Title: Research Topics
1Research Topics Initial Mapping PLM Focus
Areas ? GIT Activities
February 5, 2004
- PLM Center of Excellence
- http//www.marc.gatech.edu/plm/
- Georgia Institute of Technology
- Document Contacts
- Robert.Fulton_at_me.gatech.edu
- Chris.Paredis_at_me.gatech.edu
- Russell.Peak_at_marc.gatech.edu
- Steven.Danyluk_at_marc.gatech.edu
2Sample GIT PLM-Related Activities
Composable Simulations
Design-Analysis Integration
Standards for Systems Engineering
Lean Principles
Strategic Design
MarketingStrategy
Virtual Factories
Robust Design Simulation
Aircraft Lifecycle Support
Product Family Design
Factory Information Systems
Collaborative Visualization Environments
Change Mgt. in Product Model Databases
Source IBM PLM definition slide at PDES Inc.
Board Mtg. 2003-11
Engineering Knowledge Representation
DesignRepositories
Collaborative Design Optimization
Design-Supply ChainProcess Integration
3PLM Focus Areas Addressing Top Industry Pain
Points
Source IBM slides at PDES Inc. Board Mtg. 2003-11
4Mapping PLM Focus Areas ? GIT Activities - p1
(and related faculty)
- Product Innovation Management
- Strategic design (Mistree)
- IPPD and PLM integration (Schrage, Hart)
- Marketing strategies over the product life-cycle
(Malhotra) - Component, Platform and Asset Commonality
- Product family design (Rosen, Mistree)
- Design repositories (Paredis, Eastman )
- Domain-oriented product access and management
(Eastman) - Lean principles (Schrage)
- Adoption and continued use of products and
technologies (Malhotra) - Extended Enterprise Product Change Management
- Course Interactive Computer Graphics and
Computer-Aided Design (Fulton, Sitaraman, Dennis) - Course Intro to PLM (Schrage, Hart)
- Engineering knowledge representation info.
systems (Peak, Fulton) - Change management in product model databases
(Eastman)
5Mapping PLM Focus Areas ? GIT Activities - p2
- Virtual Product Introduction
- Course Design and Engineering Database
Management (Fulton, Eastman, Peak) - Course Modeling and Simulation in Design
(Paredis, Peak) - Design-analysis integration (Peak)
- Standards for systems engineering (Peak, Paredis)
- Decision-based design (Mistree, Allen)
- Designing open processes (Mistree)
- Composable simulations (Paredis)
- Virtual factories (McGinnis, Bodner)
- Factory information Systems (Dugenske)
- Robust design simulation (Mavris)
- Collaborative visualization environments (Mavris)
- Collaborative design optimization (Olds and
Braun) - Visualization and human computer interaction
(Rossignac)
6Mapping PLM Focus Areas ? GIT Activities - p3
- Service after Sales
- Aircraft lifecycle support (Schrage)
- Manage Operations Systems
- Course Aerospace Systems Engineering (Schrage)
- Domain specific parametric tool specification and
procurement (Eastman) - Integrating design chain processes with supply
chain processes (Mistree) - Standards-based engineering frameworks (Peak)
7Quad Charts for Sample Research Topics
- PLM Center of Excellence
- http//www.marc.gatech.edu/plm/
- Georgia Institute of Technology
8Next-Gen. PLM with Fine-Grained Interoperability
Customer Needs /Acquisitions
Abstraction Level
Systems Engineering
Legend
Model interfacesAssociativities among
domain-specific models system-level models
Fine-grained models Information objects
Parametric relations
Development Process
Human Interaction
Requirements
Electronics
Structures
Domain
After Bajaj, Peak, Waterbury 2003-09
Models of varied abstractions and domains
9Hierarchic Market Space Definition and Exploration
- Student Christopher Williams Faculty
Farrokh Mistree, Janet K. Allen
Objectives
Contributions Benefits
- Sequencing modes of managing product variety
- How can a designer synthesize multiple modes of
managing product variety in order to realize a
customized product? - How does the designer select which mode to use
first? What sequence will provide the most
affordable coverage of the market space at a high
quality? - Dealing with non-uniform demand
- How does the arrangement of the hierarchy change
as demand is non-uniform? - Can this question be answered without using
varying sized constructs? - Will this affect the sequencing of the modes of
managing product variety? - Provision of manufacturing firms an efficient
(through rigorous and systematic methodology)
foundation for realizing customized products,
thus enhancing the responsiveness of
manufacturing organizations to changes in the
market or demands for customization.
