4.3 Article

Crashworthiness design of 3D lattice-structure filled thin-walled tubes based on data mining

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CRASHWORTHINESS
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 435-448

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13588265.2022.2101306

Keywords

Lattice structure; filled thin-wall tube; 3-D parametric design; data mining; decision tree

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A new type of lattice-structure filled thin-walled tube (LFT) was proposed in this study, which was optimized and designed using a data mining method. The results showed that the LFT can greatly improve the energy absorption capacity, and the design rules for high energy absorption efficiency, high total energy absorption, and lightweight were obtained.
Lattice structures and thin-walled tubes are two types of energy-absorbers widely studied and applied in engineering practice. In this study, a new type of lattice-structure filled thin-walled tube (LFT) was proposed by combining these two energy absorbers and designed via a new explainable data mining method. In this new type of LFT, a BCC-Z (Body- centred cubic unit cell with vertical struts) lattice structure was filled into a square thin-walled tube. Then, the new LFT was parameterized by five design variables, that is, the number of layers in the longitudinal direction (n), number of cells in the transverse direction (m), rod diameter (d), tube thickness (t) and height difference between tube and lattice structures (h). Using Latin hypercubic sampling algorithm, 150 design cases were generated. Numerical models were then developed to simulate their crush behavior, and the simulation dataset was used for data mining. The results showed that (1) Filling the BBC-Z lattice structure into a thin-walled tube can significantly improve the energy absorption (EA) capacity of the structure. (2) SEA (Specific Energy Absorption) of LFT significantly increased by increasing the rod diameter d, number of cells in the transverse direction m and number of layers in longitudinal direction n. (3) The decision trees generated in the data mining process indicated that the rod diameter d of the lattice structure is the key design variable that has most significant impact on EA, followed by m and n. (4) The design rules to build LFTs with high EA efficiency (SEA >= 16 kJ/kg and CFE (Crush Force Efficiency)>= 45%), high total EA (SEA >= 16 kJ/kg and EA >= 6 kJ) and lightweight (SEA >= 16 kJ/kg and Mass <= 0.45 kg) were obtained from decision trees. The ideal configurations of LFT corresponding to these three objectives are: d > 2 mm, n > 2 and m > 3 for high EA efficiency; d > 2 mm, n > 2 and m > 3 for high total EA; and d > 2 mm, n > 2, m <= 4 and t <= 1.7 mm for lightweight.

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