Industrial Engineering

11,296 views 25 slides Jul 25, 2016
Slide 1
Slide 1 of 25
Slide 1
1
Slide 2
2
Slide 3
3
Slide 4
4
Slide 5
5
Slide 6
6
Slide 7
7
Slide 8
8
Slide 9
9
Slide 10
10
Slide 11
11
Slide 12
12
Slide 13
13
Slide 14
14
Slide 15
15
Slide 16
16
Slide 17
17
Slide 18
18
Slide 19
19
Slide 20
20
Slide 21
21
Slide 22
22
Slide 23
23
Slide 24
24
Slide 25
25

About This Presentation

With this PPT one can understand basic Industrial Engineering definitions, areas, applications.


Slide Content

Industrial Engineering Course Code: MEE308 Dr M Vijaya Kumar Associate Professor VIT University Vellore

Definition Industrial and systems engineering is concerned with the design, improvement and installation of integrated systems of people, materials, information, equipment and energy. It draws upon specialized knowledge and skill in the mathematical, physical, and social sciences together with the principles and methods of engineering analysis and design, to specify, predict, and evaluate the results to be obtained from such systems. --- IISE

Broad Areas

What we do?

Significant Events in IE

Significant Events in IE Division of labor (Smith, 1776) Standardized parts (Whitney, 1800) Scientific management (Taylor, 1881) Coordinated assembly line (Ford 1913) Gantt charts (Gantt, 1916) Motion study (the Gilbreths , 1922) Quality control ( Shewhart , 1924) CPM/PERT ( Dupont , 1957) MRP ( Orlicky , 1960) CAD Flexible manufacturing systems (FMS) Computer integrated manufacturing (CIM) © 1995 Corel Corp. © 1995 Corel Corp. © 1995 Corel Corp. © 1995 Corel Corp.

Application areas of IE

Communities in ISE Institute of Industrial Engineers International Association of Engineers

Some Journals of ISE/IIE International Journal for Production Research (Taylor & Francis) Internation Journal of Systems Science (Taylor & Francis), Journal of Intelligent Manufacturing (Springer), IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics: Systems Neuro Computing (Taylor and Francis), Journal of Decision Support System Sadhana - Acedemy Proceedings in Engineering Sciences (Springer) Journal of Manufacturing Systems (ELSEVIER) Soft Computing, Springer. Journal of Computational & Applied Research in Mechanical Engineering (JCARME) Production planning and control International Journal of Advanced Manufacturing Technology

Productivity Very simply, Productivity = Output Input For any type of organization Definition: Productivity is the relationship between the outputs generated from a system and the inputs that are used to create those outputs.

12 Basic Definitions of Productivity Measure Partial Productivity is the ratio of output to one class of input. Labour productivity = output / labour input Total-factor Productivity is the ratio of net output to sum of associated labour and captial (factor) inputs. total-factor productivity = net output / ( labour and capital input) Total Productivity is the ratio of total output to the sum of all input factors. Total productivity = total output / total input Partial Productivity Measure Total-factor Productivity Measure Total Productivity Measure Both the output and input(s) are expressed in real or physical terms by being reduced to constant rupees of a reference period (base period).

Example for productivity measure For a company XYZ, the total inputs and outputs have been converted in to money value and are given below. calculate total productivity and partial productivity for different categories of inputs. Material input= Rs 20,000 Human input= Rs 30,000 Energy input= Rs 10,000 Capital input= Rs 3,00,000 Miscellaneous input= Rs 50,000 Total output = Rs 5,00,000

Total productivity = total output/ total input = 5,00,000/4,10,000 =1.219 Partial productivities Material productivity = total output/ material input = 5,00,000/20,000 =25 Human productivity= total output/human input = 5,00,000/30,000=16.66 Energy productivity = total output/energy input = 5,00,000/10,000=50

Chapter 9: Quantitatve Methods in Health Care Management Yasar A. Ozcan Example Nurses in Unit A worked collectively a total of 25 hours to treat a patient who stayed 5 days, and nurses in Unit B worked a total of 16 hours to treat a patient who stayed 4 days. Calculate which of the two similar hospital nursing units is more productive. First, define the inputs and the outputs for the analysis. Is the proper measure of inputs the number of nurses or of hours worked? In this case the definition of the input would be total nursing hours. When the total number of nursing hours worked per nurse is used as the input measure, then the productivity measures for the two units are: Solution:

Solution H ours per patient day

COMMON MISUSE OF THE TERM PRODUCTIVITY XYZ electronic company produced 10000 calculators by employing 50 people at 8 hours/day for 25 days. Production = 10000 calculators Productivity (of labour ) = output / labour input = 10,000 / (50x8x25=10,000) = 1 calculator per man-hours This company increased its production to 12000 calculators by hiring 10 additional workers at 8 hours/day for 25 days. Production = 12000 calculators Productivity (of labour ) = 1 calculator per man-hours Production is concerned with the activity of producing goods and/or services. An increased production does not necessarily mean increased productivity

Productivity Wall? Quality is difficult to measure, and its definition is ambiguous The relationships between quantity of care provided and quality are often uncertain

Many people confuse. . . The concepts of productivity, efficiency, and effectiveness.

Efficiency Measures the resources expected to be consumed to the resources actually consumed. Hence, it focuses on the input side of the system. (To what degree did the system utilize the “right” things .) Effectiveness Measures what the system sets out to accomplish (objective) with what was actually accomplished; plan vs. actual Hence, effectiveness is an output measure. (Is the output “right” - right quality, right quantity, on time, etc.)

Standardization Technology Use of Internet , fax machines, e-mail, computerized billing, software Searching for lost or misplaced items Scrap rates Labor turnover, layoffs, n ew workers Safety Bottlenecks Factors Affecting Productivity (1 of 3)

Methods Design of the workspace Incentive plans that reward productivity Capacity utilization Location Layout Inventory Scheduling Methods Quality Technology Management Factors Affecting Productivity ( 2 of 3)

Shortage of IT workers and other technical workers Equipment breakdowns Part and material shortages Inadequate investment in training & education of the employees Factors Affecting Productivity ( 3 of 3)

References WWW. GOOGLE.COM http://www.iienet2.org Buffa E.S., (2009), Modern Production / Operational Management, John Wiley & Sons. Nigel Slack, Stuart Chambers, Robert Johnston., (2010)Operation Management, Pearson R. Danreid & Sanders, (2009), Operations Management, John Wiley & Sons. Panneerselvam . R. (2006), Production/Operations Management, Prentice Hall of India Pvt Ltd.