The Master of Technology in Electronics Engineering (M.Tech Electronics) is a two-year postgraduate program designed to build advanced expertise in electronic circuits, communication systems, semiconductor technology, embedded systems, VLSI, and automation. Aligned with NEP 2020 and 2026 industry standards, the syllabus emphasizes hands-on laboratory work, simulation-based learning, interdisciplinary innovation, and research-oriented project development.
This semester strengthens mathematical, analytical, and electronic fundamentals.
This semester focuses on circuit design, communication, and control systems.
This semester introduces advanced technologies and dissertation planning.
The final semester emphasizes research execution and industry exposure.
| Subject | Book Title | Author |
|---|---|---|
| VLSI Design | VLSI Design | John P. Uyemura |
| Signal Processing | Digital Signal Processing | Oppenheim |
| Communication Systems | Communication Systems | Simon Haykin |
| Embedded Systems | Embedded System Design | Frank Vahid |
| Control Engineering | Modern Control Engineering | Katsuhiko Ogata |
The M.Tech Electronics Engineering syllabus follows a two-year structure divided into four semesters. The curriculum includes core subjects, elective subjects, laboratory practicals, research methodology, dissertation work, and an industry internship in the final semester.
Semester 1 focuses on advanced foundations such as signal processing, semiconductor devices, and embedded systems. Semester 2 covers core electronics areas including VLSI, communication systems, power electronics, and control systems. Semester 3 emphasizes specialization through electives, IoT, RF systems, and dissertation planning. Semester 4 is dedicated to the major project, internship, and viva-voce.
Yes, laboratory practicals and simulation-based learning are mandatory parts of the M.Tech Electronics syllabus. Students work with circuit design tools, HDL simulation, signal processing software, and embedded system platforms across all semesters.
Elective subjects allow students to specialize in specific domains such as VLSI design, embedded systems, robotics and automation, communication engineering, signal processing, or power electronics. Electives are usually offered from the third semester onwards.
Yes, dissertation or major project work is compulsory in the final year. Students begin research planning in Semester 3 and complete the project in Semester 4 under faculty supervision, followed by evaluation and viva-voce.
Yes, the 2026 M.Tech Electronics Engineering syllabus is aligned with NEP 2020. It emphasizes research orientation, interdisciplinary learning, skill-based education, and practical exposure through labs, projects, and internships.
