Paper ID #23794Implementing Entrepreneurial-minded Learning (EML) in a ManufacturingProcesses CourseDr. Vishal R Mehta, Ohio Northern University B.E. Metallurgical Engineering, Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, India, 1995, M.S. Materials Science and Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology USA, 2002, PhD. Materials Science and Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology,USA, 2010Dr. David R Mikesell P.E., Ohio Northern University David R. Mikesell is chair and associate professor of mechanical engineering at Ohio Northern University. His research interests are in land vehicle dynamics, autonomous vehicles
AC 2010-1780: INCORPORATING ENTREPRENEURSHIP INTO A HANDS-ONFACILITY PLANNING COURSEJoseph Chen, Bradley University Joseph C. Chen, Ph.D., PE is a Professor and Department Chair in the Department of Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering & Technology at Bradley University. He received his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the Department of Industrial and System Engineering at Auburn University in 1990 and 1994, respectively. His teaching interests include: Lean manufacturing system design, automated manufacturing processes, facility design, Taguchi design in quality, etc. His research interests include: RFID application, manufacturing system control, cellular manufacturing system design
AC 2011-2913: DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT OF A 3D PRINTER WITHRECYCLING SYSTEMR. Radharamanan, Mercer University Dr. R. Radharamanan is currently working as Professor of Industrial Engineering and Director of Mercer Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship (MCIE) at Mercer University in Macon, Georgia. He has thirty eight years of teaching, research, and consulting experiences. His previous administrative experi- ences include: President of International Society for Productivity Enhancement (ISPE), Acting Director of Industrial Engineering as well as Director of Advanced Manufacturing Center at Marquette University, and Research Director of CAM and Robotics Center at San Diego State University. His primary research
24.1163.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2014 Teaching Ethics and Leadership with Cases: A Bottom-up ApproachAbstractThe issue of ethics in leadership has taken greater importance in the today’s business world dueto globalization and rapid advancement in information technology which has significantlytransformed current business practices. Most universities in the United States (US) now have atleast one course that includes ethics or related topics in their undergraduate engineeringcurricula. However, due to qualitative and abstract nature of the topic, the ethics course does notdraw the same level of attention from students compared to other courses like physics and
Assistant Professor in the Industrial & Engineering Technology department at Southeast Missouri State University, Cape Girardeau, MO. He received his PhD in Industrial Engineering from West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV. He is a Qualified Specialist in Process Heating, Steam, and Compressed Air Systems (certified by the US Department of Energy), a Certified Quality Engineering (ASQ-CQE), and a Master Black Belt in Lean Six Sigma. His research interests include Industrial Energy and Waste Reduction, Industrial Productivity Enhancement, Manufacturing Systems Engineering, Lean Manufacturing, and Quality Control
College of Engineering at Texas A&M University. He holds a joint appointment with the Department of Engineering Technology and the De- partment of Mechanical Engineering. His research interests include engineering education, cognitive task analysis, automation, robotics and control, intelligent manufacturing system design, and micro/nano manufacturing. He is also the Director of the Rockwell Automation laboratory at Texas A&M University, a state-of-the-art facility for education and research in the areas of automation, control, and automated system integration.Mr. Daniel M. Sherry, Alamo College Mr. Daniel Sherry has fourteen years of experience as a Skilled Technician and Electrician in the man- ufacturing
Paper ID #6201Using Simulation to Improve the Efficiency of CAM and CNC InstructionDr. Derek M Yip-Hoi, Western Washington University Dr. Derek Yip-Hoi graduated with a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan in 1997. He has worked in academia since as both a research scientist and teaching faculty. He currently is an associate professor in the department of Engineering Technology at Western Washington University. His area of specialization is CAD/CAM. In addition to ASEE, he is a member of ASME and SME. Page
of Engineering and Technology and National University of Singapore respectively. He has published more than 50 papers in refereed journals and international conferences and contributed to books, and been involved in several internal and external funded research projects in these areas. He has received numerous research awards including ’Best Paper Award - ATMAE 2014’, ’Outstanding Paper Award – SME, 2012,’ ’A.M. Stickland Best Paper Award – IMechE, 2010,’ and ’Most Downloaded Paper – Elsevier, 2010.’Dr. A. Mark Doggett, Western Kentucky University A. Mark Doggett is an Associate Professor and the Coordinator for the Master of Science Degree in Engineering Technology Management at Western Kentucky University. His
