Evaluation of Human Ear Anatomy and Functionality by Axiomatic Design

The design of the human ear is one of nature’s engineering marvels. This paper examines the merit of ear design using axiomatic design principles. The ear is the organ of both hearing and balance. A sensitive ear can hear frequencies ranging from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz. The vestibular apparatus of the i...

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Main Authors: Pratap Sriram Sundar, Chandan Chowdhury, Sagar Kamarthi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-05-01
Series:Biomimetics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2313-7673/6/2/31
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spelling doaj-53833bd139e74b2386156a3209e329612021-06-01T00:28:51ZengMDPI AGBiomimetics2313-76732021-05-016313110.3390/biomimetics6020031Evaluation of Human Ear Anatomy and Functionality by Axiomatic DesignPratap Sriram Sundar0Chandan Chowdhury1Sagar Kamarthi2Indian School of Business, Mohali 160062, IndiaIndian School of Business, Gachibowli, Hyderabad 500111, IndiaDepartment of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Northeastern University, Boston, MA 02115, USAThe design of the human ear is one of nature’s engineering marvels. This paper examines the merit of ear design using axiomatic design principles. The ear is the organ of both hearing and balance. A sensitive ear can hear frequencies ranging from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz. The vestibular apparatus of the inner ear is responsible for the static and dynamic equilibrium of the human body. The ear is divided into the outer ear, middle ear, and inner ear, which play their respective functional roles in transforming sound energy into nerve impulses interpreted in the brain. The human ear has many modules, such as the pinna, auditory canal, eardrum, ossicles, eustachian tube, cochlea, semicircular canals, cochlear nerve, and vestibular nerve. Each of these modules has several subparts. This paper tabulates and maps the functional requirements (FRs) of these modules onto design parameters (DPs) that nature has already chosen. The “independence axiom” of the axiomatic design methodology is applied to analyze couplings and to evaluate if human ear design is a good design (i.e., uncoupled design) or a bad design (i.e., coupled design). The analysis revealed that the human ear is a perfect design because it is an uncoupled structure. It is not only a perfect design but also a low-cost design. The materials that are used to build the ear atom-by-atom are chiefly carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, calcium, and nitrogen. The material cost is very negligible, which amounts to only a few of dollars. After a person has deceased, materials in the human system are upcycled by nature. We consider space requirements, materials cost, and upcyclability as “constraints” in the axiomatic design. In terms of performance, the human ear design is very impressive and serves as an inspiration for designing products in industrial environments.https://www.mdpi.com/2313-7673/6/2/31human earaxiomatic designdesign evaluation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pratap Sriram Sundar
Chandan Chowdhury
Sagar Kamarthi
spellingShingle Pratap Sriram Sundar
Chandan Chowdhury
Sagar Kamarthi
Evaluation of Human Ear Anatomy and Functionality by Axiomatic Design
Biomimetics
human ear
axiomatic design
design evaluation
author_facet Pratap Sriram Sundar
Chandan Chowdhury
Sagar Kamarthi
author_sort Pratap Sriram Sundar
title Evaluation of Human Ear Anatomy and Functionality by Axiomatic Design
title_short Evaluation of Human Ear Anatomy and Functionality by Axiomatic Design
title_full Evaluation of Human Ear Anatomy and Functionality by Axiomatic Design
title_fullStr Evaluation of Human Ear Anatomy and Functionality by Axiomatic Design
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Human Ear Anatomy and Functionality by Axiomatic Design
title_sort evaluation of human ear anatomy and functionality by axiomatic design
publisher MDPI AG
series Biomimetics
issn 2313-7673
publishDate 2021-05-01
description The design of the human ear is one of nature’s engineering marvels. This paper examines the merit of ear design using axiomatic design principles. The ear is the organ of both hearing and balance. A sensitive ear can hear frequencies ranging from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz. The vestibular apparatus of the inner ear is responsible for the static and dynamic equilibrium of the human body. The ear is divided into the outer ear, middle ear, and inner ear, which play their respective functional roles in transforming sound energy into nerve impulses interpreted in the brain. The human ear has many modules, such as the pinna, auditory canal, eardrum, ossicles, eustachian tube, cochlea, semicircular canals, cochlear nerve, and vestibular nerve. Each of these modules has several subparts. This paper tabulates and maps the functional requirements (FRs) of these modules onto design parameters (DPs) that nature has already chosen. The “independence axiom” of the axiomatic design methodology is applied to analyze couplings and to evaluate if human ear design is a good design (i.e., uncoupled design) or a bad design (i.e., coupled design). The analysis revealed that the human ear is a perfect design because it is an uncoupled structure. It is not only a perfect design but also a low-cost design. The materials that are used to build the ear atom-by-atom are chiefly carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, calcium, and nitrogen. The material cost is very negligible, which amounts to only a few of dollars. After a person has deceased, materials in the human system are upcycled by nature. We consider space requirements, materials cost, and upcyclability as “constraints” in the axiomatic design. In terms of performance, the human ear design is very impressive and serves as an inspiration for designing products in industrial environments.
topic human ear
axiomatic design
design evaluation
url https://www.mdpi.com/2313-7673/6/2/31
work_keys_str_mv AT pratapsriramsundar evaluationofhumanearanatomyandfunctionalitybyaxiomaticdesign
AT chandanchowdhury evaluationofhumanearanatomyandfunctionalitybyaxiomaticdesign
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