In the Faculty Development Program (FDP), conducted in the first week of June, the sessions handled by Dr.G.MahendranPrincipal, Professor S.Matilda Dean Academics and Professor K.R.Sukumar were well received by faculty members.
A novel activity, “Innovative Teaching” enacted by 23 groups of faculty members was thoroughly enjoyed by them as enthusiasm was writ large on their faces with competitive spirit.
An another program on personality development, leadership and counselling skills conducted by Prof.J.Asha, Dean Placement and Prof.S.Matilda, Dean Academics enlightened senior faculty members on the above skills. With the batteries fully charged, the faculty members have plunged into their work in the current semester to break their own records.
Good luck faculty members.
K.R.SUKUMAR
EDITORIAL COMMITTEE Mr. K. Madheswaran -CoordinatorSAP/MECH
Mr. K.R. Sukumar -EditorLECT/MECH Mrs. P.Menakapriya -Sub-EditorAP/H&S
Mr. S. Arulkumran -MemberAP/CIVIL
Mr. G.V. Sriramakrishnan -MemberASP/CSE
Ms. V. N. Arumbu -MemberAP/ECE
Mr. R. Rajesh -MemberAP/EEE
Ms. A. Arthi Bala -MemberLECT/IT
Mr. R. Malayalattar -MemberAP/MECH
Ms. R. Aktharnisa Begum -MemberAP/MCA
Ms. P. Sasikala -MemberAP/MBA
Mrs. D. Devi -MemberASP /H&S
Mr. A. Mohammed ShapiqueSAP/ H&S -Member
Mrs. K. Lawrence Mary -MemberSAP/ H&S
Mrs. K. Siva Sankari -MemberSAP/ H&S
Mr. L.Balaji -MemberSAP/ECE
Mr. B. Elango -Member Librarian
Seminars Attended by Faculty
1. Mrs. L.Soundari Asso.prof/Civil,
Mr.C.S.Maneesh Kumar AP/Civil,
Mr.S.Arulkumaran AP/Civil,
Mr.V.Jayakumar AP/Civil attended One
Day National Seminar on Emerging Fast
Track Techniques in Building and
Infrastructure Projects.
Seminars Attended by Students
1. 14 students from final year and 19
students form third year B.E. Civil attended
One day National Seminar on Emerging Fast
Track Techniques in Building and
Infrastructure Projects on June 28,2015 at
Ananda Inn, S.V.Patel Road, Puducherry.
Inplant Trainingby Students
67 Students from both final and third
year underwent inplant training at various
organizations as follows:
1.Public work department, water resources
organization, Chidambaram.
2.Buildings (C&M) sub Division, Public
Works Department, Cuddalore.
3. Kaashiv Infotech, Anna Nagar, Chennai.
4. VELCITI Consulting Engineers
PVT.LTD.
5. Neyveli Lignite Corporation LTD.,
6. Sai Interiors & Decors- Bangalore.
7. Swanag Constructions Private Limited-
Anna Nagar West, Chennai.
8. U.N.I.Q.Technologies, T-Nagar, Chennai.
9. Buildings(C&M) Division, Villupuram.
Workshop Attended by Students
1. S.Aarthi, M.Banupriya, S.Bharatha,
A.Rajeswari, R.Anandhajothi, R.Sasikala,
S.Ranjitha, S.Shanthini, A.Shahin Nisha
attended the workshop on “Android
application development” held at UNIQ
Technologies on 7.6.2015.
DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL
ENGINEERING
DEPARTMENT OF INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
PAPERS PRESENTED/PUBLISHED/WORKSHOPS/AWARDS
RECEIVED
Papers Published by Faculty
1. Mr. M.Arul Pugazhendhi SAP/ECE,
Mr.K.Sagadevan SAP/ECE, published a
paper titled “An Efficient Multiuser
Interference Cancellation Scheme for
OFDMA Systems using Frequency Offset
Correction” -ISSN 2348-6988, Volume:3,
Issue:2 Year 2015.
Industrial Visit by Students
1. III B.E. ECE students went for an
industrial visit in June at Radio Astronomy
Centre, Ooty on 10.6.2015.
2. II B.E. ECE students went for an
industrial visit in June at BSNL-Maraimalai
Nagar, Chennai on 15.6.2015.
