1 / 44

Overview

ISE 195 – Fundamentals of Industrial & Systems Engineering BME 195 – Fundamentals of Biomedical Engineering. Introduction to Industrial & Systems Engineering Frank W. Ciarallo, Associate Professor and Assistant Chair of ISE. Overview. Brief History and Context for ISE

brier
Download Presentation

Overview

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ISE 195 – Fundamentals of Industrial & Systems Engineering BME 195 – Fundamentals of Biomedical Engineering

  2. Introduction to Industrial & Systems EngineeringFrank W. Ciarallo, Associate Professor and Assistant Chair of ISE

  3. Overview • Brief History and Context for ISE • Discuss Some Major Areas of Study in ISE • Mathematical Optimization • Production & Service System Design • Simulation Modeling & Analysis • Overall Course Structure of the ISE Major • Some Examples of What Recent Graduates in ISE are Doing • Assignment on “Podium Design”

  4. Modern Engineering Disciplines • Civil engineering emerging from military engineering • Mechanical engineering emerging from growth of mechanical devices after steam engine • Electrical engineering after the telegraph (and other products) appeared • Chemical engineering (petroleum products, lubricants, etc)

  5. Post WWII Disciplines • Nuclear engineering • Electronic engineering • Aeronautical engineering • Astronautical engineering • Computer engineering • Environmental engineering • Biomedical engineering • Industrial & Systems Engineering

  6. Chronology of ISE • The industrial revolution in large part led to the emergence of industrial engineering as a profession • Babbage thought to specialize labor by skill required • Taylor really started ISE • Analyze and improve the work method • Reduce the times required for the work • Set standards for the times required

  7. Chronology of ISE (cont.) • Gilbreth extended work of Taylor to consider the human aspects of work to include motion involved in work • Henry Gantt developed his chart to preplan, schedule, and monitor work activity • Shewhart developed the fundamental principles of statistical process control • Disciples became big names in quality

  8. What is “ISE”? • Industrial & Systems Engineering is concerned with • The design, improvement, and installation of • integrated systems of people, materials, information, equipment, and energy. • It draws upon specialized knowledge and skill in • the mathematical, physical, and social sciences • together with the principles and methods of engineering analysis and design to • specify, predict, and evaluate the results to be obtained from such systems.

  9. Design Impacts • Industrial and systems engineers design systems at two levels • The first level is called the human activity level and is concerned with how work gets accomplished • The second level is called the management control system level and addresses the planning, measurement, and control of organizational activities

  10. Level One Elements • Processes within the organization • Layout of facilities and machines • Design of the workplace • Storage space and location • Work methods

  11. Level Two Elements • Planning systems • Forecasting systems • Material and inventory planning and control • Scheduling activities • Cost control and analysis • Quality control system

  12. “ISE” and “Operations Research” • “Industrial & Systems Engineering” = “Branch of Engineering Concerned with Integrating and Improving Systems” • ISEs can use “OR” tools to do this, usually with the help of a computer • ISEs focus on problems in Logistics, Scheduling, Healthcare, etc. that have an optimization focus and that have a “scale” large enough to utilize OR tools • ISEs use “OR” to formulate design problems and generate solutions

  13. Why the Comparison? • Pure Operations Research has a heavy mathematical and computational orientation • There are many mathematical details to formulating problems successfully • There are many computational (computer programming, algorithmic) details to successfully finding “optimal” solutions to a stated problem • ISE applications of OR do not have as high a theoretical mathematical or algorithmic content • ISEs try to use the correct technique to improve the integrated system under investigation, including OR when appropriate

  14. Model Formulation and Solution • Mathematical optimization model formulation and solution • Represent the system or phenomena in some set of algebraic structures • Uses the “decision-makers” view, usually different from the “real-world” view • Simulation models have a closer mapping to real world details • Encode the resulting model in a computer via some modeling language • GAMS, X-Press, Excel • Find a “solution” to the model (hopefully “optimal”) • Solution algorithms vary for linear, nonlinear and integer decision variables • Solutions generated suggest new designs for a system • A “prescriptive” decision technique • Trying to find a “best” solution with which to prescribe how to make the best use of limited resources

  15. INFORMS

  16. Production Operations • Analysis of proposed product or service • Analysis of manufacturing process • Facilities issues • Work methods and standards • Production planning and control

  17. Characterized by Number of machines Number of part types Part routings through the system Processing times Machine setups Demand patterns Raw material/component availability Equipment layout/configuration Operator availability Interested in: Lead time for products Cost of processing Decisions include: System configuration Scheduling methods Inventory Control Production System • parts

  18. Saw • Lathe • Mill • Drill • Saw • Mill • Drill • Paint • Stores • Warehouse • Assembly • Grind • Mill • Drill • Paint • Weld • Grind • Lathe • Drill • Saw • Grind • Paint • Inbound Stock • Outbound Stock • Warehouse • Stores • Assembly • Lathe • Mill • Drill Facility Layout • Process Layout • “U” Shaped Cells • “Focused Factory” Layout

