Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
edu/industrial)
Menu
HOME (/)
ACADEMICS (/INDUSTRIAL/ACADEMICS)
COURSE DESCRIPTIONS
Course Descriptions
Graduate Courses
Undergraduate Courses
101. Introduction to Industrial Engineering. (1-0). Credit 1.
Introduction to Industrial Engineering; overview of the curriculum; presentations by faculty and industry to familiarize
students with the department and the scope of industrial engineering applications.
II
Introduction to manufacturing and production systems; provides an overview of various aspects of manufacturing
systems; includes design, analysis, operation and control; a perspective for manufacturing systems related problems
and the complex interactions that they entail; includes the use of VBA and Excel.
Prerequisite: CSCE 206. Corequisites: ENTC 181; STAT 211.
II
, S.
Problems of limited scope in industrial engineering approved on an individual basis intended to promote independent
study.
Prerequisite: Approval of department head. [Note: This course is intended for lower-level students wishing to pursue
directed studies under the supervision of a faculty member.]
II
Principles of economic equivalence; time value of money; analysis of single and multiple investments; comparison of
alternatives; capital recovery and after-tax analysis of economic projects.
Prerequisite: MATH 152.
II
Principles of economic equivalence; time value of money; analysis of single and multiple investments; comparison of
alternatives; capital recovery and tax implications; certainty; uncertainty; risk analysis; public sector analysis and breakeven concepts.
Prerequisite: MATH 152.
II
Quality control with statistical principles applied to problems in various production systems, including probability
concepts, density and distribution functions, control chart concepts and sampling inspection plans; laboratory
exercises for exposure to basic metrology and applied statistics for quality control applications in discrete-item
manufacturing systems.
Prerequisite: STAT 212.
II
Principles, models and techniques for planning, analysis and design of integrated production systems; optimization
principles, including linear programming, unconstrained and equality constrained optimization and dynamic
programming applied to production planning; topics to include capacity expansion models, learning curves, aggregate
planning models, deterministic and stochastic inventory, MRP and project scheduling.
Prerequisites: ISEN 220; MATH 304. Corequisite: ISEN 420.
II
Analytical principles of manufacturing systems design, analysis and control; emphasis placed on stochastic analysis;
role of variability and impact on cycle time; push versus pull production strategies including Kanban and constant WIP
control; probability, queuing theory, Littles Law, heavy trac approximations, and queuing networks.
Prerequisites: ISEN 220, 424; MATH 304.
II
Analytical treatment of facilities location, physical layout, material ow and handling, combined with heuristic
algorithms to assist in the design of production/service facilities; fundamental concepts applied through a sequence of
design projects.
Prerequisites: ISEN 315; ISEN 316 or registration therein.
II
Systems simulation structure, logic and methodologies; generation of random numbers and deviates; system
simulation languages, models and analysis; applications to industrial situations.
Prerequisite: STAT 212.
425. Design and Analysis of Industrial Systems with Simulation. (2-3). Credit
3.
In-depth study into the design-modeling and subsequent analysis of contemporary production/service systems;
factory/service systems are modeled using the ARENA/SIMAN V simulation-animation language; emphasis is placed on
the critical analysis of alternative ow designs of modeled systems using ow and economic parameters to assess
system improvement.
Prerequisites: ISEN 303 and 424.
II
Human biological, ergonomic, and psychological capabilities and limitations; techniques and procedures for developing
and applying the principles of human factors engineering to systems design; stresses interdisciplinary nature of the
subject.
Prerequisite: Junior or senior classication.
II
Capstone design course emphasizing analysis and design of manufacturing systems, cellular design, exible
manufacturing systems and manufacturing integration; integrates knowledge gained from all required industrial
engineering courses in a system design project; for students in their nal semester of undergraduate studies.
Prerequisites: ISEN 314, 316, 416.
II
Permits work on special project in industrial engineering. Project must be approved by department head.
Prerequisite: Senior classication in industrial engineering. [Note: This course is intended for upper level students
wishing to pursue directed studies under the supervision of a faculty member.]
Undergraduate Courses
Graduate Advising
Graduate Courses
601. Location Logistics of Industrial Facilities. (3-0). Credit 3.
Selection of the optimal locations of industrial plants and distribution centers through analytical modeling of the costs
of inventory storage, transportation, utilities, labor supply and other cost components.
Prerequisites: ISEN 620 or approval of instructor.
Concepts, complexities, and models pertaining to supply chain management and relate these to recent practical
initiatives; includes channel coordination models, supply chain contracting, and vendor-managed, inventory models.
Prerequisites: ISEN 615, 623, and 609 or STAT 615 or approval of instructor
Scheduling and sequencing for production, assembly, supply chain, logistics and service operations; relevant solution
methods including algebraic, branch and bound, Lagrangian relaxation, facet generation, branch and price, heuristics
and simulation; computational complexity issues.
Prerequisite: ISEN 620 or 622 or approval of instructor.
669. Software Tools for Stochastic Decision Support Analysis (3-0). Credit 3.
Overview of stochastic decision analysis; focus on Palisade Corporations Decision Tools Suite of Excel add-in macros;
topics include sensitivity analysis of Excel models, decision tree construction and analysis, and simulation within Excel.
Prerequisite: STAT 630 or equivalent and ISEN 667.