Title: BioMedical Engineering Design Seminar BME 295
1BioMedical EngineeringDesign Seminar BME 295
2BioMedical Engineering Design Seminar BME 295
(11/8/06)Agenda
- Senior Project Status
- Customer contacted.
- Customer requirements document generated
- Estimating homework assignment review
- Lecture Resources
3Assignments
- Preliminary Project Plan document due on
12/6/06 - Preliminary Project Plan Presentation (dry run -
15 minutes per group) - Groups 1 thru 4 on 12/6/06
- Groups 5 thru 8 on 12/13/06
4Final Presentation of Project Plans
- Current Schedule info from Dottie.
- Formal Project Plan Presentations for customers,
supervisors, and class - Tuesday - 12/19/06
- 800 AM to 1100 AM
- Location TBD
- Is this in conflict with anybodys exam
schedule??? Please let me know immediately after
class.
5BioMedical Engineering Design Seminar BME 295
(11/8/06)Agenda
- Project Team Status
- Customer contacted.
- Customer requirements document generated
- Estimating homework assignment review
- Lecture Resources
6Project Team Status
- Is any team having trouble with customer
contacts? - Please, if you are having trouble, dont hesitate
to ask for suggestions. - How are teams getting on with generating the
customer requirements documents? - Get as much detail as you can early on because it
gets very expensive (both in time and materials)
to change downstream.
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8BioMedical Engineering Design Seminar BME 295
(11/8/06)Agenda
- Senior Project Status
- Customer contacted.
- Customer requirements document generated
- Estimating homework assignment review
- Lecture Resources
9Homework (Estimating)
- Here is the raw data from the homework sheets on
the estimating problems.
10 11A couple of sorts
- Capstone project costs
- Trip to LA
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14Any Questions or Comments ?????
15BioMedical Engineering Design Seminar BME 295
(11/8/06)Agenda
- Senior Project Status
- Customer contacted.
- Customer requirements document generated
- Estimating homework assignment review
- Lecture Resources
16Resources some general comments
- Dont be afraid to ask for suggestions from
supervisors, customers, faculty, vendors, fellow
students, whoever. - Use your networking skills to ferret out
information. (Internet, vendor manuals, etc.) - Try to formulate the requests in such a way that
you can get directly to the problem in a
straightforward manner. (Dont beat around the
bush).
17Resources you may need
- Four areas
- Consultants available
- Tools (hardware and software)
- Materials and material issues
- Fabrication facilities
18Consultants
- Consultants you most likely will use are the
faculty and staff here at the University. - Dont hesitate to contact vendor customer reps
for specific information on product performance
or use.
19Specific contacts at UR(in addition to
departmental faculty)
- Paul Osborne (ECE shop) Mechanical assembly
design, material and tool suppliers, mechanical
tools, - Jim Lindner (ECE shop) Electrical components,
electrical tools (crimpers, soldering, etc.),
circuit boards, assembly procedures, suppliers. - Vic Derefinko (HPN 305) Electrical Design,
components, vendors. - Ed Tan (CSB) LabView applications, circuit
design. - Art Salo (Hopeman/Gavett) Art is a mechanical
engineer and is part of the BME department.
20Contacts outside of UR
- Leo Cordaro Field Engineer for National
Instrument and LabView applications - Other names available talk to UR staff.
21Tools (hardware)
- An assortment of tools is available in the Senior
Projects lab. - Mechanical tools Hand tools like drills, pliers,
screw drivers, soldering irons, solder removal
tools, etc. - Electrical tools Multimeters, power supplies,
22Tools (hardware)
- An assortment of tools is available in the Senior
Projects lab. - Mechanical tools Hand tools like drills, pliers,
screw drivers, soldering irons, solder removal
tools, etc. - Electrical tools Multimeters, power supplies,
- ECE Shop in Hopeman has more sophisticated tools
like drill presses, grinders, sand blaster,
milling machine, lathe, etc.
23Tools (hardware)
- An assortment of tools is available in the Senior
Projects lab. - Mechanical tools Hand tools like drills, pliers,
screw drivers, soldering irons, solder removal
tools, etc. - Electrical tools Multimeters, power supplies,
- ECE Shop in Hopeman has more sophisticated tools
like drill presses, grinders, sand blaster,
milling machine, lathe, etc. - ECE Labs (Gavett and Hopeman) have a large
assortment of electrical equipment - Oscilloscopes, Multimeters, power supplies,
function generators, PCs, - .
