In engineering, it is often desirable to find a subset
of the set of feasible designs, a solution space, rather than
a single solution. A feasible design is defined as a design
which does not violate any constraints and has a performance
value below a desired threshold. Performance measure,
threshold value and constraints depend on the specific
problem. For evaluation of a design with respect to feasibility,
a model is required which maps the design parameters
from the input space onto the performance measures in
the output space. In state-of-the-art methodology, iterative
sampling is used to generate an estimate of the frontier
between feasible and infeasible regions in the input space.
By evaluating each sample point with respect to feasibility,
areas which contain a large fraction of feasible designs are
identified and subsequently resampled. The largest hypercube
containing only feasible designs is sought, because
this results in independent intervals for each design parameter.
Estimating this hypercube with sufficient precision may
require a large number of model evaluations, depending
on the dimensionality of the input space. In this paper, a novel approach is proposed for modeling the inequality constraints
and an objective function in a way for which a linear
formulation can be used, independently of the dimensionality
of the problem. Thereby the exact solution for the largest
feasible hypercube can be calculated at much lower cost
than with stochastic sampling as described above, as the
problem is reduced to solving a linear system of equations.
The method is applied to structural design with respect to
the US-NCAP frontal impact. The obtained solution is compared
to numerical solutions of an identical system, which
are computed using reduced order models and stochastic
methods. By this example, the high potential of the new
direct method for solution space computation is shown.
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In engineering, it is often desirable to find a subset
of the set of feasible designs, a solution space, rather than
a single solution. A feasible design is defined as a design
which does not violate any constraints and has a performance
value below a desired threshold. Performance measure,
threshold value and constraints depend on the specific
problem. For evaluation of a design with respect to feasibility,
a model is required which maps the design parameters
from the input space onto t...
»