And Scientists By Mohammad Nuruzzaman - 5 Star Book Review.pdf - Modeling And Simulation In Simulink For Engineers

For engineers, the chapters on control system design are particularly outstanding. The book masterfully demonstrates the co-simulation between SIMULINK and MATLAB’s Control System Toolbox. It walks the reader through PID tuning using both automated tools (like the PID Tuner app) and manual Ziegler-Nichols methods, comparing the results side-by-side. Furthermore, the treatment of subsystem creation and masking is a hidden gem. Nuruzzaman shows how to encapsulate complex logic into reusable components, which is the cornerstone of professional model development. The book even ventures into advanced topics such as S-functions (allowing custom C or MATLAB code to be embedded) and state machines via Stateflow, providing a taste of high-integrity system design.

One of the greatest strengths of Nuruzzaman’s work is its logical architecture. The book does not assume prior knowledge of SIMULINK, yet it rapidly ascends to complex, real-world applications. The author begins with the absolute fundamentals: navigating the SIMULINK library browser, understanding blocks, signals, and solvers. However, unlike many technical manuals that become mired in exhaustive lists of features, Nuruzzaman adopts a “learn by doing” approach. Each chapter is organized around a class of physical problems—from simple mechanical springs to intricate communication systems—and the simulation of these problems is built step-by-step. For engineers, the chapters on control system design

The subtitle, “For Engineers and Scientists,” is perfectly apt. An undergraduate student in chemical engineering will find the fluid mixing tank examples indispensable for understanding feedback loops. A graduate researcher in biomechanics will appreciate the modeling of physiological systems. A practicing aerospace engineer will rely on the sections dealing with nonlinear dynamics and variable-step solvers. Nuruzzaman writes in a universal technical dialect—clear, precise, and devoid of unnecessary jargon. He respects the reader’s intelligence while never leaving them stranded. The only prerequisite is a basic understanding of differential equations and transfer functions; the book handles the rest. Furthermore, the treatment of subsystem creation and masking

This book earns a resounding 5-star rating because it accomplishes everything it sets out to do and more. It teaches the tool, illuminates the theory, and inspires the confidence to simulate any dynamic system. Whether you are a student preparing for a controls lab, a researcher modeling biological pathways, or an engineer designing the next generation of autonomous vehicles, this book deserves a prominent place on your desk—open, dog-eared, and well-used. It is, quite simply, the best practical guide to SIMULINK currently available. One of the greatest strengths of Nuruzzaman’s work

In conclusion, Mohammad Nuruzzaman’s Modeling and Simulation In SIMULINK for Engineers and Scientists is a tour de force in technical education. It transforms SIMULINK from a bewildering array of blocks into a logical, powerful language for describing dynamic systems. For the price of a typical technical textbook, the reader gains a reference that will pay for itself in saved time and reduced prototyping errors within a single project.