63 research outputs found

    An information and communication technologies–based framework for enhancing project management education through competence assessment and development

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    This article is available open access through the publisher’s website at the link below. Copyright © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.Advances in information and communication technologies (ICT) have had a great impact on ways of working and communicating across all industrial sectors, including education. However, the education sector has been lacking adoption of potentially key technologies that can help improve delivery of modules and the overall learning experience of students. This research aims at addressing the important problem of understanding the strengths, weaknesses, current competences, and existing soft skills of new Masters of Science students starting a course on Project Management. This information is important for instructors as they can adapt and optimize delivery of such modules, enhance the overall learning experience, and assist the module leader in enhancing content. Also this information is not readily available to module leaders, and these competencies and skills cannot be assessed by traditional academic means. To address this problem a new process is proposed that uses an ICT system called Cycloid as its “backbone.” This article describes a new process and demonstrates it in a practical application. This is done through a study involving a number of students at the School of Engineering and Design at Brunel University who took the course during the 2007–2008 academic year. The aim of the study was to assess and demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed process. Results demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed process for implementation in higher education

    Multi agent system for negotiation in supply chain management

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    Supply chain management (SCM) is an emerging field that has commanded attention and support from the industrial community. Supply chain (SC) is defined as the chain linking each entity of the manufacturing and supply process from raw materials through to the end user. In order to increase supply chain effectiveness, minimize total cost, and reduce the bullwhip effect, integration and coordination of different systems and processes in the supply chain are required using information technology and effective communication and negotiation mechanism. To solve this problem, Agent technology provides the distributed environment a great promise of effective communication. The agent technology facilitates the integration of the entire supply chain as a networked system of independent echelon. In this article, a multi agent system has been developed to simulate a multi echelon supply chain. Each entity is modeled as one agent and their coordination lead to control inventories and minimize the total cost of SC by sharing information and forecasting knowledge and using negotiation mechanism. The result showed a reasonable reduction in total cost and bullwhip effect

    A first principles simulation framework for the interactions between a Si(001) surface and a scanning probe

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    By means of total energy calculations within the framework of the local density approximation (LDA), the interactions between a silicon Si(001) surface and a scanning probe are investigated. The tip of the probe, comprising 4 Si atoms scans along the dimer lines above an asymmetric p(2 × 1) surface, at a distance where the chemical interaction between tip-surface is dominant and responsible for image resolution. At that distance, the tip causes the dimer to toggle when it scans above the lower atom of a dimer. The toggled dimers create an alternating pattern, where the immediately adja-cent neighbours of a toggled dimer remain unchanged. After the tip has fully scanned across the p(2 × 1) surface, causes the dimers to arrange in a p(2 × 2) reconstruction, reproducing the images obtained in scanning probe experiments. Our modelling methodology includes simulations that reveal the energy input required to overcome the barrier to the onset of dimer toggling. The results show that the energy input to overcome this barrier is lower for the p(2 × 1) surface than that for the p(2 × 2) or c(4 × 2) surfaces.This work has been supported by the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) under contract EP/F009801/1 and Brunel University’s BRIEF award scheme. The authors would like to thank the School of Engineering and Design for purchasing our computing cluster to support research in this area. All simulations were performed on the cluster comprising 64 processors at Brunel University

    Supply chain control: Trade-offs and system requirements

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    The official published version can be accessed from the link below.A paper describes the underlying forces which drive change in manufacturing enterprises and supply chains. It sets out the complexities in modern capitalism and global economics and illustrates the trade-offs that can be made. IT systems which are required to assist improvements to both customer service and enterprise manufacturing performance are explained, alluding to the special case for the semiconductor industry. Arguments are presented showing how the new tools being developed with the ESPRIT project 20544, X-CITTIC, will satisfy the control needs for a virtual enterprise. This paper describes the underlying forces which drive change in manufacturing enterprises and supply chains. It sets out the complexities in modem capitalism and global economics and illustrates the trade-offs that can be made. IT systems which are required to assist improvements to both customer service and enterprise manufacturing performance are explained alluding to the special case for the semiconductor industry. Finally it shows how the new tools being developed with the ESPRIT project 20544, XCITTIC, will satisfy the control needs for a virtual enterprise

    Human-centric eBusiness

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    First principles studies of a Si tip on Si(100) 2x1 reconstructed surface

