|
Industrial Engineering and
Management (IEM)
2903
Manufacturing and Service
Systems and Tools I.
Prerequisites: ENGR 1111;
MATH 2144. Introduction to definition,
design, operation, and improvement of
systems that produce goods and services.
Case studies featuring classical and
contemporary issues in industrial
engineering and management. Issues include
system effectiveness and efficiency in
meeting customer needs, demands and
expectations. Introduction to
computer-aided tools useful in
documentation, analysis, and modeling within
contemporary organizations.
3103
Introduction to Probabilistic
Modeling.
Prerequisite: MATH 2153.
Introduction to concepts and models of
randomness, which support industrial
engineering and engineering management
analyses and decision making. Includes
probability models, statistical models and
distributions, Markov processes, and
Little's Law.
3303
Manufacturing Processes.
Lab 3. Prerequisites: ENGR
1322 and ENSC 3313. Manufacturing processes
used to transform new materials including
metals and non-metals into finished goods.
Traditional and nontraditional manufacturing
processes. Introduction to CAD/CAM. Basic
process selection. Metrology and measurement
fundamentals.
3403
Collaborative Engineering
Project Management.
Prerequisites: 2903, 3703.
Engineering management and group issues
involved in project planning,
implementation, and teamwork, as well as
techniques related to effective project
management in engineering topics addressed
include project management methodologies
and software; teamwork structures,
processes, and collaborative technologies;
process management, leadership and other
team roles.
3503
Engineering Economic
Analysis.
Prerequisite: MATH 2153.
Development and use of time value of money
models. Bases for comparison of
alternatives, including present worth,
annual worth, rate of return and payout
period methods. Decision making among
independent, dependent, capital-constrained
and unequal-life projects. Replacement,
breakeven and minimum cost analyses.
Depreciation and depletion methods and their
effect on corporate income taxes, leading to
after-tax cash flow analysis. Introduction
to financial reports.
3513
Economic Decision Analysis.
Prerequisite: MATH 2123.
Quantitative evaluation of investment
alternatives for non-engineering majors. The
role of interest in economic equivalence and
in formulating economic comparisons based on
present worth, annual equivalent, rate of
return and payout criteria. Accounting,
depreciation and income tax considerations.
Benefit-cost and cost-effectiveness
analysis. Cost estimation and allowance for
variance in estimates. Not available for
credit in industrial engineering curriculum.
3523
Engineering Cost Information
and Control Systems.
Prerequisite: MATH 2144.
Introduction to basic accounting concepts
and operating characteristics of accounting
systems relevant to engineering analysis and
decision making. Principles of financial and
managerial accounting, activity based
costing, taxes and depreciation. Emphasis on
interpretation and use of accounting
information for decision making.
3703
Manufacturing and Service
Systems and Tools II.
Prerequisites: ENGR 1111,
MATH 2144. Introduction to definition,
design, operation, and improvement of
systems that produce goods and services.
Case studies featuring classical and
contemporary issues in industrial
engineering and management. Issues include
system effectiveness and efficiency in
meeting customer needs, demands and
expectations. Introduction to
computer-aided tools useful in
documentation, analysis, and modeling within
contemporary organizations.
3813
Work Design, Ergonomics, and
Human Performance.
Lab 3. Prerequisite: 3103.
Evaluation and design of work systems and
processes employing humans. Emphasis on
simultaneously achieving high productivity
and employee health, safety and
satisfaction.
4010*
Industrial Engineering
Projects.
1-3 credits, maximum 6.
Prerequisite: consent of school head.
Special undergraduate projects and
independent study in industrial engineering.
4013*
Linear Modeling I.
Prerequisites: 3103, MATH
3263. Fundamental methods, models, and
computational techniques of linear
programming, including transportation and
related network models relevant to
industrial engineering and engineering
management. Practical applications of
operations research from manufacturing,
service, and government/or organizations.
4020
Undergraduate Engineering
Practicum.
1-3 credits, maximum 4.
Prerequisites: consent of IEM adviser,
admission to the Professional School of
Industrial Engineering and Management and
satisfactory completion of at least 12 hours
of IEM 3000 or 4000 level courses.
Professionally supervised experience in real
life problem solving involving industrial
projects for which the student assumes a
degree of professional responsibility.