engineeringdisciplines and the stakeholders in the success of the product design phase. Manufacturingengineers usually play a vital role in the conceptual design phase. In order to educate the nextgeneration of manufacturing engineers, we introduced and integrated the DFA methodology intoour Manufacturing Engineering Technology (MET) curricula at Minnesota State University-Mankato (MSU). A detailed description of this model, including advantages and disadvantages,future directions and recommendations, are included in this paper.Keywords: design for assembly, active learning, product development and designIntroductionDesign for assembly (DFA) is a systematic analysis process primarily intended to simplifyproduct structure and reduce the assembly costs of a
. Page 24.1166.2IntroductionGroup cell technology is a popular practice in industry. This technology utilizes group of specificmachines to fabricate family of parts that have common features. Manufacturing using groupcells, or cellular manufacturing, would reduce setup time, engineering cost, inventory, productdevelopment time, and purchasing time while simplifying process planning and procurement 1,2.A typical manufacturing laboratory is equipped with rows of identical machines, where studentslearn in sequence from one type of machine to another. Although students would repeat ademonstration and interact with their instructor, they rarely interact among themselves and oftenmiss the link among different processes. The concept of group cell and
Department of Mechanical Engineering, PO Box 17555, Al Ain United Arab Emirates Sangarappillai@uaeu.ac.aeKeywords: Design for Manufacturing, Systematic Design Process, Graduation ProjectAbstract: Engineering Design of a product identifies a set of functions derived from asocietal need and defines connected structures which as a whole deliver those functions. Inthis process it blends theory and design method into ‘Design Approach’ while technology,and working constraints form ‘Design Realization’. Design for Manufacturing is the overlapof Design Approach and Design Realization which is characterised by (i) Design ForManufacture and Assembly considerations (ii) process considerations
AC 2011-2100: THREE DIMENSIONAL SURFACE MODEL FROM LASER SCANNINGOF PROVING GROUND ROADPavel Ikonomov, Western Michigan University Dr. Pavel Ikonomov is Associate Professor in Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering Department at Western Michigan University He earned his bachelor degree from Technical University of Varna and his first master degree at M.E. in Mechanical Engineering and Manufacturing Technology from Technical University of Varna. His second master degree he earned from Muroran Institute of Technology, Japan and his Ph. D in Precision Manufacturing Engineering from Hokkaido University, Japan. He worked several years as chef engineer in Bulgaria, Asst. professor at Technical University of Varna. CTO
to be employed. That andother additions will soon to be realized.References[1] Sirinterlikci, A., Sirinterlikci, S., Utilizing Rep-Rap Machines in the Engineering Curriculum, 2014 ASEE Annual Conference.[2] Jaksic, N., New Inexpensive 3-D Printers Open Doors to Novel Experiential Learning Practices in Engineering Education, 2014 ASEE Annual Conference.[3] Ertekin, Y., Husanu, C., N.,I., Chiou, R., Konstantinos, J., Interdisciplinary Senior Design Project to Develop a Teaching Tool: Dragon Conductive 3-D Printer, 2014 ASEE Annual Conference.[4]Technology Overview DLP Process.EnvisionTec. http://envisiontec.com/technology-overview/. Accessed on December 31, 2013.[5] DIY DLP Printer. Dimensionext. http://www.dimensionext.co.uk
2006-544: AUTOMATED ROBOTIC WORKCELL DESIGN TOOLKIT -PRELIMINARY EVALUATIONSheng-Jen Hsieh, Texas A&M University Sheng-Jen (“Tony”) Hsieh is an Associate Professor and member of the Graduate Faculty at Texas A&M University, College Station, TX. He holds a joint appointment with the Department of Engineering Technology and the Department of Mechanical Engineering and is a Halliburton Faculty Fellow for 2005-2006. His research interests include intelligent manufacturing system design, virtual instrumentation, thermal profiling for process and product characterization, and simulation and modeling. He is also the Director of the Rockwell Automation Laboratory, a state-of-the-art
AC 2011-921: PROMOTING AWARENESS IN MANUFACTURING STU-DENTS OF THE NEED FOR SIMULTANEOUS IMPLEMENTATION OFLEAN SIX-SIGMA AND ACTIVITY BASED COSTINGMerwan B Mehta, East Carolina University Merwan Mehta, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor at East Carolina University in the Technology Systems Department in Greenville, NC. Prior to joining academics in 2004, he has over twenty years of experi- ence in business and industry working as an industrial/methods engineer, machine tool design engineer, manufacturing engineer, technical partner, project director, vice-president and consultant. His present re- search interests are enhancing manufacturing and business processes through lean principles and theory of constraints, and
