Constraint-Aided Product Design

The importance of supporting the early stages of design is widely accepted. In particular, the development of supportive tools and methods for modelling and analysis of evolving design solutions present a difficult challenge. One reason for this is the need to model both the product design and the d...

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Main Authors: G. Mullineux, B. Hicks, T. Medland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: CTU Central Library 2005-01-01
Series:Acta Polytechnica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.cvut.cz/ojs/index.php/ap/article/view/702
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spelling doaj-2b3e585dd0f84af1867a8b906d3695192020-11-25T00:11:36ZengCTU Central LibraryActa Polytechnica1210-27091805-23632005-01-01453702Constraint-Aided Product DesignG. MullineuxB. HicksT. MedlandThe importance of supporting the early stages of design is widely accepted. In particular, the development of supportive tools and methods for modelling and analysis of evolving design solutions present a difficult challenge. One reason for this is the need to model both the product design and the design knowledge from which the design is created. There are a number of limitations with many existing techniques and an alternative approach that deals with the design constraints themselves is presented. Dealing directly with the constraints affords a more generalised approach that represents the process by which a product is designed. This enables modelling and reasoning about a product from an often abstract and evolving set of requirements. The constraint methodology is an iterative process where the design requirements are elaborated, the constraint rules altered, design ideas generated and tested as functional structures. The incorporation of direct search techniques to solve the constrained problem enables different solutions to be explored and allows the determination of ‘best compromises’ for related constraints. A constraint modelling environment is discussed and two example cases are used to demonstrate the potential of a constraint-aided approach for supporting important issues such as the design of product variants and product families. https://ojs.cvut.cz/ojs/index.php/ap/article/view/702constraint modellingdesign knowledgesynthesisproduct designproduct families
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author G. Mullineux
B. Hicks
T. Medland
spellingShingle G. Mullineux
B. Hicks
T. Medland
Constraint-Aided Product Design
Acta Polytechnica
constraint modelling
design knowledge
synthesis
product design
product families
author_facet G. Mullineux
B. Hicks
T. Medland
author_sort G. Mullineux
title Constraint-Aided Product Design
title_short Constraint-Aided Product Design
title_full Constraint-Aided Product Design
title_fullStr Constraint-Aided Product Design
title_full_unstemmed Constraint-Aided Product Design
title_sort constraint-aided product design
publisher CTU Central Library
series Acta Polytechnica
issn 1210-2709
1805-2363
publishDate 2005-01-01
description The importance of supporting the early stages of design is widely accepted. In particular, the development of supportive tools and methods for modelling and analysis of evolving design solutions present a difficult challenge. One reason for this is the need to model both the product design and the design knowledge from which the design is created. There are a number of limitations with many existing techniques and an alternative approach that deals with the design constraints themselves is presented. Dealing directly with the constraints affords a more generalised approach that represents the process by which a product is designed. This enables modelling and reasoning about a product from an often abstract and evolving set of requirements. The constraint methodology is an iterative process where the design requirements are elaborated, the constraint rules altered, design ideas generated and tested as functional structures. The incorporation of direct search techniques to solve the constrained problem enables different solutions to be explored and allows the determination of ‘best compromises’ for related constraints. A constraint modelling environment is discussed and two example cases are used to demonstrate the potential of a constraint-aided approach for supporting important issues such as the design of product variants and product families. 
topic constraint modelling
design knowledge
synthesis
product design
product families
url https://ojs.cvut.cz/ojs/index.php/ap/article/view/702
work_keys_str_mv AT gmullineux constraintaidedproductdesign
AT bhicks constraintaidedproductdesign
AT tmedland constraintaidedproductdesign
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