Introduction To Engineering Design
Introduction To Engineering Design
About Me
Ancient history
MA, MSc, DPhil, Oxford University Hitachi Central Research L b T k Hit hi C t l R h Labs, Tokyo Microelectronics Research Lab., Cambridge University
Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Waterloo, 1994 - 2001 Research areas:
electronic materials, manufacture of microelectronic devices nanostructures thin-film electronics integrated sensors
R. Hornsey
Intro 2
Outline of Introduction
What is an Engineer? What is Engineering? Where is Engineering going? Skills required by and Engineer Engineering Design g g g The design process Case study
R. Hornsey
Intro 3
What is an Engineer?
www.startrek.com
www.unitedmedia.com
R. Hornsey
Intro 4
R. Hornsey
sol.brunel.ac.uk/~ ~jarvis
Other Engineers
ca.news s.yahoo.com/010727/6 6/80c2.html
William Gates
www w.microsoft.com collections.ic.gc.ca
Intro 5
w www.hsn.dk/rowan/
Mechanical Engineering
Bombardiers snowmobile (1923)
collections.ic.gc.c ca
R. Hornsey
Intro 6
Religious Engineering
R. Hornsey
Intro 7
Military Engineering
http://abe.www.ecn.purdue.edu/~agenhtml/agenmc/china/images/scenery/gw0.gif
R. Hornsey
http://www.airforce-technology.com/projects/b2/b21.html
Intro 8
R. Hornsey
http://w www.boldts.net/Tor9.s shtml
Civil Engineering
Intel Pentium 4
www.mdrobotics.ca
Canadarm
www.peisland.com/c confederationbridge/
R. Hornsey
Confederation Bridge
Newer Engineering
Intro 10
What differences?
What are the differences between the traditional and the newer forms of engineering?
R. Hornsey
Intro 11
So What is Engineering?
I fix things; thats what Engineers do.
www.startrek.com m
Profession devoted to designing, constructing, and operating the structures, machines, and other devices of industry and everyday life Discipline dealing with the art or science of applying scientific knowledge to practical problems
better it implies a scientific basis while acknowledging that there is an artistic component and that engineers solve practical problems
Doing for seventy cents what any fool can do for a dollar
not precise, but sums up the economics
R. Hornsey Intro 12
Textbook Definitions
Association of Professional Engineers of Ontario (APEO)
any act of designing that involves third-party concerns and that requires the application of engineering principles principles
R. Hornsey
Intro 13
Key Concepts
Engineering is a profession
what does it mean to be a professional?
Engineering Designation
Canadian Council of Professional Engineers and Microsoft Corp. Agree on use of Engineer title Ottawa, Ont., May 11, 2001 After discussions with Canadas engineering profession, Microsoft Corp. will advise Canadian holders of its MCSE certification not to call themselves engineers or use the full title Microsoft Certified System Engineers. Microsofts decision should prevent Canadian holders of the MCSE certification from inadvertently breaking provincial and territorial laws, which protect the public by restricting the use of the titles engineer and engineering and the practice of engineering in Canada to licensed professional engineers. It should also ensure that the engineering professions licensing bodies will not be required to take enforcement action against MCSE holders who mistakenly use the title engineer or otherwise hold themselves out as having been qualified to practice engineering. We are very pleased by Microsofts decision, said Marie Lemay, P.Eng., CEO of the Canadian Council of Professional Engineers (CCPE). Microsoft has demonstrated corporate leadership by acting in the best interest of the MCSE community. Holders of the MCSE certification are not licensed or regulated by the engineering profession. If they mistakenly use the titles engineer and engineering the provincial or territorial engineering associations/order would have to take enforcement action against them. Its decision is good for the information technology industry, good for MCSE holders, and good for the engineering profession profession. The engineering profession, represented by CCPE and several provincial engineering regulatory associations, met with Microsoft in Seattle late last year to explain the legal issues surrounding the use of the title engineer in Canada, and to ask the corporation to stop referring to holders of the MCSE credential as engineers. Canadian MCSEs have received certification as Microsoft Certified Systems Engineers, which could lead them to mistakenly misuse the title engineer. We are very pleased to have reached an agreement with the engineering profession and to support it, said Anne Marie McSweeney, the acting Director of Microsoft Certification and Skills Assessment. It opens the door for closer cooperation among all organizations in the information technology industry and the engineering profession in Canada. As the Microsoft credentials continue to evolve, it is our goal to ensure they maintain the highest level of relevance to the industry and represent leaders in cutting-edge technology. Microsoft is currently researching alternatives for the MCSE credential worldwide, which could result in a new name for the credential later this year.
R. Hornsey Intro 15
Whither Engineering?
Based on out definitions, is this engineering?
