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University of Alberta Specialization Certificate in Agile Software Product Management: Capstone Bodleian Project

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Folders and files, repository files navigation, softwareproductmanagement.

Suhaimi Chan Capstone Project for Agile Software Product Management from University of Alberta

Final Project File:

Suhaimi Chan Bodleian Project Final.pdf (texts in gray and highlighted in yellow are proposed solution by University of Alberta)

Supporting files are:

SPM - Capstone Open Study Guide.pdf

Greetings from Inukshuk Book.pdf

TedTalk-Video.pdf

Framework and Syllabus: Introduction to Capstone Projects—A Hidden Gem of Engineering Education

  • First Online: 11 November 2021

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capstone project university of alberta

  • Yongsheng Ma 3 &
  • Yiming Rong 3  

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First and foremost, a senior design project course, Mec E 460 at University of Alberta (UA), is a practical, “hands on” design course!

Inventing is the mixing of brains and materials. The more brains you use, the less materials you need . —Charles F. Kettering

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Department of Mechanical and Energy Engineering, Southern University of Science and Technology, Shenzhen, Guangdong, China

Yongsheng Ma & Yiming Rong

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Ma, Y., Rong, Y. (2022). Framework and Syllabus: Introduction to Capstone Projects—A Hidden Gem of Engineering Education. In: Senior Design Projects in Mechanical Engineering. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-85390-7_1

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UCalgary engineering capstone projects solve some of the biggest problems facing Alberta

capstone project university of alberta

It’s hard to not turn on a television or open a newspaper—or even browse the Daily FLIP —without seeing politicians and community leaders talk about the problems that we all face as a province.

From devastating wildfire seasons to national defence concerns, and even more local issues like finding ways of saving tax dollars and having enough clean water for Calgarians: Those problems are pervasive and discussion of them is frequently less than persuasive that solutions are on the way.

Visitors to the annual UCalgary engineering department capstone project fair though, which occurred on April 4, might be persuaded otherwise.

Projects from teams running the gamut of topics from in-air carbon capture, to creating accessible bikes for people with amputated limbs, to real-world applications of machine learning and AI, showed how students are leading the way to solving some of Alberta’s trickiest troubles.

“There are disciplines that focus on trying to tell you what the problem is. Engineering is focused on trying to find solutions to problems or creating something, to create opportunity beyond what we have right now,” said Dr. Bill Rosehart, Dean of the Schulich School of Engineering at UCalgary.

“It’s exciting when you hear about students working on water purification on Tsuut’ina. We had a group of students today that were presenting the new bike design for somebody who had upper above-the-knee amputation. That is engineering at its heart, making our lives better. Often behind the scenes and so many ways—there’s engineering that we don’t even think about that’s there.”

A focus for the 2024 capstone projects, said Dr. Rosehart, was on having real-world industry connections to the projects. Each of the projects had to have a sponsor, be it firms like Lockheed Martin or governments like the Tsuut’ina nation.

“We want it to be real world,” he said.

“We actually have an entrepreneurial capstone stream as well, for students that have a project that they think there’s a potential for launching a company afterward. So, they work on the technical part of their project and in parallel, and we give them foundations on how to launch a startup. We have a few of those floating around today.”

capstone project university of alberta

Solving water issues on Tsuut’ina nation

A current issue facing the Tsuut’ina Nation is the growth of filamentous algae in the Nation’s greywater lagoon.

The challenge, said engineering student Anita Malekian, is to pump the water to a sufficient degree to ensure that it can be safely returned to the environment.

“They’re currently using a 20 liter per second Honda trash pump, which helps mitigate the issue to a certain extent, but they’re looking for room for improvement. They wanted a solution that’s autonomous and primarily run by renewable energy,” she said.

The team developed a system using a solar-powered centrifugal pump that allows for dirty water to be sucked up in a hose on one side and then deposited as cleaner water on the other.

Malekian said they were originally connected to the Nation through Water Movement, a non-profit focused on helping to solve Indigenous water issues throughout Canada.

“They essentially told Water Movement this is the issue they’ve been dealing with, and Water Movement connected us to help work with them. We’re hoping to make a scalable solution that can be used by First Nation communities across Canada,” Malekian said.

Team member Haaziq Altaf said that the current cost for the system on Tsuut’ina was around $16,000 per year, but their solution was around $40,000 annually. The cost was higher upfront, but there would be a savings in both the fuel required to run the Honda pump and in terms of how much labour it would require to maintain, Altaf said.

“It takes about two-and-a-half years for our system to become more profitable, and in the long run helps the Tsuut’ina to be more autonomous in their operation,” Altaf said.