3. A ten days program for placement
conducted for upcoming final, III & II year
students in association with Permit Solutions
from June 11 –June 20.
Papers Published
1. A paper entitled “Power Quality
Improvement in Distributed Energy
Network Interface to Grid” is published in
the International Journal of Science and
Innovative Engineering & Technology in the
month of May 2015 by Mr.J.Vijayakumar,
IV B.E. EEE and Mr.P. Pugazhendiran,
Associate Professor/EEE.
Events
Dr.K.V.Selvarajodu, Department of
Computer Science Engineering,
Pondicherry Engineering College
inaugurated Anna University sponsored
faculty development training program on
EE6502 Microprocessor and
Microcontroller from 8 June – 15 June.
Inplant Training
1. M.Mahimai Anto Immanuvel of III
B.E.Mechanical underwentInternship
Training at National Institute of Science
DEPARTMENT OF ECE
DEPARTMENT OF EEE
DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL
ENGINEERING
Communication And Information Resources
(CSIR) from 01 June to 30 June 2015.
2. M.Vasantharaj, S.Vinoth Kumar and
B.G.Venkateshwaran of III B.E.
Mechanicalunderwent Inplant Training at
Rane Brake Lining Limited, Thirubuvana
from 1 June to 6 June 2015.
3. R.Muralidharan and G.Rajakumaran of III
B.E. Mechanical underwent Inplant Training
at Rane Brake Lining Limited, Thirubuvanai
from 1 June to 6 June 2015.
4. S.Bhuvanesh of IV B.E.Mechanical
underwent Inplant Training at Appolo
Distilleries Private Limited, Thiruvallurfrom
3June to 10 June 2015.
5. R.Thamizhvel, D.Sujith and S.Premkumar
of IV B.E. Mechanical underwent Inplant
Training at Lucas TVS Private Limited,
Nettapakkamfrom 10 June 2015 to12 June
2015.
7. Mr. A.M. Arjun and Mr. Nallam Satya
Anuroop of IV B.E. Mechanical underwent
Inplant Training at Rane Brake Lining
Limited, Thirubuvanai from 9 June to 10
June 2015.
8. Mohammed Rafiyudeen and
M.Vijayakumar of IV B.E. Mechanical
underwent Inplant Training at Rane Brake
Lining Limited, Thirubuvanai from 9 June
to 10 June 2015.
Upcoming Events
1. ISTE Staff and Student Chapter
Inauguration.(17 July 2015)
2. Induction Training Program for faculty.(4
July 2015 and 8 July 2015)
3. Inauguration of Association of
Communication Engineers. (14 July 2015)
4. Inauguration of Mechanical Engineering
Association. (15 July 2015)
5. Inauguration of Civil Engineering
Association. (21 July 2015)
6. K. Suryavarman and Navin Bharath of IV
B.E. Mechanical underwent Inplant
Trainingat Lucas TVS Private Limited,
Nettapakkam from 10 -6-15 to 12-06-15
Ranking by Anna University
SEMESTER SCRIPT BASED % STUDENT BASED % RANKING
Nov/Dec 2014 91.0 68.56 72
APR/MAY 2014 95.4 81.03 32
ANNA UNIVERSITY EXAM RESULTS SCRIPT-BASED
DEPARTMENT APR/MAY
2014
NOV/DEC
2014
Mech 91.8 86.0
EEE 93 89.9
ECE 94.9 93.6
CSE 96.7 91.8
IT 96.6 95.5
CIVIL 95.9 89.9
ANNA UNIVERSITY EXAM RESULTS STUDENT-BASED
Department Apr/May
2014
Nov/Dec
2014
Mech 79.6 43.6
EEE 71.7 64.0
ECE 82.6 72.8
CSE 86.8 61.9
IT 83.7 76.7
CIVIL 82.5 60.6
ANNA UNIVERSITY EXAM
PG Result
STUDENT BASED RESULT
DEPT
APR/MAY-2014 NOV/DEC-2014
MBA 78.7 36.5
MCA 97.8 87.5
M.E. (AE) 95.9 100
M.E. (CSE) 84.4 85.6
ROBOTS GROW IN NUMBERS
The International Federation of Robotics (IFR) expects new installations of industrial
robots to reach 200,000 units in 2014, and grow 12 percent annually between 2015 and 2017.
