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Design and Analysis of Experiments
Dr. Tai-Yue Wang Department of Industrial and Information Management National Cheng Kung University Tainan, TAIWAN, ROC This is a basic course blah, blah, blah…
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Blocking and Confounding in Two-Level Factorial Designs
Dr. Tai-Yue Wang Department of Industrial and Information Management National Cheng Kung University Tainan, TAIWAN, ROC This is a basic course blah, blah, blah…
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Outline Introduction Blocking Replicated 2k factorial Design
Confounding in 2k factorial Design Confounding the 2k factorial Design in Two Blocks Why Blocking is Important Confounding the 2k factorial Design in Four Blocks Confounding the 2k factorial Design in 2p Blocks Partial Confounding
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Introduction Sometimes it is impossible to perform all of runs in one batch of material Or to ensure the robustness, one might deliberately vary the experimental conditions to ensure the treatment are equally effective. Blocking is a technique for dealing with controllable nuisance variables
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Introduction Two cases are considered Replicated designs
Unreplicated designs
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Blocking a Replicated 2k Factorial Design
A 2k design has been replicated n times. Each set of nonhomogeneous conditions defines a block Each replicate is run in one of the block The runs in each block would be made in random order.
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Blocking a Replicated 2k Factorial Design -- example
Only four experiment trials can be made from a single batch. Three batch of raw material are required.
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Blocking a Replicated 2k Factorial Design -- example
Sum of Squares in Block ANOVA
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Confounding in The 2k Factorial Design
Problem: Impossible to perform a complete replicate of a factorial design in one block Confounding is a design technique for arranging a complete factorial design in blocks, where block size is smaller than the number of treatment combinations in one replicate.
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Confounding in The 2k Factorial Design
Short comings: Cause information about certain treatment effects (usually high order interactions ) to be indistinguishable from, or confounded with, blocks. If the case is to analyze a 2k factorial design in 2p incomplete blocks, where p<k, one can use runs in two blocks (p=1), four blocks (p=2), and so on.
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks
Suppose we want to run a single replicate of the 22 design. Each of the 22=4 treatment combinations requires a quantity of raw material, for example, and each batch of raw material is only large enough for two treatment combinations to be tested. Two batches are required.
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks
One can treat batches as blocks One needs assign two of the four treatment combinations to each blocks
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks
The order of the treatment combinations are run within one block is randomly selected. For the effects, A and B: A=1/2[ab+a-b-(1)] B=1/2[ab-a+b-(1)] Are unaffected
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks
For the effects, AB: AB=1/2[ab-a-b+(1)] is identical to block effect AB is confounded with blocks
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks
We could assign the block effects to confounded with A or B. However we usually want to confound with higher order interaction effects.
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks
We could confound any 2k design in two blocks. Three factors example
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks
ABC is confounded with blocks It is a random order within one block.
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks
Multiple replicates are required to obtain the estimate error when k is small. For example, 23 design with four replicate in two blocks
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks
ANOVA 32 observations
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks --example
Same as example 6.2 Four factors: Temperature, pressure, concentration, and stirring rate. Response variable: filtration rate. Each batch of material is nough for 8 treatment combinations only. This is a 24 design n two blocks.
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks --example
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks --example
Factorial Fit: Filtration versus Block, Temperature, Pressure, ... Estimated Effects and Coefficients for Filtration (coded units) Term Effect Coef Constant Block Temperature Pressure Conc Stir rate Temperature*Pressure Temperature*Conc Temperature*Stir rate Pressure*Conc Pressure*Stir rate Conc.*Stir rate Temperature*Pressure*Conc Temperature*Pressure*Stir rate Temperature*Conc.*Stir rate Pressure*Conc.*Stir rate S = * PRESS = *
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks --example
Factorial Fit: Filtration versus Block, Temperature, Pressure, ... Analysis of Variance for Filtration (coded units) Source DF Seq SS Adj SS Adj MS F P Blocks * * Main Effects * * 2-Way Interactions * * 3-Way Interactions * * Residual Error * * * Total
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks --example
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks --example
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Confounding the 2k Factorial Design in Two Blocks –example(Adj)
ABCD Factorial Fit: Filtration versus Block, Temperature, Conc., Stir rate Estimated Effects and Coefficients for Filtration (coded units) Term Effect Coef SE Coef T P Constant Block Temperature Conc Stir rate Temperature*Conc Temperature*Stir rate S = PRESS = R-Sq = 97.36% R-Sq(pred) = 91.66% R-Sq(adj) = 95.60% Analysis of Variance for Filtration (coded units) Source DF Seq SS Adj SS Adj MS F P Blocks Main Effects 2-Way Interactions Residual Error Total
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Another Illustration Assuming we don’t have blocking in previous example, we will not be able to notice the effect AD. Now the first eight runs (in run order) have filtration rate reduced by 20 units
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Another Illustration
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Confounding the 2k design in four blocks
2k factorial design confounded in four blocks of 2k-2 observations. Useful if k ≧ 4 and block sizes are relatively small. Example 25 design in four blocks, each block with eight runs. Select two factors to be confound with, say ADE and BCE.