“The operator currently has to go in and refuel the pump that they’re using with gasoline. They have to go to a gas station, they have to check if it’s working, but our system is so autonomous that they just have to come in maybe once or twice in a day to just make sure everything’s working and maybe even start the pump.”

capstone project university of alberta

Setting the stage for future carbon capture systems

Another UCalgary capstone project on display was a closed loop wind-tunnel system, designed to test the efficacy of carbon capture solutions from the air.

Muhammad Faroq, one of the students on the project, said that their conversion of the wind tunnel allowed them to create a system that will allow for future research into carbon capture solutions.

“Current carbon capture focuses on carbon storage. So putting it underground. What we’re doing is trying to use porous media or packed bed media to see if we could capture carbon that way,” Faroq said.

That process works like water being put through a filter with different layers, although in the case of airflow and carbon in more sophisticated ways that frequently involve chemical reactions between the carbon and elements of the media.

“It focuses on chemical reactions, like calcium hydroxide with CO2 becoming calcium carbonate,” he said.

Faroq said that their capstone project would remain at the university for future students to use under direction from Dr. Robert Martinuzzi, associate head of research at the Schulich School of Engineering at UCalgary.

“Different future capstone projects will be based on this project that we’re working on, and they can test different packed beds and go from there. So we set up the first part, and it’s up to the future groups to actually test the packed beds,” he said.

capstone project university of alberta

Saving tax dollars for Calgary taxpayers

Every year the City of Calgary will spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to dredge stormwater ponds across the city, to ensure they remain effective when they’re needed.

Although on an individual basis, the ponds themselves don’t have to be dredged more than once every 25 years, said student Brendan Arthurs, the effort required to perform the dredging is expensive and time-consuming.

“They have to drain the pond first at a specific time of the year, and use excavators or other dredging equipment that are very expensive, and completely remove all of that old sediment. That can take upwards of a month to do so,” he said.

Arthurs said that his group’s solution was to create a modular stormwater pond system that had containers for sediment capture, that could then be sucked out using a commercial-grade vacuum truck.

“That maintenance can be done year round and you do not have to completely drain the tank. It should take about a week,” Arthurs said.

He estimated that the cost per pond would be reduced to $25,000 for maintenance, instead of the current estimated price of $250,000 per pond.

Another effect of the modular system, said Arthurs, was that because it uses a filtration system based on activated carbon, it would produce cleaner water exiting the ponds.

Overall, that would mean a healthier ecosystem in the city, and especially in industrial areas—including private industrial ponds used for manufacturing or other purposes.

“It does reach into the industrial sector as well, as often their ponds on large chemical processing sites require a higher level of water quality, and therefore they do require this sort of filtration,” Arthurs said.

The next step for the group, he said, was to look to see if they could commercialize the technology.

“Individually we all do really want to work on or enter the professional industry ourselves, and it would be a large financial upbringing to take this on forward to a full-scale business. But on the back burner, we would really love to work on this on the side and slowly progress things, and work on getting patents and developing a product,” Arthurs said.

Getting it in front of the City of Calgary though, would be the ultimate achievement.

“It would be a real testament to the work we’ve done and the support that we’ve gotten from the university. I think that’d be the ultimate achievement that anyone in a capstone project, especially entrepreneurial, could ever hope for,” Arthurs said.

capstone project university of alberta

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Students Develop Virtual Reality Heart Monitoring Program to Help Firefighters Monitor and Manage Stress

Four seniors and Professor Mehdi Mekni, Ph.D., collaborated with a West Haven-based virtual reality training developer and the Cleveland Fire Department to develop a program that could one day impact first responders everywhere.

May 22, 2024

By Jackie Hennessey, Contributing Writer

Left to right: Kyle Muldoon ’24, Sean Vargas-Altamirano ’24, Matthew Lamour ’24, and James Mok ’24 present their senior capstone project at the University.

Wearing virtual reality headsets, firefighters and fire department leaders were placed in dangerous, stress-inducing situations they would face on the job. As part of the training, firefighters battling a raging blaze suddenly found themselves in the midst of a partial building collapse. A fire official in charge of the fire scene at a high-rise apartment building had to respond to a “Mayday! Mayday!” call from a firefighter trapped on the 11th floor.

Was there a way to see how the stress of the situation was affecting their heart rate during that training? Was there a way to build in reminders so those undergoing the training would use breathing techniques to center themselves and regulate their heart rates?

As part of their senior capstone project, four Tagliatela College of Engineering students – James Mok ’24, Sean Vargas-Altamirano ’24, Kyle Muldoon ’24, Matthew Lamour ’24 – set out to develop just that.

