In an early design phase for vehicle crashworthiness, the use of classical optimization is limited. One reason for this is that
development of structural components is distributed over different departments. Additionally, crash performance depends
on several components and their interaction. Common components in vehicle architectures are subject to various load
cases in multiple vehicles. Thus, the entire vehicle architecture has to be considered during optimization. In order to
enable distributed development the system needs to be decoupled, which means that a variation in one component does not
require modifications of other components in order to reach the global structural performance goal.
The objective of this paper is to introduce a method to define the component-wise force-deformation requirements of
vehicle architectures for front crash structure design. The force-deformation properties of the components are subject to
constraints, from which an analytical description of the design space of the vehicle architecture is derived. The optimal
orthogonal solution space within this design space is identified via optimization process. This results in maximal intervals
for variations of the component forces over their deformations under the given boundary conditions. The validity of the
solution space is proven through explicit FE simulation.
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In an early design phase for vehicle crashworthiness, the use of classical optimization is limited. One reason for this is that
development of structural components is distributed over different departments. Additionally, crash performance depends
on several components and their interaction. Common components in vehicle architectures are subject to various load
cases in multiple vehicles. Thus, the entire vehicle architecture has to be considered during optimization. In order to
enable distr...
»