scholarly journals Comparison of Compact Reduced Basis Method with Different Model Order Reduction Techniques

Author(s):  
Damian Szypulski ◽  
Grzegorz Fotyga ◽  
Valentin de la Rubia ◽  
Michal Mrozowski
Author(s):  
Andreas Buhr ◽  
Mario Ohlberger ◽  
Stephan Rave

Localized model order reduction methods have attracted significant attention during the last years. They have favorable parallelization properties and promise to perform well on cloud architectures, which become more and more commonplace. We introduced ArbiLoMod, a localized reduced basis method targeted at the important use case of changing problem definition, wherein the changes are of local nature. This is a common situation in simulation software used by engineers optimizing a CAD model. An especially interesting application is the simulation of electromagnetic fields in printed circuit boards, which is necessary to design high frequency electronics. The simulation of the electromagnetic fields can be done by solving the time-harmonic Maxwell’s equations, which results in a parameterized, inf-sup stable problem which has to be solved for many parameters. In this multi-query setting, the reduced basis method can perform well. Experiments have shown two dimensional time-harmonic Maxwell’s to be amenable to localized model reduction. However, Galerkin projection of an inf-sup stable problem is not guaranteed to be stable. Existing stabilization methods for the reduced basis method involve global computations and are thus not applicable in a localized setting. Replacing the Galerkin projection with the minimization of a localized a posteriori error estimator provides a stable reduction for inf-sup stable projects which retains all the advantageous properties of localized model order reduction. It allows for an offline-online decomposition and requires no global computations in the unreduced space.


2015 ◽  
Vol 651-653 ◽  
pp. 1285-1293 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Aziz Nasri ◽  
Jose Vicente Aguado ◽  
Amine Ammar ◽  
Elias Cueto ◽  
Francisco Chinesta ◽  
...  

Forming processes usually involve irreversible plastic transformations. The calculation in that case becomes cumbersome when large parts and processes are considered. Recently Model Order Reduction techniques opened new perspectives for an accurate and fast simulation of mechanical systems, however nonlinear history-dependent behaviors remain still today challenging scenarios for the application of these techniques. In this work we are proposing a quite simple non intrusive strategy able to address such behaviors by coupling a separated representation with a POD-based reduced basis within an incremental elastoplastic formulation.


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