New and emerging technologies continuously change what is possible in engineering design. VCE Systems Engineering requires students to understand several current technology areas, their defining characteristics, and their engineering applications. The examples below cover the most relevant areas for systems engineering.
KEY TAKEAWAY: New technologies are characterised by improved performance, lower cost over time, new capability, or reduced environmental impact compared to prior solutions. Understanding their characteristics enables engineers to identify appropriate applications and limitations.
Characteristics:
- Builds objects layer by layer from a digital model (CAD file)
- Materials include plastics (PLA, ABS), resins, metals (sintered powder), composites, and bioprinting materials
- Enables complex internal geometries impossible with traditional subtractive machining
- Setup cost is low; per-part cost is relatively consistent regardless of quantity (unlike injection moulding)
- Surface finish and material properties inferior to machined parts for most processes
Engineering applications:
- Rapid prototyping — physical parts for fit, form, and function testing within hours
- Custom or low-volume parts — medical implants, prosthetics, custom housings
- Tooling and jigs — custom fixtures for production
- Replacement parts on demand — avoids large spare parts inventories
EXAM TIP: The key characteristic of 3D printing for exam purposes is rapid prototyping — the ability to iterate design quickly and cheaply. This changes the design process fundamentally.
Characteristics:
- Robotic systems combine mechanical manipulators, electrotechnological actuation (servo motors), sensing (cameras, force sensors), and microcontroller/computer control
- Industrial robots are programmed for repetitive, high-precision tasks
- Collaborative robots (cobots) work safely alongside humans using force-sensing and speed limiting
- Autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) navigate environments using LIDAR, cameras, and AI
Engineering applications:
- Manufacturing: welding, painting, assembly, inspection
- Warehousing: automated picking, sorting, and transport
- Agriculture: precision harvesting, drone spraying
- Healthcare: surgical assistance (da Vinci robot), rehabilitation
- Exploration: Mars rovers, underwater inspection ROVs
APPLICATION: The integration of robotics in manufacturing directly relates to Systems Engineering content — each robot is an integrated mechanical + electrotechnological + control system. Understanding subsystem interactions is directly applicable.
Characteristics:
- Replace internal combustion engines with electric motors powered by battery packs (typically Li-ion)
- Energy recovery via regenerative braking (kinetic energy → electrical → stored)
- Significantly higher energy conversion efficiency than combustion engines (~90% motor vs ~25–35% combustion)
- Charging infrastructure requirement; range limited by battery capacity
- Battery longevity affected by charge cycles, temperature, and discharge depth
Engineering applications:
- Passenger vehicles, buses, trucks, motorcycles
- Industrial vehicles: forklifts, port equipment
- Light aircraft and marine vessels (emerging)
- Micro-mobility: e-bikes, e-scooters
Systems engineering relevance: EV powertrains are complex integrated systems — battery management system (BMS), motor controllers, thermal management, regenerative braking — all requiring sophisticated control systems.
Characteristics:
- Physical devices equipped with sensors, microcontrollers, and network connectivity
- Devices communicate via Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Zigbee, cellular (4G/5G), or LoRaWAN
- Cloud platforms aggregate data from many devices; edge computing processes data locally
- Low-power microcontrollers (ESP32, RP2040) enable battery-powered connected devices
Engineering applications:
- Smart home: connected lighting, heating, security
- Industrial IoT (IIoT): machine health monitoring, predictive maintenance
- Smart agriculture: soil moisture, weather, livestock tracking
- Smart cities: traffic management, utility metering, air quality monitoring
VCAA FOCUS: IoT is a direct extension of the microcontroller + sensor + actuator systems studied throughout the course. The key addition is network connectivity and remote monitoring/control.
Characteristics:
- AI systems learn patterns from data rather than following explicitly programmed rules
- Machine learning (ML) models trained on datasets to perform classification, prediction, or control
- Computer vision uses ML to interpret images — object detection, defect inspection, facial recognition
- Neural networks mimic biological neural structures; deep learning uses many layers
Engineering applications:
- Quality control: visual inspection of manufactured parts
- Predictive maintenance: detecting anomalies in sensor data before failure
- Autonomous systems: self-driving vehicles, drones
- Design optimisation: generative design, structural optimisation
Characteristics (recent advances):
- Perovskite solar cells: potential for higher efficiency (>30%) and lower cost than silicon PV
- Solid-state batteries: higher energy density, faster charging, safer than liquid-electrolyte Li-ion
- Hydrogen fuel cells: zero-emission energy conversion; challenged by hydrogen production and storage
- Advanced wind turbines: larger rotors, offshore floating platforms, digital control optimisation
Engineering applications:
- Grid-scale energy storage, electric transport, building-integrated PV, microgrid systems
| Technology | Key characteristic | Core engineering application |
|---|---|---|
| 3D printing | Rapid, design-flexible fabrication | Prototyping, custom parts |
| Robotics | Programmable, precise, tireless | Manufacturing automation |
| Electric vehicles | High efficiency, zero tailpipe emissions | Transport, industrial |
| IoT | Connected sensing and control | Monitoring, smart systems |
| AI/ML | Pattern learning, autonomous decision | Inspection, optimisation |
| Renewable energy | Sustainable, declining cost | Energy supply, storage |
STUDY HINT: For each technology you study, prepare: (1) a one-sentence description of the key operating principle, (2) two or three specific engineering applications, and (3) one advantage and one limitation compared to the technology it replaces.