GCSE Edexcel DT: Core Content

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354 Terms

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Effect of science & tech parks on new and emerging tech

They enable businesses to associate with universities or research organisations allowing for transfer of knowledge & technology-led economic development in the surrounding area (e.g., Silicon Valley)

Disadvantages of these parks are that they can infringe on greenfield sites resulting in habitat loss and resentment among locals

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Definition of an enterprise and the types

A business, particularly one started by someone who shows initiative by taking a risk setting up, investing in and running it

Types: Privately owned businesses, crowd funded projects, government funded projects, not-for-profit organisations

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Privately owned businesses

Privately owned businesses tend to be relatively small with limited sales, stock and workforce. Strategic decisions are made by the owner(s). An advantage is that they are often sufficiently flexible to easily adopt, adapt and exploit new technologies. However, they may not have enough funds to invest in cutting-edge manufacturing equipment.

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Crowd funding

Crowd funding is a comparatively new way of launching new products or technologies.

It funds a project by raising money from a large number of people who each contribute a small amount of money online.

It depends on capturing the imagination of potential funders, using online platforms to coordinate and administer the funds.

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Government funding

Government funding is often available for new businesses that could contribute to the overall economy, making the use of new and emerging technologies easier for them.

Local councils may also provide lower-level loans or grants.

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Not-for-profit organisations

Not-for-profit organisations reinvest the money they make into their cause (e.g., healthcare phone apps)

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Effect of tech on the consumer

- Consumers want newer technology increasing use of scarce resources need to make them

- Education & entertainment for children

- Allows for assistive tech for those with disabilities: all-terrain wheelchairs, prosthetics, eye tracking, screen reader, voice recognition

- Creates training opportunities for apprentices, with online progress logging and apprentices testing out new products

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Advantages of remote working

- Flexible work schedule (work at own pace)

- Less time & money wasted commuting

- Fewer distractions

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Disadvantages of remote working

- Lack of routine

- Less social interaction

- Blurs work-life balance

- Less IT support would affect productivity

- Data breaches

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Advantages of video conferencing

- Meetings and training can take place without leaving the office

- Travel costs and the time taken to travel can be reduced or eliminated

- Meetings can be called instantly at multiple locations with little notice

- Speeds up decision making and problem solving

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Disadvantages of video conferencing

- May not be as productive as a discussion around a table

- Confidential documents may need to be viewed and signed in person

- May be a high set-up cost

- May be difficult to find a suitable time across time zones

- People may not pick up on non-verbal information such as body language

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Culture & Technology

- Labour movement within the EU allows for immigrants bringing innovation, skills & experience of tech

- Social segregation where minorities live in clusters results in social barriers, limiting access to education, jobs and technology

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Effect of tech on transportation

- Changing fuels (diesel → electric)

- Making fewer journeys by having distribution centres close to destinations

- Designing lighter & smaller products fitting more in one shipment

- Packaging is swapped for biodegradable/recyclable materials (increases price of product)

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Effect of tech on pollution

- Government has carbon taxes or subsidies for alt. energy sources

- Software predicts environmental impacts

- Old polluting tech is replaced

- Tech has improved efficiency of extraction of natural resources and has allowed for new sustainable materials

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Effect of tech on waste

- Reducing: computer-control minimises off-cuts and rejects & improves efficiency

- Reusing: waste used in a later stage of manufacture

- Recycling: Automated machines separate materials by type (processed to no impurities) so they can be recycled ⇒ fewer raw materials sent to landfill. E.g., plastics can be melted and reset with no degradation of quality

- Recovering waste: recovering heat via CHP

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Standardised design and components description

Same components or modular systems are used across many designs in large numbers manufactured to an internationally accepted standard

(e.g., resistors, nuts & bolts)

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Standardised design and components advantages

Consistent safety & quality

Speeds up product development: parts already exist and workforce is trained to deal with those parts

Cheap

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Standardised design and components disadvantages

Difficult to customise

Quality of product may suffer

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Just in time (JIT) description

Computerised stock control ensures that parts are only received when needed (on demand) → no storage required

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Just in time (JIT) advantages

Increase efficiency, reduce waste

Changing to production runs can meet demands

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Just in time (JIT) disadvantages

Any break in the supply chain holds up production

Cost of more frequent deliveries

Fewer bulk-buying discounts

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Lean manufacturing description

Reducing or eliminating waste in design, manufacturing, distribution, customer services

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Lean manufacturing advantages

Higher efficiency when using multi-skilled teams working together to share skill & expertise for each part of the production process

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Lean manufacturing disadvantages

