there are studies in this area, I have worked on supplier evaluation by integrated decision framework. In your case i would recommend you to follow this:
1 - Sohn, S. Y., & Choi, I. S. (2001). Fuzzy QFD for supply chain management with reliability consideration. Reliability Engineering & System Safety, 72(3), 327-334.
2 - Jiao, J. R., Simpson, T. W., & Siddique, Z. (2007). Product family design and platform-based product development: a state-of-the-art review. Journal of intelligent Manufacturing, 18(1), 5-29.
3 - Ayağ, Z., Samanlioglu, F., & Büyüközkan, G. (2013). A fuzzy QFD approach to determine supply chain management strategies in the dairy industry. Journal of Intelligent Manufacturing, 24(6), 1111-1122.
4 - Haq, A. N., & Boddu, V. (2014). Analysis of enablers for the implementation of leagile supply chain management using an integrated fuzzy QFD approach. Journal of Intelligent Manufacturing, 1-12.
Application of QFD in design and supply chain can be very interesting.
Any study that adreesses ecodesign for product development should embed the entire supply chain, so I think you can find these types of studies in the Journal of Cleaner Production. Unfortunately, supply chain integration is usually studied from the point of view of economic competitiveness and risk rather than from the point of view of sustainability. I guess the studies of Dr. Seuring, D. Gunasekaran, and Dr, Govindan would help you.
Claudia's comment is helpful. I recommend looking at the work of Gil Friend, Chairman of Natural Logic, Inc., of Berkeley California. He currently heads sustainability for the City of Palo Alto, California, in the heart of the Silicon Valley. He can be reached at [email protected]. I have been attempting to think how to direct you to elements of my own work, which considers supply chains as networks of commitments (language actions) and watches for waste and confusion in those supply chains. One of the original inspirations for that work was from studying the work of Taiichi Ohno, the inventor of the Toyota Production System.
Dear Pittawat, I would recomend the following articles and books
i) A framework of sustainable supply chain management: moving toward new theory
Craig R. Carter and Dale S. Rogers; University of Nevada, College of Business Administration, Reno, Nevada, USA
http://gbatech.org/scrm_article/001.pdf
ii) Sustainable supply chains: An introduction, Jonathan D. Linton, Robert Klassen and Vaidyanathan Jayaraman; Journal of Operations Management xxx (2007) xxx–xxx
iii) From a literature review to a conceptual framework for sustainable supply chain management; Stefan Seuring and Martin Muller; Journal of Cleaner Production 16 (2008) 1699–1710.