Abstract :
This paper presents the use of first-order logic to improve upon currently employed engineering design knowledge management
techniques. Specifically, this work uses description logic in unison with Horn logic, to not only guide the knowledge
acquisition process but also to offer much needed support in decision making during the engineering design process in
a distributed environment. The knowledge management methods introduced are highlighted by the ability to identify modeling
knowledge inconsistencies through the recognition of model characteristic limitations, such as those imposed by
model idealizations. The adopted implementation languages include the Semantic Web Rule Language, which enables
Horn-like rules to be applied to an ontological knowledge base and the Semantic Web’s native Web Ontology Language.
As part of this work, an ontological tool, OPTEAM, was developed to capture key aspects of the design process through a
set of design-related ontologies and to serve as an application platform for facilitating the engineering design process. The
design, analysis, and optimization of a classical I-beam problem are presented as a test-bed case study to illustrate the capabilities
of these ontologies in OPTEAM. A second, more extensive test-bed example based on an industry-supplied medical
device design problem is also introduced. Results indicate that well-defined, networked relationships within an ontological
knowledge base can ultimately lead to a refined design process, with guidance provided by the identification of
infeasible solutions and the introduction of “best-case” alternatives. These case studies also show how the application of
first-order logic to engineering design improves the knowledge acquisition, knowledge management, and knowledge
validation processes.
Keywords :
Engineering design , First-Order Logic , Knowledge Management , Web Rule Language , Ontology; Semantic