R. Hornsey
www.ornl.g gov/hgmis/education/images.html
Or this?
www. .microsoft.com
Intro 16
no longer do people stay with one company the above skills ensure that an engineer remains flexible
Intro 17
R. Hornsey
Half-life of Knowledge
Half-life is the time after which half of our (technical) knowledge is obsolete
~12 years in 1940 12 ~5 years in 2000 ~3 years for software professionals long half-life knowledge f f Fundamentals e.g. science & math, g communication, creativity, time process short half-life knowledge Application Specific e.g. software packages, exam cramming
Intro 19
acquisition
R. Hornsey
depreciation
time
What is Design?
From Oxford English Dictionary
to make the plans and drawings necessary for the construction of (a building, ship, machine, etc.), building ship machine etc ) which the workmen have to follow out from Latin, to mark out, from de- + signare to mark
Engineering Design
is the i th systematic, intelligent generation and evaluation of t ti i t lli t ti d l ti f specifications for artifacts whose form and function achieve stated objectives and satisfy specified constraints (Dym & Little) how is this different from the definition of engineering? engineering ?
Key words
systematic generation and evaluation specifications, stated objectives artifacts form and function constraints
R. Hornsey Intro 20
Such management practices are being standardised in such generic standards as ISO 9000
The ISO 9000 family of standards represents an international The consensus on good management practices with the aim of ensuring that the organization can time and time again deliver the product or services that meet the client's quality requirements. These good practices have been distilled into a set of standardized requirements for a quality management system, regardless of what your organization does, its size, or whether it's in the private, or public sector. sector this is not specifically for engineering, but the same idea applies
R. Hornsey Intro 21
Problem formulation
1. Client Statement 2. P bl Problem D fi iti Definition 3. Conceptual Design 4. Preliminary Design 5. D t il d D i Detailed Design 6. Design Communication 7. Final Design
Analysis
Other books use slightly different models, e.g. Dym & Little
Are these the same? Which do you prefer? The 6 steps in the cycle are well described in the text (1.2) R. Hornsey
Intro 22
Needs Assessment
Identify the objectives and/or needs
may be supplied by the client may require d i education of th client ti f the li t
Who will benefit from the solution? How? What solutions, if any, already exist?
strengths and weaknesses?
w www.nasa.gov
Intro 24
Problem Formulation
Define the real problem
re-interpret the objectives in the light of what is possible
The Th goal is to break down the problem into a set of design li t b kd th bl i t t fd i objectives which can lead to a full solution
check that the sum of the parts still equals the whole, i.e. the individual steps together solve the original problem
R. Hornsey
Intro 25
If necessary, additional knowledge should be gained from published material or from experimentation/theory bli h d t i l f i t ti /th For example
determine how the the drag and lift are affected by the shape and area of the wing, hence propose appropriate wing geometries find someone to build a lightweight engine to your specifications test a number of control strategies on un-powered gliders before designing the final d i i th fi l version i
R. Hornsey Intro 26
Approximations
The world is not an ideal place
non-idealities lead to very complex and not necessarily solvable calculations l l i even ideal situations have no straightforward solution e.g. the motion of a pendulum with just one extra joint is chaotic
However, engineers must find a workable solution Sometimes a brute-force approach is used, such as numerical simulation
but this is still only as good as the knowledge used to construct the simulator
Typically, the skill of an engineer is to determine which approximations to use in order to reach an acceptable solution e.g. Sydney Opera House
the architect originally wanted parabolic roofs but the stress calculations were so complex that engineers eventually substituted arcs of circles
Intro 27
R. Hornsey
Analysis
Determine which of your designs is best
technically economically i ll ethically, environmentally to manufacture (linked to economics) for f product life cycle d t lif l for human factors satisfies the customer
R. Hornsey
Intro 28
R. Hornsey
It i I is very expensive if it is the customer who finds the fault in i i i h h fi d h f l i your product
Intro 29
Flaws in Evaluation
The Pentium Bug
a subtle fault which appeared in 1994 that could produce significant errors in mathematical calculations Intel initially responded that only people doing serious math would get a replacement company eventually gave in under intense pressure and offered replacements for everyone
Law of ten
cost of catching a mistake increases tenfold at each stage concept, schematic, layout, manufacture, packaging, verification, customer
R. Hornsey Intro 30
Summary
Engineers are highly skilled and versatile professionals
with understanding both of the technical theory and the methods for solving problems
This Thi combination makes the professional engineer different bi ti k th f i l i diff t from both the technologist and the inventor We concluded this introduction with a brief overview of each of the stages of the design process f th t f th d i These stages will be examined in detail in the remainder of the term
R. Hornsey
Intro 31
R. Hornsey
Intro 32
Homework
Read and understand the section on report writing in textbook (1.5) Read th R d the case studies at th end of Ch 1 t di t the d f Ch.1 Chapter 1 problems
R. Hornsey
Intro 33