Abstract

AbstractThe Inertia Relief (IR) technique is widely used by industry and produces equilibrated loads allowing to analyze unconstrained systems without resorting to the more expensive full dynamic analysis. The main goal of this work is to develop a computational framework for the solution of unconstrained parametric structural problems with IR and the Proper Generalized Decomposition (PGD) method. First, the IR method is formulated in a parametric setting for both material and geometric parameters. A reduced order model using the encapsulated PGD suite is then developed to solve the parametric IR problem, circumventing the so‐called curse of dimensionality. With just one offline computation, the proposed PGD‐IR scheme provides a computational vademecum that contains all the possible solutions for a predefined range of the parameters. The proposed approach is nonintrusive and it is therefore possible to be integrated with commercial finite element (FE) packages. The applicability and potential of the developed technique is shown using a three‐dimensional test case and a more complex industrial test case. The first example is used to highlight the numerical properties of the scheme, whereas the second example demonstrates the potential in a more complex setting and it shows the possibility to integrate the proposed framework within a commercial FE package. In addition, the last example shows the possibility to use the generalized solution in a multi‐objective optimization setting.

Highlights

  • Unconstrained structures are widespread in the automotive, aerospace and naval industry

  • A nonintrusive algebraic proper generalized decomposition (PGD) approach combined with the inertia relief (IR) method for the solution of unconstrained problems being characterized by material and geometric parameters has been presented

  • The developed solver makes use of the Encapsulated PGD Toolbox developed by Díez et al.,[43] which enables to perform algebraic operations for multidimensional data and allows to solve sequentially the three parametric problems required by the IR method

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Unconstrained structures are widespread in the automotive, aerospace and naval industry. Well-known computational approaches based on this idea are Krylov-based methods,[11] the reduced basis method ,12 and the proper orthogonal decomposition.[13,14,15] These techniques, known as a posteriori methods, first solve the full-order problem for a suitably chosen set of parameters, providing a set of snapshots of the solution. This step, usually referred to as the offline stage, is used to extract the most relevant characteristics of the solution.

Problem statement
Spatial discretization
THE INERTIA RELIEF METHOD
Problem definition
Cascade application of the encapsulated PGD approach
NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
Parametric IR with material and geometric parameters
Industrial application: dummy car test
CONCLUSIONS
Methods
Findings
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.