Requires time-consuming data analysis

Requires disruptive changes to existing processes

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One-off scale description

One product made at a time, either for a specialist product, or to test an idea

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One-off scale advantages

- No set-up cost

- Made with existing equipment

- Product can be customised to user's needs

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One-off scale disadvantages

Slow, so expensive to make several

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Batch scale description

Several copies of the same product are made at the same time

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Batch scale advantages

- Jigs, templates and moulds speed up the process and can be kept for future use

- Special machinery is not needed, so set-up cost is not high

- Low cost, identical products, easily changed

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Mass scale description

Factory machinery set up to make lots of identical products

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Batch scale disadvantages

- Labour intensive, so it is quite expensive per product

- Takes time to make jigs, moulds and templates

- Poor planning can result in waste products

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Mass scale disadvantages

Machinery expensive to set up, so only worthwhile for making a lot of products

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Mass scale advantages

- Can make a product quickly and cheaply

- Automatic process, very efficient, low unit costs, lower labour costs

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Continuous scale description

Factory machinery making the same thing 24/7

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Continuous scale disadvantages

Machinery expensive to set up, so only worthwhile for making huge quantities of a products

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Continuous scale advantages

Makes the product very quickly and cheaply

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Advantages of a template in batch production

- Speed up the process

- Minimise waste to mark out shapes as close together as possible

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Biodiesel

Made from plants/vegetables/fermented waste/cooking oil and can be used in diesel-powered vehicles without modifying engine

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How a company can reduce carbon footprint

- maximising energy efficiency

- analysing their supply chain

- recycling

- using renewables

- identifying suitable carbon offsetting methods

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Power system

a network of components that supply, transfer and use electric power, including batteries and cells, wind, solar, and mains electricity

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Things to consider when selecting power systems for products

portability of power source, environmental impact (including creation, transport, and disposal), power output & consistency, circuit/system connections, cost

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Mains electricity supply

AC 50Hz 230V

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Description & disadvantages of batteries and cells in general

Chemical reaction produces electrons that collect at the negative terminal and when connected in a circuit flow to the positive terminal

Expensive source of electricity

Can lead to chemicals leaching into water & soil if not disposed of correctly

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Advantages of cylindrical cells (D, C, AA, AAA, AAAA)

- Easy to manufacture

- Small

- Inexpensive

- Have good mechanical stability and long life

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Advantages/disadvantages of prismatic cells (ones used in mobile phones + tablets)

Advantages:

Prismatic cells are flexible, easy to recharge

Disadvantages:

Prismatic cells are expensive, have a shorter life than cylindrical batteries

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Examples of smart materials

SMAs, Nanomaterials, Photochromic glass, reactive glass, piezoelectric materials, temperature responsive polymers, conductive inks

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Nanomaterials (carbon nanotubes) description & application

Particles, nanowires nanotubes, or thin films and surface coatings

Fire retardants, Sunscreen, Tennis rackets, Helmets, Car bumpers

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Nanomaterials (carbon nanotubes) advantages

Higher surface area ∴ higher strength, elasticity, conductivity, absorbance

Can combine properties

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Nanomaterials (carbon nanotubes) disadvantages

Unusual physical and chemical properties ∴ risk assessment needed for health + safety

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Shape-memory alloys (Nitinol, Gold-cadmium) description & application

Can be plastically deformed but will return to shape when heated/current applied

Glasses frames, stents, tweezers and hooks, orthodontic wires

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Shape-memory alloys (Nitinol, Gold-cadmium) advantages

Lengthen life of product

Decrease size + complexity

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Shape-memory alloys (Nitinol, Gold-cadmium) disadvantages

Expensive

Continuous use ⇒ metal fatigue

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Photochromic glass description & application

Darkens when ↑ light (UV reaction with silver halides)

Sunglasses, plane cockpit windows

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Photochromic glass advantages

Adapts easily

No fatigue/ performance change

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Photochromic glass disadvantages

May be slow

User cannot control reaction

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Reactive glass description & application

Use electro chromatics to change transparent → opaque when current applied

Welding masks & Windows

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Reactive glass advantages

Retains heat

Instant privacy without permanent blocking of light

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Reactive glass disadvantages

Expensive

Requires electricity source

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Piezoelectric materials (Quartz, Topaz) description & application

Generate small charge when compressed/Generate movement when electric charge applied

Generating energy, Sensors (burglar alarms, sear belt etc.), Actuators for precise position control (cameras), Piezoelectric transducer

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Piezoelectric materials (Quartz, Topaz) advantages

Sustainable

Low maintenance

Compact

Actuators have high response speed and high force

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Piezoelectric materials (Quartz, Topaz) disadvantages

Wears out

Has temperature and voltage limits

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Temperature responsive polymers (PNIPAM) description & application

Can change with temperature

Can deliver drugs, cells, proteins to patients and release when temperature rises

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Temperature responsive polymers (PNIPAM) advantages

Useful in biomedicine

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Temperature responsive polymers (PNIPAM) disadvantages

Still in research

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Conductive Ink (silver, carbon, graphite base) description & application

Contain conductive pigments (even when dry)

Drawing working circuits on polyester, polycarbonates, paper, Repairing PCBs, Print ticket RFID tags

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Conductive Ink (silver, carbon, graphite base) advantages

