ECE 145

ECE 145 - First-Year Design Laboratory

Fall 2025

TitleRubricSectionCRNTypeHoursTimesDaysLocationInstructor
First-Year Design LaboratoryECE145JS180864LAB11500 - 1650 T  1001 Electrical & Computer Eng Bldg Christopher Schmitz
Charles Lai
Jialiang Zhang
First-Year Design LaboratoryECE145JS280865LAB11500 - 1650 W  1001 Electrical & Computer Eng Bldg Christopher Schmitz
Jialiang Zhang
Muye Yuan

Official Description

Aims to provide resources for first-year students to apply electrical and computer engineering concepts to an open-ended project design in their first year on campus. Students will generally work in teams of two to three to plan and execute their projects to result in a working prototype. Course Information: May be repeated in separate terms up to 2 hours. Prerequisite: Must be concurrently enrolled in ECE 110 or ECE 120. Restricted to James Scholars.

Course Director

Website

https://canvas.illinois.edu

Goals

This course will provide resources for first-year students to apply electrical and computer engineering concepts to an open-ended project design in their first year on campus. Students will generally work in teams of two to three students to plan and execute the project, resulting in a working prototype.

Topics

  • The Engineering Design Algorithm
  • Project ideation
  • Top-down and bottom-up design
  • Functional decomposition
  • Useful circuits for design
  • Intro to state machines for design
  • Efficient and effective breadboarding
  • Schematics and simulation for design
  • Research documentation for analysis, validation, and education

Detailed Description and Outline

Date

Reading, Tutorial, Exercise, Assignment, etc.

Topic(s)

Week 1

Exercise: Ideation.

Tutorial: Flowcharts

Intro to Design

Week 2

Tutorial: Circuit Basics and Simulation

Exercise: Project ideation and team formation.

Exercise: Mini-Project milestone 1.

Assignment: Draft proposal due.

Electronics

Week 3

Tutorial: Digital Logic and FSM

Exercise: Mini-Project milestone 2.

Assignment: Updated draft proposal due.

Logic,

Equipment

Week 4

Tutorial: Useful Circuits in Design Projects

Exercise: Mini-Project milestone 3.

Assignment: Project Proposal due.

Useful Circuits

Week 5

Tutorial: Computer-Aided Design part I

Exercise: Mini-Project milestone 4.

Assignment: Mini-Project Demo due.

CAD

Week 6

Tutorial: Journaling for Open-Ended Design

Exercise: Student Projects

Assignment: Journal due.

Journaling

Week 7

Exercise: Student Projects

Assignment: Journal entry.

Project design

Week 8

Tutorial: 3D printing

Exercise: Student Projects

Assignment: Journal due.

3D Printing

Week 9

Tutorial: Computer-Aided Design Part II

Exercise: Student Projects

Assignment: Journal entry.

Project design

Week 10

Tutorial: Soldering

Exercise: Student Projects

Assignment: Journal due.

Soldering

Week 11

Tutorial: Printed Circuit Board (PCB) design

Exercise: Student Projects

Exercise: Midterm Progress Report and Demo due.

PCB

Week 12

Tutorial: Microcontrollers

Exercise: Student Projects

Assignment: Journal due.

Microcontrollers

Week 13

Tutorial: Presentation Skills

Exercise: Student Projects

Assignment: Begin consolidating journal entries into a report.

Presentation skills

Week 14

Assignment: In-Class Demo due (flexible scheduling).

Assignment: Team Video due at end of term.

Assignment: Team Report due at end of term.

Presentations

Reports

Students will prepare research journal entries every two weeks. Those entries will be used to produce midterm and end-of-term written reports and video-recorded demonstrations.

Lab Projects

Students will first complete a procedural mini-project in the first weeks of the semester as they learn fundamental skills in the discipline. Once the mini-project is completed, students will work on their open-ended project design producing journal entries, midterm, and final written reports and demonstration videos.

