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Geometric Tolerances

Impact on Product Design, Quality Inspection and Statistical Process Monitoring

  • Book
  • © 2011

Overview

  • Provides new perspectives on the development of a current evolution in industrial manufacturing
  • Features up-to-date research and information to give quality engineers, designers and manufacturing process managers a competitive advantage
  • Gives a modern approach
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

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Table of contents (11 chapters)

  1. Impact on Product Design

  2. Impact on Product Quality Inspection

  3. Impact on Statistical Process Monitoring

Keywords

About this book

Geometric tolerances are changing the way we design and manufacture industrial products. Geometric Tolerances covers their impact on the world of design and production, highlighting new perspectives, possibilities, current issues and future challenges. The topics covered are designed to be relevant to readers from a variety of backgrounds, ranging from product designers and manufacturers to quality inspection engineers and quality engineers involved in statistical process monitoring. Areas included are: • selection of appropriate geometric tolerances and how they stack up in assembled products; • inspection of parts subjected to geometric tolerancing from the macro to the micro and sub-micro scales; and • enhancement of efficiency and efficacy of quality monitoring. Geometric Tolerances provides the reader with the most recent scientific research in the field, as well as with a significant amount of real-life industrial case studies, delivering a multidisciplinary, synoptic view of one of the hottest and most strategic topics in industrial production.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Politecnico di Milano, Milano, Italy

    Bianca M. Colosimo

  • University of Perugia, Perugia, Italy

    Nicola Senin

About the editors

Bianca M. Colosimo is an associate professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the Politecnico di Milano, Milan, Italy, where she received both her M.S. degree in Industrial Engineering and her PhD degree in Manufacturing and Production Systems. Since 2001, she has collaborated with the Engineering Statistics Laboratory of the Industrial Engineering Department of the Pennsylvania State University. She is a member of the editorial board of the Journal of Quality Technology. She is the author of about 60 papers in international and national journals and conference proceedings, including over 20 refereed papers (in the Journal of Quality Technology, Technometrics, Communications in Statistics and Journal of Applied Statistics, among others). She is a senior member of the American Society for Quality (www.asq.org), a member of Informs (http://www.informs.org/) and of the AITEM (Italian association of manufacturing engineers (www.aitem.org)).

Her research interests are mainly in the area of quality monitoring and process adjustment, with special attention to discrete part manufacturing. Further research activity is devoted to manufacturing process optimization. Her main research target is to take full advantage of new methods and tools developed in the area of applied or industrial statistics for solving industrial manufacturing problems.

Nicola Senin is an associate professor in the Department of Industrial Engineering at the University of Perugia, Perugia, Italy, where he received his M.S degree in Mechanical Engineering. Since 1995 he has collaborated with the Computer-aided Design Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), in Cambridge (MA), USA. He is the author of about 30 publications in international and national journals and conference proceedings, including about 10 refereed papers in international journals (in the ASME Journal of Mechanical Design, the Computer Aided Design Journal, the Journalof Robotics and Computer-integrated Manufacturing, and Wear, among others). He is a member of the AITEM (Italian association of manufacturing engineers (www.aitem.org)).

His research interests are mainly in the area of inspection of manufactured surfaces, with particular reference to three-dimensional surface topography analysis at the micro and sub-micro scales. Additional research activities are related to the development of computer-based frameworks for supporting collaborative product design and manufacturing.

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