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BIOE 498 Senior Design

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Title: BIOE 498 Senior Design


1
BIOE 498Senior Design
  • Fall 2009
  • Orientation

2
Contact Information
  • Dr. Jenny Amos
  • 3113 DCL (I moved!)
  • jamos_at_illinois.edu
  • 217-333-4214

3
My Background
  • BS Chemical Engineering and Computer Science
  • PhD Chemical Engineering area focused in Tissue
    Engineering
  • Dissertation A Mechanotransduction Study of
    Chondrogenesis Using a Novel Tubular Scaffold
  • Areas of research/experience
  • Developmental biology
  • Histology
  • Tissue engineering (scaffold bioreactor design)
  • Hydrogels/Shape memory polymers
  • AFM
  • Six Sigma
  • Tribology
  • Gene arrays
  • Fluid dynamics
  • Rheology
  • Computer programming (C, Perl, VB, Java)

4
My Philosophy for This Course
  • Attendance is not mandatory, but some lectures
    will be, you will be warned about those and you
    must do your best to attend those lectures
  • However, if your grade is slipping, you might
    want to attend since I will likely curve based on
    attendance
  • I know you do group work, I did too as a student,
    but turn in your own work
  • I have a practically photographic memory and Im
    good at spotting similarities
  • Some people like laptops in class, I find them
    annoying and distracting
  • I sat in the back of Biomaterials often, I saw
    all of the Gmail, crosswords, Bejeweled, etc.
  • If youre bringing it to class, youd better be
    taking notes

5
My Philosophy for This Course
  • Keep answers concise on homeworks, I dont want a
    novel
  • Writing more only invites an opportunity to
    contradict yourself
  • Please type assignments unless your handwriting
    is really neat
  • Please dont talk during class unless youre
    talking to me or class is open for discussion
  • Ill stop talking and everyone will stare at
    younot fun
  • I end my lectures when they end, I see no need to
    torture you for the additional 10-20 minutes
    because thats how long we have

6
My Philosophy for This Course
  • You are all seniors in BIOE, congrats you made
    it!
  • That means that you have earned a certain degree
    of respect but you must still respect your
    professors
  • Its okay to eat in class but keep it small,
    simple, and quiet
  • Its going to be hard to fail this course so
    please dont try )
  • Id like to give out all As and Bs, maybe even
    all As

7
Failure is not an option
  • Grade school failure is not allowed
  • High school learn basic tools
  • Freshman-Junior years advanced tools and how
    to use them
  • If you work hard, success is likely
  • Senior Design use the tools!
  • Students work in Teams, and solve a problem for a
    Client, guided by the Instructors
  • Grad school?
  • MS thesis solve a (hard) problem
  • You are the Team
  • PhD thesis identify a hard problem and solve it
  • You are the Client and the Team
  • The real world
  • Recognize that there is a problem, and proceed
  • You are Instructor, Client, and Team!

You Are Here
Failure is not an option its already bundled
into the system anon, Microsoft,
1998
8
Best Efforts - Mine
  • This is BIOE coming from 498 to 435 this year
  • Special Topics work in progress, permanent
    course number tested and approved
  • Not everything has been tried, tested, refined
  • There may be some bumpy bits
  • Material is subject to change
  • We will stick to the schedule as best we can but
    if Im going to fast or too slow let me know
    and well adjust
  • A simple email or chat after class will suffice ?