Lab Equipment

DC Power Supply

Function Generator

Benchtop and Handheld Multimeters

Oscilloscope

Lab Software

https://falstad.com/circuit, LTspice, or other circuit simulator. Onshape CAD design for (optional) 3D printing.

Topical Prerequisites

Students must be co-enrolled in either ECE 110 or ECE 120.

Texts

Required: None

References

Recommended: Practical Electronics for Inventors, 4th Ed. by Scherz and Monk

Required, Elective, or Selected Elective

Elective.

Course Goals

ECE 145 is a freshmen design course. Students will construct a first-year appropriate design project using hardware circuitry like that used in first-year courses ECE 110 and/or ECE 120. They will use project ideation techniques to generate high-level open-ended project ideas. Through discussion, they will form teams then convert a broad project idea into well-defined modular components to place structure to the design process. Each modular component will be described by a circuit diagram, constructed, and individually validated for proper operation using appropriate tools of the trade, including benchtop power supplies and oscilloscopes before being assembled to complete the design. There is an emphasis on engineering design utilizing ECE concepts, documentation of research, and application of the engineering tools and methods learning in the co-requisite courses. Students will learn to document the successes, failures, and challenges of the project and to place more focus on the journey of discovery and less focus on the final “product.” The progress is cataloged in a weekly journal and regular analysis aids to complete a report and generate a team presentation video. The teams will then provide, in person, a brief demonstration of their completed work and each teammate will answer questions and provide measurements as requested.

Instructional Objectives

By the end of week 4, students working in teams will have:

  • ideated a project (ABET 1, 5),
  • diagramed a flowchart to describe the tasks required to achieve that project (ABET 1, 3),
  • constructed an approximate circuit schematic for implementing the functions of the flowchart (ABET 1, 3, 6),
  • generated a parts list and cost analysis (ABET 1, 2), and
  • provided a timeline complete with three or more milestones to mark achievements of the project (ABET 1, 6).

By the end of week 5, students working individually (but consulting in pairs) will:

  • have completed a partially guided mini-project where they build circuit modules (ABET 6, 7),
  • locate and report important information from multiple component datasheets (ABET 6, 7),
  • analyze circuit behavior using an oscilloscope (ABET 6, 7),
  • validate the anticipated behavior of circuit modules (ABET 6), and
  • revise the design where deviations from the intended solution exist (ABET 1, 7).

By the end of week 10, students working in teams will have:

  • built circuit modules (ABET 5, 6, 7),
  • leveraged information from additional component datasheets (ABET 6, 7),
  • analyzed circuit behavior using an oscilloscope (ABET 6, 7),
  • validated (or invalidated) the behavior of circuit modules (ABET 6), and
  • Revised their own design as needed to move toward their intended solution (ABET 1, 7).
  • They will also have completed five journal entries where, as a team, they report on their successes and failures (ABET 5, 6), present analysis and conclusions (ABET 6), propose and implement pivots on their designs (ABET 7), and propose a plan for the following week (ABET 5).

By the end of week 11, students working in teams will have compiled three journal entries into a mid-term report demonstrating the structured progression of their timeline and any achieved milestones such that the focus is on the process of research (ABET 1, 3, 5, 6).

By the end of the course, the students working in teams will have completed a final report and a video demonstration appropriate for a technical audience that again focuses on the process of research through the validation of modules and careful builds, test and measurement, evaluation, and pivoting the design as needed (ABET 3, 5, 6, 7). In an in-class presentation, the students, working in teams, will demonstrate the working (or mostly working) prototype of their design in a short, high-level presentation appropriate for the general public (ABET 3). The students of that team will then be asked to demonstrate specific measurements or answer specific questions regarding the prototyped device (ABET 3, 6).

Tutorials provided throughout the semester will emphasize the need for lifelong learning (ABET 7) and provide students with additional skills (ABET 1, 7) that might be applied to their projects as desired or needed.

Last updated

6/26/2025by Christopher Schmitz