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SyDeR—System design for reusability

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 September 1998

FRANK FELDKAMP
Affiliation:
Daimler-Benz AG, Research and Technology, IT for Engineering Lab., Alt-Moabit 96a, D-10559 Berlin, Germany
MICHAEL HEINRICH
Affiliation:
Daimler-Benz AG, Research and Technology, IT for Engineering Lab., Alt-Moabit 96a, D-10559 Berlin, Germany
KLAUS DIETER MEYER-GRAMANN
Affiliation:
Daimler-Benz AG, Research and Technology, IT for Engineering Lab., Alt-Moabit 96a, D-10559 Berlin, Germany

Abstract

A fixed set of components with a fixed set of properties is often regarded as a defining characteristic of configuration design problems. In configuration design for larger and more complex systems (e.g., street cars), however, this often is not really true. The reason is that sometimes the component library offers no component that meets the actual requirements, so that a new component has to be added to the library. In general, configuration design for larger products must be interactive: interactive in the sense that the user controls the configuration process and in the sense that the phases of knowledge acquisition and configuration are partly mixed. This paper describes a method and a corresponding software tool (SyDeR, System Design for Reusability) that support the interactive configuration design of complex products, especially in the tendering phase. It combines three different technologies:

[bull ] structural modeling of technical systems;

[bull ] a library for technical solutions, which is based upon taxonomies and allows the reuse of the technical solutions;

[bull ] constraint techniques to propagate design decisions and check designs for consistency to support interactive configuration design.

This paper gives an overview of the functionality of the SyDeR tool and describes the main ideas behind the modeling language, which is especially oriented towards the requirements of system design problems. It also explains how we integrated structural modeling, taxonomies, and advanced constraint reasoning techniques into real-world applications.

Type
ARTICLES
Copyright
© 1998 Cambridge University Press

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