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On Technical Presentations
On Technical Presentations
Mechanics of Contact and Lubrication Department of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering Northeastern University Boston, MA 02115 Date by Author-1 and Author-2
Outline
Motivation of the presentation Goal of the report/presentation Background Text, style, figures etc. Content sections Results and Conclusions
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Prof. Sinan Mft
Acknowledgments I would like to acknowledge all the bad presentations that I made over the years which taught me how to be prepared for making good presentations
References Bedford, A., Fowler, W., (2005) Statics and Dynamics, Pearson Hibbeler, R.C, (2004) Mechanics of Materials, 6th edition, Pearson Sheppard, S.D, Tongue, B.D., (2005) Statics, John Wiley and Sons. Wickert, J., (2006) An Introduction to Mechanical Engineering, Thomson
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Prof. Sinan Mft
Outline
Motivation of the presentation Goal of the report/presentation Background Text, style, figures etc. Content sections Results and Conclusions
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Prof. Sinan Mft
We tend to explain the topic to ourselves (who know it too well) leaving the audience in relative darkness. I sat through too many presentations that were reporting great work incomprehensibly! Goal Therefore, the goal of this presentation is to provide some guidelines for technical presentations.
Disclaimer: This document is meant to be a general guideline. In your presentations, you are not required to follow it exactly, as some of the things mentioned here may be too time consuming for this course. But, please read through and try your best to follow the general advice.
Prof. Sinan Mft
Outline
Motivation of the presentation Goal of the report/presentation Background Text, style, figures etc. Content sections Results and Conclusions
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Prof. Sinan Mft
Background
In this section you should give a brief (2-3 slide long) background of the problem you are presenting.
See for example the following slide
Practical examples, figures, jokes etc. belong here. You are now motivating the audience for why you will be presenting the specific topics that follow.
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Prof. Sinan Mft
Background
External forces cause a flexible body to change its shape and size.
Thermal expansion
Deformation of a body will also occur due to temperature changes (thermal expansion or contraction).
Strain is the measure of deformation in engineering. The material behavior laws scale with strain.
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Prof. Sinan Mft
Outline
Motivation of the presentation Goal of the report/presentation Background Text, style, figures etc. Content sections Results and Conclusions
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Prof. Sinan Mft
Try to avoid slides filled only with text, such as this one!
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Prof. Sinan Mft
4000 3500 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25
Content sections
Motivation of the presentation Goal of the report/presentation Background Text, style, figures etc. Content sections Results and Conclusions
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Prof. Sinan Mft
Content sections
Prepare organized, and informative slides
Most engineering analysis are based on Newtons Laws: First Law: If the resultant force acting on an object is zero:
It will remain at rest, if it were originally at rest OR It will move with constant speed in a straight line, if it were originally in motion.
(resultant force acting on it zero = forces acting on it are balanced)
Second Law: If the resultant force acting on an object is not zero: the object will have an acceleration a proportional to the magnitude of the resultant force |F| and in the direction of the resultant force.
i 1 Third Law: The forces exerted by two object on each other are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction.
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Fresultant Fi ma
Content sections
5x6 mm Bicon Implant: Different clinical scenarios
In practice Bone quality and Insertion depth are patient and site specific.
Full-coverage
2/3-coverage
healthy 1/3-coverage
The strains for the 5 x 6 mm Bicon implant were found to be in the range for vertical load of 100 N. No-coverage The peak strains in the cancellous bone are reduced as the implant is placed deeper in the bone. The peak strains in the cancellous bone increase in case there is less cortical bone. For totally submerged case the sloping shoulder of the implant resists Sinan Mft the loading, provided osseointegration took place. If bone grows around the abutment, then the outer periphery of the abutment could also contribute to load reduction.
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Bicon World Symposium, September 10th 2005 Sinan Mft
Outline
Motivation of the presentation Goal of the report/presentation Background Text, style, figures etc. Content sections Results and Conclusions
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Prof. Sinan Mft
Stability of an accelerating string subjected to two frictional guides is investigated using the finite element method and the Floquet theory. A system with sinusoidally varying transport velocity becomes unstable for cases where the maximum velocity V0 is greater than the critical transport velocity of the non-accelerating system Vcr. A small number of instabilities occurred when V0 < Vcr. The friction force introduces more unstable points where V0 < Vcr Frictional instabilities were relatively mild, as compared buckling. Springs help reduce the instability Guide location affects the stability. More physical insight may be gained by investigation of wave propagation through numerical interation.
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Prof. Sinan Mft