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Article
Generalized Coupling Management in Complex Engineering Systems Optimization
Journal of Mechanical Design (2011)
  • Sulaiman F. Alyaquot
  • Diane L. Peters, Kettering University
  • Panos Y. Papalambros
  • A. Galip Ulsoy
Abstract
Decomposition-based design optimization strategies are used to solve complex engineering system problems that might be otherwise unsolvable. Yet, the associated computational cost can be prohibitively high due to the often large number of iterations needed for coordination of subproblem solutions. To reduce this cost one may exploit the fact that some systems may be weakly coupled and their interactions can be suspended with little loss in solution accuracy. Suspending such interactions is usually based on the analyst’s experience or experimental observation. This article introduces an explicit measure of coupling strength among interconnected subproblems in a decomposed system optimization problem, along with a systematic way for calculating it. The strength measure is then used to suspend weak couplings and, thus, improve system solution strategies such as the model coordination method. Examples show that the resulting strategy may decrease the number of required function evaluations significantly.
Publication Date
September 9, 2011
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4004541
Publisher Statement
This is a RoMEO green journal - Must link to publisher version with DOI
© 2011 by American Society of Mechanical Engineers
Citation Information
Sulaiman F. Alyaquot, Diane L. Peters, Panos Y. Papalambros and A. Galip Ulsoy. "Generalized Coupling Management in Complex Engineering Systems Optimization" Journal of Mechanical Design Vol. 133 Iss. 9 (2011) p. 091005-1 - 091005-10 ISSN: 1050-0472
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/diane-peters/43/