The Rearrangement Algorithm of Puccetti and Rüschendorf: Proving the Convergence

Author(s):  
Marcello Galeotti ◽  
Giovanni Rabitti ◽  
Emanuele Vannucci
1993 ◽  
Vol 115 (3) ◽  
pp. 312-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tien-Sheng Chang ◽  
E. B. Magrab

A methodology to attain the highest fundamental natural frequency of a printed wiring board by rearranging its components has been developed. A general two-dimensional rearrangement algorithm is developed by which the rearrangement of the component-lead-board (CLB) assemblies is performed automatically for any combination of equal size, unequal size, movable and immovable CLBs. This algorithm is also capable of incorporating two design restrictions: fixed (immovable) components and prohibited (non-swappable) areas. A highly computationally efficient objective function for the evaluation of the automatic rearrangement process is introduced, which is a linear function of the size of the individual CLBs that have been selected for each interchange. The simulated annealing method is adapted to solve the combinatorial rearrangement of the CLBs. Using 61 combinations of boundary conditions, equal and unequal sized CLBs, movable and immovable CLBs, various CLB groupings and sets of material properties, it is found that, when compared to the exact solution obtained by an exhaustive search method, the simulated annealing method obtained the highest fundamental natural frequency within 1 percent for 87 percent of the cases considered, within 0.5 percent for 72 percent of the cases and the true maximum in 43 percent of them. To further increase the fundamental natural frequency the introduction of a single interior point support is analyzed. Depending on the boundary conditions an additional increase in the maximum fundamental natural frequency of 44 to 198 percent can be obtained.


2013 ◽  
Vol 756-759 ◽  
pp. 533-541
Author(s):  
Zhi Jian Tian ◽  
Fa Yong Zhao

To cope with increasingly rigorous challenges that large scale digital integrated circuit testing is confronted with, a comprehensive compression scheme consisting of test-bit rearrangement algorithm, run-length assignment strategy and symmetrical code is proposed. The presented test-bit rearrangement algorithm can fasten dont-care bits, 0s or 1s in every test pattern on one of its end to the greatest extent so as to lengthen end-run blocks and decrease number of short run-lengths. A dynamical dont-care assignment strategy based on run-lengths can be used to specify the remaining dont-care bits after the test-bit rearrangement, which can decrease run-length splitting and maximize length of run-lengths. The symmetrical code benefits from long run-lengths and only uses 2 4-bit short code words to identify end-run blocks almost as long as a test pattern, and hence the utilization ratio of code words can be heightened. The presented experiment results show that the proposed comprehensive scheme can obtain very higher data compression ratios than other compression ones published up to now, especially for large scale digital integrated circuits, and considerably decrease test power dissipations.


2019 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
pp. 40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chiu-Yen Kao ◽  
Braxton Osting

The spectrum of a Schrödinger operator with periodic potential generally consists of bands and gaps. In this paper, for fixed m, we consider the problem of maximizing the gap-to-midgap ratio for the mth spectral gap over the class of potentials which have fixed periodicity and are pointwise bounded above and below. We prove that the potential maximizing the mth gap-to-midgap ratio exists. In one dimension, we prove that the optimal potential attains the pointwise bounds almost everywhere in the domain and is a step-function attaining the imposed minimum and maximum values on exactly m intervals. Optimal potentials are computed numerically using a rearrangement algorithm and are observed to be periodic. In two dimensions, we develop an efficient rearrangement method for this problem based on a semi-definite formulation and apply it to study properties of extremal potentials. We show that, provided a geometric assumption about the maximizer holds, a lattice of disks maximizes the first gap-to-midgap ratio in the infinite contrast limit. Using an explicit parametrization of two-dimensional Bravais lattices, we also consider how the optimal value varies over all equal-volume lattices.


2017 ◽  
Vol 261 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 107-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carole Bernard ◽  
Oleg Bondarenko ◽  
Steven Vanduffel

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