5 resultados para product development, user-designer collaboration
em Lume - Repositório Digital da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
Resumo:
Esta dissertação apresenta uma metodologia de retroalimentação do ciclo de desenvolvimento de produtos, com ênfase na fase de projeto, a partir de dados obtidos em estudos de confiabilidade. A metodologia é proposta com base no escopo da norma QS-9000, norma esta que vem sendo utilizada por fornecedores e sub-fornecedores da indústria automobilística no mundo inteiro. Um estudo de caso permitiu que a metodologia fosse implementada em uma empresa certificada na norma. São aplicadas retroalimentações em ferramentas como Desdobramento da Função Qualidade (QFD), Análise dos Modos e Efeitos de Falha de Produto (DFMEA) e de Processo (PFMEA). Os resultados obtidos demonstraram que a metodologia de retroalimentação proposta é uma ferramenta útil na maturação de um produto, através da utilização dos dados de falhas em campo, bem como no momento do desenvolvimento de um produto novo, que irá suceder o atual, através da utilização da voz do cliente e dos dados de falha em campo de forma ordenada.
Resumo:
O tema desta dissertação de mestrado é o estudo da Engenharia Reversa como ferramenta de suporte à melhoria e adaptação de produtos. A partir de conceitos teóricos sobre desenvolvimento de produtos e melhoria de processos, propõe-se uma metodologia para adaptação de produtos destinados à exportação. A metodologia proposta consiste de oito passos, contemplando etapas de identificação e priorização das demandas de adaptação de produtos e elencando ferramentas auxiliares no atingimento dos objetivos desejados. A etapa inicial deste trabalho consiste de uma revisão bibliográfica dividida em duas partes: (i) adaptação de produtos através da utilização da Engenharia Reversa e seus habilitadores, e (ii) ferramentas para melhoria de processos. Os tópicos contemplados em (ii) incluem ferramentas para o mapeamento de processos de manufatura e para a sua melhoria. Destaque especial é dado ao Desdobramento da Função Qualidade – QFD (Quality Function Deployment), a Análise de Modos e Efeitos de Falhas (FMEA – Failure Mode and Effect Analysis) e às Cartas de Processos. Na seqüência, apresentam-se os passos da metodologia proposta para a adaptação de produtos às demandas de mercado utilizando a Engenharia Reversa e seus habilitadores. Finalmente, os passos metodológicos são aplicados a um caso prático, cujo objetivo é a adaptação de um pincel, produzido por uma empresa gaúcha, às demandas de um distribuidor alemão de ferramentas manuais.
Resumo:
Este trabalho trata sobre um assunto relativamente novo, mas com uma importância cada vez maior no desenvolvimento de produtos. Trata-se do Projeto para o Meio-Ambiente (Design for Environment - DFe). São analisados os aspectos do DFe relacionados com o desenvolvimento de produtos eletro-eletrônicos, abrangendo métricas ambientais, práticas de projeto e métodos de análise de produtos. Estes conhecimentos são aplicados no desenvolvimento de um conjunto de métricas ambientais e de uma metodologia de avaliação ambiental de produtos, a serem adotadas pela Springer Carrier SA no desenvolvimento de seus novos produtos. Esta ferramenta foi criada através da análise de uma ferramenta anterior, desenvolvida nos Estados Unidos, mas incorporou sugestões presentes na literatura e a experiência prática acumulada pelo autor. Este trabalho trata sobre um assunto relativamente novo, mas com uma importância cada vez maior no desenvolvimento de produtos. Trata-se do Projeto para o Meio-Ambiente (Design for Environment - DFe). São analisados os aspectos do DFe relacionados com o desenvolvimento de produtos eletro-eletrônicos, abrangendo métricas ambientais, práticas de projeto e métodos de análise de produtos. Estes conhecimentos são aplicados no desenvolvimento de um conjunto de métricas ambientais e de uma metodologia de avaliação ambiental de produtos, a serem adotadas pela Springer Carrier SA no desenvolvimento de seus novos produtos. Esta ferramenta foi criada através da análise de uma ferramenta anterior, desenvolvida nos Estados Unidos, mas incorporou sugestões presentes na literatura e a experiência prática acumulada pelo autor.
