1 / 43

What is Engineering?

What is Engineering?. Problem solving Design Innovation and Creativity Application of math and science Teamwork and Leadership Communication Professional. What do Engineers do?. Work in industry, government or consulting Develop surgical instruments

Download Presentation

What is Engineering?

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. What is Engineering? • Problem solving • Design • Innovation and Creativity • Application of math and science • Teamwork and Leadership • Communication • Professional

  2. What do Engineers do? • Work in industry, government or consulting • Develop surgical instruments • Design municipal infrastructure (water distribution lines, water treatment) • Remediate a contaminated site • Design a robotic systems for a production line in a factory

  3. Engineer or Scientist – What’s the difference? • Science – understand concepts, learn about theory and principles, have expertise • Engineering – applies principles of math and science to solve real-life problems • Engineers and scientists often work together as part of a team • Engineering is a profession – P.Eng

  4. Innovation in... • Waste management • Transportation • Communication • Production of: food, tools, machinery • Human health • Space travel and exploration • Computers in everyday life

  5. Traditional Engineering Programs • Civil Engineering • Mechanical Engineering • Electrical Engineering • Chemical Engineering

  6. Non-Traditional Engineering Programs • Industrial Engineering • Environmental Engineering • Biological or Biomedical Engineering • Engineering Systems & Computing • Computer or Software Engineering • Water Resources Engineering • Aerospace Engineering

  7. Engineering at Guelph • Biological Engineering (Biomedical or bio-process areas of interest) • Engineering Systems & Computing (Biomedical, software or mechatronics areas of interest) • Environmental Engineering • Water Resources Engineering

  8. Design Engineering • Design courses starting in first year • First year - marble launcher • Second year - windmill powered battery charger • Third year - design of prosthetic arm • Fourth year design courses

  9. The Mission: • Design, build and test a device to transport a marble from less than a foot off the floor into a column of water • Slow the descent of the marble to the greatest extent possible • Maximum time completely under water, not touching the bottom

  10. The Rules: • You may attach a device to the marble to suspend it in the water column • You may not change the marble • Human energy can only supply potential energy to the launch mechanism • If you add something to the water, it must be added with the marble mechansim • No explosives can be used

  11. More Rules: • Made entirely by recycled materials • Constructed by the group • Total equivalent cost less than $50 • Safe for a nine year old to use • No animals may be used/harmed in the design

  12. The column • Column 3 feet high • Water filled to within 2 inches of the top • A shallow sheet metal funnel will be attached to provide a greater entry radius (approx 3-4 feet) • Launch mechanism can touch the metal funnel but not the column or the water

  13. OAC Requirements New Curriculum requirements OAC English ENG 4U 2 of OAC Physics, Chemistry and Biology 2 of PHYS, CHEM or BIOL OAC Calculus Advanced Functions and Introductory Calculus OAC Algebra & Geometry Geometry and Discrete Mathematics 1 additional OAC credit 1 additional grade 12 credit What do you need?

  14. The Criteria • How long does the marble to descend to the bottom of the water column (longer is better) to a max of 5 min. • How expensive (cheaper is better) • Aesthetic appeal • Simplicity of design • Unique, innovative design

  15. Brainstorming – the first step • No idea is a stupid or silly idea • Wild and crazy is good – suggest ideas without thinking too hard • One person record all of the ideas • No one is allowed to prove any ideas won’t work

  16. What is Engineering? • Problem solving • Design • Innovation and Creativity • Math and science • Professional • Teamwork and Leadership • Communication

  17. Solution 1 – Elastic launcher • Launching arm on an elastic band, potential energy by drawing back the arm launches the marble • Added prop to elevate the launcher • Adjustable to change the range of the launcher and improve accuracy

  18. Solution 1 – Cork floater • Marble attached to cork – buoyant forces counteract the weight of the marble • Flat piece of cork acts to provide drag in the water

  19. Solution 2 – Weight pulley on a ramp • Weight (pop bottle filled with nails) attached by string to ½ popcan holding the marble flotation device over a pulley (old inline skate wheels) • As weight falls by potential energy, the can with the marble leaves the floor and rises to the column and tips the marble flotation device into the column

  20. Solution 2 – Oil capsule • Spherical capsule filled with canola oil (lighter than water) • Fishing weights and paperclips to balance weight

  21. Solution 3 Counter-weight lift device • Elevator type lift – wooden structure with a angled platform • Free weights attached by string to the platform • Once released from the top of the structure, the weights fall, and the platform rises, releasing the flotation device into the column

  22. Solution 3 – Water balloon • Large balloon filled with water, diameter slightly less than the diameter of the column • Marble inside • Attached to a PVC pipe capsule containing alka-seltzer • When balloon is released, water leaks into capsule through a drilled hole • Reaction with alka-seltzer released gas, increases the balloon diameter, balloon gets stuck in column

  23. The Winner • Solution 3 – Maximum suspension (5 min) • Second runner up – Solution 2 (4 min)

  24. OAC Requirements New Curriculum requirements OAC English ENG 4U 2 of OAC Physics, Chemistry and Biology 2 of SPH 4U, SCH 4U or SBI 4U OAC Calculus Advanced Functions and Introductory Calculus OAC Algebra & Geometry Geometry and Discrete Mathematics 1 additional OAC credit 1 additional grade 12 credit What do you need ?

  25. Biological Engineering • Applying engineering to biological systems • Food engineering • Biological processing • Biomechanics or biomedical applications • Ergonomic design applications • Students can mix and match

  26. 4th Year Design Projects • Project SOY – has included projects involving food coatings, alternate food packaging, SOY substitutes • Analysis and bioremediation of contaminated soils • Pedobarograph • Device for measuring forces during teeth grinding/Bruxism • Surgical Instrument for back surgery

  27. Engineering Systems & Computing • Computer engineering (hardware) and Software engineering and Systems engineering • Embedded systems • Elevators • Microwaves • VCR • Car • Interaction – hardware, software, environment

  28. Robotic Arm Demonstration

  29. 4th Year Design Projects • Portable MP3 music machine • Robotic arm application where arms work in collaboration to complete a task • Intelligent mechatronic aide for recovering stroke patients • Voice recognition and translation • Home robot controlled via the internet

  30. Research – Computer Vision Technologies • Robot that has vision and interacts with and tracks people • More sensitive than automated visual tracking • Applications – monitoring manufacturing, robotic arm routines and prevention of line shutdowns • GM – vehicle technology to prevent drivers from falling asleep, driver assistant for traffic surveillance

  31. What is in our water? • Our water originates from lakes, reservoirs, groundwater and must be treated before use • Water recycling - Guelph’s wastewater is Brantford’s drinking water • Escherichia coli (O157:H7), Giardia lamblia, Cryptosporidium parvum

  32. What is in our water?

  33. MERCURY VAPOR AND ARGON QUARTZ ENVELOPE TUNGSTEN ELECTRODE UV Disinfection

  34. Visible Violet Red Cosmic rays Gamma rays X- rays Ultra- violet Radio waves Infrared X-rays Vacuum UV UV-C UV-B UV-A Visible l (nm) 100 200 300 400 800 What is UV light?

  35. First Semester Second Semester Design I Mechanics Calculus I Calculus II Intro to Computer Programming Chemistry II/Programming II Chemistry I Physics History of Science Engineering Analysis The First Year

More Related