1st Edition

Productivity Theory for Industrial Engineering

By Ryspek Usubamatov Copyright 2018
    276 Pages
    by CRC Press

    276 Pages 111 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Since the time of the Industrial Revolution, manufacturing industries have accumulated a huge experience in creating different machines and systems for fabricating various goods, work parts, and products. All these diverse machines and systems, with different designs to solve pivoted economic problems, increased the productivity rate of manufacturing processes and generated high-quality products.



    In the area of productivity theory for industrial engineering, there are numerous publications that describe the fundamental approaches and the mathematical models of productivity rate for the different designs of industrial machines and systems. Known theories consider the physical productivity rate as the number of products fabricated over a given time (ASME) that is a component of economic productivity. However, known mathematical models are simplified with assumptions and not well developed analytically, which can lead to severe errors in computing the output of manufacturing systems.



    Modern industrial machines and systems are complex in design and in structure with serial, parallel, and serial-parallel arrangements, and any failure of any component leads to downtime of expensive production systems. For this reason, industries need a productivity theory that enables accurate predicting of the output of manufacturing systems at the preliminary stages.



     Key features







    • Offers fundamental principles of productivity theory for industrial machines and systems based on mathematics, technology, design, reliability, probability, and management


    • Presents the conceptual principles of productivity theory for industrial machines and systems


    • Provides methods for computing productivity losses in real industrial environments


    • Closes the gap between theory and practice for computing productivity rates of manufacturing systems


    • Incudes a comparative analysis of productivity rates for manufacturing systems of serial, parallel, and serial-parallel arrangements




    Productivity Theory for Industrial Engineering presents analytical approaches and methods to define maximal productivity rates, optimal machining regimes, and optimal structure of manufacturing machines and systems based on the parameters of technological processes, structural design, reliability of mechanisms, and management systems. This book uses productivity theory for solving productivity problems and can also be used for complex approaches for sustainable improvement of production processes.

    1. Introduction to productivity theory for industrial engineering 2. Conceptual principles of productivity theory for industrial engineering 3. Manufacturing systems of parallel arrangement and productivity rate 4. Manufacturing systems of serial arrangement and productivity rate 5. Manufacturing systems of parallel–serial arrangement 6. Analysis of the work of industrial machines and systems at real manufacturing environment 7. Conclusion

    Biography

    Ryspek Usubamatov graduated as a professional engineer and received his Ph.D. from Bauman Moscow State Technical University as Doctor of Technical Science from the Academy of Sciences of Kyrgyzstan. He is currently affiliated with Kyrgyz State Technical University. He has published more than 300 papers in reputed journals, he holds more than 60 patents of inventions in engineering, and has published seven books in the area of manufacturing engineering. He supervised six Ph.D. and several dozens MSc. students. His research interests are in the areas of Gyroscope Theory and Productivity Theory for Industrial Engineering.