Activities approved in advance by the
instructor. May consist of full or part-time
engineering experience, on-campus or in
industry, or both, either individually or as
a responsible group member. Periodic reports
both oral and written required as specified
by the adviser.
4103*
Introduction to Quality
Control.
Prerequisite: 3103.
Performance excellence in an enterprise,
including relationships between industrial
engineering and quality control. Statistical
quality control concepts to measure,
monitor, diagnose, and improve performance
at the enterprise level, the operational
level, and the project level. Quantitative
and qualitative quality tools to solve
problems and capture opportunities for
improvement.
4113*
Industrial Experimentation.
Prerequisite: 3103.
Analytical methods for the purpose of
process improvement. Experimental designs
including single, blocked and multiple
factors. Introduction to fractional
factorial designs, central composite
designs, and Taguchi robust designs. Data
collection, analysis, and interpretation,
including graphical methods, confidence
intervals, and hypothesis tests. Multiple
linear regression analysis methods.
Industrial applications.
4163*
Service Systems and
Processes.
Prerequisites: 3103, 3503,
4613. Design and analysis of service systems
and processes from the perspective of
industrial engineering and engineering
management. Application of basic industrial
engineering principles and tools applied to
service systems. Basics of service quality
and productivity including metrics,
measurement, and improvement.
4203*
Facilities and Material
Handling System Design.
Prerequisites: 3303, 3813,
4013, 4713. Design principles and analytical
procedures for determining facility location
and location of physical assets within a
facility. Introduction to material-handling
concepts, technologies and methods.
Considerations include production
processes, product volume, material flow,
and information flows.
4323*
Manufacturing Systems and
Processes.
Lab 3. Prerequisites: 3303,
4103. Presentation of advanced concepts and
processes in manufacturing. Topics include
engineering for product life cycles,
automated manufacturing, computer-aided
design and manufacturing, real-time quality
control and associated sensing,
introduction to manufacturing research.
4413*
Industrial Organization
Management.
Prerequisites: 2903, 3703.
Issues, concepts, theories and insights of
engineering management and applications
emphasizing effective performance.
4613*
Production Planning and
Control Systems.
Prerequisite: 4013. Concepts
of planning and control for production and
service environments. Design of operation
planning and control systems. Techniques
used in demand forecasting, operations
planning, inventory control, scheduling,
and progress control.
4713*
Introduction to Systems
Simulation Modeling. Lab 3.
Prerequisite: 4013.
Simulation of discrete-event systems
including problem formulation, translation
to a computer model, and use of a model for
problem solution as well as concepts of
random variable selection and generation,
model validation and statistical analysis of
results.
4723*
Information Systems Design
and Development.
Prerequisites: 2903, 3703.
Information systems development
methodologies, modeling methods and software
tools for the design and development of
information systems. Different phases of
system design and implementation. Data
modeling using entity-relationship diagrams
and process modeling using data flow
diagrams, IDEF0 and IDEF3. Introduction to
enterprise resource planning systems and
their use within different enterprise
functional units.
4733*
Engineering Business
Processes.
Prerequisite: 4723.
Business-related process fundamentals
including functional units, strategy, and
performance measurement within and between
manufacturing and/or service-related
operations. Modern enterprise structures
such as virtual enterprises and supply
chains. Techniques for the design and
engineering of intra and inter-enterprise
processes-functional and process modeling,
qualitative analysis, quantitative analysis,
and automation technologies.
4823*
Industrial Ergonomics.
Lab 3. Prerequisite: 3813.
Characteristics of humans, equipment, and
work environment examined using a systems
approach. Job designs that concurrently
emphasize multiple goals of productivity,
safety and employee satisfaction.
Investigation of psychological, social,
safety, reward, training and ergonomic
parameters that affect work life of both
employee and supervisor.
4913
Senior Design Projects.
Lab 6. Prerequisite: 3403,
3503, consent of instructor; IEM majors
only. Student teams work on
professional-level engineering projects
selected from a wide range of participating
organizations. Projects are equivalent to
those normally experienced by beginning
professionals and require both oral and
written reports. Normally taken during
student's last semester of undergraduate
work.
4931
Industrial Engineering and
Management Seminar.
