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Engineering

Engineering. Systems. of. Systems Engineering. An Introduction. M R Shankar. Outline. What is “ SE ”? Why “ SE ”? Where it can be? How “ SE ” ? (A big question) A Generic SE process. What is a ‘ System ’?. Electrical. Avionics. Hydraulics. Mechanical. What is a ‘ System ’?.

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Engineering

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  1. Engineering Systems of

  2. Systems Engineering An Introduction M R Shankar

  3. Outline • What is “SE”? • Why “SE”? • Where it can be? • How “SE”?(A big question) • A Generic SE process

  4. What is a ‘System’? Electrical Avionics Hydraulics Mechanical

  5. What is a ‘System’? • A group of components that worktogether for a specified purpose • Components - products (hardware, software, firmware), processes, people, information, techniques, facilities, services and other support elements • Together – integration of many • Purpose – is achieved by implementing many functions

  6. Other Systems Natural Man made Technical Non – Technical Aircraft Missile … Economic system Societal systems … Emphasis on Technical systems

  7. Technical Systems • Human-made artifacts • Result of engineering activities with the processes of engineering design • Difficult to classify systems based on technology like electrical system, mechanical system • Most present day systems are hybrids of simple systems of the past • An indication of the need to use inter-disciplinary approach

  8. What is “Engineering”? • Knowledge of mathematical and naturalsciences applied to utilize limited resources economically for the benefit of people • Scientific approach • Optimize resources • User/customer in focus Classical Engineering focused mainly on product design

  9. Systems Engineering (SE) • SE is an interdisciplinary approach and means to enable realization of successful systems • It is veryquantitativeincludingtradeoff, optimization,selectionandintegrationofproductsfrom various engineering disciplines • It is more of an engineering discipline.

  10. Why “SE” is needed Complexity Project Technical

  11. Why “SE”? Wright Brothers Designed, Built and Flew the world’s first powered, controlled, heavier-than-air flight

  12. Why “SE”? ONE Chief Designer – TOTAL knowledge

  13. High Complexity • Multidisciplinary • Cost & Time “SE” is needed due to Technical complexity

  14. Why “SE”? % Commitment to technology, configuration, cost etc 100 75 Cost incurred System specific knowledge 50 25 Ease of change Detail design & development Concept & prelim. design Production Use, phase-out disposal

  15. Why SE (cont..) • More systematic way of development • Better control of System Development incl. management of risk, changes, configuration • Traceability at all levels • Operational & supportability aspects • Effectiveness Analysis • Risk management • Operational - Maintainability, Availability, Safety etc Ensures FINAL PRODUCTFullyMeetsAllUserRequirements

  16. Where “SE”? • All levels • Organization level – for a project • Full fledged SE • Subsystem level • We aim at this level!! • Individual level • Systems thinking

  17. Systems Engineering (SE) • Emphasis on • Top-down approach • Interdisciplinary approach • Effort on more complete definition of system requirements • Life cycle engineering approach

  18. Emphasis in SE • Top-down approach • Look at system from top • Decide inputs/outputs taking into account the supersystem • Decide subsystems … down to lower levels • Interdisciplinary approach • Analytical approach is inadequate • Capture the interactions between disciplines • Exploit the synergism of these interactions

  19. Emphasis in SE • More complete definition of needs • Complete definition of needs facilitates verification of system performance • Minimize surprises at later stages • Life cycle engineering approach • Initial approach was Design cycle • Later with Design for Manufacture (DFM) approach Manufacturing cycle also included • Present thinking is to consider three life cycles i.e. Design,Manufacturing and Supportability concurrently • Leading to Concurrent Engineering (CE)

  20. Conceptual & Preliminary Design Detail Design & Development Production and/or Construction Product use Phase out and Disposal NEED Manufacturing Configuration Design Manufacturing Operations Product support configuration design and development Product support and maintenance Life-cycle engineering approach Utilization phase Development phase Design Manufacture Deployment

  21. Product life cycle Identification of need Research Input Conceptual design System concept Preliminary Design Subsystem design Detailed Design & Development Component design Production/Construction Development phasing Utilization & Support Phase-out and Disposal

  22. Systems Engineering process Basic steps • Define system objectives (user’s needs) • Establish performance requirements (requirements analysis) • Establish functionality (functional analysis) • Evolve design and operation concepts (design synthesis) • Select a baseline (thro’ trade-off studies) • Verify the baseline meets requirements • Iterate the process through lower level trades (decomposition)

  23. Requirements analysis Functional analysis INPUT R V D Design Synthesis System Analysis & Control OUTPUT Concept studies System studies Prelim. Design Detailed Design

  24. System Engineering Management • Conceptual design • Preliminary design • Detailed design & Development • Requirement analysis • Functional analysis • Design Synthesis • System analysis and control Development phasing • Development • Production • Deployment • Operation • Support • Training • Verification • Disposal System Engineering process Life cycle approach This interaction shows how to apply SE process to develop systems in life cycle approach

  25. Lifecycle planning Baselines Integrated approach Aids to SE Management • Functional baseline • Allocated baseline (‘Design to’ specs.) • Product baseline (‘Build to’ specs.) Drawing inputs from all the life cycle activities for various development phases Development phasing System Engineering Management System Engineering process Life cycle approach Integrated team from Systems engineering and discipline specialists

  26. SE process overview

  27. SE process mapped to Life cycle

  28. What we have seen • What is a System • What is Systems Engineering • Why Systems Engineering is needed? • Life cycle engineering approach leading to Concurrent Engineering • Product cycle & development phasing • Steps in System engineering process

  29. I will stop here… We will move forward… Ref: INCOSE SE handbook DSMC – SE mgmt guide Systems Engineering & Analysis – Blanchard & Fabrycky

  30. Baselines • Functional baseline : • Top level (system) functions, performance & interfaces. • System level technical description • Allocated baseline : • System requirements flowed down to items below • Item performance specification, interface definitions, process description and drawings • ‘Design to’ specifications • Product baseline : • Defining system from top to bottom in terms of physical entities • ‘Build to’ specifications

  31. System classification • Natural & manmade systems • River system, Bridges • Physical & conceptual systems • Airline system, economic system • Open & closed systems • Chemical equilibrium in closed vessel, business organization • Static & Dynamic systems • Bridge, Aircraft

  32. What is a system? • A group of components that work together for a specified purpose e.g. Aircraft • Purpose is achieved by implementing many functions • System is made up of components, attributes and relationships • Components are the operating parts consisting of input, process and output e.g. Wing • Components may be structural, flow or operating • Attributes are the properties that characterize the system e.g. Lift generated • Relationships are links between components and attributes • The purposeful action by system is its function.

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