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2 - Resolving system conflicts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 January 2010

Victor Fey
Affiliation:
Wayne State University
Eugene Rivin
Affiliation:
Wayne State University
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Summary

Problem solving is the core of concept development. Solving problems usually starts with attempts to find solutions by using conventional means. Frequently, however, such an approach does not work. Suppose, for example, that we want to enhance the comfort of a car. One of the simplest known ways to achieve this goal is to enlarge the passenger compartment. This will result in increased weight and size (drag resistance), and consequently in increased fuel consumption. Thus, gaining advantage in one part of the car will be negated by disadvantages in other parts.

An engineering design problem becomes difficult when attempts to meet one constraint make another constraint, or constraints, unattainable. Designers are usually taught that it is impossible to have the “best of both worlds,” so they take for granted that trade-offs are unavoidable.

There is not a universal approach to distinguish the best trade-off from a variety of potential options. Much effort is spent on trade-off studies, but rarely can the engineer claim that the selected trade-off is the best one possible, and that the entire design space was examined. As a rule, many products and processes are designed with less than optimal performance.

Another, more fundamental, concern is the very nature of trade-offs, which is an incomplete fulfillment of opposing requirements. In other words, trade-offs are inherently suboptimal designs.

This chapter describes concepts and tools of TRIZ that make developing trade-off-free – i.e., breakthrough – designs possible.

Type
Chapter
Information
Innovation on Demand
New Product Development Using TRIZ
, pp. 11 - 46
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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