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Technical Paper

Multi-Joint Topology Optimization: A Method for Considering Joining in Multi-Material Design

2021-04-06
2021-01-0812
Automakers are under constant pressure to improve fuel economy and vehicle range to achieve a competitive advantage within the industry and meet government regulations. Reducing the overall weight of a vehicle contributes significantly to achieving this goal. Topology optimization (TO) has been identified within industry as a leading method to reduce weight on both a component and assembly level. With this tool, components can be redesigned to maintain structural performance requirements while also providing significant weight savings. On an assembly level, TO can be used to determine optimal loadpaths within large structures such as frames or bodies. These loadpaths can be interpreted to determine the locations of different components within the structure. To support the development of lightweight vehicle design, this paper presents a revised methodology and application of multi-joint topology optimization (MJTO).
Journal Article

Automotive Hood Panel Design Utilizing Anisotropic Multi-Material Topology Optimization

2021-04-06
2021-01-0361
Topology optimization (TO) represents an invaluable instrument for the structural design of components, with extensive use in numerous industries including automotive and aerospace. TO allows designers to generate lightweight, non-intuitive solutions that often improve overall system performance. Utilization of multiple materials within TO expands its range of applications, granting additional freedom and structural performance to designers. Often, use of multiple materials in TO results in material placement that may not have been previously identified as optimal, providing designers with the ability to produce novel high performance systems. As numerous modern engineering materials possess anisotropic properties, a logical extension of multi-material TO is to include provisions for anisotropic materials. Herein lies the focus of this work.
Technical Paper

Multi-Material Topology Optimization: A Practical Method for Efficient Material Selection and Design

2019-04-02
2019-01-0809
As conventional vehicle design is adjusted to suit the needs of all-electric, hybrid, and fuel-cell powered vehicles, designers are seeking new methods to improve system-level design and enhance structural efficiency; here, multi-material optimization is suggested as the leading method for developing these novel architectures. Currently, diverse materials such as composites, high strength steels, aluminum and magnesium are all considered candidates for advanced chassis and body structures. By utilizing various combinations and material arrangements, the application of multi-material design has helped designers achieve lightweighting targets while maintaining structural performance requirements. Unlike manual approaches, the multi-material topology optimization (MMTO) methodology and computational tool described in this paper demonstrates a practical approach to obtaining the optimum material selection and distribution of materials within a complex automotive structure.
Technical Paper

Multi-Material Topology Optimization as a Concept Generation and Design Tool

2019-04-02
2019-01-1095
Conventional vehicle design is continually being pushed by consumers and regulations to reach higher level of fuel efficiency and system performance. New methods such as use of alternative structural materials and structural optimization are being utilized heavily in the automotive industry. Currently, materials such as advanced composites, polymers, aluminum and magnesium are all being considered as candidates for alternatives to conventional steel parts to help meet lightweight performance targets. While topology optimization has proven to be a powerful in many case studies for automotive light weighting studies, it is currently constrained for use with one material in the optimization algorithm. Multi-material topology optimization (MMTO) methods presented in this paper demonstrate the tools capability to optimize material selection simultaneously alongside material layout for a given design space and desired weight target.
Technical Paper

Multi-Material Topology Optimization and Multi-Material Selection in Design

2019-04-02
2019-01-0843
As automakers continue to develop new lightweight vehicles, the application of multi-material parts, assemblies and systems is needed to enhance overall performance and safety of new and emerging architectures. To achieve these goals conventional material selection and design strategies may be employed, such as standard material performance indices or full-combinatorial substitution studies. While these detailed processes exist, they often succeed at only suggesting one material per component, and cannot consider a clean-slate design; here, multi-material topology optimization (MMTO) is suggested as an effective computational tool for performing large-scale combined multi-material selection and design. Unlike previous manual methods, MMTO provides an efficient method for simultaneously determining material existence and distribution within a predefined design domain from a library of material options.
Technical Paper

Multi-Material Topology Optimization: A Practical Approach and Application

2018-04-03
2018-01-0110
The automotive industry is facing significant challenges for next-generation vehicle design as fuel economy regulations and tailpipe emission standards continue to strive for greater efficiency. In order to ensure vehicle design reaches these sustainability targets, lightweighting through multi-material design and topology optimization (TO) has been suggested as the leading method to reduce weight from conventional component and small assembly structures. More effective tools, techniques, and methodologies are now required to advance the development of multi-phase optimization tools beyond current commercial capability, and help automotive designers achieve critical efficiency improvements without sacrificing performance. Presented here is a unique tool description and practical application of multi-material topology optimization (MMTO), a direct extension of the classical single-material problem statement (SMTO).
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