Anderson Soares da Costa Azevêdo, Hao Li, Naouyuki Ishida, Lucas Oliveira Siqueira, Rômulo Luz Cortez, Emílio Carlos Nelli Silva, Shinji Nishiwaki, Renato Picelli
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Recent advancements in computational tools and additive manufacturing have expanded design possibilities on fluid devices and structures to also include aesthetics. However, traditional discrete density-based topology optimization methods usually use square and cubic regular meshes, resulting in jagged contour patterns that require mesh refinement and post-processing to numerical solution steps of complex physics problems. In this article, we propose a new isosurface boundary capture strategy for topology optimization in structural and fluid flow problems. The capture of smoothed boundaries is done via a simple strategy through element splitting and analysis domain remeshing. The smoothing procedure novelty lies on the optimizer regular mesh decomposition into smaller triangular or tetrahedral elements with a pseudo-density nodal function that produces implicit geometry boundaries. We employ the TOBS-GT (topology optimization of binary structures with geometry trimming) method to solve optimization problems for mean compliance and fluid flow energy dissipation, subject to a volume fraction constraint. Since, we perform discrete body-fitted optimization, the material interpolation models are expressed in linear form without penalty factors. Our method produces a lower computational cost topology evolution with high resolution and mitigated sharp details, achieved via smooth edges and surfaces, as demonstrated through benchmark numerical examples in two- and three-dimensional space. In addition, the proposed strategy facilitates the optimization of benchmark fluid flow examples for moderate Reynolds numbers.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering publishes original papers describing significant, novel developments in numerical methods that are applicable to engineering problems.
The Journal is known for welcoming contributions in a wide range of areas in computational engineering, including computational issues in model reduction, uncertainty quantification, verification and validation, inverse analysis and stochastic methods, optimisation, element technology, solution techniques and parallel computing, damage and fracture, mechanics at micro and nano-scales, low-speed fluid dynamics, fluid-structure interaction, electromagnetics, coupled diffusion phenomena, and error estimation and mesh generation. It is emphasized that this is by no means an exhaustive list, and particularly papers on multi-scale, multi-physics or multi-disciplinary problems, and on new, emerging topics are welcome.