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contributor authorLoucas S. Louca
contributor authorJeffrey L. Stein
contributor authorGregory M. Hulbert
date accessioned2017-05-09T00:37:01Z
date available2017-05-09T00:37:01Z
date copyrightNovember, 2010
date issued2010
identifier issn0022-0434
identifier otherJDSMAA-26535#061202_1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/142825
description abstractIn recent years, algorithms have been developed to help automate the production of dynamic system models. Part of this effort has been the development of algorithms that use modeling metrics for generating minimum complexity models with realization preserving structure and parameters. Existing algorithms, add or remove ideal compliant elements from a model, and consequently do not equally emphasize the contribution of the other fundamental physical phenomena, i.e., ideal inertial or resistive elements, to the overall system behavior. Furthermore, these algorithms have only been developed for linear or linearized models, leaving the automated production of models of nonlinear systems unresolved. Other model reduction techniques suffer from similar limitations due to linearity or the requirement that the reduced models be realization preserving. This paper presents a new modeling metric, activity, which is based on energy. This metric is used to order the importance of all energy elements in a system model. The ranking of the energy elements provides the relative importance of the model parameters and this information is used as a basis to reduce the size of the model and as a type of parameter sensitivity information for system design. The metric is implemented in an automated modeling algorithm called model order reduction algorithm (MORA) that can automatically generate a hierarchical series of reduced models that are realization preserving based on choosing the energy threshold below which energy elements are not included in the model. Finally, MORA is applied to a nonlinear quarter car model to illustrate that energy elements with low activity can be eliminated from the model resulting in a reduced order model, with physically meaningful parameters, which also accurately predicts the behavior of the full model. The activity metric appears to be a valuable metric for automating the reduction of nonlinear system models—providing in the process models that provide better insight and may be more numerically efficient.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleEnergy-Based Model Reduction Methodology for Automated Modeling
typeJournal Paper
journal volume132
journal issue6
journal titleJournal of Dynamic Systems, Measurement, and Control
identifier doi10.1115/1.4002473
journal fristpage61202
identifier eissn1528-9028
keywordsAlgorithms
keywordsDesign
keywordsModeling
keywordsVehicles
keywordsTires
keywordsDamping
keywordsSprings
keywordsDynamic systems AND Flow (Dynamics)
treeJournal of Dynamic Systems, Measurement, and Control:;2010:;volume( 132 ):;issue: 006
contenttypeFulltext


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