DEVELOPMENT OF SYSTEM ENGINEERING DESIGN TOOL (SEDT) FOR SMALL SATELLITE CONCEPTUAL DESIGN

Author(s):  
Patricia Kristine Sheridan ◽  
Jason A Foster ◽  
Geoffrey S Frost

All Engineering Science students at the University of Toronto take the cornerstone Praxis Sequence of engineering design courses. In the first course in the sequence, Praxis I, students practice three types of engineering design across three distinct design projects. Previously the final design project had the students first frame and then develop conceptual design solutions for a self-identified challenge. While this project succeeded in providing an appropriate foundational design experience, it failed to fully prepare students for the more complex design experience in Praxis II. The project also failed to ingrain the need for clear and concise engineering communication, and the students’ lack of understanding of detail design inhibited their ability to make practical and realistic design decisions. A revised Product Design project in Praxis I was designed with the primary aims of: (a) pushing students beyond the conceptual design phase of the design process, and (b) simulating a real-world work environment by: (i) increasing the interdependence between student teams and (ii) increasing the students’ perceived value of engineering communication.


Author(s):  
Valeria S. Guevara ◽  
Mark Moening ◽  
Brian R. Smith ◽  
Dennis B. Finley ◽  
Patrick J. Yagle

Author(s):  
C. P. Huang ◽  
F. W. Liou ◽  
J. J. Malyamakkil ◽  
W. F. Lu

Abstract This paper presents an advisory conceptual design tool for mechanical transmission systems. Space consideration was taken into account during the design process. A prototype function tree was built in the form of knowledge-based system to transfer a designer’s idea into a set of mechanical components. An advisory expert system was also developed to help a designer in decision making. As an example, a packaging machine is designed using the developed system.


Author(s):  
Julian R. Eichhoff ◽  
Felix Baumann ◽  
Dieter Roller

In this paper we demonstrate and compare two complementary approaches to the automatic generation of production rules from a set of given graphs representing sample designs. The first approach generates a complete rule set from scratch by means of frequent subgraph discovery. Whereas the second approach is intended to learn additional rules that fit an existing, yet incomplete, rule set using genetic programming. Both approaches have been developed and tested in the context of an application for automated conceptual engineering design, more specifically functional decomposition. They can be considered feasible, complementary approaches to the automatic inference of graph rewriting rules for conceptual design applications.


Author(s):  
Jialing Lu ◽  
Wuli Chu ◽  
Yanhui Wu

In recent years endwall profiling has been well validated as a major new engineering design tool for the reduction of secondary loss in turbines. However, its application on compressors have been rarely performed and reported. This paper documents the findings of the analysis for diminishing compressor stator corner separation using endwall profiling; In the study, novel profiled endwalls were designed and numerically studied on a subsonic axial-flow compressor stage. The compressor stator endwalls were profiled on both axial and azimuthal directions. The results showed, the stator corner separation was significantly suppressed under all the operating conditions by implementing this profiled endwall. Significant improvements on stage pressure ratios and stage efficiency were observed. Detailed flow field changes, as well as endwall profiling methods are provided in the paper, so that the results of this research can be referenced to other compressor designs.


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