Abstract :
The natural world provides numerous cases for inspiration in engineering design. Biological organisms, phenomena, and
strategies, which we refer to as biological systems, provide a rich set of analogies. These systems provide insight into sustainable
and adaptable design and offer engineers billions of years of valuable experience, which can be used to inspire
engineering innovation. This research presents a general method for functionally representing biological systems through
systematic design techniques, leading to the conceptualization of biologically inspired engineering designs. Functional representation
and abstraction techniques are used to translate biological systems into an engineering context. The goal is to
make the biological information accessible to engineering designers who possess varying levels of biological knowledge
but have a common understanding of engineering design. Creative or novel engineering designs may then be discovered
through connections made between biology and engineering. To assist with making connections between the two domains
concept generation techniques that use biological information, engineering knowledge, and automatic concept generation
software are employed. Two concept generation approaches are presented that use a biological model to discover corresponding
engineering components that mimic the biological system and use a repository of engineering and biological information
to discover which biological components inspire functional solutions to fulfill engineering requirements. Discussion
includes general guidelines for modeling biological systems at varying levels of fidelity, advantages, limitations, and
applications of this research. The modeling methodology and the first approach for concept generation are illustrated by a
continuous example of lichen.
Keywords :
Biologically Inspired , Concept Generation , Engineering design , Function-Based Design