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IntroductionLife Cycle DesignDesign flowOptimization model generationAnalysis of solution setConclusionReferences. Outline. How Engineered Products Impact the Environment. ManufactureExhaustion of Raw MaterialsEnergy UseEmissionsProduct UseEnergy UseEmissionsProduct Disposal. Impact
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1. Engineering & the Environment
2. Introduction
Life Cycle Design
Design flow
Optimization model generation
Analysis of solution set
Conclusion
References
Outline
3. How Engineered Products Impact the Environment Manufacture
Exhaustion of Raw Materials
Energy Use
Emissions
Product Use
Energy Use
Emissions
Product Disposal
4. Impact of Environmental issues on Engineering Decisions Environmental regulations impose constraints on product designs and manufacturing processes
Environmental regulations impose costs which may affect engineering decisions
Competition
Green products
5. Design for Environment Requirements for environment
use product longer
increase the amount of reuse
recycle materials
save energy
Customer satisfactions
quality
the latest technology
price that matches service
6. The Modern DfE Paradigm Balance between environmental considerations and custom satisfactions
Reuse/recycling
Focus on all aspects of product life cycle
Lower environmental burden
A challenging and multi-objective optimization problem
7. Life Cycle Design (LCD) Design of completely new products
Design for variety
e.g. Printers:
Color InkJet printers
Photo printers
Black & white LaserJet printers
Color LaserJet printers
Large format printers
8. Life Cycle Design Flow Voice of customers
Existing product groups
Spatial or generational variety
Life cycle optimization
Product detail design
9. Design Optimization Model Market Analysis
Design target definition
Quality function analysis
Value prediction of objectives
Problem formulation
Generation of solution set
Evaluation of solutions
10. Market Analysis Market size and trend
Potential competitors
Cause of product variation
Potential customers and their preference
11. Design Problem Definition How to satisfy the customers’ need?
In what degree does the current products need changing
Product upgrades are less intensive in terms of energy and materials
12. Problem Formulation Life cycle variables
Life cycle modeling
Value prediction of parameters in life cycle models
Optimization algorithm selection
13. Life Cycle Variables, Parameters, and Constant Life time (year)
Maintenance (yes/no and how to?)
Upgrade (yes/no)
Update time
End-of-life strategy (reuse/recycle)
14. Modeling of Objectives Obj(i) = fi(X1, X2, … Xn-1)
Energy consumption
Waste disposal
Function
Quality
Time to market
Availability
15. Product Data Prediction Changes of user’s requirement
Changes of engineering metrics
Changes of modular or function
Estimation of values of parameters in LC models
16. Generation of Solution Set Effect of changes in the values of parameters
Sensitivity analysis
Change of objectives’ priority
Range of variables
17. Service-Oriented Life Cycle Design Shift from selling products to selling services
Improve products without increasing cost to customer
Company has complete access to components for reuse
e.g. Xerox – emphasis on selling “photocopier service” rather than photocopiers, IBM – grid computing
18. DfE Initiatives Develop products with consideration for better function and service capability
Develop products with consideration of reuse and recycling
Develop products for safe disposal
Develop products using recycled materials when technically and economically viable
Develop products for improved energy efficiency or reduced consumption of energy
19. Conclusion Environmental Considerations Impact Design by way of
Regulations
Customer preferences
DfE must enter the design process at the outset
DfE must consider entire product life cycle
Benchmarking is necessary to compare alternatives or evaluate progress
20. References S. Yu, S. Kato, and F Kimura, “EcoDesign of Product Variety: A Multi-Objective Optimization Framework,” Proc. EcoDesign2001, Tokyo, 2001, pp.293-298.
H. Kobayashi and N. Fushiya, “Life Cycle Planning Methods for Environmentally Conscious Products,” Proc. ISEE, 87 (1999).
W. Knight, “Product Benchmarking Using DfE Analysis Tools,” Proc. ISEE, 92 (1999).
D. A. Ufford and W. J. Ward, “Next Generation Design for the Environment Paradigms,” Proc. ISEE, 204 (1999).
D. L. Thurston and W. F. Hoffman III, “Integrating Customer Preferences into Green Design and Manufacturing,” Proc. ISEE, 209 (1999).
T. A. Bhamra and S. Evans, “The Next Step in Ecodesign: Service-Oriented Life Cycle Design,” Proc. ISEE, 263 (1999).