Resumo:
With the ever increasing demands for high complexity consumer electronic products, market pressures demand faster product development and lower cost. SoCbased design can provide the required design flexibility and speed by allowing the use of IP cores. However, testing costs in the SoC environment can reach a substantial percent of the total production cost. Analog testing costs may dominate the total test cost, as testing of analog circuits usually require functional verification of the circuit and special testing procedures. For RF analog circuits commonly used in wireless applications, testing is further complicated because of the high frequencies involved. In summary, reducing analog test cost is of major importance in the electronic industry today. BIST techniques for analog circuits, though potentially able to solve the analog test cost problem, have some limitations. Some techniques are circuit dependent, requiring reconfiguration of the circuit being tested, and are generally not usable in RF circuits. In the SoC environment, as processing and memory resources are available, they could be used in the test. However, the overhead for adding additional AD and DA converters may be too costly for most systems, and analog routing of signals may not be feasible and may introduce signal distortion. In this work a simple and low cost digitizer is used instead of an ADC in order to enable analog testing strategies to be implemented in a SoC environment. Thanks to the low analog area overhead of the converter, multiple analog test points can be observed and specific analog test strategies can be enabled. As the digitizer is always connected to the analog test point, it is not necessary to include muxes and switches that would degrade the signal path. For RF analog circuits, this is specially useful, as the circuit impedance is fixed and the influence of the digitizer can be accounted for in the design phase. Thanks to the simplicity of the converter, it is able to reach higher frequencies, and enables the implementation of low cost RF test strategies. The digitizer has been applied successfully in the testing of both low frequency and RF analog circuits. Also, as testing is based on frequency-domain characteristics, nonlinear characteristics like intermodulation products can also be evaluated. Specifically, practical results were obtained for prototyped base band filters and a 100MHz mixer. The application of the converter for noise figure evaluation was also addressed, and experimental results for low frequency amplifiers using conventional opamps were obtained. The proposed method is able to enhance the testability of current mixed-signal designs, being suitable for the SoC environment used in many industrial products nowadays.
Resumo:
The work described in this thesis aims to support the distributed design of integrated systems and considers specifically the need for collaborative interaction among designers. Particular emphasis was given to issues which were only marginally considered in previous approaches, such as the abstraction of the distribution of design automation resources over the network, the possibility of both synchronous and asynchronous interaction among designers and the support for extensible design data models. Such issues demand a rather complex software infrastructure, as possible solutions must encompass a wide range of software modules: from user interfaces to middleware to databases. To build such structure, several engineering techniques were employed and some original solutions were devised. The core of the proposed solution is based in the joint application of two homonymic technologies: CAD Frameworks and object-oriented frameworks. The former concept was coined in the late 80's within the electronic design automation community and comprehends a layered software environment which aims to support CAD tool developers, CAD administrators/integrators and designers. The latter, developed during the last decade by the software engineering community, is a software architecture model to build extensible and reusable object-oriented software subsystems. In this work, we proposed to create an object-oriented framework which includes extensible sets of design data primitives and design tool building blocks. Such object-oriented framework is included within a CAD Framework, where it plays important roles on typical CAD Framework services such as design data representation and management, versioning, user interfaces, design management and tool integration. The implemented CAD Framework - named Cave2 - followed the classical layered architecture presented by Barnes, Harrison, Newton and Spickelmier, but the possibilities granted by the use of the object-oriented framework foundations allowed a series of improvements which were not available in previous approaches: - object-oriented frameworks are extensible by design, thus this should be also true regarding the implemented sets of design data primitives and design tool building blocks. This means that both the design representation model and the software modules dealing with it can be upgraded or adapted to a particular design methodology, and that such extensions and adaptations will still inherit the architectural and functional aspects implemented in the object-oriented framework foundation; - the design semantics and the design visualization are both part of the object-oriented framework, but in clearly separated models. This allows for different visualization strategies for a given design data set, which gives collaborating parties the flexibility to choose individual visualization settings; - the control of the consistency between semantics and visualization - a particularly important issue in a design environment with multiple views of a single design - is also included in the foundations of the object-oriented framework. Such mechanism is generic enough to be also used by further extensions of the design data model, as it is based on the inversion of control between view and semantics. The view receives the user input and propagates such event to the semantic model, which evaluates if a state change is possible. If positive, it triggers the change of state of both semantics and view. Our approach took advantage of such inversion of control and included an layer between semantics and view to take into account the possibility of multi-view consistency; - to optimize the consistency control mechanism between views and semantics, we propose an event-based approach that captures each discrete interaction of a designer with his/her respective design views. The information about each interaction is encapsulated inside an event object, which may be propagated to the design semantics - and thus to other possible views - according to the consistency policy which is being used. Furthermore, the use of event pools allows for a late synchronization between view and semantics in case of unavailability of a network connection between them; - the use of proxy objects raised significantly the abstraction of the integration of design automation resources, as either remote or local tools and services are accessed through method calls in a local object. The connection to remote tools and services using a look-up protocol also abstracted completely the network location of such resources, allowing for resource addition and removal during runtime; - the implemented CAD Framework is completely based on Java technology, so it relies on the Java Virtual Machine as the layer which grants the independence between the CAD Framework and the operating system. All such improvements contributed to a higher abstraction on the distribution of design automation resources and also introduced a new paradigm for the remote interaction between designers. The resulting CAD Framework is able to support fine-grained collaboration based on events, so every single design update performed by a designer can be propagated to the rest of the design team regardless of their location in the distributed environment. This can increase the group awareness and allow a richer transfer of experiences among them, improving significantly the collaboration potential when compared to previously proposed file-based or record-based approaches. Three different case studies were conducted to validate the proposed approach, each one focusing one a subset of the contributions of this thesis. The first one uses the proxy-based resource distribution architecture to implement a prototyping platform using reconfigurable hardware modules. The second one extends the foundations of the implemented object-oriented framework to support interface-based design. Such extensions - design representation primitives and tool blocks - are used to implement a design entry tool named IBlaDe, which allows the collaborative creation of functional and structural models of integrated systems. The third case study regards the possibility of integration of multimedia metadata to the design data model. Such possibility is explored in the frame of an online educational and training platform.