One person’s experience creating a · One person’s experience creating a wearable. Mike Gibson, Girls Who Build 2014

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One person’s experience creating a

wearable

Mike Gibson, Girls Who Build 2014 1

What we’ll talk about Selecting a problem:

Concept generation and ideation

You have a problem, so solve it: Applying technical know-how to solve problems

Making a solution into a product: The iterative, engineering process

The journey of starting a small company 2

the problem: thermal is personal

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3

Our wristband is an intelligent, connected

and personal heating and cooling

solution.

the solution: a personal thermal wearable

4

the opportunity:our skin

the challenge

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our skin responds strongly to

temperature changes

comfort depends on

both core and skin

temperature

5

Pulsed heating and cooling uses less energy to efficiently stimulate the skin

temperature

time

6

Technology selection: how to generate pulsed heating and cooling in a small form factor?

Fan Pumped Phase Evap. water Peltier water change cooling

Tunable ΔT ✓ ✓ X X ✓

ΔT rapid and reversible X X X X ✓

Quiet X X ✓ ✓ ✓

No moving parts X X ✓ X ✓

Lifetime ? ? X X ? 7

Technology selection: how to generate pulsed heating and cooling in a small form factor?

Fan Pumped Phase Evap. water Peltier water change cooling

Tunable ΔT ✓ ✓ X X ✓

ΔT rapid and reversible X X X X ✓

Quiet X X ✓ ✓ ✓

No moving parts X X ✓ X ✓

Lifetime ? ? X X ? 8

an energy-efficient personal thermal solution

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an intelligent personal thermal solution

temperaturemonitoring

adaptive learning

predictive operation 10

a connected personal thermal solution

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The iterative engineering process Keep in mind: never try to do everything at once! It’s too hard.

Engineers break projects into steps, representing testable hypotheses.

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The iterative engineering process

Hypothesis 1: People will like pulsed heating and cooling

Step 1: Building something that pulses heating and cooling.

So… we made a heating and cooling box!

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The iterative engineering process Hypothesis 2: People want wearable heating and cooling

Step(s) 2: Building something wearable. (Note: many steps) Making it more wearable with each iteration

Not wearable. Not wearable. Hacked together Cleaner wearable, but Circuit is enclosed, Is a box... Has a cord. wearable (gross) circuit is exposed has buttons, but ugly 14

The iterative engineering process

Hypothesis 3: It can’t be ugly.

Step 3: Make it prettier.

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The iterative engineering process

Make prototypes

Making prototypes informs new concepts

Make concept renders (sketch, CAD)

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personalized for comfort user interface heat pumps

power + electronicsheat sink 17

Why CAD is fun: It lets you make art, fast.

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wristify &

comfort on demand

predictive &adaptive

personal &environmental

sensing

a connected & efficient world

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our journey so far

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our journey so far

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our journey so far

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our journey so far

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our journey so far

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Thanks! 25

MIT OpenCourseWarehttp://ocw.mit.edu

RES.2-005 Girls Who Build: Make Your Own Wearables WorkshopSpring 2015

For information about citing these materials or our Terms of Use, visit: http://ocw.mit.edu/terms.

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