Conceptual design seeks to deliver design concepts that implement
desired functions. Function and behavior are two dominant terms
used in the research of this design phase. However, there are
still some fundamental ambiguities and confusions over their
representation, which have greatly hindered the interchange
of research ideas and the development of design synthesis
strategies. For conceptual design of mechanical products
specifically, this paper attempts to clarify these ambiguities.
It classifies function as purpose function and action function
and relates them to the different levels of design hierarchy
and abstraction. It distinguishes between semantic and syntactic
representations of function and behavior and summarizes basic
representation schemes. It also proposes an input–output
action transformation scheme for semantic function representation
and an input–output flow of action scheme for semantic
behavior representation. Based on these discoveries, a refined
framework is proposed for conceptual mechanical product design,
where a function–decomposition–mapping process is
elaborated to demonstrate the necessities and usefulness of
the presented work.