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An Overview of Design Process

An Overview of Design Process . Steven N. Kramer Nagi G. Naganathan MIME Department The University of Toledo. What is Design?. Involves the creation of a device, component, mechanical or other system, software program, or engineering process to meet a desired set of specifications.

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An Overview of Design Process

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  1. An Overview of Design Process Steven N. Kramer Nagi G. Naganathan MIME Department The University of Toledo

  2. What is Design? • Involves the creation of a device, component, mechanical or other system, software program, or engineering process to meet a desired set of specifications. • Occurs when human brain combines knowledge of facts and figures with creative abilities to synthesize. • Increasing in complexity -- Space shuttle more than 107 parts!

  3. Stages of Engineering Design Feedback & iterations can occur at any stage!

  4. Stage 1a: Why do it? Confront/ motivate Typical Forms • Letter to engineer • Memo from superior • Observation of troubles in plant • Staff conference Typical Features • Too much or too little information • No clear-cut goals/objectives • Objectives specified may not meet the REAL NEED!

  5. Stage 1b: Sources of Information • Technical journals • Government publications • Commercial catalogs • Internet • Engineer’s or client’s files & experience • Consultation with others, including those in different but related technologies.

  6. Stage 2a: Formulate problem • Recognition • What is the REAL NEED? • Drawbacks of current practice? • Do we need a new approach? • Can existing approach be improved by increasing capacity, longer life, or greater accuracy? • Definition • Necessary & desirable objectives -- performance, safety, purchase cost, assembly, disassembly, weight, size, maintenance cost, etc.

  7. Stage 2b: Prepare information & assumptions • Key dimensions based on practical and theoretical knowledge wherever possible. • Augment by assumptions where knowledge is lacking.

  8. Stage 3: Select Design Concepts DEVELOPMENT • List related fields & existing solutions in those fields. • List candidate solutions • List the features or functions essential to the product (not physical components). • For each feature or function, list the means by which it might be achieved. • Draw up a chart containing all possible sub-solutions • Sketch configurations

  9. How to identify candidate solutions? - Morphological chart • Example:Forklift truck • Identify functions/features: • Means of support which allows movement • Means of moving the vehicle • Means of steering the vehicle • Means of stopping the vehicle • Means of lifting loads • Location for operator.

  10. How to identify candidate solutions? - Morphological chart • Identify means for functions/features • Support: Wheels, track, air cushion, etc. • Propulsion: Driven wheels, air thrust, moving cable, etc. • Power: Electric, gas, diesel, propane • Transmission: Gears, belts, hydraulics, etc. • Steering: Turning wheels, rails, etc. • Stopping: Brakes, rev. thrust, ratchet • Lifting: Hydraulic ram, rack & pinion, screw, chain, rope hoist • Operator: Seated at front, rear, walking, remote control

  11. Concepts - Morphological chart

  12. Evaluation of a candidate concept • Is it simple? • Acceptable to maker and user? • Expressible clearly? • Up to date in materials & methods? • Does it satisfy the REAL NEED?

  13. Stage 4: Synthesize • To determine the values (size, shape, properties, etc.) of the essential parameters of a system or component.

  14. Stage 5: Abstracting analyzable model • Simplified physical version • Mechanical-electrical analogs • Models based on 1-D equivalence • Mathematical models • Free-body diagrams • Kinematic skeletal diagrams.

  15. Stage 6: Analyze, experiment & optimize • Analysis: • Kinematic-Dynamic • Loads -- Stress & strain • Energy balance • Economic • Prototype • Design of experiments • Optimize

  16. Stage 7: Present product to user & maker • Flow charts • Plant layouts and models • Specifications • General, subassembly, and detail drawings • Gant charts for realization of design • Economic tables & bar charts.

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