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Ergonomic Housing improvements to Personal Smoke Monitoring Device

Multidisciplinary Senior Design Systems Level Design Review. Team: Evan Wozniak Sarah Kostuk Christina Smith Aaron Prahst. Ergonomic Housing improvements to Personal Smoke Monitoring Device. Background. Device measures: Puff volume Volume drawn into lungs. Purpose.

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Ergonomic Housing improvements to Personal Smoke Monitoring Device

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  1. Multidisciplinary Senior Design Systems Level Design Review Team: Evan Wozniak Sarah Kostuk Christina Smith Aaron Prahst Ergonomic Housing improvements to Personal Smoke Monitoring Device

  2. Background • Device measures: • Puff volume • Volume drawn into lungs

  3. Purpose Current cigarette testing may not reflect actual smoker puff profiles. The personal monitoring device will be used as part of a clinical study to gather information on real smoker puff profiles.

  4. History

  5. Customer Needs • Cigarette holder does not alter the smoking behavior or manner in which the smoker smokes the cigarette. • Cigarette holder is ergonomic. For example it is lightweight and feels like holding a cigarette. • Cigarette holder will support the cigarette independent of the user • Cigarette holder will not hinder the act of lighting the cigarette. • Cigarette holder includes a flow path with and orifice plate to measure flow rate. • Cigarette holder encompasses the pressure sensor for flow rate measurements. See Appendix A of Preread.

  6. Customer Needs • Cigarette holder has room for all the wireless electronic components needed to record and transmit the signal to the base unit and support any additional desired indicator lights. • Cigarette holder transmits pressure signal by wire to the base unit or an external fixture for testing. • Cigarette holder can handle a wide range of cigarettes including electronic cigarettes. • Cigarette holder and base unit are easy to maintain by the user. For example there is an easy way to store the holder to avoid loss. There is a comfortable way to attach the base unit to the subject • Base unit housing size is minimal yet has room for all wireless components. Preferably the size is no bigger than a cellphone • The final design includes ergonomic considerations, and potentially an improved solution for the chest bands to enhance wearability. See Appendix A of Preread.

  7. Risks • Lead time on Pressure sensor causes delays on analysis for decision • Requirements are too large for ergonomic hand hold • Might not have means to survey a "powerful" sample size • Smoker does not want to use the product See Appendix B of Preread.

  8. Risks • Rapid prototyping does not allow for accurate tolerances on orifice plate • Design hinders smoker ability to cover/ not cover vent holes • Not all plastic is FDA approved • Smoker does not hold ergonomic hand hold the way it was intended • Handhold is too heavy and breaks the cigarette See Appendix B of Preread.

  9. Overview Decomposition See Appendix C of Preread.

  10. P12056 Decomposition See Appendix D of Preread.

  11. Benchmarking Current Prototype

  12. Benchmarking Current Prototype

  13. Benchmarking Current Prototype Existing Pressure Sensor Specifications • Measurement Range • 0-2” H2O • Differential Pressure Resolution • Typ. 0.1% of Full-Scale

  14. Benchmarking Existing Smoke Monitoring Devices • CReSS Pocket by Borgwaldt • Mobile SPA/M by Sodim

  15. Benchmarking Current Prototype FSI Software Flowchart See Appendix E of Preread.

  16. Benchmarking Results: Previous project • 9 people were surveyed • Avg. Age: 23.11yrs (Std. Dev 3.58 years) • 8 Males, 1 Female • Answer questions on scale 1-5 (1= BEST , 5=Worst) • Questions regarding comfort of; hand piece, chest belt, and belt pack • Results were inconclusive

  17. Benchmarking Current Prototype • Survey Plan: • Usability of current plan • Survey data • Actual device data • Calibrate sensor • Calibrate chest band • Survey can be seen in appendix F of Preread

  18. Benchmarking Marking Sample Size • One way to prove that the new design is an improvement of the current design is to do an hypothesis test to show a statistically significant difference • The original hypothesis is that the mean (µ) of the survey response of original product is “=“ the mean of the survey response of the new product • The alternative hypothesis (what we want to prove) is that the mean (µ) of the survey response of original product is “≠ “ the mean of the survey response of the new product H0: µ0= µa HA: µ0 ≠ µa