Scholarship
- To develop formal, mathematically correct, and
rigorous principles for designing product
architectures that facilitate the production of
customized products. - Determine an optimal arrangement of product
variety techniques that link all points in the
market space in order to satisfy any customer
demand so that cost is minimized.
Industry
Resources, Status, Publications, etc.
Background
- Constructal Theory
- The hierarchic structures (tree networks) that we
observe in natural and artificial systems are the
fingerprint of the minimization of flow
resistance between a finite volume and one point. - An access problem can be solved through the
optimization of the shape of the smallest,
inner-most space elements and the hierarchic
assembly of these elements into larger
constructs until covering the entire geometric
space. - The abstraction of a space of customization as a
geometric space in need of access optimization,
allows a designer to effectively develop a
product architecture for customized products.
Resources
- SRL Knowledge Base
- X-DPR, iSIGHT, Matlab, Concurrent Versioning
System (CVS) - Nearing completion of MS Research
- Adaptation to the development of a process family
- Consideration of non-uniform demand, risk and
uncertainty
Status
Publications
Williams, C. B., Panchal, J., Rosen, D. W., 2003,
A General Decision-Making Method for the Rapid
Manufacturing of Customized Parts, accepted by
the 23rd Conference on Computers and Information
in Engineering, ASME, September 2-6, Chicago,
Illinois. Carone, M. J., Williams, C.B., Allen,
J. K., and Mistree, F., 2003, An Application of
Constructal Theory in the Multi-Objective Design
of Product Platforms, accepted by the 15th
International Conference on Design Theory and
Methodology, ASME, September 2-6, Chicago,
Illinois. Hernandez, G., Williams, C. B., Allen,
J.K., Mistree, F., Design of Platforms for
Customizable Products as a Problem of Access in a
Geometric Space, Journal of Mechanical Design,
Submitted. Hernandez, G., Allen, J.K., and
Mistree, F. 2002, Design of Hierarchic Platforms
for Customizable Products, ASME Design
Automation Conference, Montreal, Canada,
DETC2002/DAC-34095. Hernandez, Gabriel, 2001,
Platform Design for Customizable Products as a
Problem of Access in a Geometric Space, Ph.D.
Dissertation, George W. Woodruff School of
Mechanical Engineering, Georgia Institute of
Technology, Atlanta, GA.
10Strategic Design
- Student Matthew Chamberlain
Faculty Farrokh Mistree
- Contributions Benefits
- Scholarship
- Effective tools for creating representations of
n-dimensional market spaces and design
capabilities - Systematic approaches for designing families of
products that can evolve and accommodate change
and innovation and a systematic tool for choosing
between multiple available approaches - Methods for forecasting and characterizing the
impact of innovation on a feasible space in a
manner meaningful to the design process - Industry
- Computing, information, and decision frameworks
for coordinating distributed decision makers
carrying out strategic design - Methods for linking market and design capability
forecasts to design decisions and plans for
product portfolios
- Objectives
- To establish a method for allowing distributed
designers to collaborate on the design of
products while taking into account - Changes in market trends
- Changes in the capabilities of existing
technologies - New or evolving technologies
- To develop a number of new techniques that would
be parts of a strategic design method, including - N-dimensional market visualization techniques
- Innovation modeling and early technology impact
forecasting methods - To develop a plan for coordinating the many
disparate methods that would make up strategic
design as well as a logic for choosing between
different modes of managing product variety
- Tasks
- Strategic product planning techniques for
forecasting dynamic requirements and
technological capabilities and for assessing the
potential impact of innovation on complex
products and processes. - Product variety design techniques for leveraging
and adapting existing products. - Decision support techniques that are formal,
rigorous, and flexible, and account for
uncertainty - Coordination mechanisms for multiple agents in
product development activities - Flexible computing and information
infrastructures for effective distributed design - Resources
- One student.
- Publications
- Seepersad, C. C., F. S. Cowan, M. K. Chamberlain
and F. Mistree, 2002, "Strategic Design
Leveraging and Innovation for a Changing
Marketplace," Engineering Design Conference,
King's College, London, pp. 3-20. - Chamberlain, M. K., 2002, A Step Towards
Web-Based Strategic Design, MS Thesis, G.W.
Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering,
Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA.
