Title: Dr Paul T Mativenga
1Implementing technical and experimental
projects/case studies
Dr Paul T Mativenga Manufacturing and Laser
Processing School of Mechanical, Aerospace and
Civil Engineering
2What is a case study (common view)
An in-depth study of an individual unit where
that unit is approached as an example of some
larger phenomenon.
3???
- Who is doing a technical/experimental PhD?
- Whose technical/experimental PhD has a case study
component? - Whose technical/Experimental PhD is a case study?
4When do we need a technical case study
- Introducing new technology Step change needed,
new legislation - Process improvement Increased demand, tighter
output requirements, better products - Reclaiming of systems in decline - e.g. company
observes quality issues, bridge is about to
collapse
5Getting into the organisation
- Understand the overlap between immediate
organisational goals and your expertise - The academic solution may not have value to a
commercial problem. - Industry may not necessarily be interested in
your ideas but in how you think and approach
problems
6Constraints on engagement
- Technical processes are covered by
- Patents
- Non disclosure agreements
- Collaboration agreements
- Censorship
- There is limited scope for dissemination that can
be obtained by undertaking technical case studies
or case implementation in a commercial company.
7Winning an industrial collaboration case
8Disjointed or Invisible Circles-Goals
Academia (academic expertise)
Industry (needs)
9Establishing the intersection
- Industry does not broadcast institutional
challenges/problems/focus areas. - Personal relations are a vital part in gaining
access into a company and successfully taking
through a case implementation or technology
transfer project - Networking
- Conferences
- SME are more accessible than large companies
(most large companies have strategic University
partnerships) - Visit institutional functions or seminars IMechE,
IET - Publicise your capability, expertise, facilities
etc.
10Why would a company agree to a case
implementation/study
- Process not in control
- Process lead time too long
- Need to increase plant capacity
- New processing route required
- New materials to be processed
11Implementing a technical project (case study) in
a PhD
- You have a new idea and want to try it out NOT
ENOUGH - You have a tried idea but want to take it to a
different application - YES - You have a proven idea but what to develop
operating envelop and process repeatability - YES - You have a working prototype but want to scale it
up for pre-production (on actual machines, actual
components) - NO
12Technology Readiness Levels
When a new technology is first proposed/invented/c
onceptualized, it is not suitable for immediate
application. New technologies should normally be
subjected to experimentation refinement and more
representative/realistic testing. Once the
technology is sufficiently proven, it can be
incorporated into a system/subsystem. Technology
Readiness Level (TRL) is a measure used to assess
the maturity of evolving technologies prior to
incorporating that technology into an industrial
process or system/subsystem.
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14TRL and MCRL
- While Technology Readiness Levels (TRL)s are
generic to all technologies, Manufacturing
Capability Readiness Levels (MCRL) are more
focussed on implementation of manufacturing
technologies
15Manufacturing Capability Readiness
Level(Technology assessment and proving)
- MCRL1 Process concept proposed with scientific
foundation. - MCRL2 Applicability and validity of concept
described demonstrated and vetted - MCRL3 Analytical and experimental critical
function and/or characteristic proof-of-concept
completed. - MCRL4 Technology component and/or basic
technology subsystem validated in laboratory
environment using representative development
equipment.
MCR1 to 4 Relevant to a PhD could be a PhD
16Implementing a technical project
17Manufacturing Capability Readiness
Level(Pre-production)
- MCRL5 Basic capability demonstrated using
production equipment (validation in relevant
environment). - MCRL6 Process optimized for capability and rate
using production equipment.
18Manufacturing Capability Readiness
Level(Production Implementation)
- MCRL7 Technology system prototype demonstration
in an operational environment (capability and
rate confirmed via economic run lengths on
production parts). - MCRL8 Actual technology system completed and
qualified through test and demonstration. Fully
production capable process qualified on full
range parts over significant run lengths. - MCRL9 Fully production capable process on full
range of parts over extended period. Actual
technology system qualified through successful
mission operations.
19TRL Pros and Cons
Advantages include Provides a common
understanding of technology status Enables the
making of decisions concerning transition of
technology Enables risk management to be used to
make decisions concerning technology funding
Disadvantages include More reporting,
paperwork, reviews and meetings Systems
engineering not addressed in early TRLs
20Who Pays
21A dream
- A man had a recurring dream. He dreamt he was
being shown the secrets of the universe. - Each morning he woke up but would not remember
what the secret was. - He went to a wise man and asked for advice on how
he could capture the secrete in the dream - Take a piece of paper and pen to bed
22 23Criteria for industry engagement
- THE WORK PACKAGE HAS TO BE
- Realistic Manage risk
- Achievable Demonstrate capability of delivery
- Quantifiable Goal money/cost reduction/lead
time reduction/process capability - Time bound industry wants results fast and in
the promised delivery time.
24Investigation Techniques
- Analytical modelling Enables inferred
understudying of process) - Computer Modelling (e.g. Finite Element
Modelling) - Experimental and analytical/computer modelling
(closes the loop) - Experimental Design Techniques Factorial
design/Taguchi experiments - Serial Testing and Mechanism studies (answers the
why and how. Can effect a step change)
25Concluding Remarks - 1
- Manufacturing technology is an applied science
- The true value of manufacturing technology
innovation has to be realised through
implementation in industry or as company spin
offs - New and original ideas may not be ready for
implementation in an industrial environment - Technology readiness levels can be applied in the
transfer of research expertise from academia to
industry - Academic expertise has to be matched to
industrial commercial needs. - Implementing manufacturing technology within a
commercial company needs a project that is
REALISTIC, ACHIEVABLE, QUANTIFIABLE AND TIME
BOUND
26Concluding Remarks - 2
- A fact is a simple statement that everyone
believes. A hypothesis is a novel suggestion that
no one wants to believe. It is guilty until found
effective - Edward Teller (1908-2003)
- Think beyond the possible and then back off to
reality - Sir Robin Saxby, 2008
27The value of technical ideas
- Okay we have set-up manufacturing facilities,
organised the distribution network, hired the
marketing expertise, and allocated the
advertising budget. - Any ideas for a product?
28Thank You We can open the discussion