4.7 Article

An improved fully stressed design evolution strategy for layout optimization of truss structures

Journal

COMPUTERS & STRUCTURES
Volume 164, Issue -, Pages 127-144

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compstruc.2015.11.009

Keywords

Covariance matrix self-adaptation; Mixed-variable problem; Structural optimization; Adaptive penalty function; Resizing; Topology optimization

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During the recent decade, truss optimization by meta-heuristics has gradually replaced deterministic and optimality criteria-based methods. While they may provide some advantages regarding their robustness and ability to avoid local minima, the required evaluation budget grows fast when the number of design variables is increased. This practically limits the size of the problems to which they can be applied. Furthermore, many recent stochastic optimization methods handle the size optimization only, the potential saving from which is highly limited, when compared to the most sophisticated, and obviously the most challenging scenario, simultaneous topology, shape and size (TSS) optimization. In a recent study by the authors, a method based on combination of optimality criteria and evolution strategies, called fully stressed design based on evolution strategies (FSD-ES), was proposed for TSS optimization of truss structures. FSD-ES outperformed available truss optimizers in the literature, both in efficiency and robustness. The contribution of this study is twofold. First, an improved version of FSD-ES method, called FSD-ES-II, is proposed. In comparison with the earlier version, it takes the displacement constraints in the resizing step into account and can handle constraints governed by practically used specifications. Update of strategy parameters is also revised following contemporary and new developments in evolution strategies. Second, a test suite involving a number of complicated TSS optimization problems is chosen to overcome usual shortcomings in the available benchmark problems. For each problem, performance of FSD-ES-II is compared with the best results available in the literature, often showing a significant superiority of the proposed approach. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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