Prerequisite: senior
standing. Designed to orient seniors to
their professional work environment. Topics
include placement procedures, resume
construction, interviewing skills,
professional dress, graduate school,
professional societies and registration,
personal management of time and money, and
job-related expectations. Taught by senior
faculty; utilizes outside speakers.
4953
Industrial Assessment and
Improvement.
Prerequisites: senior
standing and consent of instructor. Plant
assessment and improvement-based concepts,
strategies, and tools for manufacturing
operations. Emphasis is on small to
medium-sized manufacturing operations.
Issues include energy, water, waste,
quality, and productivity analysis across
the organization from a systems perspective.
Justification of improvement projects and
measurement of results.
4990
Selected Topics in Industrial
Engineering and Management.
1-6 credits, maximum 6.
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. Study
of selected contemporary topics in
industrial engineering and management
including operations research; quality;
manufacturing systems; engineering
management; enterprise systems and supply
chains; facilities, energy, and
environmental management.
5000*
Research and Thesis.
1-6 credits, maximum 6.
Prerequisite: approval of major adviser.
Research and thesis for master's students.
5010*
Industrial Engineering
Projects.
1-6 credits, maximum 6.
Prerequisites: consent of school head and
approval of major adviser. Special graduate
projects and independent study in industrial
engineering.
5013*
Linear Modeling II.
Prerequisite: 4013 or
equivalent. Model formulation and modeling
of linear optimization problems using linear
programming and network optimization
techniques. Product mix, blending, staffing
and covering, and multi-period planning
models. Formulation of network problems as
linear programming models, including maximum
flow, minimum cost, and capacitated flow
networks.
5020*
Graduate Engineering
Practicum.
1-3 credits, 3 maximum.
Prerequisites: consent of IEM adviser and
satisfactory completion of 12 hours of IEM
5000- or 6000-level courses. Professionally
supervised experience in real-life problem
solving involving projects for which the
student assumes a degree of professional
responsibility. Activities approved in
advance by the instructor; must reflect
graduate level analysis. May consist of full
or part-time engineering experience,
on-campus or in industry, or both, either
individually or as a responsible group
member. Periodic reports both oral and
written required as specified by the
adviser.
5023*
Optimization Applications.
Prerequisite: graduate
standing. A survey of various methods of
unconstrained and constrained linear and
non-linear optimization. Applications of
these methodologies using hand-worked
examples and available software packages.
Intended for engineering and science
students. Same course as CHE 5703, ECEN 5703
and MAE 5703.
5030*
Engineering Practice.
1-9 credits, maximum 12.
Prerequisite: approval of adviser.
Professionally supervised experience in a
real-life problem involving authentic
projects for which the student assumes a
degree of professional responsibility.
Activities must be approved in advance by
the student's adviser. May consist of full
or part-time engineering experience,
on-campus or in industry, or both, either
individually or as a responsible group
member. Periodic reports both oral and
written required as specified by the
adviser.
5033*
Linear Optimization.
Prerequisite: 4013 or
equivalent. Algorithms for linear
optimization, including linear programming
and network optimization. Simplex algorithm
to solve deterministic linear optimization
models considering maximization and
minimization objectives. Degeneracy,
alternative optima and no feasible
solutions. Revised simplex procedures.
Duality theory, economic interpretations,
dual simplexing and complementary pivoting.
Sensitivity analysis and parametric
programming. Interior point methods.
Minimum cost, maximum flow, Dijkstra's and
other network optimization algorithms.
5043*
Nonlinear Optimization.
Prerequisite: 5033 or
equivalent. Theoretical and practical
aspects of nonlinear optimization, integer
optimization, and dynamic programming.
Development and application of nonlinear
optimization techniques for unconstrained
and constrained problems; sequential search,
gradient, penalty and barrier, and
projection methods. Development and
application of integer and mixed integer
techniques for unconstrained and constrained
problems; branch and bound, and cutting
methods.
5103*
Breakthrough Quality.
Prerequisites: 4103 and 4113
or equivalents. Structured, systematic
approach and advanced statistical and
modeling tools to achieve breakthrough
improvement across all areas of an
enterprise. Rigorous application,
integration, and betterment of strategies
and tools for improving or redesigning
products and processes such that performance
gains are noticeably higher or quicker than
those achieved under traditional incremental
improvement approaches.
