Regina Problem Domain
Regina Problem Domain
Industrial Engineering
Industrial engineers perform the following tasks in manufacturing and service industries. Forecast the demand the product Prepare a plan to produce the product Analyze the cost and benefits of the product Design the layout of the plant to produce the product Select the manufacturing processes to make the product Identify the people and their skills for production and supervision Integrate people, materials, machines, and processes to work together Schedule the machines and processes for production Supervise the day-to-day operation of the facility Design the workplace and procedures for workers to follow Handle occupational and safety concerns Model and analyze the performance of the system and find ways to improve it
Factories
Distributor/Retailer Warehouse
Customers
Product Flow Information Flow
Areas of Application
Manufacturing and Production Schedule jobs on the shop floor Plan facilities layout Formulate inventory policy Improve reliability of products Business Determine advertising strategy Determine mix of product to sell Select an investment portfolio Public Sector Locate and equip emergency facilities Design traffic systems
Facilities Design
SLP PATTERN OF PROCEDURES Input Data: P,Q,R,S,T, & Activities
Flow of Materials Activity Relationships
Relationship Diagram Space Requirements Space Relationship Diagram Modifying Considerations Practical Limitations Space Available
PLAN X PLAN Y
PLAN Z
Evaluation SELECTED LAYOUT PLAN Muthers Systematic Layout Planning Pattern of Procedures
Tool Room
Work Cell
Laboratories
E.R. beds
Pharmacy
Billing/exit
Warehousing
Capability Histogram
Means
40.4
Ranges
Last 25 Subgroups
43
Capability Plot
Potential (ST) StDev: 0.959752 Cp: 0.69 Cpk: 0.69 Overall (LT) StDev: 1.18146 Pp: 0.56 Ppk: 0.56 Process Tolerance
I I I I I I I I I ST LT
Values
41 39 37 30 40 50
38
42
Specifications
Subgroup Number
Areas of Quality
Human Factors Engineering Work Measurements and Work Design Facilities Planning and Design Reliability Engineering Experimental Design For Engineering Production Planning and Control Engineering Project Management Integrated Manufacturing Systems Expert Systems in Engineering Industrial Robotics
Quality Control Automated Inspection Integrated Product and Process Design Queuing Methods for Services and Manufacturing Introductory Decision Analysis for Engineering Simulation Modeling and Analysis Engineering Information Systems Contemporary Topics in Industrial Engineering
Industrial engineers are the problem solvers in all organizations. Career opportunities for industrial engineering are limitless.
A sample list of career opportunities for industrial engineers include: Manufacturing: regardless of the product manufactured, every manufacturing company needs IEs to plan the facility, perform economic analyses, plan and control production, manage people, handle safety issues, improve quality, evaluate performance, etc. Health Services: hospitals and clinics need IEs to perform cost/benefit analyses, schedule work load, manage people, evaluate safety concerns, design and maintain facilities, etc. airlines, ground transportation, trucking, and warehousing companies need IEs to design the best schedules and routes, perform economic analyses, manage crews, etc. banks and other savings and lending institutions need IEs to design financial plans, perform economic analyses, etc. local and federal governments need IEs to design and enforce safety systems, environmental policies, plan for and operate in a number of organizations.
Transportation:
Financial:
Government:
Consulting:
IEs may work as consultants to help design and analyze a variety of systems including information systems, manufacturing and service systems.
The systematic and creative application of scientific and mathematical principles to practical ends such as the design, manufacture, and operation of efficient and economical structures, machines, processes, and systems.
The basic purpose of any organization is to provide products or services to their customers.
Thus, the design of these products and services is essential to the livelihood of a company.
Effective Design
Effective designs provide a competitive edge by:
Bringing new ideas to the market quickly Doing a better job of satisfying customer needs Making new products easier to manufacture, use, and repair than existing products
Product Design:
Specifies which materials are to be used Determines dimensions and tolerances Defines the appearance of the product Sets standards for performance.
2. Feasibility Study
(Performance Specifications)
3. Preliminary Design
(Prototype)
4. Final Design
(Final Design Specifications)
5. Process Planning
(Manufacturing Specifications)
Final design
Prototype
Process planning
Design
Cost
Form Design
Functional Design
Maintainability
ease and/or cost or maintaining/repairing product A measure for maintainability is Mean Time To Repair (MTTR).
