ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT

DIGITAL SIGNAL FILTER DESIGN LABORATORY I - ELEN 406

 

Location:  J.B. MOORE HALL-Rm. 438

 

Purpose of the Lab: This laboratory course is designed to be the experimental companion to ELEN 405 Digital Signal Processing. These two courses are designed to give the student a solid background in the digital signal processing area. The students design digital filters and reinforce this learning process by implementing them in the laboratory.

 

Equipment/Apparatus:  The following experimental set-ups are available for lab use.

 

·         Personal Computers: Dell Optiplex GX270 Tover Computer, 2.6 GHz CPU, 1 GB RAM,

·         MATLAB Version 7.3.0.267 (R2006b) software, Signal Processing Toolbox

·         HP 4100N Laser Jet Printer

·         Digital Multimeters

·         Oscilloscopes

·         Function Generators

 

In addition to the above apparatus, this lab is equipped with the following equipment: TMDSEVM6701-4 C6701 EVM bundled with Code Composer Studio: Texas Instrument Model DSP7439U, TMS320C6713 DSP Starter Kit (DSK) Texas Instruments Model, TMS320C6000(TM) DSP Imaging Developer's Kit (IDK): Texas Instruments Model.

 

Experiments:

 

Experiment 1

Introducing the DSP Starter Kit and Tutorial

Experiment 2

Starting with the Reference Frameworks

Experiment 3

Building the Audio Player/Recorder

Experiment 4

DSP Development System

Experiment 5

Input and output with the DSK

Experiment 6

Architecture and Instruction Set of the C6x Processor

Experiment 7

FIR Filter Design

Experiment 8

IIR Filter Design

 

Faculty:  Hamid R. Majlesein

 

Lab Technician:  Kendrick Smith

 

Course Manuals and Textbook:  

Textbook:      Rulph Chassaing, Digital Signal Processing and Applications with the C6713 and C6416 DSK, Wiley, ISBN: 0-471-69007-4, 2005.

 

References:

1.      Vinay K. Ingle and John G. Proakis, Digital Signal Processing using MATLAB, Thomson Engineering Books, 2007.

2.      Miroslav D. Lutovac, Dejan V. Tosic,  and Brian L. Evans, Filter Design for Signal Processing using MATLAB and Mathematica, Prentice Hall, 2001.

3.      Sophocles J. Orfanidis, Introduction to Signal Processing, Prentice Hall, 1996.

 

Course Handouts-  1. Course Syllabus, 2. Lab Coversheet, 3. Lab Group Assignments.