9
Website, Textbook
  • http//www.bioen.illinois.edu/courses/BIOE498/SMM/
    bioe498.html
  • Will be updated throughout the year
  • Check often
  • Design of Biomedical Devices and Systems Paul H.
    King and Richard C. Fries
  • Homework assignments will come from this book. I
    will not assign reading but it is suggested

Yes, its a pink book, sorry!
10
What to expect
  • Fall semester may start easy
  • The lecture material is not rocket science
  • The assignments are not killers
  • The tools you will learn are important so just
    play along
  • Late Fall will be bad
  • Your Team must talk to and negotiate withyour
    Client, on his/her schedule
  • You must be prepared! Plans, Budgets, whatever!
  • Spring semester will be worse!
  • Presentations, status meetings, reviews, reports
  • More time talking to your Client
  • Time in the lab researching, developing
  • Time finding materials, supplies
  • Time spent finding/working-with machine shops
  • Time lost on disaster recovery

11
Time is Money
  • You can not afford to be idle, ever!
  • If you are waiting on item A, you should be
    working on item B
  • Fall, Winter and Spring Breaks, arent
  • They can be part relaxing and part thinking
  • You should come back from Winter Breakwith
    napkins, envelope-backs, scraps of paper,covered
    with concept ideas
  • Writing in your Design Notebook is better ?
  • If you wait, you will fail

12
Course Outline (planned)
  • Fall 2009
  • Orientation, basics
  • Lectures
  • Guest Lectures (Patents, FDA, bioengineering in
    the real world)
  • Client Presentations
  • Project Discussions, in class
  • Six Sigma
  • Fall Break
  • Winter Break
  • Spring 2010
  • First Presentation (teams)
  • Status meetings (no lectures)
  • Design Reviews (no lecture)
  • Presentations (teams), QA
  • Report (student reviewers)
  • Status meetings (no lectures)
  • Spring Break
  • Design Notebook Review
  • Status meetings (no lectures)
  • Final Presentations (tba, teams)
  • Final Report Notebook due

13
When, where (planned)
  • Lectures (including Guest), and Client
    presentations (Fall)
  • Tuesdays, Thursdays 5pm 620pm
  • 2320 DCL
  • Project Discussion, in class (Nov)
  • Same as Lecture
  • Planning meetings (Fall) and Status meetings
    (Spring)
  • Half hour per team
  • Additional time available, on request
  • To be scheduled at a fixed time each week
  • 3113 DCL (my office)
  • First Presentation (January)
  • Same as Lecture
  • Design Reviews (Spring)
  • Same as Status Meeting, twice (details later)
  • Final Presentation (May)
  • To be determined (when, where)

14
Lecture Subjects (planned not necessarily in
order)
  • The Design Process
  • The Design Problem
  • Concept Design
  • Intellectual property, patents
  • Materials, Manufacturing
  • Configuration Design, DFM
  • Parametric Design
  • Prototyping, Testing
  • FMEA, DFX
  • Liability, risk, safety
  • Human Factors, ergonomics
  • Quality/Six Sigma
  • Ethics
  • Project Planning, budgets
  • Design Reviews Value Engineering

15
Six Sigma
  • I am a Six Sigma green belt and you will be
    trained in Six Sigma and receive a green belt
    certificate after this course
  • Put this on your resumes!
  • We will cover important Six Sigma concepts and do
    an assignment in the fall to solidify concepts
    and then a small project related to your design
    project in the spring
  • If you are already a Six Sigma green belt, then
    please meet with me, maybe we can incorporate
    something you did into the lectures as well

16
What are Projects?
  • Problem research
  • Meetings with a faculty sponsor (Client)
  • Resource search
  • Project planning and execution
  • Analytical thinking
  • Quantitative decision making
  • Teamwork
  • Creativity, and mindless labor!
  • Documented in a Design Notebook
  • Producing a new, Bioengineering-relevant
    Prototype
  • By the end of Spring 2009

17
Projects 2007-2008
  • A Robotic Leg Test Fixture to Simulate Normal and
    Abnormal Gait Patterns
  • The iFishbot A Robot for the Simulation of
    Active Sensing Organisms
  • Applied Breath Technologies' SLEBA 1
  • pH and pH2O2 from exhaled breath
  • The Birth of the Cali-BRAIN-te
  • MRI phantom
  • FTIR Spectroscopic Needle Probe for in situ
    Pathology
  • Phenotype Database Merger
  • Multiple Needle Biopsy Device for Tissue Analysis
    of Angiogenesis
  • pathwayfindr customizing cellular signaling
    pathways