That would boost the world’s industrial robot population to more than 2 million in 2017.In 2013,
the latest year for which the organization has complete data, sales of industrial robots rose 12
percent, to 178,132 units worth $9.5 billion.
IFR’s data comes from projections of its members, the world’s top robot manufacturers.
The data include robots, but not peripherals (grippers, welders, cameras, and the like), software,
and systems engineering. Those installed costs, typically three to four times the cost of the robot,
would bring the total market to $29 billion in 2013.
Automakers still drive the market for industrial robots. In 2013, they purchased 69,400
units, a 4 percent increase from 2012, and accounted for nearly 40 percent of all industrial robot
installations.BMW highlights some of the changes in the industry. The German automaker
started by linking groups of robots to programmable linear controllers. As robot controllers grew
more powerful, they replaced some PLC functions. This supported larger, more distributed, more
flexible, and safer networks of robots.
Today, BMW’s typical installation involves 800 to 1,000 industrial robots handling
payloads of 10 to 750 kg. Master production scheduling takes place in the cloud, and the orders
are passed down through manufacturing execution systems and 150 PLCs, each one connected to
several robots. The resulting system can produce up to six different car derivatives on one line,
allowing real-time customization.
Going forward, BMW’s Stefan-Markus Baginski, a senior manager involved in robot
installations, expects systems for programming and connecting robots and PLCs to become more
open and standardized. He also expects more robot-human collaboration.Until now, robots were
limited to white body applications, the automated welding and joining of auto frame and body
components, according to Universal Robots CEO Enrico Iversen. This is because working
around high-speed robots is dangerous.
Universal is a pioneer in safer industrial robots that stop quickly when they contact a
person. This enables them to work near people without hurting them. BMW and other
automakers have begun installing these robots on assembly lines, where they can split such jobs
as positioning and joining parts.
The same human-friendly robots can also shuttle work pieces in and out of machines,
pack products, run tests, and place pepperoni slices on pizza in assembly lines near
people.Electronic and electrical products are the second largest industrial robot market. Orders
rose 11 percent, to 36,200 units, in 2013, about 20 percent of all installations. While many
electronic devices are made in low-wage nations, those countries are also rapidly installing
robots to achieve the high quality needed to compete in international markets.
According to IFR, China added 50,000 new robots in 2014. It expects installations to rise
25 percent per year and reach roughly 100,000 robots annually in 2017. These will double the
number of industrial robots now in China to 400,000. At that point, the number of robots in
China will exceed those in Japan, Germany, Korea, and North America.
China combines an enormous manufacturing base with very low robot density. The
country currently has about 30 robots per 10,000 employees. Japan and Germany have between
10 and 11 times that density. China may be able to absorb many more robots.There are many
factors, in addition to quality, driving the increased use of robots. Robots have already
demonstrated their productivity. As a result, many factories choose to add robots as they retool to
use new materials (such as composites) and energy-efficient technologies.
Robots are also growing easier to program and more flexible to use, enabling factories to
switch between products rapidly. This is increasing the practicality of robots for smaller
manufacturers who cannot afford a dedicated staff to program their systems.
P. Dharani Devi
AP/ECE
IFET College of Engineering
Jokes Corner
1. Question: Prove that “PAPA = MAMA”
Answer:
1. Art student: “Out of syllabus”
2. Commerce student: “Wrong question”
3. Medical student: “It’s impossible”
4. Engineering student: “It’s so simple’
According to Newton’s 2nd
law:
F = MA ---- (1)
We know that
Pressure (P) = Force (F) / Area (A)
P = F/A
F = PA ---- (2)
From equation (1) & (2)
PA = MA
Squaring both sides
PAPA = MAMA
“Engineers are the species with solution of any problem.”
2. There are three engineers in a car going for a drive. The first is a mechanical engineer,
the second an electronics engineer and the third is a software engineer.
Fortunately, the mechanical engineer is driving because the brakes fail as they are going
downhill. The mechanical engineer eventually brings the car safely to a halt and gets out
to examine the hydraulic systems.
The electronics engineer gets out and checks the body computer, ABS system and the
power train CAN bus.
The software engineer stays in the car and when queried about it says that they should all
just get back in the car and see if it happens again!