Paper ID #22043MAKER: Facial Feature Detection Library for Teaching Algorithm Basics inPythonMr. Mehmet Ucar M.S. in Computer Engineering, University of Houston- Clear Lake(2016) B.S. in Electrical and Electron- ics Engineering, Erciyes University (2008)Dr. Sheng-Jen ”Tony” Hsieh, Texas A&M University Dr. Sheng-Jen (”Tony”) Hsieh is a Professor in the Dwight Look College of Engineering at Texas A&M University. He holds a joint appointment with the Department of Engineering Technology and the De- partment of Mechanical Engineering. His research interests include engineering education, cognitive task analysis
Paper ID #34815Quality Control in System Optimization of an Electrohydraulic SystemDr. Mustafa Shraim, Ohio University Dr. Mustafa Shraim is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering Technology & Man- agement at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio. He received both of his B.S. and M.S. degrees from Ohio University in 1986 and 1989, respectively. He received his Ph.D. in Industrial Engineering from West Virginia University in 1996. Dr. Shraim’s research interests are in the area of quality engineering. Specifically, they cover Lean / Six Sigma methods and including incorporating experimental design to
trained on a long term technology transfer (plastic mold making) project between government of Pakistan and government of Japan. He holds a master degree in Mechatronic Engineering and bachelor in Mechanical Engineering both from the University of Engineering and Technology Lahore Pakistan. He has extensive teaching and industrial experience.Mrs. IMAN ABDULWAHEED, United Arab Emirates University Mrs IMAN ABDULWAHEED;graduated from United Emirates Emirates University in February in 2014 with a mechanical engineering degree.During her residency in the university she was an enthusiastic par- ticipant in academic and extracurricular activities.She was an active member and office holder in ASME, ASAA and Robotics and
Paper ID #17438MAKER: Fabricating a Flat-Pack Portable Display Using Laser Cutting andKerf BendingMr. Riley S. Booth, University of Calgary I’m a biomedical engineering MSc student at the university of Calgary. My research interests include haptics, rehabilitation, mobile and wearable technology, engineering education and educational software. I’m currently developing a wearable device for blind and/or deaf users to interface with a computer.Prof. Peter Goldsmith P.Eng., University of Calgary Peter Goldsmith is an Associate Professor in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Calgary. He holds a PhD in Mechanical
One Week – Bucknell Fabrication Workshop (B-Fab)IntroductionWithin the past decade or more, the increased technological capacity of incoming students –accompanied by a diminished skill-set with regard to traditional hands-on, “tinkering” skills hasbeen discussed in both STEM education as well as mainstream media [1, 2]. Many studentschoose engineering because they want to learn how to design and build the solutions oftomorrow, yet they often do not have dedicated opportunities to expand their hands-on skill setwithin the engineering curriculum. Sadly, traditional curricular instruction in engineering is suchthat students spend the bulk of their first three years learning theory, and relatively little timecontextualizing
2006-15: TEACHING LEAN MANUFACTURING ON A DISTANCE LEARNINGPLATFORM USING VIRTUAL SIMULATIONMerwan Mehta, East Carolina UniversityRichard Monroe, East Carolina University Richard W. Monroe is associate professor of Technology Systems focusing on Distribution and Logistics at East Carolina University in Greenville, NC. He completed his Ph.D. at Old Dominion University in 1997 and completed his M.S. at Western New England College in 1990. His dissertation research was conducted at NASA Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia. He has almost 20 years of industry experience in industrial engineering prior to his academic career. He is a member of ASEM, APICS, ASQ, and a senior member of IIE
Paper ID #24940Teaching Composites Manufacturing Through ToolingMs. Nikki Larson, Western Washington University After receiving my bachelor degree in Mechanical Engineering from Bradley University, I started working for Boeing. While at Boeing I worked to receive my master’s degree in Mechanical Engineering with an emphasis in Materials and Manufacturing. After leaving Boeing I spent several years in equipment research and development at Starbucks Coffee Company. From there I decided my heart lied in teaching and left Starbucks to teach Materials Science Technology at Edmonds Community College. I eventually moved to
