I-011
Development of 2.737 Mechatronics at MIT
Authors: David L. Trumper, Stephen J. Ludwick
Affiliation: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Abstract
In this paper we describe the development of the curriculum and associated laboratory
facilities and exercises for the undergraduate course 2.737 Mechatronics in the Mechanical
Engineering Department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The course
is centered on laboratory experiences which teach integration across the mechanical,
electrical, and control engineering disciplines. Within this broad focus, the labs
emphasize the application of feedback design in a variety of contexts as a means
to motivate the broader mechatronic design issues. The labs utilize PC-based hardware
and software for rapid control prototyping on a target digital signal processing
(DSP) board. This DSP board is programmed through a commercially-available block-diagram-based
graphical environment, in order to eliminate the need for low-level programming and
thereby allow students to concentrate on the higher-level challenges posed in each
lab exercise. A student's lab performance is evaluated primarily through a one-on-one
interview with a member of the teaching staff in conjunction with a conventional
written lab report.
Steve Ludwick
MIT Room 35-030
77 Massachusetts Ave.
Cambridge, MA 02139
TEL: (617) 258-6098
FAX: (617) 258-9652