5113*
Strategic Quality Leadership.
Prerequisites: STAT 4013 or
equivalent and graduate standing.
Quality-related strategies. Critical
elements that differentiate high performing
organizations from their competitors.
Delivering value to customers. Quality
leadership, strategic planning, customer
value, learning organizations, knowledge
management, quality systems, and business
results.
5123*
Service Quality.
Prerequisite: STAT 4013 or
equivalent. Theory and application of
service quality, including characteristics
of services (intangibility, heterogeneity,
perishability and inseparability of
production and consumption), dimensions of
service quality, measurement methodologies
for service quality and improvement;
methodologies for service quality.
Certification and accreditation processes
for service industries.
5133*
Stochastic Processes.
Prerequisites: MATH 2233,
MATH 3013, STAT 5123. Definition of
stochastic processes, probability
structure, mean and covariance function, the
set of sample functions. Renewal processes,
counting processes, Markov chains, birth and
death processes, stationary processes and
their spectral analyses. Same course as STAT
5133 and MATH 5133.
5143*
Reliability and
Maintainability.
Prerequisite: 3103 or
equivalent. Probabilistic failure models of
components and systems. Detailed study of
reliability measures; static and dynamic
reliability models. Classical and Bayesian
reliability testing for point and interval
estimation of exponential and Weibull
failures. Reliability optimization through
allocation and redundancy. Fundamentals of
maintainability.
5153*
Process Design and
Integration.
Prerequisite: STAT 4033 or
equivalent. Process design, integration,
control, and improvement within and between
enterprises. Analytical and systems
approaches to address physical and
statistical characterization of inputs,
transformations, and outputs. Modeling
issues, including process mapping, cause
and effect analysis, and impact projection.
Purpose, linkages, value, leverage,
measurement, creativity and leadership.
5163*
Service Systems and
Processes.
Prerequisites: 3103, 3503,
4613. Design and analysis of service systems
and processes from the perspective of
industrial engineering and engineering
management. Application of basic industrial
engineering principles and tools applied to
service systems. Basics of service quality
and productivity including metrics,
measurement, and improvement.
5203*
Advanced Facility Location
and Layout and Material Handling Systems.
Prerequisites: 3503, 4013,
4203. A continuation and expansion of topics
covered in 4203 with an emphasis upon model
development for predicting and evaluating
the effectiveness of production and/or
service systems. Advanced analytical and
computer techniques.
5303*
Computer Integrated
Manufacturing Systems Design for Higher
Volume Products.
Prerequisites: 3303, 4613, or
equivalents. Principles and procedures
related to the design, implementation,
documentation, and control of manufacturing
systems focusing on higher volume, lower
product variety production systems.
Introduction to product life cycle concepts
and the application of computer-aided
design and computer-aided manufacturing
tools to systems characterized by dedicated
production equipment and the need for
absolute minimization of unit costs.
Product and production system design,
analysis, and operation for fixed
automation. Operational philosophies and
applicable systems concepts, especially
those relating to line design, analysis,
efficiency, and unit production cost
reduction.
5313*
Computer Integrated
Manufacturing Systems Design for Lower
Volume Products.
Prerequisites: 3303, 4613,
4723 or equivalents. Principles and
procedures for design, implementation,
documentation, and control of manufacturing
systems focusing on lower volume, higher
product variety production systems. Product
life cycle concepts, concurrent engineering,
and computer-aided design and manufacturing
practices for systems characterized by
frequent product, product mix or product
volume changes. Product and production
system design and analysis for flexible
automation. Operational philosophies and
applicable systems engineering concepts,
especially those providing system
flexibility and those regarding the
critical role of information availability
and exchange in rapidly changing
environments.
5350*
Industrial Engineering
Problems.
1-6 credits, maximum 6.
Prerequisite: approval of major adviser. A
detailed investigation into one area of
industrial engineering with a required
written report.
5363*
Management of Cellular
Manufacturing Systems.
Prerequisites: graduate
standing and consent of instructor. Issues
related to cellular manufacturing systems,
including group technology, production
control, cell formation and design, office
cells, industrial relations, performance
measurement, justification and
implementation.
5413*
Managing the Engineering and
Technical Function.