24Tools (hardware)
- An assortment of tools is available in the Senior
Projects lab. - Mechanical tools Hand tools like drills, pliers,
screw drivers, soldering irons, solder removal
tools, etc. - Electrical tools Multimeters, power supplies,
- ECE Shop in Hopeman has more sophisticated tools
like drill presses, grinders, sand blaster,
milling machine, lathe, etc. - ECE Labs (Gavett and Hopeman) have a large
assortment of electrical equipment - Oscilloscopes, Multimeters, power supplies,
function generators, PCs, - ECE Labs have specific time constaints in which
the labs are available to the students.
25Tools (software)
- University software systems include
- Mathlab (analysis tool)
- National Instruments LabView
- Electronic Workbench (electrical CAD tool)
- Cadence OrCAD (electrical CAD tool)
- Solidworks (mechanical CAD tool)
- ProEngineer (mechanical CAD tool)
- Quartus II (electrical logic design tool)
- Variety of other electrical SW tools (TI DSP,
Xilinx, Microchip assembler, etc.)
26Materials
- For the most part, project teams buy hardware and
materials for the project - No supplier approval is required at this time.
- For custom parts, ECE shop is one source or they
can recommend another place. Paul or Jim can
help identify facility. - Lead time is a concern in material purchases.
27Materials (cont)
- If you are going to use the ECE shop, try to
avoid exotic material if you possibly can - Stainless Steel (use aluminum)
- Phosphor bronze
- Beryllium copper
- Lead (or any heavy metal)
28Material Issues
- Further increasing of phosphorus content leads to
formation of a very hard compound Cu3P resulting
in a brittle bronze with only special uses. - Phosphor bronze is used for springs and other
applications where resistance to fatigue, wear
and chemical corrosion is required. It is also
used in acoustic instruments (for guitars,
mandolins, etc...). - Beryllium copper may have a carcinogenic effect
if inhaled and gloves and masks are recommended
while handling it. As a result, it is sometimes
replaced by safer beryllium copper alloys such as
Cu-Ni-Sn beryllium. - Stainless is a hard material and takes a long
time to machine.
29Fabrication
- Senior Design Labs These are facilities that
are specifically allocated to the design and
fabrication of the medical devices being designed
by the Capstone Project Teams - The ECE shop and shop support personnel is
another facility that can be used for subassembly
fabrication. - ECE Shop/Personnel cost is 45 per hour. Paul
and Jim will provide estimates on fab times. - Printed Circuit Board Layout and Fab consulting
is also available in the shop.
30Fabrication Issues
- Specific items that must be considered when using
the support facilities - Policy is First come first served
- ECE shop works on both BME and ECE projects
- Lead time on parts
- Shop work scheduling (Schedule work early)
- Shop gets busy as projects get cranked up
- Art Salo does some Mechanical work free
- Paul Osborne is available for consulting (free)
31Fabrication Issues (cont)
- To streamline the fab process, please consider
the following - Must have drawings. They should be of parts that
can be made.
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33This one is very difficult to make.
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36 You tell Paul or Jim in the shop that you want
this
37 As the project progresses, they find out you
really want this.
38Fabrication Issues (cont)
- To streamline the fab process, please consider
the following - Must have drawings. They should be of parts that
can be made. - Drawings must have dimensions and tolerances
- Standard tolerances shop works to are
- Metal .001
- Plastic .01
- Wood .03
- Specify the tolerance that is really needed.
Tighter tolerances than standard cost more.
39Fabrication Issues (cont)
- To streamline the fab process, please consider
the following - Must have drawings. They should be of parts that
can be made. - Drawings must have dimensions and tolerances
- Standard tolerances shop works to are
- Metal .001
- Plastic .01
- Wood .03
- Specify the tolerance that is really needed.
Tighter tolerances than standard cost more. - Before submission to shop have another project
member review the drawing.
40Other Fabrication Issues
- How stable must fabed part be
- Sheet metal vs solid
- Welded or screwed together
- What type of fastener are to be used
- Screws, rivets, blind holes, ¼ turn, etc.
- Painting is possible
- Electrical safety an issue?
- Fire Hazard
- Heat dissipation from components.
41Any Questions or Comments ?????
42Lab Notebooks
- I still have some lab notebooks if anybody needs
one.
43Till next time, have a good Thanksgiving