Are Circular Shaped Masks Adequate in Adaptive Mask Overlay Topology Synthesis Method?

2010 ◽  
Vol 133 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anupam Saxena

Previous versions of the material mask overlay strategy (MMOS) for topology synthesis primarily employ circular masks to simulate voids within the design region. MMOS operates on the photolithographic principle by appropriately positioning and sizing a group of negative masks and thus iteratively improves the material layout to meet the desired objective. The fundamental notion is that a group of circular masks can represent a local void of any shape. The question whether masks of more general shapes (e.g., any two-dimensional closed, nonself intersecting polygon) would offer significant enhancements in efficiently attaining the appropriate topological features in a continuum remains. This paper investigates the performance of two other mask types; elliptical and rectangular masks are compared with that of the circular ones. These are the respective modest representatives of closed curves and their polygonal approximations. First, two mean compliance minimization examples under resource constraints are solved. Thereafter, compliant pliers are synthesized using the three mask types. It is observed that the use of elliptical or rectangular masks do not offer significant advantages over the use of circular ones. On the contrary, the examples suggest that less number of circular masks are adequate to model the topology design procedure more efficiently. Thus, it is postulated that using generic simple closed curves or polygonal masks will not introduce significant benefits over circular ones in the MMOS based topology design algorithms.

Author(s):  
Pranay Sharma ◽  
Anupam Saxena

Previous versions of the Material Mask Overlay Strategy (MMOS) for topology synthesis have primarily employed circular masks to simulate voids within the design region. MMOS operates on the photolithographic principle by appropriately positioning and sizing a group of negative masks to create voids within the design region and thus iteratively improve the material layout to meet the desired objective. The fundamental notion has been that a group of circular masks can represent a local void of any shape. Thus, circular masks, as opposed to those modeled using simple, non-intersecting, closed curves of generic shapes, have been employed. This paper investigates whether employing masks of more general shapes (e.g., any two-dimensional polygon) offers significant enhancements in efficiently attaining the appropriate topological features in a continuum. Here, performance of two other mask shapes, namely, elliptical and rectangular are compared with that of the circular masks. For fair comparison, two mean compliance minimization examples under resource constraints are solved as each design space is known to contain a unique minimum.


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joice Sophia Ponraj ◽  
Muniraj Vignesh Narayanan ◽  
Ranjith Kumar Dharman ◽  
Valanarasu Santiyagu ◽  
Ramalingam Gopal ◽  
...  

: Increasing energy crisis across the globe requires immediate solutions. Two-dimensional (2D) materials are in great significance because of its application in energy storage and conversion devices but the production process significantly impacts the environment thereby posing a severe problem in the field of pollution control. Green synthesis method provides an eminent way of reduction in pollutants. This article reviews the importance of green synthesis in the energy application sector. The focus of 2D materials like graphene, MoS2, VS2 in energy storage and conversion devices are emphasized based on supporting recent reports. The emerging Li-ion batteries are widely reviewed along with their promising alternatives like Zn, Na, Mg batteries and are featured in detail. The impact of green methods in the energy application field are outlined. Moreover, future outlook in the energy sector is envisioned by proposing an increase in 2D elemental materials research.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 205395172110184
Author(s):  
Tommaso Venturini ◽  
Mathieu Jacomy ◽  
Pablo Jensen

It is increasingly common in natural and social sciences to rely on network visualizations to explore relational datasets and illustrate findings. Such practices have been around long enough to prove that scholars find it useful to project networks in a two-dimensional space and to use their visual qualities as proxies for their topological features. Yet these practices remain based on intuition, and the foundations and limits of this type of exploration are still implicit. To fill this lack of formalization, this paper offers explicit documentation for the kind of visual network analysis encouraged by force-directed layouts. Using the example of a network of Jazz performers, band and record labels extracted from Wikipedia, the paper provides guidelines on how to make networks readable and how to interpret their visual features. It discusses how the inherent ambiguity of network visualizations can be exploited for exploratory data analysis. Acknowledging that vagueness is a feature of many relational datasets in the humanities and social sciences, the paper contends that visual ambiguity, if properly interpreted, can be an asset for the analysis. Finally, we propose two attempts to distinguish the ambiguity inherited from the represented phenomenon from the distortions coming from fitting a multidimensional object in a two-dimensional space. We discuss why these attempts are only partially successful, and we propose further steps towards a metric of spatialization quality.


Author(s):  
K. D. Chaney ◽  
J. K. Davidson

Abstract A new method is developed for determining both a satisfactory location of a workpiece and a suitable mounting-angle of the tool for planar RPR robots that can provide dexterous workspace. The method is an analytical representation of the geometry of the robot and the task, and is particularly well suited to applications in which the task requires large rotations of the end-effector. It is determined that, when the task requires that the end-effector rotate a full turn at just two locations and when the first or third joint in the robot is rotatable by one turn, then the radial location of the workpiece is fixed in the workcell but its angular location is not fixed. When the mounting-angle of the tool is also a variable, the method accommodates tasks in which the tool must rotate a full turn at three locations on the workpiece. The results are presented as coordinates of points in a two-dimensional Cartesian reference frame attached to the workcell. Consequently, a technician or an engineer can determine the location for the workpiece by laying out these coordinates directly in the workcell. Example problems illustrate the method. Practical applications include welding and deposition of adhesives.


In a preparatory study of structural relaxations and plastic flow in a two-dimensional idealized atomic glass, the process of melting and quenching through a glass transition has been studied by computer simulation using a molecular dynamics model. In this model, the transition from a solid to a melt was observed to take place when liquid-like structural elements composed of dipoles of five- and seven-sided Voronoi polygons percolate through the two-dimensional structure of distorted hexagons in the form of strings. Such dipoles constitute discrete elements of excess free volume within which liquid like behaviour is established in the sense of reduced cohesion or local elastic moduli. Upon quenching the melt, the percolation condition of liquid-like regions is retained for under-cooled melts between the melting point and a glass transition temperature below which the percolation condition is broken and the thermal expansion is sharply reduced. The simulation that has used empirical pair potentials characteristic of Cu and Zr has substantially underpredicted the melting and glass transition temperatures and overpredicted the thermal expansion of C u x Zr 1-x type glasses. These defects of the model can be partly attributed to the two-dimensional nature of the material, which stores larger concentrations of free volume than a corresponding three-dimensional material. In spite of these quantitative shortcomings, the model gives valuable insight into the topological features of the local atomic configurations at melting and upon vitrification.


2009 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Romeo Brunetti ◽  
Lorenzo Franceschini ◽  
Valter Moretti

2011 ◽  
Vol 77 (783) ◽  
pp. 4015-4023 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eiji KATAMINE ◽  
Hiroki YOSHIOKA ◽  
Kousuke MATSUURA ◽  
Hideyuki AZEGAMI

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