DocumentCode
2589565
Title
Dematerialisation-some implications on product design
Author
Persson, Jan-Gunnar
Author_Institution
Dept. of Machine Design, R. Inst. of Technol., Stockholm, Sweden
fYear
1999
fDate
1-3 Feb 1999
Firstpage
61
Lastpage
66
Abstract
A sustainable society must meet the requirements for improved wealth as well as for closed material loops and minimised environmental impact. In new product development, functional requirements, economy and environmental considerations have to be balanced. Environmental adaptation means also a longer time scale, the entire product life cycle must be considered during design. Dematerialisation means that virtually all environmental impact could be considered dependent on direct and indirect mass flows. The total flow of materials in the eco-cycle must then be reduced, in relation to the service produced. Radical changes, often expressed by the “factor 10” will be required. This is the real challenge in engineering. In this paper, environmental and utility indicators that could be used by designers are discussed. It is shown, that the dematerialisation concept has much in common with life cycle sssessment (LCA)
Keywords
design for environment; power consumption; product development; recycling; closed material loops; dematerialisation; direct mass flows; eco-cycle; economy; energy consumption; energy use; environmental adaptation; environmental considerations; environmental indicators; functional requirements; improved wealth; indirect mass flows; life cycle sssessment; materials recycling; minimised environmental impact; new product development; product design; product life cycle; sustainable society; utility indicators; Consumer behavior; Design engineering; Energy consumption; Environmental factors; Logistics; Mass production; Product design; Product development; Recycling; Resource management;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Environmentally Conscious Design and Inverse Manufacturing, 1999. Proceedings. EcoDesign '99: First International Symposium On
Conference_Location
Tokyo
Print_ISBN
0-7695-0007-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ECODIM.1999.747582
Filename
747582
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