Under the guidance of Mehdi Mekni Ph.D. , professor and director of the Computer Science program, the students collaborated with Fred Caserta, founder and CEO of Pleiadian Systems, Inc., a West Haven-based company that creates cutting-edge computer hardware and software training systems for first responders. Caserta was developing a firefighter training program for the Cleveland (Ohio) Fire Department.

‘Reduce stress and be more high performing’

For two semesters, the students built upon the existing virtual reality training platform. They incorporated a heart-monitoring system by HeartMath, a leading heart-monitoring company that uses biofeedback – “breathing techniques to bring about coherence, to align the physical, mental and emotional systems to work in sync.”

Each week, the student team met via Zoom with Caserta and Brendan McNamara, the Cleveland Fire Department’s chief of health and safety, as well as Dr. Jennifer Franklin, the stress consultant/wellness coordinator for Cleveland’s Department of Public Safety. They discussed how best to build up stressors the firefighters would experience through virtual reality. Then they wove in reminders to breathe and meditate.

“So, when firefighters go into the actual environment, their heart breathing will be like second nature, and they can reduce stress and be more high performing on the job,” Mok said.

‘Value, Purpose, and Meaning’

Chief McNamara said this tool – SMART-VR – is vitally important for firefighters and fire department leaders. “The main things that kill firefighters are cancer, heart disease, and suicide,” he said. “In the last three years, four Cleveland firefighters committed suicide.”

He and Dr. Franklin talked with the student team about the mental health issues firefighters can experience, including anxiety and post-traumatic stress. Dealing with stress in the middle of a critical incident “will lead to better health outcomes,” McNamara said.

During the Fire Administrator’s Summit on Fire Prevention and Control in 2023, stress reduction was a major topic, including a discussion about a study from the Journal of Occupational Health Psychology. The researchers found “approximately 20 percent of firefighters and paramedics meet the criteria for post-traumatic stress at some point during their careers, compared to a 6.8 percent lifetime risk for the general population.”

“This is the best type of project because it has value, purpose, and meaning, and it’s an experiential journey for the students to develop skills – interacting with a CEO, learning from the chief and a doctor of psychology,” Dr. Mekni said.

Mok, who graduated in May and was hired as a software engineer by Electric Boat, said it was a continual learning experience, “having stakeholders to adhere to and a product to deliver.” He and his fellow students felt very invested, he said, because of the impact the project could have on so many first responders. “It’s one of the reasons I gravitated to the field of computer science because it can reach across every field,” he said. “I like that I can help in some way.”

Mok said it was powerful to hear McNamara describe the training firefighters undergo and the work they do daily, “rescuing people from burning buildings, doing underwater search and rescue in water. They’re real heroes.”

‘An extremely exciting and rewarding journey’

Central to the students’ challenge was building out the platform so firefighters encountered more stressors in each scenario, while also being reminded to breathe.

“It’s really difficult to train that mindset so we are trying to turn the fire scene into a firefighter’s yoga studio,” McNamara said. “We want them to be in a relaxed state, so they are mentally prepared for anything.”

McNamara said he isn’t certain the students “understand the magnitude of what they accomplished. It’s the first time mindfulness and breathing has been woven into virtual reality training in this way.”

In a letter of thanks to the Tagliatela College of Engineering, Chief McNamara and Dr. Franklin praised the student team for their unwavering commitment. “You spent months listening to our problems, researched multiple solutions, and created something useful,” they wrote.

Added Caserta, “It’s been an extremely exciting and rewarding journey to work with such a creative and bright-minded group of students.”

Several students were hired by Pleiadian Systems Inc., and another capstone group will work next fall on SMART-VR 2.0. “For us, this story is not over,” Dr. Mekni said. “There is so much yet to explore.”

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This project was a novel experiment where students researched the intersection of music recording and artificial intelligence. They examined the distribution of music as an information medium, and ways in which music serves purposes beyond just entertainment. Then, students composed music - regardless of any prior experience playing an instrument or musical education - at Odegaard and Area 01 Sound Lab recording studios with Large Language Models (LLMs) as members of their musical ensembles. Students produced three song EPs of their musical compositions with LLMs and released them to Spotify and other streaming services.  This project was sponsored by Fishing Comets Farm, a Seattle-based record label.

Students: Xinyu Chang, Kassy Chaput, Brian Chien, Mike Deng, Lily Dong, Kexuan Feng, Lewis Going, Jake Harper, Kunyang Li, Lydia Lin, Siyu Lin, Luna Liu, Maria Mayuzhuo, Shammu Meyyappan, Sloane Shea, Joshua Shin, Danny Yue, Zhuoyi Zhao (Informatics)

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