Paper ID #29831Remotely Accessible Injection Molding Machine for ManufacturingEducation: Lessons LearnedDr. Sheng-Jen ”Tony” Hsieh, Texas A&M University Dr. Sheng-Jen (”Tony”) Hsieh is a Professor in the College of Engineering at Texas A&M University. He holds a joint appointment with the Department of Engineering Technology and the Department of Mechanical Engineering. His research interests include engineering education, cognitive task analysis, automation, robotics and control, intelligent manufacturing system design, and micro/nano manufactur- ing. He is also the Director of the Rockwell Automation laboratory at
AC 2009-2503: MICROMACHINING EDUCATION AND RESEARCH AT TEXASA&M UNIVERSITYWayne Hung, Texas A&M UniversitySujeev Chittipolu, Texas A&M UniversitySaurabh Kajaria, Texas A&M University Page 14.878.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 Micromachining Education and Research at Texas A&M UniversityAbstractThe market trend for product miniaturization promotes research and education in micromanufacturing. Micromachining is an extension of conventional machining when chips areremoved in micro/nano scales, but micromachining requires new knowledge, specially designedequipment, tooling, and additional knowledge for successful results. Common
Paper ID #13406Maker: Call a 3D Locksmith – How 3D Printing can Defeat Physical SecurityByron Doyle, Brigham Young University Byron is a recent graduate of Brigham Young University with a Bachelor’s of Science in Information Technology, emphasizing Cyber Security. He currently works as a Security Analyst at Vivint.Colby Goettel, BYUMr. Lane Broadbent, Brigham Young UniversityDr. Dale C Rowe, Brigham Young University Dr. Rowe has worked for nearly two decades in security and network architecture with a variety of industries in international companies. He has provided secure enterprise architecture on both military and
. Greg J Strimel, Purdue Polytechnic Institute Dr. Greg J. Strimel is an assistant professor of engineering technology teacher education in the Purdue Polytechnic Institute at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana. His prior teaching experience includes serving as a high school engineering teacher and a teaching assistant professor within the College of Engineering & Mineral Resources at West Virginia University. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 The Next Generation for Manufacturing Competitiveness?: Children’s Perceptions as Shown Through DrawingsIntroduction Manufacturing continues to be an important industry in the United States and one that
, profile and waviness height parameters, spacing, shape and hybrid parameters must be included.References[1] http://www.mmsonline.com/columns/surface-texture-from-ra-to-rz[2] Paul, S., Dhar, N.R., and Chattopadhyay, A.B., 2001, “Beneficial effects of cryogenictreatment over dry and wet machining on tool wear and surface finish in turning AISI 1060steel,” Journal of Materials Processing Technology, 116, pp. 44-48.[3] Luca, L., Neagu-Ventzel, S., and Marinescu, L., 2005, “Effects of working parameters onsurface finish in ball-burnishing of hardened steels,” Precision Engineering, 29(2), pp. 253-256.[4] Schmitz, T.L., Couey, J., Marsh, E., Mauntler, N., and Hughes, D., 2007, “Runout effects inmilling: Surface finish, surface location error, and
, J., & Chen J., (1995) The Role of Decouplers in JIT Pull Apparel Cells. International Journal of Clothing Science and Technology. Volume 7 Number 1, 17-35 2) Black, J., & Hunter, S. (2003) Lean Manufacturing Systems and Cell Design. Dearborn, MI: Society of Manufacturing Engineers 3) Kolar, R., & Sabatini, D.A. (2000). Environmental Modeling- A Project Driven, Team Approach to Theory and Application. Journal of Engineering Education, 89(2), 201-207. 4) Liou, F., Allada, V. Leu, M., Mishra, R., Okafor, A., & Agrawal, A. (2002). A Product Focused Manufacturing Curriculum. ASEE Annual Conference Proceedings, 2709-2718. 5) Monden, Y., (1993) Toyota Production System an Integrated Approach to Just-In
Paper ID #7015Leveraging Scarce Resources to Preserve an Important, Low Enrollment Man-ufacturing ProgramDr. Bill D. Bailey, Southern Polytechnic State University Dr. Bill Bailey is currently an assistant professor of industrial engineering technology and quality assur- ance at Southern Polytechnic State University. He holds a Ph.D. in Technology Management (Quality Systems Specialization) from Indiana State University. He also holds a Master of Science in Industrial Technology degree from North Carolina A&T State University, and a Baccalaureate degree in Psychol- ogy and English. Dr. Bailey has extensive
analytical courses in the Engineering Mechanics sequence.Dr. John Farris, Grand Valley State University John Farris joined the faculty at Grand Valley State University after a successful tenure as the chief product designer for a medical device manufacturer. His other significant industrial experience includes designing engine components for Caterpillar Inc. and consulting on the design of stationary fuel cell power generation units. His current research interests are design methods and medical technology. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Rhode Island and his Bachelors and masters degrees from Lehigh University. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2016