scholarly journals Practical Determination of an Effective Reduced Order in a Model Order Reduction of Dynamic FEM via Krylov Subspace

Author(s):  
Mitsuteru ASAI ◽  
Norliyati MOHD AMIN ◽  
Yoshimi SONODA
Author(s):  
David Binion ◽  
Xiaolin Chen

Modeling and simulation of Micro Electro Mechanical Systems has become increasingly important as the complexity of MEMS devices increases. In particular, thermal effects on MEMS devices has become a growing topic of interest. Through the FEA, detailed solutions can be obtained to investigate the multiphysics coupling and the transient behavior of a MEMS device at the component level. For system-level integration and simulation, the FEA discretization often results in large full-scale models, which can be computationally demanding or even prohibitive to solve. Model order reduction (MOR) was investigated in this study to reduce problem size for complex dynamic system modeling. The Arnoldi method was implemented for MOR to improve the computational efficiency while preserving the input-output behavior of coupled MEMS simulation. Using this method, a low dimensional Krylov subspace was extracted from the full-scale system model. Reduced order solution of the transient temperature distributions was then determined by projecting the system onto the extracted Krylov subspace and solving the reduced system. An electro thermal MEMS actuator was studied for various inputs. To compare results, the full-scale analyses were performed using the commercial FEA program ANSYS. It was found that the computational time of MOR was only a fraction of the full-scale solution time, with the relative errors ranging from 1.1% to 4.5% at different positions on the actuator. Our results show that the reduced order modeling via Alnoldi can significantly decrease the transient analysis solution time without much loss in accuracy for coupled-field MEMS simulation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 94
Author(s):  
Shazzad Hasan ◽  
M. Monir Uddin

This paper studies the structure preserving (second-order to second-order) model order reduction of second-order systems applying the projection onto the dominant eigenspace of the Gramians of the systems. The projectors which create the reduced order model are generated cheaply from the low-rank Gramian factors. The low-rank Gramian factors are computed efficiently by solving the corresponding Lyapunov equations of the system using the rational Krylov subspace method. The efficiency of the theoretical results are then illustrated by numerical experiments.


2012 ◽  
Vol 503 ◽  
pp. 260-265
Author(s):  
Le Guan ◽  
Jia Li Gao ◽  
Zhi Wen Wang ◽  
Guo Qing Zhang ◽  
Jin Kui Chu

A refined approach producing MEMS numerical macromodels is proposed in this paper by generating the iterative Krylov subspace using a refined Arnoldi algorithm, which can reduce the degrees of freedom of the original system equations described by the state space method. Projection of the original system matrix onto the Krylov subspace which is spanned by a refined Arnoldi algorithm is still based on the transfer function moment matching principle. The idea of the iterative version is to expect that a new initial vector will contain more and more information on the required eigenvectors that is called refined vector. The refined approach improves approximation accuracy of the system matrix eigenvalues equivalent to a more accurate approximation to the poles of the system transfer function, obtaining a more accurate reduced-order model. The clamped beam model and the FOM model are reduced order by classical Arnoldi and refined Arnoldi algorithm in numerical experiments. From the computing result it is concluded that the refined Arnoldi algorithm based Krylov subspace technique for MEMS model order reduction has more accuracy and reaches lower order number of reduced order model than the classical Arnoldi process.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Othman M. K. Alsmadi ◽  
Zaer S. Abo-Hammour

A robust computational technique for model order reduction (MOR) of multi-time-scale discrete systems (single input single output (SISO) and multi-input multioutput (MIMO)) is presented in this paper. This work is motivated by the singular perturbation of multi-time-scale systems where some specific dynamics may not have significant influence on the overall system behavior. The new approach is proposed using genetic algorithms (GA) with the advantage of obtaining a reduced order model, maintaining the exact dominant dynamics in the reduced order, and minimizing the steady state error. The reduction process is performed by obtaining an upper triangular transformed matrix of the system state matrix defined in state space representation along with the elements ofB,C, andDmatrices. The GA computational procedure is based on maximizing the fitness function corresponding to the response deviation between the full and reduced order models. The proposed computational intelligence MOR method is compared to recently published work on MOR techniques where simulation results show the potential and advantages of the new approach.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Avadh Pati ◽  
Awadhesh Kumar ◽  
Dinesh Chandra

A Padé approximation based technique for designing a suboptimal controller is presented. The technique uses matching of both time moments and Markov parameters for model order reduction. In this method, the suboptimal controller is first derived for reduced order model and then implemented for higher order plant by partial feedback of measurable states.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikolaos Tsokanas ◽  
Thomas Simpson ◽  
Roland Pastorino ◽  
Eleni Chatzi ◽  
Bozidar Stojadinovic

Hybrid simulation is a method used to investigate the dynamic response of a system subjected to a realistic loading scenario by combining numerical and physical substructures. To ensure high fidelity of the simulation results, it is often necessary to conduct hybrid simulation in real-time. One of the challenges arising in real-time hybrid simulation originates from high-dimensional nonlinear numerical substructures and, in particular, from the computational cost linked to the computation of their dynamic responses with sufficient accuracy. It is often the case that the simulation time-step must be decreased to capture the dynamic behavior of numerical substructures, thus resulting in longer computation. When such computation takes longer than the actual simulation time, time delays are introduced and the simulation timescale becomes distorted. In such a case, the only viable solution for doing hybrid simulation in real-time is to reduce the order of such complex numerical substructures.In this study, a model order reduction framework is proposed for real-time hybrid simulation, based on polynomial chaos expansion and feedforward neural networks. A parametric case study encompassing a virtual hybrid model is used to validate the framework. Selected numerical substructures are substituted with their respective reduced-order models. To determine the robustness of the framework, parameter sets are defined to cover the design space of interest. A comparison between the full- and reduced-order hybrid model response is delivered. The attained results demonstrate the performance of the proposed framework.


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