The Morphological Matrix is a well-known and established method for synthesising concepts in engineering design. With the aim to improve its applicability, the method has been implemented into a software tool, which then has been introduced in engineering courses at Chalmers University of Technology. In this paper, the tool and its most important functions are presented and discussed, along with experiences from its use in design projects. It was demonstrated that the tool can ease the process of creating and modifying morphological matrices. Furthermore, the tool demonstrated the ability to generate and keep track of large quantities of solutions, which has previously been difficult as morphological matrices are typically hand drawn or created using an Excel sheet. However, less desired effects were encountered as the tool was perceived by some students as more of a screening and downselection method, rather than as a tool for synthesising concepts. The learnings and the way forward in education and the industrial context are discussed.
Additive manufacturing has the potential to decrease the climate impact of aviation by providing more light-weight designs. Sustainability is however required to be assessed from a systemic view, including all lifecycle phases, and from a social, ecologic, and economic dimension. This is however challenging in early phase design, where also a large design space need to be explored. A case study is carried out with an aerospace company where two candidate engineering design tools are combined to address this. The integration of these two engineering tools are applied on a Turbine Rear Structure, and shows promising results in enabling a systemic view of sustainability to be integrated and assessed in early phase design space explorations of additive manufactured components. It is recommended that the integration between the two tools is further established and validated.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.