Research Article
A human-like numerical technique for design of engineering systems
Article first published online: 11 AUG 2005
DOI: 10.1002/nme.1432
Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Issue
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International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering
Volume 64, Issue 14, pages 1915–1943, 14 December 2005
Additional Information
How to Cite
Lee, C. J. K., Furukawa, T. and Yoshimura, S. (2005), A human-like numerical technique for design of engineering systems. Int. J. Numer. Meth. Engng., 64: 1915–1943. doi: 10.1002/nme.1432
Publication History
- Issue published online: 18 NOV 2005
- Article first published online: 11 AUG 2005
- Manuscript Accepted: 20 APR 2005
- Manuscript Revised: 15 NOV 2004
- Manuscript Received: 30 JUN 2004
- Abstract
- References
- Cited By
Keywords:
- human-like design;
- multi-objective optimization;
- gradient-based search;
- constraint handling;
- centre-of-gravity method
Abstract
Because of the necessity for considering various creative and engineering design criteria, optimal design of an engineering system results in a highly-constrained multi-objective optimization problem. Major numerical approaches to such optimal design are to force the problem into a single objective function by introducing unjustifiable additional parameters and solve it using a single-objective optimization method. Due to its difference from human design in process, the resulting design often becomes completely different from that by a human designer.
This paper presents a novel numerical design approach, which resembles the human design process. Similar to the human design process, the approach consists of two steps: (1) search for the solution space of the highly-constrained multi-objective optimization problem and (2) derivation of a final design solution from the solution space. Multi-objective gradient-based method with Lagrangian multipliers (MOGM-LM) and centre-of-gravity method (CoGM) are further proposed as numerical methods for each step.
The proposed approach was first applied to problems with test functions where the exact solutions are known, and results demonstrate that the proposed approach can find robust solutions, which cannot be found by conventional numerical design approaches. The approach was then applied to two practical design problems. Successful design in both the examples concludes that the proposed approach can be used for various design problems that involve both the creative and engineering design criteria. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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