Integrated Susatinable Life Cycle Design: A Review
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-16-2010
Publication Source
Journal of Mechanical Design
Abstract
Product design is one of the most important sectors influencing global sustainability, as almost all the products consumed by people are outputs of the product development process. In particular, early design decisions can have a very significant impact on sustainability. These decisions not only relate to material and manufacturing choices but have a far-reaching effect on the product’s entire life cycle, including transportation, distribution, and end-of-life logistics. However, key challenges have to be overcome to enable eco-design methods to be applicable in early design stages. Lack of information models, semantic interoperability, methods to influence eco-design thinking in early stages, measurement science and uncertainty models in eco-decisions, and ability to balance business decisions and eco-design methodology are serious impediments to realizing sustainable products and services. Therefore, integrating downstream life cycle data into eco-design tools is essential to achieving true sustainable product development. Our review gives an overview of related research and positions early eco-design tools and decision support as a key strategy for the future. By merging sustainable thinking into traditional design methods, this review provides a framework for ongoing research, as well as encourages research collaborations among the various communities interested in sustainable product realization.
ISBN/ISSN
1050-0472
Copyright
Copyright © 2010, American Society of Mechanical Engineers
Publisher
American Society of Mechanical Engineers
Volume
132
Issue
9
Peer Reviewed
yes
eCommons Citation
Choi, Jun-Ki; Ramani, Karthik; Bernstein, William B.; Ramanujan, Devarajan; Zhao, Fu; Sutherland, John; Handwerker, Carol; Kim, Harrison; and Thurston, Deborah, "Integrated Susatinable Life Cycle Design: A Review" (2010). Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Faculty Publications. 219.
https://ecommons.udayton.edu/mee_fac_pub/219
COinS
Comments
Permission documentation on file.