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    We present a systematic study of the interaction between a silicon tip and a reconstructed Si(100)2×1 surface by means of total energy calculations using Density Functional Theory. We perform geometry optimisation to obtain the reconstructed Si surface using the Local Density Approximation and the Generalized Gradient Approximation methods and compare our results with those obtained experimentally. We then study the effects of the tip of a scanning probe of an Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) on the behaviour of atoms on the reconstructed surface when the tip translates at distances close to it. Our results show that at certain positions of the tip relative to the surface and depending on the direction of the scan, the Si dimer on the surface flips, resulting to a local reconstruction of the surface into p(2×2) or c(4×2) configurations. These configurations exhibit energy lower by 0.05 eV/dimer compared to the Si(100)2×1 structure

    A novel architecture for a reconfigurable micro machining cell

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    There is a growing demand for machine tools that are specifically designed for the manufacture of micro-scale components. Such machine tools are integrated into flexible micro-manufacturing systems. Design objectives for such tools include energy efficiency, small footprint and importantly flexibility, with the ability to easily reconfigure the manufacturing system in response to process requirements and product demands. Such systems find application in medical, photonics, automotive and electronic industries. In this paper, a new architecture for a reconfigurable micro manufacturing system is presented. The proposed architecture comprises a micro manufacturing cell with the key design feature being a hexagonal-base on which three tool heads can be attached to three of its sides. Each such machine-tool head, or processing module, is able to perform a different manufacturing process. These tool heads are interchangeable, enabling the cell to be configured to process a wide range of components with different materials, dimensions, tolerances and specification. Additional components of the cell include manipulation robots and an automated buffer unit. Such cells can be integrated into a manufacturing system via a modular conveyor belt to transfer parts from one cell to another and into assembly. A key consideration of the architecture is a control system that is also modular and reconfigurable; such that when new processing modules are introduced the control system is aware of the change and adjusts accordingly. Further to this coordination, issues between modules and machining cells are also considered. Other design considerations include work-piece holding and manipulation. This paper provides an overview of the architecture, the key design and implementation challenges as well as a high level operational performance assessment by means of a discrete event simulation model of the micro factory cell

    WSN based intelligent cold chain management

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    This paper presents a cold chain monitoring system which is implemented by using ubiquitous computing technologies, Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) & Wireless Sensor Network (WSN). In this paper, we discuss how cold supply chain works and how we can monitor and control cold supply chain by using wireless tracking and sensing technologies. We propose a prototype design which will provide a well controlled and transparent cold chain system, which could help the users to manage their products’ environmental data in real time during the life cycle. Moreover, we highlight how the availability of product trace data in combination with historical condition-monitoring data can facilitate decision-making processes enhancing supply chain’s performance. Finally we discuss the integration works of these two technologies together in the cold supply chain management system. Hardware and software platform of WSN used in this system are also described in this paper

    Developing Scenarios for Product Longevity and Sufficiency

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    This paper explores the narrative of peoples’ relationships with products as a window on understanding the types of innovation that may inform a culture of sufficiency. The work forms part of the 'Business as Unusual: Designing Products with Consumers in the Loop' [BaU] project, funded as part of the UK EPSRC-ESRC RECODE network (RECODE, 2016) that aims to explore the potential of re-distributed manufacturing (RdM) in a context of sustainability. This element of the project employed interviews, mapping and workshops as methods to investigate the relationship between people and products across the product lifecycle. A focus on product longevity and specifically the people-product interactions is captured in conversations around product maintenance and repair. In exploring ideas of ‘broken’ we found different characteristics of, and motivations for, repair. Mapping these and other product-people interactions across the product lifecycle indicated where current activity is, who owns such activity (i.e. organisation or individual) and where gaps in interactions occur. These issues were explored further in a workshop which grouped participants to look at products from the perspective of one of four scenarios; each scenario represented either short or long product lifespans and different types of people engagement in the design process. The findings help give shape to new scenarios for designing sufficiency-based social models of material flows

    A landscape of repair

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    This paper reports on EPSRC-funded research that explores the role of repair in creating new models of sustainable business. In the lifecycle stage of repair we explore what 'broken' means and uncover the nature of local and dispersed repair activities. This in turn allows us to better understand how the relationship between products and people can help shape new modes of consumption. Therefore, narratives of repair are collected to identify diverse people-product interactions and illustrate the different characteristics of, and motivations for, repair. The paper proposes that mapping the different product-people interactions across the product lifecycle, particularly at the stage of fragile-functionality (performance or function failure, emotional disengagement, superseded technology) is important in understanding the potential for enduring products and their repair. Building a landscape of repair creates new opportunities for manufacture and for slowing resource loops across product lifetimes, which together provide a framework for a sufficiency-based model of production and consumption
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