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Machine Design for Technology Students:A Systems Engineering Approach

  • Machine Design
  • Categories:New Technology & Discoveries
  • Language:English(Translation Services Available)
  • Publication date:
  • Pages:128
  • Retail Price:(Unknown)
  • Size:190mm×234mm
  • Page Views:232
  • Words:(Unknown)
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Description

This book is intended for students taking a Machine Design course leading to a Mechanical Engineering Technology degree. It can be adapted to a Machine Design course for Mechanical Engineering students or used as a reference for adopting systems engineering into a design course. The book introduces the fundamentals of systems engineering, the concept of synthesis, and the basics of trade-off studies. It covers the use of a functional flow block diagram to transform design requirements into the design space to identify all success modes.

The book discusses fundamental stress analysis for structures under axial, torsional, or bending loads. In addition, the book discusses the development of analyzing shafts under combined loads by using Mohr’s circle and failure mode criterion. Chapter 3 provides an overview of fatigue and the process to develop the shaft-sizing equations under dynamic loading conditions.

Chapter 4 discusses power equations and the nomenclature and stress analysis for spur and straight bevel gears and equations for analyzing gear trains. Other machine component topics include derivation of the disc clutch and its relationship to compression springs, derivation of the flat belt equations, roller and ball bearing life equations, roller chains, and keyways.

Chapter 5 introduces the area of computational machine design and provides codes for developing simple and powerful computational methods to solve: cross product required to calculate the torques and bending moments on shafts, 1D stress analysis, reaction loads on support bearings, Mohr’s circle, shaft sizing under dynamic loading, and cone clutch.

The final chapter shows how to integrate Systems Engineering into machine design for a capstone project as a project-based collaborative design methodology. The chapter shows how each design requirement is transformed through the design space to identify the proper engineering equations.

Author

Anthony D'Angelo, Jr.
Anthony D’Angelo, Jr. is a licensed Professional Engineer in the State of New Jersey and holds a B.S. and an M.Sc. in Mechanical Engineering from the New Jersey Institute of Technology and a MBA from Rutgers University. He has over 37 years of professional experience in government and industry conducting structural, thermal, and reliability analyses and authored or co-authored nine papers in the area of reliability-based design analysis and systems engineering. The author presently is conducting research, pursuing a Ph.D. in systems engineering from Colorado State University, on developing a reliability-risk modeling-based trade study tool. In addition, he is an adjunct instructor and has taught numerous courses in machine design, statics, dynamics, mechanics of materials, mechanisms, and material science at the County College of Morris, and various math courses at several County Colleges in New Jersey

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