Title :
A concurrent optimization methodology for concurrent engineering
Author :
Hatch, Melanie ; Badinelli, Ralph D.
Author_Institution :
Miami Univ., Oxford, OH, USA
fDate :
2/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The authors describe a methodology for making the decisions associated with the concurrent engineering of a product and its downstream held support. They adopt, for the overall metrics for evaluating these decisions, long-run system availability and life-cycle cost. The decisions that constitute the concurrent engineering effort can be categorized into three phases: designing the product; designing the manufacturing and logistics systems; and setting operations-control policies for parts production and field support. As an enhancement to well-established methods of coordinating decision makers in concurrent engineering and sharing data across different phases of design and deployment, they have developed a methodology that simultaneously makes the decisions that constitute these phases. This methodology is based on a dynamic programming model of these decisions which is robust and efficient when compared to manual methods of coordinating the concurrent engineering effort. They recommend its use as a decision support mechanism, not as a substitute for interaction among design-team members
Keywords :
concurrent engineering; decision support systems; dynamic programming; life cycle costing; research and development management; concurrent engineering; concurrent optimization methodology; decision making methodology; decision support mechanism; dynamic programming model; life-cycle cost; logistics system design; long-run system availability; manufacturing system design; Concurrent engineering; Costs; Decision support systems; Dynamic programming; Logistics; Manufacturing; Optimization methods; Process design; Product design; Robustness;
Journal_Title :
Engineering Management, IEEE Transactions on