DFM Guidelines
1. Minimize the number of parts 2. Develop a modular design 3. Design parts for multi-use 4. Avoid separate fasteners 5. Eliminate adjustments 6. Design for top-down assembly
7. Design for minimum handling 8. Avoid tools 9. Minimize subassemblies 10. Use standard parts when possible 11. Simplify operations 12. Design for efficient and adequate testing 13. Use repeatable & understood processes 14. Analyze failures 15. Rigorously assess value
Design Simplification
(a) The original design (b) Revised design (c) Final design
Listening to Customers
Customers Requirements
Normal Requirements are typically what we get by just asking customers what they want. Expected Requirements are often so basic the customer may fail to mention them - until we fail to perform them. For example, if coffee is served hot, customers barely notice it. If it's cold or too hot, dissatisfaction occurs. Expected requirements must be fulfilled. Exciting Requirements are difficult to discover. They are beyond the customer's expectations. For example, if full meals were served on a flight from Chicago to Indianapolis, that would be exciting. If not, customers would hardly complain.
Engineering economy: the discipline concerned with the economic aspects of engineering. It involves the systematic evaluation of the costs and benefits of proposed technical projects.
Some Examples
Choosing the best design for a high-efficiency gas furnace Recommending whether an overnight delivery service should be purchased or leased
Recognize a decision problem Define the goals or objectives Collect all the relevant information Identify a set of feasible decision alternatives Select the decision criterion to use Select the best alternative
Engineering Costs
General Cost Terms
Manufacturing Costs Direct materials Direct labor Mfg. Overhead Non-manufacturing Costs Overhead Marketing Administrative
Cost Components
Material Cost Direct material cost Bill of Material (BOM) Non-formula material cost expense of consumables used during
processing
Conversion Cost Capital depreciation Direct labor MBR management budget review Scrap Tools and Dies Transportation
Fixed Costs
Variable Costs
Def: Costs that vary depending on the level of production or sales Cost behavior: Increase or decrease proportionally according to the level of volume Examples: Costs of raw material, packaging material, direct labor, machine utilities are main variable costs.
Variable Costs
Variable costs per unit of production (V)
Break-Even Analysis (BEA) The total revenue depends on the production level. The higher the production, the higher the total variable costs. In BEA, it is assumed that price of product is fixed.
BEA
BEA
Therefore, the overall break-even analysis can be pictorially represented in the following graph
Profit Total costs (F+VQ) BEP: F+VQ=PQ loss
BEA
Total Cost (TC) = Total Revenue (TR)
TC=F+VQ TR=PQ
At the break-even point: F+VQ=PQ
QBEQ = F/ (P-V)
Example
500,000$ total yearly fixed costs. 150$ / unit variable costs 200$ / unit sale price QBEQ=500000/(200-150) =10000 units If our market research indicates that the present demand is > 10000, then this manufacturing system is economically feasible.
QFD: An approach that integrates the voice of the customer into the product and service development process.
customer wants Identify how the good/service will satisfy customer wants Relate customer wants to product hows Identify relationships between the firms hows Develop importance ratings Evaluate competing products
Customer Requirements
Peels a variety of produce
Works both right and left handed Creates minimal waste Saves time Durable Easy to clean Safe to use and store Comfortable to use Stays sharp or is sharpenable
CUSTOMER COMMENTS
Select a household product of your choice, your goal will be to describe how you think this design evolved. By looking at the product, can you tell: 1. How and why the device functions? Can you describe how it works, what energy sources are used, and what purpose that function serves? 2. How was human engineering involved? How would the human/machine interface affect this design? What safety issues would have been involved? 3. Why the original designers selected the materials used? What properties of the materials were most important in selecting them? 4. What features make this product unique? Compared to similar items, are there features on your example that would identify this as a better product? 5. How was the production process affected by this design? Are there specific features that might have been added to make production more efficient?
As your analysis continues, choose one aspect of the design that intrigues you. Study the design used, and consider how you might improve on it.
Develop a list of alternatives, and compare them to the existing design. Develop some criteria that may help you select one of your alternatives as most likely to succeed. Finally, select one alternative, and describe how it improves on the existing design, what its limitations are, and why you think this is a better alternative than the existing design.