<p><em>Product and Process Design: Driving Innovation</em> is a comprehensive textbook for students and industrial professionals. It treats the combined design of innovative products and their innovative manufacturing processes, providing specific methods for BSc, MSc, PDEng and PhD courses. Student
Product and Process Design : Driving Innovation
β Scribed by Jan Harmsen, AndrΓ© B. de Haan, Pieter L. J. Swinkels
- Publisher
- de Gruyter
- Year
- 2018
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 465
- Series
- de Gruyter Textbook
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Industrial innovation can be tremendously accelerated by incorporating design activities throughout the innovation process to drive projects from early-stage idea generation to commercial implementation.
Innovation projects must be effective and efficient. Effective means that a need is fulfilled. Efficiency means that the novel product and/or technology require minimal resources and that the innovation project is carried out with minimal effort, time, and cost.
These innovation projects can only achieve all these goals by having trained and experienced people skilled to execute innovation projects. Trained people are recruited from universities and have completed the appropriate programs and courses.Product and Process Design: Driving Innovation by authors Jan Harmsen, Andre de Haan, and Ir. Pieter Swinkels focuses on the importance of design in all innovation stages for both processes and products and also how to perform these designs. The authors apply these in detail on life cycle, value chain, industrial implementation, processes, unit operations, chemistry, equipment and operations toward sustainable processes and products.
This text provides a practical guide for all R&D people on how to innovate in the chemical industry.β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Preface
Contents
Authorsβ biographies
Part A: Innovation and industry
1 Goal, scope, and structure
2 Systems relevant to design for innovation
3 Managing innovation
4 Designing for innovation
Part B: Design generation
5 Special design approaches
6 Scoping the design
7 Executing designs
8 Product modeling and optimization
Part C: Design optimization
9 Process modeling and optimization
10 Evaluating economic performance
11 Evaluating for safety and health
12 Evaluating for environmental, social and sustainable development aspects
13 Communicating
Part D: Education
14 Education
A3 Appendix to Chapter 3
A4 Appendix to Chapter 4
A9 Appendix to Chapter 9
A13 Appendix to Chapter 13: Communicating
Index
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><em>Product and Process Design: Driving Innovation</em> is a comprehensive textbook for students and industrial professionals. It treats the combined design of innovative products and their innovative manufacturing processes, providing specific methods for BSc, MSc, PDEng and PhD courses. Student
<p><p>The book gives a systematic and detailed description of a new integrated product and process development approach for sheet metal manufacturing. Special attention is given to manufacturing that unites multidisciplinary competences of product design, material science, and production engineering
<p><span>Using many real-world examples and cases, this book identifies key factors and processes that have contributed to the creation of successful new products, buildings, and innovations, or resulted in some failures. Such factors include the creativity of individuals and groups, their sources o
<p><span>Using many real-world examples and cases, this book identifies key factors and processes that have contributed to the creation of successful new products, buildings, and innovations, or resulted in some failures. Such factors include the creativity of individuals and groups, their sources o
<p><span>Using many real-world examples and cases, this book identifies key factors and processes that have contributed to the creation of successful new products, buildings, and innovations, or resulted in some failures. Such factors include the creativity of individuals and groups, their sources o