A customer requirement driven framework for design synthesis - applied to a washing machine

  • Kristof Berx
  • , Michael Friedl
  • , Maarten Witters
  • , Peter Hehenberger

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference proceedingspeer-review

Abstract

In order to maximize the success of a product, the customers' wishes need to be integrated into the entire product design process. The design of a mechatronic system can be divided in a 3 dierent phases, requirements engineering, architectural design and detailed design. During the requirement phase, customers needs are translated into engineering characteristics. In the architectural phase, the topology, consisting of the number and type of components, as well as some key properties (size, material) of the dierent components, is chosen. This phase has a major impact on the nal product performance. Since (mechatronic) products need to meet an ever increasing number of performance speci ca- tions and constraints, recently computational design synthesis approaches have been developed to support design engineers. These types of methods use computational power and computer models to search the design space in an automatic way. However, as these methods focus entirely on maximizing the functional performance, the customers' actual wishes and needs may slip to the background. This article presents a novel computational design synthesis approach which integrates design space exploration and Quality Function Deployment during the architectural design phase. The proposed method allows to generate architectures that maximize customer satisfaction. The eectiveness is illustrated by an industrial case study: the design of the mechanical architecture for a washing machine.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publication15th Mechatronics Forum Internatioonal Conference, Loughborough, UK
Pages431-438
Number of pages8
Volume49
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2016

Publication series

Name7th IFAC Symposium on Mechatronic Systems MECHATRONICS 2016

Fields of science

  • 203 Mechanical Engineering
  • 203015 Mechatronics

JKU Focus areas

  • Mechatronics and Information Processing
  • SyMMDe System Models for Mechatronic Design

    Dierneder, S. (Researcher), Friedl, M. (Researcher), Kellner, A. (Researcher), Scheidl, R. (Researcher), Weingartner, L. (Researcher), Zeman, K. (Researcher) & Hehenberger, P. (PI)

    01.01.201301.03.2017

    Project: Funded researchFFG - Austrian Research Promotion Agency

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