- Background
- Strategic Design is a comprehensive approach for
designing products and processes that efficiently
and effectively accommodate - changing markets and associated customer
requirements - technological innovations
- In a collaborative, distributed environment
11Design Process, Information, and Knowledge
Management in Distributed, Collaborative Design
Student Jitesh H. Panchal
Faculty Farrokh Mistree, Janet K. Allen
Objectives
Contributions Benefits
- Means for improvement of design processes
- Systematic method for configuring design chains
- Design knowledge reuse in an organization
- Tools for modeling and reconfiguring design
processes - A new dimension to the design information
management and reuse
- Development of
- A method for Integrated Design of Products and
Design Processes - Computational model of design processes in the
form of a design equation - Quantitative metrics for openness of products
and processes - Method for synthesizing design processes
- Application to design of materials
Background
Collaboration Needed
Design Equation K T (I)
2 PhD Students Student 1 Development of method
for Integrated Design of Products and Design
Processes Student 2 Application of the method to
design of materials
Decision Based Design Decision Support Problem
(DSP) Technique
References
1 B. A. Bras, "Designing Design Processes for
Decision-Based Concurrent Engineering," presented
at CERC's First Workshop on Product Development,
Process Modeling and Characterization,
Morgantown, West-Virginia, 1992. 2 F. Mistree,
W. F. Smith, B. Bras, J. K. Allen, and D. Muster,
"Decision-Based Design A Contemporary Paradigm
for Ship Design," in Transactions, Society of
Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, vol. 98.
Jersey City, New Jersey, 1990, pp. 565-597. 3
D. Muster and F. Mistree, "The Decision Support
Problem Technique in Engineering Design,"
International Journal of Applied Engineering
Education, vol. 4, pp. 23-33, 1988.
12A Decision Support Framework (DSF) for
Distributed Collaborative Design and Manufacture
(DCDM)
- Student Marco Gero Fernández Faculty
Farrokh Mistree and Janet K. Allen
Objectives
Contributions Benefits
- Develop and commercialize a Decision Support
Framework (DSF) for Distributed Collaborative
Design and Manufacture (DCDM), where decision
support refers to the cumulative means of
modeling, structuring, and negotiation solutions
to decisions and any of their interactions. - Provide a consistent mechanism for supporting
designers in their capacity as decision-makers.
The fundamental goals are to (1) manage the
design process, (2) facilitate the collaboration
of stakeholders, and (3) effectively share
information. - Effectively structure design processes and
properly reflect decision critical information
and any dependencies.
Scholarship
- Emphasis is placed on development of theory,
creation of domain independent constructs for
characterizing and modeling decisions, and
formalization of interactions among distributed
design agents via digital interfaces - Development of logic for design process
reconfiguration and investigation of strategic
decision-making/resource allocation - Facilitation of strategic decision-making from a
systems perspective and enhancement of design
process reconfiguration with regard to
flexibility, efficiency, and effectiveness. - Enablement of companies to trace errors to their
origins within a given design chain and allow for
remediation through dynamic design modification
and/or process reconfiguration
Industry
Background
- This research will expand upon a substantial
knowledge base in Decision Based Design, design
theory, and decision theory that has evolved in
the Systems Realization Laboratory (SRL) since
its establishment in 1992. - It is the nature and types of decisions,
implemented that determine the progress of a
design - Decisions in all stages of engineering design
depend on scientific, factual information as well
as empirical, experience-based knowledge,
designer preferences, and uncertainty. - There is a need to propagate decision-critical,
up-to-date information alongside design knowledge
for both sequential and concurrent design tasks,
particularly for dependent and interdependent
decisions that cannot be made in isolation.
Resources, Status, Publications, etc.
Resources
- SRL Knowledge Base
- X-DPR, iSIGHT, Web Board, Concurrent Versioning
System (CVS) - Completion of MS Research, Development of
Decision Constructs and Information Model
required for DSF - Active consideration/infusion of Risk and
Uncertainty into decision-making
Fundamental Assertions
Status
Publications
- Fernández, M.G., D.W. Rosen, J.K. Allen, and F.
Mistree (2002). A Decision Support Framework for
Distributed Collaborative Design and
Manufacture. 9th AIAA/ISSMO Symposium on
Multidisciplinary Analysis and Optimization,
Atlanta, GA, AIAA-4881. - Others available upon request.
