Product development organizations are unwilling to compromise product functionality, unit cost, or time to market in order to create products that have less environmental impact than that required by regulations. Thus, designers may face a conflict between improving product functionality and reducing environmental impact. The design for environment (DfE) tools currently available are inadequate with respect to helping designers determine how to resolve this conflict during the conceptual design phase. Design-by-analogy is a promising conceptual design approach for this problem. Examples of products that simultaneously reduce environmental impact and improve product functionality can inspire designers to do likewise. The challenges are to generate the relevant knowledge and to organize it in an accessible DfE tool. This paper describes an approach for generating and organizing this knowledge, an analysis of successful products, and a table of successful designs.
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e-mail: jwh2@umd.edu
e-mail: lschmidt@umd.edu
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September 2010
Research Papers
A Conceptual Design Tool for Resolving Conflicts Between Product Functionality and Environmental Impact
Jeffrey W. Herrmann,
Jeffrey W. Herrmann
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
e-mail: jwh2@umd.edu
University of Maryland
, College Park, MD 20742
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Linda C. Schmidt
Linda C. Schmidt
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
e-mail: lschmidt@umd.edu
University of Maryland
, College Park, MD 20742
Search for other works by this author on:
Daniel P. Fitzgerald
Jeffrey W. Herrmann
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
University of Maryland
, College Park, MD 20742e-mail: jwh2@umd.edu
Linda C. Schmidt
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
University of Maryland
, College Park, MD 20742e-mail: lschmidt@umd.edu
J. Mech. Des. Sep 2010, 132(9): 091006 (11 pages)
Published Online: September 16, 2010
Article history
Received:
February 1, 2010
Revised:
July 2, 2010
Online:
September 16, 2010
Published:
September 16, 2010
Citation
Fitzgerald, D. P., Herrmann, J. W., and Schmidt, L. C. (September 16, 2010). "A Conceptual Design Tool for Resolving Conflicts Between Product Functionality and Environmental Impact." ASME. J. Mech. Des. September 2010; 132(9): 091006. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4002144
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