The document discusses the process of engineering design. It states that design is the creative process of joining scientific understanding with human needs to conceive artifacts that serve human purposes. Engineering is primarily concerned with design - the design of processes, structures, machines, and software. The design process involves specifying goals and objectives, conceptualizing alternative designs, analyzing and ranking alternatives, and selecting and testing the preferred design. No single design process fits all problems, as design is an iterative, creative process.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes)
642 views
System Design 1
The document discusses the process of engineering design. It states that design is the creative process of joining scientific understanding with human needs to conceive artifacts that serve human purposes. Engineering is primarily concerned with design - the design of processes, structures, machines, and software. The design process involves specifying goals and objectives, conceptualizing alternative designs, analyzing and ranking alternatives, and selecting and testing the preferred design. No single design process fits all problems, as design is an iterative, creative process.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 23
Design is the essence of engineering.
Broadly defined, design is the creative
process by which our understanding of logic and science is joined with our understanding of human needs and wants to conceive and refine artifacts that serve specific human purposes. As a profession, therefore, engineering is concerned primarily with design-- the design of processes, structures, machines, circuits, and software
--and with the purposeful
combinations of these elements to result in what we call systems. • This gives the detail of the structure of the system including the size, shape, materials, and quantities of components and the interrelationships among these design elements together. • Achieving this result means bridging the gap between the realm of human needs (tangible and intangible) and the realm of concrete expression.
• The concept of the design is
understood to involve – thespecification of measurable goals, objectives, and constraints for the design – the conceptualization and parameterization of alternative candidate designs that meet or surpass specifications; – the analysis and ranking of design alternatives; and, – finally, the selection, implementation, and testing of the most preferred alternative • It should be noted that, no single realization of the design process is just the fight style for all.
• It is assumed that, translation from
human needs to final design invariably involves the experience, intuition, skill, and creativity of the designer or design team. • Design is universally understood to be a creative, iterative, decision-making process since there is no unique solution to a given design problem. • The design process begins with the identification of a human need and the reduction of this need to a precise set of specifications for the system to be built. The definition of system specifications for a given design problem usually requires considerable interaction with the client or sponsor in order to: ensure that the design problem is well understood, that goals and objectives of the design are explicit, and that the success of alternate designs can be measured quantitatively. • Gibson (1991) recommends seven steps for the systematic development of goals. These are: 1. Generalize the question in order to provide a correct problem statement placing the problem in its proper context. 2. Develop a descriptive scenario, honestly assessing where you are now. 3. Develop a normative scenario describing where you want to be at some time in the future. 4. Develop the axiological component, setting out the values of the sponsor. 5. Prepare an objectives tree that contains the most general goals at the top, and successively more specific and measurable objectives in the branches below. 6. Validate the goals and objectives developed in the preceding steps. 7. Iterate through several passes to refine and perfect the objectives tree. • This involves generating alternative designs, or design options, that might reasonably satisfy system specifications. • Systems engineers typically think of alternative designs as points in an options or design space. – Theoptions space is the set of possible system configurations and decisions, and represents the full range of choices available to the designer. • For complex problems, defining the options space can be a very difficult task. – Need to decompose it into two component subtasks--design synthesis and parameterization-- which can be addressed sequentially, but iteratively. How to Develop Design Options Readabout design options on page 6-8 (460- 462) System Design The result of design synthesis is the selection of a promising set of preliminary or conceptual designs for the system.
These design concepts need to be
converted into detailed designs for all components and subsystems. This requires the identification of system parameters and selection of parameter values. Hazelrigg (1996) defines this as the task of design parameterization: Parameterization consists of identifying the numerical quantities that specify each element in the system and their permissible ranges. A system specification consists of a set of values for the system parameters together with the system configuration. The ranking of design alternatives and the ultimate selection of the most preferred design involves the selection of the best parameterization of the best conceptual design. The ultimate step in the design process involves the fabrication and testing of a prototype or system. Computer-aided design (CAD) refers to the use of modem computing hardware and software in converting the initial idea for a product into a detailed engineering design.
Read more on computer-aidedengineering (CAE). Computer-aided manufacturing (CAM) Computer-integrated manufacturing (CIM) Thank you!!!