13Digital Clay for Shape Input and Display
15 Students Faculty Wayne Book, Mark Allen,
Imme Ebert-Uphoff, Ari Glezer, David
Rosen, Jarek Rossignac
Contributions Benefits
Objectives
- Develop an interactive, 3-D haptic computer
input/output device. Specifically, the device
will enable - Shape input through a sculpting interaction
mode - Shape display of a computer model (e.g. CAD
model) - Stiffness (feel) display of shapes with various
material properties. - Demonstrate the digital clay device on a variety
of mechanical and architectural shape design
applications, distributed collaboration, and
dynamic simulations.
- Define state-of-the-art in haptics (force-based)
computer interaction. - Greatly impact distributed collaboration when
shape must be communicated. - Potentially, impact the ability for visually
impaired people to interact with computers. - Significantly impact technology in hydraulics,
controls, kinematics, manufacturing, and
human-computer interface areas.
Supported by 5 year NSF grant.
Background
Collaboration Needed
- 1 student to develop digital clay prototypes and
test them in mechanical design applications. - Materials and supplies to construct digital clay
prototypes.
- Hydraulics will be used for actuation and
sensing. - A formable skin will comprises the bulk and shape
of the clay device. The skin will have
inflatable bladders to enable the skin to change
shape and to sense user forces. - Stereolithography used to fabricate skin and clay
structure. - MEMS technologies will be utilized to fabricate
array of pressure sensors and valves in device
backplane. - Human-computer interface studies will determine
appropriate methods of interaction with clay
devices.
References
- Bosscher, P. and Ebert-Uphoff, I., Digital Clay
Architecture Designs for Shape-Generating
Mechanisms, IEEE Robotics and Automation
Conference, 2003. - Rosen, D.W., Nguyen, A., and Wang, H., On the
Geometry of Low Degree-of-Freedom Digital Clay
Human-Computer Interface Devices, Proceedings
ASME CIE Conference, paper DETC2003-48295,
Chicago, Sept. 2-6, 2003.
- Zhu, H. and Book, W.J. Control Concepts for
Digital Clay, 7th Annual International Symposium
on Robot Control SyRoCo 2003, Sept. 1-3, 2003,
Wroclaw, Poland.
14Constrained Objects A Knowledge Representation
for Design, Analysis, and Systems Engineering
Interoperability
- Students Manas Bajaj, Injoong Kim, Greg Mocko
Faculty Russell Peak
Objectives
Contributions Benefits
Chip Package Stress Analysis Template
- Develop better methods of capturing engineering
knowledge that - Are independent of vendor-specific CAD/CAE/SE
tools - Support both easy-to-use human-sensible views
and robust computer-sensible formulations in
a unified manner - Handle a diversity of product domains,
simulation disciplines, solution methods, and
leverage disparate vendor tools - Apply these capabilities in a variety of
sponsor-relevant test scenarios - Proposed candidates are templates and custom
capabilities for design, analysis, and
systems engineering
- To Scholarship
- Develop richer understanding of modeling
(including idealizations and multiple levels of
abstraction) and representation methods - To Industry
- Better designs via increased analysis intensity
- Increased automation and model consistency
- Increased modularity and reusability
- Increased corporate memory via better knowledge
capture
Constrained Object (COB) Formulations
Approach Status
Collaboration Needed
- Approach
- Extend and apply the constrained object (COB)
representation and related methodology based on
positive results to date - Expand within international efforts like the OMG
UML for Systems Engineering work to broaden
applicability and impact - Status
- Current generation capabilities have been
successfully demonstrated in diverse environments
(circuit boards, electronic chip packages,
airframes) with sponsors including NASA, Rockwell
Collins, Shinko (a major supplier to Intel), and
Boeing. - Templates for chip package thermal analysis are
in production usage at Shinko with over 75
reduction in modeling effort (deformation/stress
templates are soon to follow)
- Support for 1-3 students depending on project
scope - Sponsor involvement to provide domain knowledge
and facilitate pilot usage
COB-based Airframe Analysis Template
- Additional Information
- 1. http//eislab.gatech.edu/projects/
- 2. Response to OMG UML for Systems Engineering
RFIhttp//eislab.gatech.edu/tmp/omg-se-33e/ - 3. Characterizing Fine-Grained Associativity
Gaps A Preliminary Study of CAD-E Model
Interoperabilityhttp//eislab.gatech.edu/pubs/con
ferences/2003-asme-detc-cie-peak/
15Composable Simulations Model Archiving and Reuse
for Systems Design
- Students Rich Malak, Tarun Rathnam, Steve Rekuc
Faculty Chris Paredis
Objectives
Contributions Benefits
- Develop integrated representations for
