MSD 1 System Level Design Review Biomass Compressor

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TEAM 13432 MSD 1 System Level Design Review Biomass Compressor

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MSD 1 System Level Design Review Biomass Compressor. Team 13432. Terminology. Biomass – any grown organic matter to be used in the system Compressor – increases pressure on the biomass FVP – force versus power TIE – team industrial engineering TC – team compression - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of MSD 1 System Level Design Review Biomass Compressor

TEAM 13432

MSD 1 System Level Design Review

Biomass Compressor

Terminology

Biomass – any grown organic matter to be used in the system Compressor – increases pressure on the biomass FVP – force versus power TIE – team industrial engineering TC – team compression TSP – team slicing and packaging

Goals

• Present design criteria and customer needs for approval by customer

• Update customer in regards to concept generation

• Settle upon final systems architecture for approval by customer

EDGE Website

https://edge.rit.edu/edge/P13432/public/Home

One Page SummaryConcept Generation

Functional Analysis

House of Quality

PUGH Baseline

Pugh Diagram

DescriptionLoose Biomass

HydraulicTwiner

AugerFlywheelTwiner

GuillotineWorm Gear

Unbound

Vibrating WirePnumatic

Glue

Vibrating WireFlywheel

Hemp Wrap

Selection Criteria Weight Datum Design 1 Design 2 Design 3 Design 4

Budget 2 0 - 0 + -Production Standards 1 0 + - - +

Efficiency 1 0 - + + +

Ease of Use 3 0 0 + + +

Safety 2 0 - - - -

Size 3 0 - 0 - -

Noise 3 0 - + 0 +

PUGH Refined

criteriaweigh

t

augerflywheeltwiner

hydraulictwiner

guillotinewormgearunbound

vibe wirepneumatic

glue

vibe wireflywheel

hemp wrap

budget 2 0 + + - -prod

standards 1 0 0 - 0 -

efficiency 1 0 + + - +ease of

use/maintenance 3 0 0 - + -

safety 2 0 + 0 + +

size 3 0 + 0 + +

noise 3 0 0 - 0 +

System Architecture

Feasibility Analysis

Feasibility Analysis

What the mechanical testing will answer1. What does the force v. displacement curve look like?2. Does moisture have an effect on the results?3. Is the compressed material isotropic or an-isotropic?4. What are the effects of the three different materials?5. What is Poisson’s ratio for the materials tested?6. What are the effects of the orientation of the material on resulting

forces?7. What is the force needed to eject the brick from the compression

chamber?8. Do the results scale?9. What are the effects of dwell time in compression chamber?10. What is the maximum achievable density of brick?11. How does friction affect the compression and ejection of the

biomass?

Feasibility Analysis

Steel 1018 CDSut (psi) 64000Sy (psi) 54000E (psi) 29000000Critial Load (psi) 43277.79754Factor of Safety 2Max Load (psi) 21638.89877Load 15000Marin Factorska 0.896862925kb (axial) 1kc (axial) 0.85kd 1ke 0.99kf 1Se (psi) 24150.72483Factor of Safety¹ 1.3158098

Flywheel Calculations(back of the envelope)

Flywheel Calculations

Position (°) Factor90 -0.013

100 -1.765110 -3.629120 -5.796130 -8.401140 -11.904150 -17.405160 -27.559170 -56.667179 -612.080

179.9 -7957.720

OVERVIEW•2 lbs bricks•Goal is to promotes Water Intake for Proper Hydration•Convenient, Lightweight and Easy to Use•Quickly Expands in a Bucket of Water to About One Flake of Moist Hay•Compressed Blend of Premium Grass and Alfalfa Hay

NUTRIOTIONAL INFO:Crude Protein (min) ................ 8.00%

Crude Fat (min)........................ 1.50%

Crude Fiber (max) .................... 37.00%

Ash (max) ................................ 9.00%

INGREDIENTS:1.Sun-cured Chopped Grass Hay (Timothy and Orchardgrass),2.Sun-cured Chopped Alfalfa, Vegetable Oil.

http://purinahorsesupplements.com/media/pdf/HydrationHayBlockOriginalSellSheet-FINAL-Sep-24-2012.pdf

http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2008/mar/31/county_residents_have_hot_idea_new_type_biofuel_ha/

Schaetzel family hay brick production

• Purchasing a hydraulic machine ($350,000)• Plant plans on using 20 tons of hay per day• Economically unfeasible to transport hay more than 100 miles away

Schedule for MSD 1

Work Breakdown StructureTeam Action Items Date: 2013-03-21

Phase Action Item Responsibility Start DateTarget

CompletionActual

CompletionComments

Define Meet with Customer All 03/08/13     3/8/13 Group meeting with customer to explain initial details3/16/13 Angela, Jackson, Josh, Sean, Akhil Taveled to Overmoyer farms to see original design and process.

  Narrow scope Dani 03/08/13 03/22/13 03/22/13  

  Define specs All 03/21/13      

  Project roles All 03/08/13 03/15/13 03/15/13 3/15/13 Project Manager and Lead Engineer roles chosen, Documentation Officer and EDGE specialists created. Subgroups created to attack individual parts of machinery.

  Design process All 03/15/13 04/05/13    

Measure Research Examples Leila, Ahkil 03/08/13 03/21/13 03/21/13  

  Brainstorm Preliminary Ideas All 03/15/13 03/21/13 03/21/13  

  Measure Design Performance All Week 9/10      

  Create Cad Drawings All Week 8      

Analyze Analyze Cost All Week 8      

  Analyze Feasibility   Week 8      

  Analyze Energy Consumption   Week 8      

  Analyze Location   Week 8      

  Analyze Optimization   Week 8      

  Analyze Safety   Week 8      

  Minimize Noise   Week 8      

  Select Materials   Week 5      

  Analyze Failure Mechanics   Week 8      

  Create B.O.M.   Week 7      

Implement Select Final Design   Week 5/6      

  Customer Approval Customer Week 5      

  Select Prototype Method   MSD II      

  Assemble Prototype   MSD II      

Control Measure Compression   MSD II      

  Improve Repeatability   MSD II      

  Measure Weight   MSD II      

  Improve Safety   MSD II      

  Measure Energy Consumption   MSD II      

  Create Instruction Manual   MSD II      

  Create PFMEA   MSD II      

  Create Fault Tree Analysis   MSD II      

1. WORKSPACE OSHA REGULATIONS

2. MATERIAL FLOW

3. FLOOR LAYOUT

4. EOQ & ROP

5. PRODUCTION TIMES:a) Mean time to repair

b) Utilization times

c) Throughput rate

d) WIP

e) Raw Processing time

6. MAINTENANCE MANUAL

7. NET ENERGY CALCULATIONS

8. SENSOR ARRAY / CONTROLSa) Emergency Switch

b) Brick and Cycle Counters

c) Light Indicators

d) Hazard Area Protection

Questions / Concerns