Prerequisite: 4413 or
equivalent industrial experience. Advanced
study of the engineering and technical
organization. Engineering and technical
functions, management process, roles, and
activities. Individual study of current
technical management issues of student
interest.
5503*
Financial and Advanced
Capital Investment Analysis.
Prerequisites: 3103, 3503,
4013. An understanding of financial concepts
and markets, and an advanced treatment of
proper methods of capital project selection
under risk and uncertainty. Decision making
under capital rationing. Financial
environment and valuing securities,
representing cash flows, selecting
investments, avoiding common pitfalls,
evaluating timing consideration,
depreciation and corporate taxation,
replacement analysis, and incorporating
risk and uncertainty.
5603*
Project Management.
Prerequisite: 4413 or
equivalent. A systems approach to planning,
organizing, scheduling and controlling
projects. The behavioral and quantitative
aspects of project management. Importance of
working with personnel as well as
technology. Project management software
utilized.
5613*
Integrated Manufacturing
Control Systems.
Prerequisite: 4613. Advanced
treatment of planning and control
philosophies and techniques for
manufacturing and production systems.
Approaches focusing on demand-driven control
and achieving competitive advantage through
manufacturing. Material requirements
planning, capacity planning, shop floor
control, master scheduling, production
planning and demand management. Just-in-time
and the theory of constraints.
5623*
Project Planning and Control
Technologies.
Prerequisites: graduate
standing and consent of instructor. Project
planning and control technologies including
time and cost resources required to
accomplish projects related to
manufacturing, service, and software
development enterprises. Project planning
and control software: purpose, methods of
use, progress reporting, deviation
correction, and implementation issues.
5633*
Advanced Production Control.
Prerequisites: 4013, 4613.
Advanced concepts and quantitative
techniques used in production planning and
control, including demand forecasting using
regression, time series analysis, and
Box-Jenkins models, mathematical programming
approaches, to aggregate planning and
disaggregation, static and dynamic
scheduling of machines and cells, and
independent demand inventory management.
Deterministic and stochastic models and
their relationship to Just-In-Time and Zero
Inventory practices.
5703*
Discrete System Simulation.
Prerequisite: 4713.
Discrete-event systems via computer
simulation models. Model building and the
design and analysis of simulation
experiments for complex systems.
Application to a variety of problem areas.
Use of simulation languages and related
software tools.
5713*
Statistical Topics in
Simulation Modeling.
Prerequisite: 4713 or 5703.
Statistical analysis in simulation modeling
of discrete-event systems. Modeling of
input processes, random variate generation
and analysis of simulation output. Methods
applied to any discrete-event simulation.
5723*
Data, Process and Object
Modeling.
Prerequisite: graduate
standing or consent of instructor. Logical
and physical models in the analysis, design
and improvement of enterprise systems.
Structured and object-oriented analysis and
design techniques. Data modeling using
entity-relationship diagrams and IDEF1x.
Data normalization techniques. Process
modeling using data flow diagrams, IDEF0,
IDEF3, and Petri nets. Object modeling using
the unified modeling language (UML).
5743*
Information Systems and
Technology.
Prerequisite: graduate
standing or consent of instructor. For
current and potential engineering and
technology managers. Knowledge of
information systems and technology to lead
the specification, selection,
implementation, and integration of
information technology in manufacturing and
service organizations. Management issues
involved in the use of information
technology in organizations.
5753*
Manufacturing Enterprise
Modeling.
Prerequisite: 5723 or equivalent. Generic
Enterprise Reference Architecture (GERAM).
Review of data, process, and object modeling
techniques. Overview of enterprise modeling
tools, methods, and architectures including
the CIMOSA method and architecture, IDEF
modeling tools, SAP's event-driven process
chain (EPC) model, Baan's Dynamic Enterprise
Modeling (DEM) approach, and integrated
enterprise modeling (IEM) using the
object-oriented (OO) approach. Role and
scope of methods and tools in enterprise
analysis, design and improvement. Emerging
modeling frameworks and techniques for
next-generation enterprises.
5763*
Supply Chain Strategy.
