Abstract

The paper describes a two-level method for structural optimization for a minimum weight under the local strength and displacement constraints. The method divides the optimization task into separate optimizations of the individual substructures (in the extreme, the individual components) coordinated by the assembled structure optimization. The substructure optimizations use local cross-sections as design variables and satisfy the highly nonlinear local constraints of strength and buckling. The design variables in the assembled structure optimization govern the structure overall shape and handle the displacement constraints. The assembled structure objective function is the objective in each of the above optimizations. The substructure optimizations are linked to the assembled structure optimization by the sensitivity derivatives. The method was derived from a previously reported two-level optimization method for engineering systems, e.g. aerospace vehicles, that comprise interacting modules to be optimized independently, coordination provided by a system-level optimization. This scheme was adapted to structural optimization by treating each substructure as a module in a system, and using the standard finite element analysis as the system analysis. A numerical example, a hub structure framework, is provided to show the new method agreement with a standard, no-decomposition optimization. The new method advantage lies primarily in the autonomy of the individual substructure optimization that enables concurrency of execution to compress the overall task elapsed time. The advantage increases with the magnitude of that task.

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