Easy to use

Light and economical

Low waste

Ink can be folded

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Examples of composites

Concrete

Plywood

Fibre/carbon/glass

Reinforced polymers

Robotic materials

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Conductive Ink (silver, carbon, graphite base) disadvantages

Silver is expensive

Difficult to get working

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Concrete description

Made of coarse aggregate (gravel between 14 and 40 mm); aggregate (sand); cement; water

Proportions depend on the use

Hardens over time to gain excellent compressive strength, but tensile strength is low

Relatively cheap

Can last 100 years. Additives can prevent attack from seawater or acids

Tensile strength can be improved by embedding steel rods to form reinforced concrete

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Concrete examples

Mainly used for construction but it can be used for smaller products such as park benches and bins

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Concrete advantages

Excellent compressive strength

Good heat and sound insulator

Can be moulded into complex shapes with a variety of surface finishes, so has many applications

Can be manufactured on site, so reduces transport issues

Durable, fire-resistant

Will last for a long time

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Concrete disadvantages

Can be damaged by corrosion of reinforcement bars, fire or radiant heat and freezing trapped water

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Plywood description

Manufactured board of wood veneers bonded with glue to produce a flat sheet

Always has an odd number of layers (at least three) as they balance the stresses around the central core, making it stable in all directions

The veneers' grain direction runs at 900 to the sheets above and below it, which also increases the stability

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Plywood examples

Graded for exterior or interior use depending upon the glue's water resistanceSheds, cladding, flooring, furniture

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Plywood advantages

High strength-to-weight ratio and strong in all directions

High impact resistance, so not easily damaged

Versatile - can be used inside and outside

Economical use of wood as less wastage and available in large sheets

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Plywood disadvantages

Although plywood is strong and stable, some plywood will come apart if the layers become wet

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Fibre/carbon/glass description

Plastic can be reinforced with fine glass or carbon fibres to make a higher strength-to weight ratio than its component parts

Loose or woven fibres form a flexible fabric, and are built up in layers with polyester resin

Reinforced plastic can be sanded for a smooth finish and painted or colour added at the start of the process

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Fibre/carbon/glass advantages

Low maintenance, durable and good resistance to ultraviolet (UV) light and most chemicals

Able to be formed into most 3D shapes, with added surface texture

Lightweight with an excellent strength-to-weight ratio

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Fibre/carbon/glass disadvantages

Breathing in the fibres can cause respiratory problems

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Reinforced polymers description

Phenolic resins are combined with cotton fabrics to make inflammable laminated plastic sheets, rods and tubes

Grades depend on fibre coarseness -- all are about half the weight of aluminium, strong, tough and with insulating properties at high temperatures

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Reinforced polymers examples

Non-metallic engineering components like gears and bearingsSubstitute for exterior timber because they are weatherproof and do not need further treatment

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Reinforced polymers advantages

Strong with good wear resistance and excellent machining qualities (will not blunt too as much as metals)

Good insulator of heat and electricity with low water absorption

Available in a range of forms

Good dimensional stability (does not change shape in heat or moisture-rich environments)

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Reinforced polymers disadvantages

Can be expensive

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Robotic materials description

Materials that couple sensing, activation (movement), computation and communication and can react to their surroundings autonomously,

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Robotic materials examples

Vehicles or uniforms that change colour to match their surroundings

Prosthetics with a sense of touch

Plane wings that change shape depending on wind conditions

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Robotic materials advantages

React quickly and appropriately by themselves (without connection to computer)

Can change colour, shape, and the load they can carry

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Robotic materials disadvantages

Expensive and complex

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Types of technical textile

Agrotextiles

Construction textiles

Geotextiles

Domestic textiles

Environmentally friendly textiles

Protective textiles

Sports textiles

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Agrotextiles description

Improve or increase agricultural productionMay be made from nylon, polyester, polyethene, polypropene or natural materials like jute and wool

Often biodegradable and offer solar and ultraviolet protection

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Agrotextiles examples

Shading

Thermal insulation

Netting

Wind-breaks

Weed suppression

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Agrotextiles advantages

Durable

Reduces the need for weed killers and pesticides

Can be cheap

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Agrotextiles disadvantages

Could change ecosystems by altering natural circulation of water, carbon and other nutrients

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Construction textiles description

Developed to improve construction appearance and longevity

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Construction textiles examples

Structures: waterproof membrane, concrete reinforcement

During construction: hoardings nets, awnings, tarpaulins, canopies

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Construction textiles advantages

Stable in different heat conditions

Strong and light

Resistant to degradation by chemicals, sunlight and acids

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Construction textiles disadvantages

May be expensive or hard to source

May degrade over time

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Geotextiles description

Used in civil engineering where soil, rock or other geotechnical material needs to be stabilised, filtered, drained or reinforced

Retain their structure in the ground

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Geotextiles examples

Non-woven or woven mats for reinforcing banks or draining flat land

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Geotextiles advantages

Do not rot

Deal well with water

Cost effective

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Geotextiles disadvantages

Easily blocked by sediments and organic matter Ineffective if damaged