Teaching and Theses
Open Topics for Theses
- Sustainability Assessment of smart farming - Development of a concept based on a literature review
- Development of sustainable business models for sensors/sensor systems manufacturer in the agricultural sector
- Social Life Cycle Assessment - a literature review
Completed Bachelor and Master Theses
- Reuniões Diárias 4.0 – Um caso de estudo que visa contribuir para a digitalização no contexto da indústria do papel
- A Framework for assessing manufacturing SMEs Industry 4.0 maturity
- Life Cycle Assessment of a Hybrid Train
- Material Flow Cost Accounting application and its Integration with Lean Tools
- Incorporation of Material Flow Cost Accounting in Life Cycle Engineering for product and process design
- Economic comparison of new fibre placement methods – Dry Fibre Placement and Tailored Fibre Placement
Joint teaching programm of SustEEM members at Chemitz University of Technology (in the Master Programs Merge Technologies for Resource Efficiency and Advanced Manufacturing)
- Course Resource Efficiency from an Economic Perspective
- Course Life Cycle Engineering: Concepts and Application case
- Course Life Cycle-oriented Management
- Course IT-supported Evaluation of Material Flows and Process Chains
- Interdisciplinary Research Project
Chair of Management Accounting and Control (Chemnitz University of Technology)
- Chair of Management Accounting and Control is responsible for a couple of courses at Bachelor level and Master level
- Supervision of about 80 bachelor and master theses per year as well as more than ten ph. D. studies
Department of Mechanical Engineering (Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade de Lisboa)
- Técnico Lisboa Production Management group of the Mechanical engineering department is responsible for several Master programmes courses:
- Production Management, 200 students per semester, English language (Link to course)
- Project Management, 80 students per semester, English language (Link to course)
- Product development and Entrepreneurship, 80 students per semester, English language (Link to course)