4.7 Article

A comparative study of metamodeling methods for multiobjective crashworthiness optimization

Journal

COMPUTERS & STRUCTURES
Volume 83, Issue 25-26, Pages 2121-2136

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compstruc.2005.02.025

Keywords

metamodeling; crashworthiness; multiobjective optimization; radial basis function; response surface methodology

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The response surface methodology (RSM), which typically uses quadratic polynomials, is predominantly used for metamodeling in crashworthiness optimization because of the high computational cost of vehicle crash simulations. Research shows, however, that RSM may not be suitable for modeling highly nonlinear responses that can often be found in impact related problems, especially when using limited quantity of response samples. The radial basis functions (RBF) have been shown to be promising for highly nonlinear problems, but no application to crashworthiness problems has been found in the literature. In this study, metamodels by RSM and RBF are used for multiobjective optimization of a vehicle body in frontal collision, with validations by finite element simulations using the full-scale vehicle model. The results show that RSM is able to produce good approximation models for energy absorption, and the model appropriateness can be well predicted by ANOVA. However, in the case of peak acceleration, RBF is found to generate better models than RSM based on the same number of response samples, with the multiquadric function identified to be the most stable RBF. Although RBF models are computationally more expensive, the optimization results of RBF models are found to be more accurate. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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