  19. Inventory/Supply Chain Management • Plan production quantities to meet customer demands on time with a high level of certainty at a minimum cost/maximum profit • Coordinate production/inventories between stages of the “Supply Chain” • Issues • Costs for production, inventory, shortages, setups, etc. • Variability in demand, supply • Lead times in production, transportation

  20. Product/Service Analysis • Will it be profitable? • Is product compatible with production line? • Can it be manufactured? • Where are there opportunities for improvement? • Analyze distribution of product or delivery of service to customers

  21. Manufacturing Process • What is the best process by which to manufacture and assemble the product • What is the mix of equipment, robots, or personnel • How can the assembly lines best be balanced • What is the best material flow and material handling procedures

  22. Facilities Concerns • What is the best facility layout? • How should material and goods be stored? • What maintenance processes should be adopted to include preventative maintenance, test, and inspection • Utilities required • Security and emergency planning

  23. Prod. Planning & Control • Forecast potential sales • Are capacity and resources being utilized to their capabilities • Establish inventory procedures • Plan for any materials requirement planning • Scheduling

  24. Institute of Industrial Engineers

  25. Studying Mathematical or Logical Models • If model is simple enough, use ISE mathematical analysis … get exact results, lots of insight into model • Queueing theory • Differential equations • Linear programming • But complex systems can seldom be validly represented by a simple analytic model • Danger of over-simplifying assumptions … model validity? • The simplified model can provide valid bounds • Often, a complex system requires a complex model, and analytical methods don’t apply … what to do?

  26. Discrete Event Simulation • “A model of a system as it evolves over time where the state of the system changes at discrete points in time” • Necessary when systems involve humans and logical connections between components • The “engine” of common ISE simulation software is built on the discrete event approach: ARENA (used in ISE 4712),FlexSim, AnyLogic etc. • The “logic” for the common ISE simulation software is built on the “process flow” approach. • Add animation to help communicate the model to the people operating the system.

  27. Process Flow Description of Systems • To build the model on the computer, use a “process-flow” approach • Systems consist of: • Entities (Customers, Parts) • Resources (Machines, People) • Routings (Logic, Networks) • Input Data (Times, Probabilities) • Performance Measures (Times, Utilizations)

  28. ARENA Model of a Supply Chain

  29. ARENA Model of a Truck Assembly Line

  30. Example: Traffic Simulators • Vehicle Intersection Model with Pedestrians (VisSim) • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yq9IAzNTAz0&feature=related

  31. Example: Agent Based Models • Subway Station Simulation: AnyLogic Subway Entrance Hall Model • http://www.xjtek.com/anylogic/demo_models/44/

  32. Work Methods and Standards • Perform work measurement studies and establish time standards • Perform work improvement studies • Value engineering studies to determine and eliminate sources of waste and excess cost

  33. Personnel Systems • Employee testing, selection and placement • Training and education programs • Job evaluation and incentive programs • Ergonomics and human engineering applied to jobs, workplaces and workplace in general • Quality improvement activities

  34. Prod. Planning & Control • Design quality control system and inspection processes • Shop floor control procedures • Reports • Cost • Quality • Labor • Productivity

  35. Planning • Support corporate strategic planning to include national and international planning • Perform enterprise modeling • Support and perform system integration activities • Provide support to major decisions and participate in major decisions • Quality management activities

  36. Policies and Procedures • Study organizational analysis and design • Perform analyses of functional groupings • Policy manuals • Procedures

  37. Performance Measurement • Identify meaningful performance measures for those areas of interest key to the firm success • Identify critical success factors • Specify and design corrective action procedures • Design reports for all levels of management

  38. Projects and ISE might take on • Analyze systems and construct models • Apply appropriate solution methodologies • Perform simulation studies • Perform operations research studies • Perform statistical analysis • Conduct designed experiments • And more…

  39. ISE and Systems • Industrial engineering really takes a system-level perspective • The tools and techniques of the ISE allow the ISE to examine the system, the interactions among the components of the system, all while keeping in mind the objective or purpose of the system • An ISE seeks to optimize systems

  40. ISE Course Coverage • Optimization (ISE 4711) • Simulation (ISE 4712) • Human Factors and Usability (ISE 4300, ISE 4320) • Ergonomics (ISE 4310) • Production & Distribution Systems (ISE 4810, ISE 4820) • Statistical Analysis of Data (ISE 2211, ISE 2212) • Cost and Entrepreneurship (ISE 4400, ISE 4410, ISE 4420)

  41. ISE Course Coverage • Computation (ISE 3540, ISE 4510) • Engineering Science (BME 3211, BME 3212, BME 3511) • Senior Design Project • Calculus, Physics and Chemistry • WSU Core

  42. What are ISE graduates doing now? • http://www.linkedin.com

  43. Assignment • Podium Specification Assignment • A customer need is a statement describing something needed by the “customer” of a design. • A metric is a measure used to quantify the fulfillment of a need. • A specification is a precise engineering statement of a goal to achieve during design. It includes a metric and value.

  44. Podium Specification Assignment • Form a team • 4 students per team preferred, • 3 students acceptable • Understand the product, customer, stakeholders • Develop a list of customer needs (15 to 25) • Develop a set of metrics for the podium • Develop a set of specifications for the podium (15 to 25)

More Related