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Confounding the 2k design in four blocks
L1=x1+x4+x5 L2=x2+x3+x5 Pairs of L1 and L2 group into four blocks
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Confounding the 2k design in four blocks
Example: L1=1, L2=1 block 4 abcde: L1=x1+x4+x5=1+1+1=3(mod 2)=1 L2=x2+x3+x5=1+1+1=3(mod 2)=1
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Confounding the 2k design in 2p blocks
2k factorial design confounded in 2p blocks of 2k-p observations.
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Confounding the 2k design in 2p blocks
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Partial Confounding In Figure 7.3, it is a completely confounded case
ABC s confounded with blocks in each replicate.
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Partial Confounding Consider the case below, it is partial confounding. ABC is confounded in replicate I and so on.
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Partial Confounding As a result, information on ABC can be obtained from data in replicate II, II, IV, and so on. We say ¾ of information can be obtained on the interactions because they are unconfounded in only three replicates. ¾ is the relative information for the confounded effects
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Partial Confounding ANOVA
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Partial Confounding-- example
From Example 6.1 Response variable: etch rate Factors: A=gap, B=gas flow, C=RF power. Only four treatment combinations can be tested during a shift. There is shift-to-shift difference in etch performance. The experimenter decide to use shift as a blocking factor.
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Partial Confounding-- example
Each replicate of the 23 design must be run in two blocks. Two replicates are run. ABC is confounded in replicate I and AB is confounded in replicate II.
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Partial Confounding-- example
How to create partial confounding in Minitab?
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Partial Confounding-- example
Replicate I is confounded with ABC STAT>DOE>Factorial >Create Factorial Design
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Partial Confounding-- example
Design >Full Factorial Number of blocks 2 OK
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Partial Confounding-- example
Factors > Fill in appropriate information OK OK
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Partial Confounding-- example
Result of Replicate I (default is to confound with ABC)
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Partial Confounding-- example
Replicate II is confounded with AB STAT>DOE>Factorial >Create Factorial Design 2 level factorial (specify generators)
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Partial Confounding-- example
Design >Full Factorial
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Partial Confounding-- example
Generators …> Define blocks by listing … AB OK
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Partial Confounding-- example
Result of Replicate II
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Partial Confounding-- example
To combine the two design in one worksheet Change block number 3 -> 1, 2 -> 4 in Replicate II Copy columns of CenterPt, Gap, …RF Power from Replicate II to below the corresponding columns in Replicate I.
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Partial Confounding-- example
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Partial Confounding-- example
STAT> DOE> Factorial> Define Custom Factorial Design Factors Gap, Gas Flow, RF Power
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Partial Confounding-- example
Low/High > OK Designs >Blocks>Specify by column Blocks OK
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Partial Confounding-- example
Now you can fill in collected data.
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Partial Confounding-- example
ANOVA Factorial Fit: Etch Rate versus Block, Gap, Gas Flow, RF Estimated Effects and Coefficients for Etch Rate (coded units) Term Effect Coef SE Coef T P Constant Block Block Block Gap Gas Flow RF Gap*Gas Flow Gap*RF Gas Flow*RF Gap*Gas Flow*RF S = PRESS = R-Sq = 97.60% R-Sq(pred) = 75.42% R-Sq(adj) = 92.80%
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Partial Confounding-- example
ANOVA Factorial Fit: Etch Rate versus Block, Gap, Gas Flow, RF Analysis of Variance for Etch Rate (coded units) Source DF Seq SS Adj SS Adj MS F P Blocks Main Effects 2-Way Interactions 3-Way Interactions Residual Error Total * NOTE * There is partial confounding, no alias table was printed.
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Partial Confounding-- example
ANOVA
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