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Requirements – Short Review

Requirements – Short Review. User Level Product Level Block Levels. Definition: “ Statements of desired product performances and features used to define and quantify a product design”

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Requirements – Short Review

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  1. Requirements – Short Review User Level Product Level Block Levels Definition: “Statements of desired product performances and features used to define and quantify a product design” • User Level: Special list or labels which state the intended application and/or purpose of the product (Labeling) • Product Level: Quantitatively state all features, performances, and interfaces described in “Eng Terms” • Block Level: State all features, performances and interfaces describing the block in “Engineering Terms” • User Level >>> Validation • Product & Block Level>>>Verification Effective Engineering means full specification before design !!

  2. Requirements Imply Proof of Satisfaction !Implied Product Design Integrity ! • Many Gov’t Agencies mandate that ALL product requirements should be user validated and/or engineering verified (tested or justified). A requirement which cannot be verified or validated should NOT be stated unless objective evidence can be compiled to prove its satisfaction • Requirement Categorization Used in this Course: • Standard: Common to ALL Project Teams • Performance: Unique to Project and Technology, For Differentiating

  3. Design Blocks • Complex products require that the design be broken into logical design elements (termed blocks in this course) • A minimum of 1 Design Block per team member is required for ALL projects • Blocks form the basis of standardized design elements in this course. • Product Level Requirements can either be allocated or just associated to all design blocks. • The Project System Design entails defining ALL Block Performance Reqs incl Interfaces and Functions

  4. Allocation and Associationto Design Blocks • ALLProduct Level Requirements Must be allocated or associated to each Design Block within the project to complete a System Design Phase • Allocated: % of total budgeted to applicable design blocks plus margin. For example: Product Cost, Power Consumption, Mass …. • Associated: Used when allocation is not applicable. For example: Country(s) of Market, Annual Volume, Safety Standards ….

  5. Types of Verification • Inspection, Existence (Mostly Std Requirements) • User Manual (UM) • Product Labeling • Business Case • BOM’s, Asm Dwgs and other Eng Dwgs • Engineering Analysis (Mix of Std and Perf Requirements) • Analog Worst Case DFM Analysis • Digital Worst Case DFM Analysis • Circuit Simulations • Lab Testing (Mix of Std and Perf Requirements) • Bench testing circuit performances • Mechanical Measurements • Integration with other design blocks, compatible equipment • HALT and Other Stress Tests for Reliability • Safety and EMC Testing

  6. Verification Evidence • Verification Plan* • Numbered List or Numbered Table of ALL requirements • Corresponding List or Table of Verification Types • Location or Pointer to Verification Evidence File(s) or Doc(s) • Detailed Test Plan and Test Results Document • Use for All Simulation and Lab Test Verifications • Written with sufficient detail, a 2nd party could perform the testing • Must describe all inputs, permutations, configurations, and expected output limits • Test Results may be in a separate document in case multiple verifications will be conducted. Sims, Scope Traces, Digital Photos • * Summary of Verification Plan (PPT Slides) • List Key Requirements and Verification Types Employed • List Any Requirements which were Unverifiable • Summarize Detailed Test Plan for Key Performance Requirements • Show % of Requirements Verified (Coverage)

  7. Product Level - Standard Requirements • Standard Requirements are those requirements which are universal and can be applied to nearly all products and hence final projects • Standard Requirements may or may not be differentiating depending upon project goals but MUST be part of the minimum description of the product Standard Reqs Are Common to Nearly ALL Projects

  8. PL - Std Reqs: Market & Business Case Documented Business Case & Product Labeling RequirementVerification Evidence • Business Case • Business Case • User Manual, Env, Power Reqs • Labeling, User Manual • Labeling, User Manual • Overall BOM Spreadsheet $ • Mfg Process Diags • Business Case • Market Size • Average List Price • Market Geography • Market Demography • Intended Application • Material Cost • Manufacturing Cost • Annual Volume

  9. PL - Std Reqs: Env & Safety Analysis and Specific Lab Testing RequirementVerification Evidence • Eng Analysis, Lab Test • Eng Analysis, Lab Test • Eng Analysis, Lab Test • Eng Analysis, Lab Test • Eng Analysis, Lab Test • Eng Analysis, Lab Test • Eng Analysis, Lab Test • EMC Certification Tests • Safety Tests • Min Oper Temp Range • Min Oper Humidity Range • Min Oper Alt or Press Range • Min Storage Temp Range • Min Storage Humidity Range • Min Storage Alt or Press Range • Max Storage Duration • Primary EMC Standards • Primary Safety Standards

  10. PL - Std Reqs: Power Interfaces RequirementVerification Evidence • Energy Source List • Source Connection List • Min Oper Voltage Range • Max Power Consumption • Max Energy Consumption • Block Diags, Schematics, Lab Test • User Manual (UM) • UM, Labels, Lab Test, Sims • Eng Analysis, Sims & Lab Test • Eng Analysis, Sims & Lab Test

  11. PL - Std Reqs: Mechanical Variety of Evidence for Verification RequirementVerification Evidence • Mech Dwgs, Asm Dwg, UM • Mech Dwgs, Measurement • Eng Analysis, Lab Test • BOM, Asm Dwgs • Top Level Asm Dwg, BOM • Bd Layout Dwgs • Eng Analysis, Lab Test • Max Volume • Shipping Container Size • Max Mass • Elec I/F Connector(s) • Max # of PC Bds • Max PCB Circuit Area • Max Shock

