|
If you
would like to take your interest in engineering further, why
not enrol for an Open University course.
The Open
University offers a number of courses on engineering. Visit
www.open.ac.uk
for more details.
If you
would like to learn more about forensic engineering specifically,
the Open University runs a postgraduate course (T839) on the
subject:
The
course tackles problems that can arise from product failure
caused by inadequate materials, poor manufacturing or assembly
methods, or poor design. Failure can arise at any stage during
product development, and gives the designer a clear indication
of what to avoid so as to improve quality. One of the course's
central aims is to provide guidance for good product design
before development, so that wasted effort during development
is eliminated. Case studies are used as illustration, many
based on the authors' own cases, others on historical catastrophes
and failures.
Block
1 Introduction to forensic engineering uses case studies,
many including polymeric materials, to develop the skills
you need for the analysis of product failure.
Block
2 Failure of products and processes provides a ‘toolbox'
of techniques: observations, scientific and engineering
tests that can be used to establish evidence of the causes
of a failure in a metallic product or process. A casebook
presents real cases drawn from over forty years of one forensic
metallurgist's work. Some take you step by step through
an investigation and ask you to consider allegations of
serious or criminal negligence.
Block
3 Catastrophic failures examines large-scale failures
that have caused loss of life, including the Tay Bridge
disaster (1879), the Challenger space-shuttle disaster (1985)
and the airship Hindenburg (1937). The studies consider
the roles of stress concentration in the design of critical
components, poor manufacturing and poor design, material
failures, and poor communications.
Block
4 Intellectual property matters considers protection
of new designs and inventive concepts. It concentrates on
the arguments used for understanding particular patents,
and the precedents that lawyers use for assessing construction,
infringement and validity. Case studies include trials in
which imitators were successfully sued by means of patents,
and cases of new designs that were challenged unsuccessfully
because the patents were weak or did not define the inventive
concept widely enough to catch the alleged infringing product.
Visit
www.open.ac.uk
for more details.
Specific
courses that might also be of interest include:
T835
Integrated Safety, Health and Environmental Management
T834
Quality: Delivering Excellence
T173
Engineering the Future
T353
Failure of Stressed Materials
|