multi-disciplinary products and their
corresponding behavioral models - Develop algorithms for reusing and composing
simulation models of individual components into
models for entire systems - Characterize the validity and accuracy of
simulation models at multiple levels of
abstraction - Support the seamless transition between models at
multiple levels of abstraction while progressing
through the design process
- To Scholarship
- Develop understanding of the relationship between
configuration of components and configuration of
simulation models - Create ontology for ports (locations of intended
interaction) and artifacts - Develop understanding of validity and accuracy of
models to enable reuse - To Industry
- Faster and broader exploration of design space
- Capture history of design exploration and
analyses - Save resources by reusing validated simulation
models
Approach Status
Collaboration Needed
- Approach
- Semantically rich product representations in OWL
(Web Ontology Language) combined with
object-oriented simulation models in Modelica - Define and populate a repository of components
and models to demonstrate reuse and composition - Investigate the compatibility, composability, and
accuracy of models and model configurations. - Status
- We have demonstrated the concept of composable
simulations for satellite systems (with
Lockheed-Martin) and for transportation systems
(with Bombardier). - We have implemented an initial software
prototype, COINSIDE Composition in Simulation
and Design.
- Support for 1-2 students depending on scope of
study - Engineering support to provide application domain
knowledge for example study.
COINSIDE framework Composition in Simulation and
Design
Additional Info C.J.J. Paredis, A.
Diaz-Calderon, R. Sinha, and P.K. Khosla,
"Composable Models for Simulation-Based Design",
Engineering with Computers. Vol. 17, pp. 112-128,
2001. (http//www.cs.cmu.edu/paredis/pubs/EWC01.p
df)
Composition of port-based objectsallows for
automatic composition of thecorresponding
simulation andCAD models
http//srl.marc.gatech.edu/people/paredis/
16Supply Chain Design and Analysis Testbed
Students Jin-Young Choi, Nan Li Faculty
Leon McGinnis
Objectives
Contributions Benefits
- Develop distributed simulation testbed for
analyzing global supply chains, including
factories, warehouses, transportation - Use the distributed simulation testbed to
investigate alternative designs, planning
methods, and supply chain management methods
- To Scholarship
- Testbed for evaluating proposed supply chain
planning/management methods - To Industry
- Tools that permit collaboration between supply
chain partners to analyze/design the supply chain
without revealing proprietary data
Approach Status
Collaboration Needed
- Approach
- Use HLA to support distributed simulation, using
legacy models where necessary - Develop general purpose simulation models for
warehouses and transportation - Develop supply chain manager models
- Status
- First generation distributed simulation
demonstrated, using factory models at SimTech,
and warehouse and transportation models at
Georgia Tech - Ongoing development of generic warehouse,
transportation and supply chain manager models
- Demonstration case study
- Development and evaluation of specific supply
chain planning and/or management methods - Integrating existing legacy models to permit
supply chain analysis
Additional Info This project has been conducted
in collaboration with SimTech, the Singapore
Institute for Manufacturing Technology
17High Fidelity Factory Modeling
Students 5 PhD students Faculty L.
McGinnis, C. Zhou, S. Reveliotis
Objectives
Contributions
- Develop a new generation of factory modeling
tools that - Support high fidelity description of factory
resources and operations - Are based on concepts that map one-to-one with
factory entities - Enable abstraction to support more aggregate
models and analyses - Demonstrate new tools in semiconductor wafer fabs
- To Scholarship
- Comprehensive reference model for semiconductor
fabrication operations - Testbed for exploring alternative factory
designs, alternative scheduling and control
methods - To Industry
- Testbed for evaluating proposed factory designs
or factory planning and control strategies
Approach Status
Collaboration Needed
- Approach
- Object oriented
- Separation of process and control
- Explicit material handling
- Java, HLA
- Status
- Third generation toolkit
- Currently testing against Sematech 300mm model
- Demonstration case studies of specific fabs
- Evaluation of through-stocker versus
point-to-point AMHS - Linking factory operations models with real
factory control software to create a virtual
factory
Additional Info http//factory.isye.gatech.edu/vf
l/research/hifive.php For interim status report,
presentations, and demonstrations
18GIT Contacts Departments