Prerequisites: 4613 and 5503
or equivalents. Supply chain strategy
including the philosophical base of business
practice and the analytical base of
modeling. Supply chain strategy, including
key objectives and financial considerations,
supply chain dynamics, supply chain
performance measurement, supply chain
integration, characteristics of different
supply chains and supply chain performance
modeling.
5773*
Supply Chain Modeling.
Prerequisites: 4713 or 5703;
5013 or 5033 or 5763; or equivalents. Supply
chain analysis using different approaches to
the supply chain modeling, including the
Supply Chain Council's SCOR (Supply Chain
Operations Reference) model, optimization
and simulation. Specialized software is used
to develop each modeling approach.
5803*
Human Factors.
Lab 3. Prerequisites:
graduate standing and consent of
instructor. Human factors theories and
concepts and their impact on job and
organization design. Evaluation and analysis
of human performance in the workplace.
System redesign for improved human-machine
interaction.
5813*
Performance Measurement
Systems.
Prerequisites: 3813, 4413 or
equivalents. Strategies and methods to
define, measure, and apply individual,
group- and organizational-level performance
metrics in a variety of service and
production contexts. Implementation and
effective use of metrics. Measurement's role
in a management system, managerial decision
styles and preferences, operational
definitions of performance, processes for
identifying and applying metrics,
performance measurement tools and
techniques, data collection, portrayal of
quantitative and qualitative information,
and the role of computer technology in
measurement system application.
5823*
Performance Management and
Improvement.
Prerequisites: 3813 and 4413
or equivalents. Philosophies and approaches
for managing and improving organizational-,
group-, and individual-level performance.
Historical roots, theoretical foundations,
implementation and use, and demonstrated
efficacy of these approaches in production
and service contexts. Planning, leadership,
employee involvement and teams, culture,
technology, training, and measurement and
reward.
5923*
Advanced Energy and Water
Management.
Prerequisite: 4953.
Continuation of material covered in 4953
with an emphasis on modern management
techniques. Cogeneration, energy management
control systems, private purchases of gas,
energy accounting. Significant case study or
term paper required.
5943*
Hazardous Material and Waste.
Prerequisites: 3503 or
equivalent, CHEM 1515 or 1414 or equivalent.
Management of hazardous materials and waste
by the generator to reduce operating costs
and protect employees. Emphasis on hazard
communication program, reducing volume and
toxicity, and management activities.
5953*
Industrial Assessment and
Improvement.
Prerequisite: consent of
instructor. Plant assessment and
improvement-based concepts, strategies, and
tools for manufacturing operations.
Emphasis is on small to medium-sized
manufacturing operations. Issues include
energy, water, waste, quality, and
productivity analysis across the
organization from a systems perspective.
Justification of improvement projects and
measurement of results.
5990*
Special Topics in Industrial
Engineering and Management.
1-6 credits, maximum 6.
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. Study
of selected contemporary topics in
industrial engineering and management
including operations research; quality and
reliability; manufacturing systems;
engineering management; enterprise systems
and supply chains; facilities, energy, and
environmental management.
6000*
Research and Thesis.
1-15 credits, maximum 30.
Prerequisites: approval of major adviser and
advisory committee. Independent research
for Ph.D. dissertation requirement under
direction of a member of the Graduate
Faculty.
6110*
Special Problems in
Industrial Engineering.
1-6 credits, maximum 12.
Prerequisites: consent of school Head and
approval of major adviser. Special problems
in industrial engineering and management
under supervision of a member of the
Graduate Faculty.
6123*
Queueing Systems: Theory and
Manufacturing Applications.
Prerequisites: 3103, 5133 or
consent of instructor. Review of
probability, stochastic processes, and
Markov chains. Single-server and
multi-server exponential queueing models.
Queueing models with Poisson arrivals and
general service times. Product form
queueing network models: open and closed
network models, mean value analysis
algorithms for closed models, and single
class and multiclass models. Approximations
for general single server queues and
nonproduct form networks. Applications of
queueing models in the performance analysis
of transfer lines, automatic assembly
systems, and flexible manufacturing systems.
6990*
Advanced Topics in Industrial
Engineering and Management.
1-6 credits, maximum 6.
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. Study
of advanced topics in industrial engineering
and management including operations
research, quality and reliability,
manufacturing systems, engineering
management, enterprise systems and supply
chains, facilities, energy, and
environmental management. |