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A hole-filling based approach to controlling structural complexity in topology optimization

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 10:52 authored by Yunzhen HeYunzhen He, Zi-Long Zhao, Xiaoshan LinXiaoshan Lin, Yimin XieYimin Xie
Shape and topology optimization problems are usually associated with geometrical restrictions. Effective control of structural complexity during the optimization process is important for various considerations, e.g., functionality, manufacturability, and aesthetics. Most existing approaches characterize structural complexity as the number of cavities. However, for three-dimensional structures, the genus (i.e., the number of tunnels) should also be considered as an additional topological constraint. In this paper, a hole-filling method is integrated into the bi-directional evolutionary structural optimization (BESO) computational framework to control the number and size of existing cavities and tunnels during the form-finding process. In the hole-filling method, excess cavities are filled with solid material and excess tunnels are covered by building sheet-like patches. The minimum size of the truss-like components and the minimum thickness of the sheet-like components can be controlled separately. Several two- and three-dimensional compliance minimization problems are presented to demonstrate the effectiveness and potential applications of the proposed approach. The structural performances of the optimized structures with and without complexity control are compared and analyzed. The results show that the developed methodology can produce structurally efficient designs with controllable topologies. It is also demonstrated that the generation of sheet-like components can considerably increase the stiffness of the optimized structure. The proposed approach is capable of generating diverse and competitive designs for architects and engineers to achieve a fine balance between architectural novelty and structural efficiency.

History

Journal

Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering

Volume

416

Number

116391

Start page

1

End page

37

Total pages

37

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2023 the authors

Former Identifier

2006125950

Esploro creation date

2023-09-28

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