Chapter 6
Chapter 6
Concept Generation
Introduction
After identifying a set of customer needs and establishing target product specifications, the team faced the following questions: What existing solution concepts, if any, could be successfully adopted for this application? What new concepts might satisfy the established needs and specifications? What methods can be used to facilitate the concept generation process?
Concept Generation
The nailer will be compatible with nail magazines on existing tools. The nailer will nail into wood. The nailer will be hand held.
Functional decomposition
Represent the overall function as a single black box operating on material, energy and signal flows Divide the black box into sub-functions (3-10 sub-functions)
Exhibit 6-4
Functional decomposition
Challenge: to describe the functional elements of the product without implying a specific technological working principle for the product concept. For example, the subfunction isolate nail expressed in such a way that it does not imply any particular physical solution concept, such as indexing the stick of nails into a slot or breaking a nail sideways off the stick.
Functional decomposition
Note that the function diagram is typically non unique. Create several drafts and then work to refine them into a single diagram that the team is comfortable with.
Functional decomposition
If the material, energy, and signal flows are difficult to identify: A simple list of the subfunctions of the product, without connections between them, is often sufficient.
Functional decomposition is most applicable to technical products, but it can also be applied to simple and apparently nontechnical products. For example, an ice cream being separated, formed, transported, and deposited.
This approach is often useful for products with very simple technical functions involving a lot of user interaction.
This approach is often useful for products in which form, and not working principles or technology, is the primary problem. Examples of such products include toothbrushes (assuming the basic brush concept is retained) and storage containers.
Consult Experts
Experts may include professionals at firms manufacturing related products, professional consultants, university faculty, and technical representatives of suppliers. A good habit to develop is to always ask people consulted to suggest others who should be contacted. Best information often comes from pursuing these second generation leads
Search Patents
Patents are a rich and readily available source of technical information containing detailed drawings and explanations of how many products work. Main disadvantage of patent searches is that concepts found in recent patents are protected (generally for 20 years from date of the patent application), so there may be a royalty involved in using them.
Search Patents
Concepts contained in foreign patents without global coverage and in expired patents can be used without payment of royalties.
Mechanical Engineering, Perrys Chemical Engineers Handbook, and Mechanisms and Mechanical Devices Sourcebook
Useful source: Thomas Register of American Manufacturers, a directory of manufacturers of industrial products organized by product type
Exhibit 6-6