Abstract

Reliability analysis poses a significant challenge for complex structures with stringent reliability requirements. While Sequential Importance Sampling (SIS) and Subset Simulation (SUS) have proven highly effective in addressing high-dimensional problems with small failure probabilities, the computational burden of mechanical simulations remains substantial due to the time-consuming nature of numerical simulation processes. Consequently, this paper introduces a novel approach, denoted as AK-SIS, which combines SIS with Kriging metamodeling specifically designed to address computational challenges associated with small failure probabilities. The fundamental principle of this approach involves utilizing AK-MCS technology (Echard et al., 2011) [1] as a precursor to the SIS approach to initially generate metamodels. These metamodels are then employed in lieu of performance functions in subsequent steps, significantly reducing the number of function calls required to simulate complex engineering problems when applying SIS techniques directly. By inheriting the advantages of SIS, AK-SIS has demonstrated its suitability for reliability analysis in scenarios involving high-dimensional spaces and small fault probabilities. Furthermore, AK-SIS is not limited by the shape of the failure domain, eliminates the need to solve the design point, and is particularly well-suited for analyzing reliability in cases of discontinuous failure domains, multiple failure domains, as well as complex failure domains and rare events. The efficacy of AK-SIS is substantiated through rigorous evaluation encompassing nonlinear, high-dimensional examples, and an engineering application. These empirical validations collectively contribute to a robust methodological framework for reliability analysis of intricate structures characterized by stringent reliability requirements.

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