In the Microprocessor Systems Lab, electrical, computer, and software engineers learn the fundamentals of microprocessor integration and microprogramming, including analog and digital input/output to devices ranging from stepper motors to liquid crystal displays. Students start with small-scale, low-power single-core System-on-Chip and Internet-of-Things microprocessors and work their way up to larger scalable microprocessor systems for real-time and human-computer interaction applications. Students make use of embedded integrated development tools, the Analog Discovery combined oscilloscope and logic analyzer, and circuit prototyping equipment to build complete hardware, firmware, and software solutions.
Overall, the Microprocessor Systems Lab provides students with unbounded embedded computing capability to explore the construction and prototyping of a wide range of low-level to scalable real-world microprocessor-based systems.
Equipment
- 15 Texas Instruments Tiva C-Series TM4C123G prototyping System-on-Chip boards
- 9 Analog Discovery combined Oscilloscope and Logic Analyzer systems
- Windows workstations for use with IAR or Code Composer integrated development environments for use with USB/JTAG
- 9 GW Instek 30300 current-limiting power supplies
- Prototyping boards, components for analog and digital circuit construction
- 9 Intel NUC (Next Unit of Computing) Linux mini-desktop systems
- 9 NVIDIA Jetson GP-GPU (General Purpose Graphics Processing Unit) embedded systems
- 9 1280x720 pixel USB cameras
Lab Director
Assistant Professor
- Electrical, Computer & Software Engr Department
- College of Engineering
Related Resources
Contact Us
Dr. Luis Felipe Zapata RiveraKing Engineering and Technology Center, Rm. 122
Prescott, AZ 86301