Physics-Informed Tolerance Allocation: A Surrogate-Based Framework for the Control of Geometric Variation on System Performance
In this paper, we present a novel tolerance allocation algorithm for the assessment and control of geometric variation on system performance that is applicable to any system of partial differential equations. In particular, we parameterize the geometric domain of the system in terms of design parame...
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Zusammenfassung: | In this paper, we present a novel tolerance allocation algorithm for the
assessment and control of geometric variation on system performance that is
applicable to any system of partial differential equations. In particular, we
parameterize the geometric domain of the system in terms of design parameters
and subsequently measure the effect of design parameter variation on system
performance. A surrogate model via a tensor representation is constructed to
map the design parameter variation to the system performance. A set of
optimization problems over this surrogate model restricted to nested
hyperrectangles represents the effect of prescribing design tolerances, where
the maximizer of this restricted function depicts the worst-case member, i.e.
the worst-case design. Moreover, the loci of these tolerance hyperrectangles
with maximizers attaining, but not surpassing, the performance constraint
represents the boundary to the feasible region of allocatable tolerances. Every
tolerance in this domain is measured through a user-specified, weighted norm
which is informed by design considerations such as cost and manufacturability.
The boundary of the feasible set is elucidated as an immersed manifold of
codimension one, over which a suite of optimization routines exist and are
employed to efficiently determine an optimal feasible tolerance with respect to
the specified measure. Examples of this algorithm are presented with
applications to a plate with a hole described by two design parameters, a plate
with a hole described by six design parameters, and an L-Bracket described by
seventeen design parameters. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1904.06559 |