Abstract

The present work reports an investigation on the use of adaptive metamodels based on radial basis functions (RBFs) for aeroacoustic applications of highly innovative configurations. The relevance of the topic lies on the paramount importance of metamodelling techniques within the design optimisation process of disruptive aircraft layouts. Indeed, the air traffic growth, consequently the hard environmental constraints imposed by regulations, will make a technological breakthrough, an imperative need within few years. As a consequence, the engineering community is paying particular attention to the development of innovative techniques for the design of unconventional configurations. For this class of applications, the designer cannot successfully rely on historical data or low-fidelity models, and the expensive direct simulations remain the only valuable design strategy. In this regard, it can be demonstrated that the use of surrogate models, i.e., metamodels, significantly reduces the computing costs, especially in view of a robust approach to the optimised design. In order to further improve the efficiency of metamodel-based techniques, dynamic approaches based on hyperparameter optimisation and adaptive sampling procedures have been recently developed. The case study presented here pertains the exploiting of dynamic RBF-based metamodels for noise shielding applications. The analysis of the metamodel performances and its convergence properties shows how the final number of direct simulations is significantly reduced by the hyperparameter optimisation algorithm, still strongly depending on the choice of the RBF kernel function.

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