  19. Benchmarking Sample Size • Yield a standard deviation of 1.3 (from results of previous project’s survey) • Calculate the sample size needed to prove a statistically significant difference of 1.0 or 0.5 • With an alpha (α) = 0.5 • And a Power (confidence level) of 90%, 95%, or 99% Alpha = 0.05 Assumed std dev= 1.3 Factors: 1 Number of levels: 2 Maximum Sample Target Actual Difference Size Power Power 1.0 37 0.90 0.903914 1.0 45 0.95 0.950397 1.0 64 0.99 0.990815 0.5 144 0.90 0.901930 0.5 177 0.95 0.950364 0.5 250 0.99 0.990146

  20. Rapid Prototyping Concerns • Lead time on Prototyping • Strength of Parts • Strength of multiple part connections • FDA approval of plastic for oral use • Tolerances

  21. Professor Cormier’s Input • RIT’s equipment is better for larger parts • Fastline is a company that does FDA approved rapid prototying • Rapid prototyping is feasible outside RIT • Definitely cheaper that injection molding • Cost is dependent on material height

  22. Input from FSI • Needed wireless components • Physical room needed to be allotted for wireless components • Are our prototypes sizes appropriate or do they need to be modified • Do we design and fabricate the belt pack and if so what are the internal dimensions that FSI needs • If we are not fabricating it is it a purchased part?

  23. FSI’s Input • Rechargeable battery would be smaller than supplied dimensions • 2 week life cycle with battery recommended • Belt pack can be made smaller • Half the size in the x and y direction • Use mockup from previous group • Chest belt: • How to make more user friendly • Rather than spend a lot of money on a orifice plate that is exact, each mouth piece can be calibrated in a lab setting before use

  24. FSI Input Could split board in half if needed.

  25. Hand Piece Concepts 1 2 4 3

  26. Hand Piece Concepts 5 6 8 7

  27. Hand Piece Concepts 9 10 11 12

  28. Hand Piece Concepts 14 13 15 16

  29. Hand Piece Concepts 17 18 19 20

  30. Hand Piece Concepts 21 22 23

  31. Hand Piece Selection

  32. Input from Professor Marshal • Have no more than 5 options for final survey • Rigid finger holds are frowned upon for ergonomics • Don’t need smokers to narrow down hand pieces • Look at similar productions like a hookah mouthpiece.

  33. Hand Piece Survey Plans • A survey will be conducted where smokers are asked to simulate smoking using the 24 prototypes. • They will be asked three questions about each object. • The survey questions can be found in appendix G of the preread.

  34. Handpiece Survey Plan • In order to score the handpieces the mean survey response must be proven the be < or > the neutral response of 3 • This can be proven statistically using an hypothesis test ( 1 sample Z test) • The original hypothesis is that the mean (µ) of the survey response of the design concept is “=“ 3 • The alternative hypothesis (what we want to prove) is that the mean (µ) of the survey response of the design concept is “>” or “<“3 (this will be 2 separate tests) H0: µ0= 3 HA: µa > 3 or µa < 3

  35. Hand Piece Survey Plans • Yield a standard deviation of 1.3 (from results of previous project’s survey) • Calculate the sample size needed to prove a statistically significant difference of 1.0 or 0.5 ( -1.0 or -0.5; alternative hypothesis of < 3) • With an alpha (α) = 0.5 • And a Power (confidence level) of 90%, 95%, or 99% Testing mean = null (versus > null) Calculating power for mean = null + Δ Alpha = 0.05 Assumed std dev = 1.3 Sample Target Actual Difference Size Power Power 1.0 15 0.90 0.908958 1.0 19 0.95 0.956195 1.0 27 0.99 0.990668 0.5 58 0.90 0.900480 0.5 74 0.95 0.951917 0.5 107 0.99 0.990193

  36. Pressure Sensor Selection Process See Appendix H of Preread. Please see next slide for graph with losses using discharge coefficient.

  37. Pressure Sensor Selection Process

  38. Pressure Sensor Selection Process • Criteria for picking a differential pressure sensor: • It should have an operating pressure of at least 0 to 2.0” H2O • It should be small enough to fit inside the hand piece • It should be able to run off of a future battery inside hand piece

  39. Sources • http://www.servoflo.com/downloads/item/mb-lps1-01-r-datasheet.html • http://edge.rit.edu/content/P10057/public/Home • http://edge.rit.edu/content/P10054/public/Home • Incropera, Frank P., David P. Dewitt, Theodore L. Bergman, and Adrienne S. Lavine. Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer. 6th ed. Wiley, 2007. Print. • The team would also like to thank Dr. Robinson and FSI for their support in this project.

  40. Thank you for your time • Questions/Comments

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