Expert Details
Reliability, Design of Experiments, Statistics and Tribology
ID: 108096
Pennsylvania, USA
Expert has engaged in a number of sponsored efforts aimed at evaluating life prediction theory for rolling bearings. The projects involved the compilation and reduction of life data, the prediction of life under a model, and comparison of predicted life to actual life.
Expert developed, and continues to develop, methodology for the analysis of life data, with primary emphasis on the Weibull distribution. This includes exact confidence intervals for Weibull parameters, analysis of sudden death tests, multiple comparisons, regression analysis with Weibull response as applied to the analysis of accelerated life tests, and the analysis of factorial experiments with Weibull response. He also teaches graduate courses in reliability theory.
Expert has experience in post-processing surface profile data for such things as peak count, zero-level crossings, and spectral content and developing models for predicting surface interaction based on microtopographic measurements. Since 1991, he has been Director of Penn State Great Valley Surface Microtopography Laboratory, which is equipped through NSF support with a state-of-the-art profile measurement device (Rank Taylor Hobson Form Talysurf). The laboratory works with industry in developing manufacturing processes which result in acceptable levels of surface microgeometry.
Expert has worked extensively in the area of tribology, which focuses on the microscale phenomena that occur at the tips of contacting surface asperities. He has developed computer models for predicting the means and probability distributions of microcontact area, load, and flash temperature, as well as the number and relative proportion of the microcontacts which undergo plastic deformation. Further work considers the effect on these variables of surface coatings, and skewness/kurtosis of the asperity height distribution.
Education
Year | Degree | Subject | Institution |
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Year: 1993 | Degree: PhD | Subject: Statistics | Institution: Temple University |
Year: 1962 | Degree: MS | Subject: Mechanical Engineering | Institution: Drexel University |
Year: 1959 | Degree: BS | Subject: Mechanical Engineering | Institution: Drexel University |
Work History
Years | Employer | Title | Department |
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Years: 2000 to Present | Employer: Undisclosed | Title: Professor | Department: Engineering |
Responsibilities:Available upon request. |
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Years | Employer | Title | Department |
Years: 1994 to 2000 | Employer: Undisclosed | Title: Associate Professor, Coordinator of Graduate Industrial Engineering Program | Department: Industrial Engineering |
Responsibilities:Available upon request. |
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Years | Employer | Title | Department |
Years: 1988 to 1994 | Employer: Undisclosed | Title: Assistant Professor | Department: Industrial Engineering |
Responsibilities:Available upon request. |
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Years | Employer | Title | Department |
Years: 1959 to 1987 | Employer: SKF Industries | Title: Principal Engineering Scientist | Department: Research |
Responsibilities:He was Principal Investigator for corporate and sponsored projects in tribology, and applied statistics. |
Fields of Expertise
engineering statistics, analysis of experiments, bearing reliability, life testing, Weibull density function, Weibull distribution, Weibull inference, surface microtopography, surface roughness analysis, rough-surface interaction, solid surfaces interaction, survey statistics, statistical design of experiments, design of experiments, reliability engineering, blast-cleaning surface profile, probability distribution, regression analysis, life-prediction methodology, statistical method, applied statistics, Taguchi method experimental design, response surface methodology, confidence interval, Taguchi method, stochastic process, statistics, statistical process control, statistical data analysis, failure modes and effects analysis, data analysis