18
Projects 2008-2009
  • The 21st Century Personal Emergency Response
    System
  • Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) in a Handheld
    Probe for Breast Cancer Imaging
  • Bacteria Film Tracking Program
  • Endoscopic OCT Needle Probe
  • Biological Network Inference Suite for Clustering
    Gene Arrays
  • Intra-operative Leg Length Measuring System
  • Acoustical Tweezers for Moving Micro and Nano
    Objects

19
Project Rules (for Clients)
  • Product, not research or service
  • New
  • Clients talk to Teams, Instructors talk to
    Students and Teams
  • Clients provide lab resources but also there are
  • Sr Design Project lab 3116 DCL
  • Fabrication Lab basement DCL, TBA
  • Up to 500 per project, from Bioengineering
    Department
  • Clients are free to provide more ?
  • The fundamental deliverable Prototype
  • Prototype belongs to Client
  • Intellectual property Client and Team

20
Actors and Communications
Team
Client (Sponsor)
Student(s)
Instructor and support
No!
21
Money (planned)
  • It is likely that each Team will purchase
  • Parts (chemical, mechanical, electrical)
  • Services (machine shop time)(note pure software
    projects not so much)
  • The Bioengineering Department has finite finances
    available, (planned) 500 per project
  • The amount of money available for your Team will
    be determined by the needs of all Teams
  • Software projects are expected to cost 0
  • All purchases will be coordinated through the
    Bioengineering Department
  • Elizabeth Stovall her rules are Law!
  • Plan to fill out Purchase Forms, etc.
  • Details later

22
Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
  • contract, Client Team
  • Template will be provided by the Instructors
  • Negotiated
  • Details will be determined by Client and Team
  • Instructors can mediate
  • Defines who, what, when
  • Calls for Best Effort
  • Stuff happens
  • Will be amended, throughout the design year
  • Refined, as the design matures
  • Adjusted, in response to surprises
  • But the bottom line is that you must work with
    the Client!
  • The (pre-amendment) MOU must be signed (by all
    parties) by Finals Week before Winter Break

23
Project-related Events (planned)
  • In-class Client presentations (mid Oct)
  • Identify projects
  • Team assignments (early Nov)
  • Followed by Team-Client meetings
  • In-class discussions of projects (before Fall
    break)
  • Project planning meetings after break
  • signed MOU (before Winter break)
  • First Presentation (January)
  • To the class introduction, by the Team
  • Website Planning and start
  • Weekly status reports emailed to Instructors
    (cc to Client)
  • Weekly (Bi-weekly?) status meetings
  • Team Instructors, 50 minutes per Team, to be
    arranged
  • Design Reviews (before Spring Break)
  • Team Reviewers ( anyone interested), 1 hour
    per Team, times 2
  • Design Notebook Review
  • By Instructors, during Spring Break
  • Final Presentation and Website (before Spring
    finals)
  • To the public outcomes

24
Design Reviews (planned)
  • Late Feb (S6), Instructors will
  • provide a charge document setting the rules and
    responsibilities of all parties
  • for each Team, select 3 other students (not on
    Team, not on same Teams) to serve as Reviewers
  • Then, Teams will email review material (URLs) to
    their Reviewers
  • Early March (S7)
  • Each Team will present their project, design
    choices (what, and why), and current status 15
    minutes
  • Reviewers will review, ask questions 35 minutes
  • After, Reviewers write/email a report
  • Findings (statements of fact)
  • Recommendations (opinions)
  • Following week (S8)
  • Roles reverse Reviewers present their Report
    15 minutes
  • Teams ask questions, or provide rebuttal 35
    minutes
  • To be conducted during the Teams regularly
    scheduled Status meeting
  • Reviewer selection/assignment may be tricky, to
    fit schedule
  • Modeled on Department of Energy (and others)
    critical decision review process