  12. PL - Std Reqs: Mfg & Life Cycle Product designs should consider full “life cycle” from Mfg process to Disposal RequirementVerification Evidence • Composite BOM • Composite BOM • Composite BOM, Quotations • Quotations, Cycle Time • Eng Analysis, Lab Tests • UM, Analysis of R(1 period) • UM, Labeling • Obsolescence Analysis • UM, Labeling • Max Parts Count • Max Unique Parts Count • Parts/Mat $ Allocation • Asm/Test $ Allocation • Product Life, Reliability • Full Warranty Period • Product Disposition • Production Life Support • Service Strategy

  13. Product Level -Performance Requirements • Performance Requirements are those requirements which are specific to a product and project • Performance Requirements differentiate the product from all other similar products • Performance Requirements should describe …. • Signal Interfaces • Mechanical Interfaces • Features, Options • Modes of Operation • Performance Parameters • User Controls • User Displays and Outputs

  14. PL – Perf Reqs: Power Input(s) RequirementVerification Evidence • Eng Analysis, Lab Test • Lab Test • Mfg Data Sheet • Mfg Data Sheet, Lab Test • Eng Analysis, Lab Test • AC Power Freq Range(s) • AC Power EMC Stds • Battery Chemistry • Battery Std Size • Battery Capacity

  15. PL – Perf Reqs: Electrical Functions(Must be Defined if Applicable) Nearly All will be Eng Analysis and/or Lab Test Verifications RequirementDefinition • Voltage or Current Gain Ranges • Input – Output SNR • Frequency Response • Linearity and THD • Delay in uSec or mSec • Computation or Algorithm • Compute Speeds in Ops/Sec • Input – Output Delay • Analog Functions • Digital Functions

  16. PL – Perf Reqs: Electrical Interfaces(For each signal “grouping”) Every Signal Needs to be Defined in Detail Electrical Signal ReqDefinition • Analog, Digital, or Power • Input, Output, Bidirectional • RS170 Video, RS232, USB, Custom, etc • Voltage Range, Frequency or Bandwidth Range • Impedance or Current Range • Offset Voltages, Currents • Error Voltages, Currents • Max Noise • Other Analog Characteristics • Signal Type • Signal Direction • Standard Definition • Basic Analog Characteristics • Detailed Analog Characteristics

  17. Other Verifications: Societal (#7) • Societal Aspects are those concerned with accessibility, ergonomy, and diversity including cultural, gender, and age • Questions to Answer as part of project design and presentation: • Does the product depend on a certain class of user age, intelligence, strength, height, weight, skill, gender, language, etc. • Would common handicaps (vision, hearing, limbs, etc) prevent your product from being utilized or make your product unsafe? • Does your design require the use of any country specific infrastructures (ie; phone, cable, power, network, etc) • What countries is the target market and what languages will the product labeling support? • Does the product require special skills or tools to operate or maintain • Would the product potentially offend or exclude a cultural group? Accessibility and Ergonomics:Key to products that require user interaction related to overall user height, size, strength, mobility, vision, hearing, touch, etc.

  18. Other Verifications: Safety (#8) • This aspect includes Environmental, Health and Safety (EHS) • Questions to Answer as part of project design: • What industry is the product intended to serve? (home, automotive, factory, medical, aerospace, telecom, computer, educational, etc) • What hazard would result from a single point failure of a component? • What safety features have been designed into the product to prevent injury in the case of failure or accidental misuse • Does continuous use of your product present any long term user hazards? • Has the environment been adequately specified for all modes? (operating environment, shipping/storage environment, indoor vs outdoor use, dry versus wet, cleaning and maintenance, etc) • What hazardous materials are utilized in the product? (eg. Nickel Cadmium, Mercury or Lead Acid batteries, Lead based solders, etc) • What components are recyclable? Through what process? • What warning labeling will be required on the product, user manual? • What safety standards will the product be designed and tested to?

  19. Other Verifications: Legal, Ethical (#9) • Pretext: Most products must be designed in accordance with the laws of the countries in which they are sold. This includes providing an operation and service manual in the language of the country sold. • Key Questions to Answer: • Does your product design include an operator manual? Does the operator manual or product labeling indicate specific applications or uses? What product labeling is required in the industry in which the product pertains? • Does the product include labeling of user interface? Manufacturer, Date, Serial, etc? • What languages would the product labeling and information need to be published in? • How long would you be required to provide support parts for the product? • What liabilities may be encountered if the product malfunctions?

  20. Other Verifications: Manufacturability (#10) • Manufacturability: Measure of the ability to mass produce a product design within known, established, economic and commonly available processes at a high yield. • Key Questions to Answer as part of project design and presentation: • Does your design utilize common place assembly industries? • Are you relying on any custom processes? • What % of hand assembly is required versus automated or robotic? • What is the expected overall yield of your product in DPM? • What measurements, adjustments, calibrations or tweaks are required during the manufacturing process? • Could your product design be mass produced outside the US? Outside North America? In China, India or other lower overhead areas? • Is there any processes involved in mfg which may be hazardous?

  21. Other Verifications: Sustainability (#10) • Sustainability: Measure of the ability to continue a product in mass production and/or continue to service a product even after production has ceased. • Key Questions to Answer as part of project design and presentation: • How would your product be serviced? • Are there any user replaceable parts? What skills, tools, are required to service it? • What special instructions/warnings need to be included with the product with regard to service • How long will it likely remain in production? • Are there any parts likely to go obsolete? Technologies that would take its place (eg; 74LSXX replaced by 74FXX device) • What parts are unique with no potential substitutes? • What is the oldest standard component used in the design? Newest standard component?

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