Integrating Function-Based and Biomimetic Design for Automatic Concept Generation
Abstract
This paper explores combining functional modeling and biomimetic design. Observed benefits of applying functional modeling to biomimetic design include a more complete, systematic modeling that reveals additional aspects of biological phenomena to be exploited. Incorporating biological phenomena into a function-Based design repository requires that multiple facets of the potential solution be presented, including a natural-language description of the biological phenomenon, the strategy derived from the phenomenon, example implementation of the strategy in engineered solutions, and functional modeling of both biological and engineered systems. This paper will illustrate the functional modeling of a single biological phenomenon at multiple levels of biological organization (organism/organ and cellular/molecular), the use of multiple biological analogies present in a single phenomenon in different engineering problems, and how the combination of functional modeling and biomimetic design leads to more complete exploitation of biological phenomena, as well as more complete representation of stimulus when including biological phenomena in a design repository.
Recommended Citation
L. H. Shu et al., "Integrating Function-Based and Biomimetic Design for Automatic Concept Generation," Proceedings of ICED 2007, the 16th International Conference on Engineering Design, vol. DS 42, The Design Society, Dec 2007.
Department(s)
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Keywords and Phrases
Automated concept generation; Biomimetic design; Function based design
International Standard Book Number (ISBN)
978-190467002-5
Document Type
Article - Conference proceedings
Document Version
Citation
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2024 The Design Society, All rights reserved.
Publication Date
01 Dec 2007