25
Final Presentation
  • To be defined, Spring 2009
  • But this is what you can look forward to
    (planned)
  • 15 minutes describing your project to the public
  • Problem, plan, outcome
  • Presented by the Team
  • to BIO 498 students, Clients, interested faculty,
    others
  • esp. Juniors with fears about next fall
  • Followed by 5 minutes of QA
  • Intermission snacks and drinks (non-EtOH)
  • And after all presentations (planned)
  • 30 minutes of vendor fair
  • Your Team behind a table, showcasing your
    prototype
  • You will need to advertise (poster, brochures
    banner, etc.)

26
Final Report
  • To be defined, Spring 2009
  • But this is what you can look forward to
    (planned)
  • problem, mission, and plan
  • contract
  • schedule, budget
  • design process documentation
  • Due diligence
  • what was considered, planned
  • as-built documentation
  • what was done
  • plan/project critique
  • 20-20 hindsight
  • what should have happened, what did happen, why
  • Reviewers recommendations, revisited
  • Followed/rejected, and why

27
Design Notebook
  • Each student must keep a Design Notebook
  • Typically paper
  • Bound, or 3-ring
  • Can be electronic
  • If so, must be printed for Review (Spring Break)
  • To contain dated copies of all ideas,
    discoveries, plans, laments
  • Organized in sections, for Review (Spring Break,
    and Final)
  • Hence 3-ring may be wiser
  • To contain a journal of email exchanges
  • You can filter out the noise, but too much is
    better than missing something
  • To contain the dates, names of participants, and
    minutes/notes from all official meetings
  • Planning meeting, Client-Team meetings, Design
    Review, other
  • Start now!

28
Example Design Website
  • From U Rochester

29
Example Design Website
  • From Penn State

30
Course Rules
  • Cell phones off, or equivalent
  • If I can hear it, you will suffer!
  • Assignments, Reports are due on time
  • Meetings begin/end on time
  • Most Instructor meetings will be xx00 to xx30
  • Most things are negotiable
  • But only before, not after!

31
Grading
  • Fall 2008
  • Assignments (written)
  • 60
  • Client Assessment
  • 30
  • Other /- 10
  • in-class participation
  • Web content provided
  • Other contribution to the course10
  • Being here 0
  • Making my life miserable(without a good
    reason) -10
  • Spring 2009
  • Presentations
  • 30
  • Final Report Notebook
  • 30
  • Client assessment
  • 20
  • Weekly Meetings/Weekly reports
  • 20

32
What is a Good Reason?
  • Each Team will do something different
  • Each Student has a different (perhaps valid ?)
    perspective
  • I could be wrong
  • Therefore, if you disagree with something,lets
    talk about it
  • However, after the debate, you must comply
  • My obligation is to be flexible, reasonable
  • Your obligation is to accept it

33
Outstanding, Adequate, and Failed
  • Every Team will do something different
  • Projects are hopefully as balanced as is fair but
    are very different
  • The fundamental grade-scale will be
  • Work hard, work smart Outstanding (A)
  • Do the work, and be very lucky Adequate (B)
  • Dont count on being lucky
  • Anything less Failure

34
Assignments (planned)
  • Design warm-up
  • Concept Design
  • Configuration Design
  • Six Sigma Project
  • FMEA, Liability
  • Contract
  • Purpose
  • Problem statement
  • Mission statement
  • Project Plan
  • Tasks
  • Milestones
  • Budget
  • Obligations resources, deliverables
  • Rules
  • And in the Spring, weekly Status Reports (details
    later)

35
Assignments, Reports
  • Typed
  • Handwritten will lose points
  • E.g. Outstanding gt Adequate, Adequate gt
    Failed
  • Paper and/or electronic documents
  • Word, Excel, Powerpoint, website designIf you
    dont know these, learn now!Or plan to hire
    someone, at your expense
  • Will often include figures and drawings
  • And tables

