No. |
Title |
Explanation |
| |
Moving objects |
Objects which can easily change position in
space, either on their own, or as a result of external forces. Vehicles and objects
designed to be portable are the basic members of this class. |
| |
Stationary objects. |
Objects which do not change position in
space, either on their own, or as a result of external forces. Consider the conditions
under which the object is being used. |
| |
| 1 |
Weight of moving object |
The mass of the object, in a gravitational
field. The force that the body exerts on its support or suspension. |
| 2 |
Weight of stationary object |
The mass of the object, in a gravitational
field. The force that the body exerts on its support or suspension, or on the surface on
which it rests. |
| 3 |
Length of moving object |
Any one linear dimension, not necessarily the
longest, is considered a length. |
| 4 |
Length of stationary object |
Same. |
| 5 |
Area of moving object |
A geometrical characteristic described by the
part of a plane enclosed by a line. The part of a surface occupied by the object. OR the
square measure of the surface, either internal or external, of an object. |
| 6 |
Area of stationary object |
Same |
| 7 |
Volume of moving object |
The cubic measure of space occupied by the
object. Length x width x height for a rectangular object, height x area for a cylinder,
etc. |
| 8 |
Volume of stationary object |
Same |
| 9 |
Speed |
The velocity of an object; the rate of a
process or action in time. |
| 10 |
Force |
Force measures the interaction between
systems. In Newtonian physics, force = mass X acceleration. In TRIZ, force is any
interaction that is intended to change an object's condition. |
| 11 |
Stress or pressure |
Force per unit area. Also, tension. |
| 12 |
Shape |
The external contours, appearance of a
system. |
| 13 |
Stability of the object's composition |
The wholeness or integrity of the system; the
relationship of the system's constituent elements. Wear, chemical decomposition, and
disassembly are all decreases in stability. Increasing entropy is decreasing stability. |
| 14 |
Strength |
The extent to which the object is able to
resist changing in response to force. Resistance to breaking . |
| 15 |
Duration of action by a moving object |
The time that the object can perform the
action. Service life. Mean time between failure is a measure of the duration of action.
Also, durability. |
| 16 |
Duration of action by a stationary object |
Same. |
| 17 |
Temperature |
The thermal condition of the object or
system. Loosely includes other thermal parameters, such as heat capacity, that affect the
rate of change of temperature. |
| 18 |
Illumination intensity * (jargon) |
Light flux per unit area, also any other
illumination characteristics of the system such as brightness, light quality, etc.. |
| 19 |
Use of energy by moving object |
The measure of the object's capacity for
doing work. In classical mechanics, Energy is the product of force times distance. This
includes the use of energy provided by the super-system (such as electrical energy or
heat.) Energy required to do a particular job. |
| 20 |
Use of energy by stationary object |
same |
| 21 |
Power * (jargon) |
The time rate at which work is performed. The
rate of use of energy. |
| 22 |
Loss of Energy |
Use of energy that does not contribute to the
job being done. See 19. Reducing the loss of energy sometimes requires different
techniques from improving the use of energy, which is why this is a separate category. |
| 23 |
Loss of substance |
Partial or complete, permanent or temporary,
loss of some of a system's materials, substances, parts, or subsystems. |
| 24 |
Loss of Information |
Partial or complete, permanent or temporary,
loss of data or access to data in or by a system. Frequently includes sensory data such as
aroma, texture, etc. |
| 25 |
Loss of Time |
Time is the duration of an activity.
Improving the loss of time means reducing the time taken for the activity. "Cycle
time reduction" is a common term. |
| 26 |
Quantity of substance/the matter |
The number or amount of a system's materials,
substances, parts or subsystems which might be changed fully or partially, permanently or
temporarily. |
| 27 |
Reliability |
A system's ability to perform its intended
functions in predictable ways and conditions. |
| 28 |
Measurement accuracy |
The closeness of the measured value to the
actual value of a property of a system. Reducing the error in a measurement increases the
accuracy of the measurement. |
| 29 |
Manufacturing precision |
The extent to which the actual
characteristics of the system or object match the specified or required characteristics. |
| 30 |
External harm affects the object |
Susceptibility of a system to externally
generated (harmful) effects. |
| 31 |
Object-generated harmful factors |
A harmful effect is one that reduces the
efficiency or quality of the functioning of the object or system. These harmful effects
are generated by the object or system, as part of its operation. |
| 32 |
Ease of manufacture |
The degree of facility, comfort or
effortlessness in manufacturing or fabricating the object/system. |
| 33 |
Ease of operation |
Simplicity: The process is NOT easy if it
requires a large number of people, large number of steps in the operation, needs special
tools, etc. "Hard" processes have low yield and "easy" process have
high yield; they are easy to do right. |
| 34 |
Ease of repair |
Quality characteristics such as convenience,
comfort, simplicity, and time to repair faults, failures, or defects in a system. |
| 35 |
Adaptability or versatility |
The extent to which a system/object
positively responds to external changes. Also, a system that can be used in multiple ways
for under a variety of circumstances. |
| 36 |
Device complexity |
The number and diversity of elements and
element interrelationships within a system. The user may be an element of the system that
increases the complexity. The difficulty of mastering the system is a measure of its
complexity. |
| 37 |
Difficulty of detecting and measuring |
Measuring or monitoring systems that are
complex, costly, require much time and labor to set up and use, or that have complex
relationships between components or components that interfere with each other all
demonstrate "difficulty of detecting and measuring." Increasing cost of
measuring to a saticfactory error is also a sign of increased difficulty of measuring. |
| 38 |
Extent of automation |
The extent to which a system or object
performs its functions without human interface. The lowest level of automation is the use
of a manually operated tool. For intermediatel levels, humans program the tool, observe
its operation, and interrupt or re-program as needed. For the highest level, the machine
senses the operation needed, programs itself, and monitors its own operations. |
| 39 |
Productivity * |
The number of functions or operations
performed by a system per unit time. The time for a unit function or operation. The output
per unit time, or the cost per unit output. |