36
Figures, Drawings, etc.
  • You will need to include artwork in your
    assignments and reports
  • AutoCAD, ProE
  • PowerPoint/Word
  • Cutpaste
  • PrintScreen, crop, scale
  • annotate
  • Start now!
  • Hand-drawn art will lose points

annotation
37
Handing in Assignments, Reports
  • Paper, or email
  • Special cases will be specifiedHowever...
  • Do not email attached documents larger than 500
    KB !
  • Email was not intended for file transfer
  • It costs a lot more than you might imagine!
  • Post the document(s) to a website, and email the
    URL Use your Wiki or NetFiles

38
Posting Documents
  • Everyone has a Netfiles accountwww.cites.uiuc.ed
    u/netfiles/
  • Documents can be public
  • Documents can be read-restricted to specific
    Net-IDs
  • Documents can be read-restricted by guest ticket
    (which you can email)
  • Some students may work in research groups that
    have web pages, see if you can use them
  • Some may have ISP/other resources
  • Find out now. Ask for help if you need.

39
Design Notebook exception
  • Your Design Notebook may be
  • Handwritten, hand sketched
  • With scraps of paper taped to pages
  • and napkins, laminated in plastic
  • Electronic
  • With cutpaste figures from the web
  • And scanned/photographed images
  • You Design Notebook will be
  • Reviewed by the instructor during Spring Break
  • Due for final review/grade, along with your Final
    Report
  • Returned to you after grading
  • Final Report will not be returned, but
    grade/comments will be available
  • I have examples in my office, if you are curious

40
Ethics and Attribution
  • Assignments, Notebook Students
  • Presentations, Reports Teams
  • Team efforts must show all names
  • If you have a team member not contributing tell
    me ASAP so that you arent penalized
  • Students may collaborate
  • Assignments must show your name
  • To receive grade/credit
  • and the names of your collaborators
  • Anything less is cheating

41
Engineering Design
  • Is not just finding one solution to the problem
  • It is not art, sprung full-grown from the brow of
    the creator
  • It is a series of decision-making processesto
    determine the form of the solutiongiven the
    functions required by the Client

42
Why not just find one solution?
  • Self satisfaction in a job well done?
  • Yeah, right.
  • Profit
  • 3. Never spend more for an acquisition than you
    have to.
  • Rules of Acquisition.
  • And next team can do it better
  • They will profit from your RD you will not!
  • Value engineering

43
Value Engineering
  • Public Law 104-106 Each executive agency shall
    establish and maintain cost-effective value
    engineering procedures and processes."
  • http//oecm.energy.gov/Portals/2/PL104_106.pdf
  • OFPP Act, section 432 value engineering
    meansan analysis of the functions of a
    program, project, system, product, item of
    equipment, building, facility, service, or supply
    of an executive agency, performed by qualified
    agency or contractor personnel, directed at
    improving performance, reliability, quality,
    safety, and life cycle costs
  • The Office of Federal Procurement Policy
  • Value function/cost
  • Maximize function, minimize cost
  • If you do any engineering for/with the U.S.
    Government, you may be required to perform a
    Value Engineering analysis.

44
You Will DemonstrateDue Diligence
  • You can use
  • Concept DesignConfiguration DesignSix
    SigmaFMEA, Liability assessmentValue
    Engineering Analysis
  • Your Design Reviewers will be required to
    determine the verb-noun base function(s) of
    your project. Details later.
  • Or you can do something else
  • Equally compelling
  • However, your final report will demonstratethat
    you have evaluated alternatives, and havea sound
    engineering basis for your solution.

45
Questions?
46
By Next Time
  • Identify your website for posting assignments
  • Netfiles, other
  • Email to me a URL of a document on your site
  • To test the concept
  • If you have difficulties, email to mea request
    for help
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