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    Efficient Computation of Large Deformation of Spatial Flexure-Based Mechanisms in Design Optimizations

    Source: Journal of Mechanisms and Robotics:;2022:;volume( 015 ):;issue: 002::page 21011
    Author:
    Dwarshuis, Koen;Aarts, Ronald;Ellenbroek, Marcel;Brouwer, Dannis
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4054730
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Design optimizations of flexure-based mechanisms take a lot of computation time, in particular when large deformations are involved. In an optimization procedure, statically deformed configurations of many designs have to be obtained, while finding the statically deformed configuration itself requires tens to hundreds of load step iterations. The kinematically started deformation method (KSD-method) (Dwarshuis, K. S., Aarts, R. G. K. M., Ellenbroek, M. H. M., and Brouwer, D. M., 2020, “Kinematically Started Efficient Position Analysis of Deformed Compliant Mechanisms Utilizing Data of Standard Joints,” Mech. Mach. Theory, 152, p. 103911) computes deformed configurations fast by starting the computation from an approximation. This approximation is obtained by allowing the mechanism only to move in the compliant motion-direction, based on kinematic equations, using data of the flexure joints in the mechanism. This is possible as flexure-based mechanisms are typically designed to be kinematically determined in the motion directions. In this paper, the KSD-method is extended such that it can also be applied without joint-data, such that it is not necessary to maintain a database with joint-data. This paper also shows that the method can be used for mechanisms containing joints that allow full spatial motion. Several variants of the KSD-method are presented and evaluated for accuracy and required computation time. One variant, which uses joint-data, is 21 times faster and shows errors in stress and stiffness below 1% compared to a conventional multibody analysis on the same model. Another variant, which does not use joint-data, reduces the computation time by a factor of 14, keeping errors below 1%. The KSD-method is shown to be helpful in design optimizations of complex flexure mechanisms for large range of motion.
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      Efficient Computation of Large Deformation of Spatial Flexure-Based Mechanisms in Design Optimizations

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    contributor authorDwarshuis, Koen;Aarts, Ronald;Ellenbroek, Marcel;Brouwer, Dannis
    date accessioned2022-12-27T23:15:50Z
    date available2022-12-27T23:15:50Z
    date copyright6/23/2022 12:00:00 AM
    date issued2022
    identifier issn1942-4302
    identifier otherjmr_15_2_021011.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4288245
    description abstractDesign optimizations of flexure-based mechanisms take a lot of computation time, in particular when large deformations are involved. In an optimization procedure, statically deformed configurations of many designs have to be obtained, while finding the statically deformed configuration itself requires tens to hundreds of load step iterations. The kinematically started deformation method (KSD-method) (Dwarshuis, K. S., Aarts, R. G. K. M., Ellenbroek, M. H. M., and Brouwer, D. M., 2020, “Kinematically Started Efficient Position Analysis of Deformed Compliant Mechanisms Utilizing Data of Standard Joints,” Mech. Mach. Theory, 152, p. 103911) computes deformed configurations fast by starting the computation from an approximation. This approximation is obtained by allowing the mechanism only to move in the compliant motion-direction, based on kinematic equations, using data of the flexure joints in the mechanism. This is possible as flexure-based mechanisms are typically designed to be kinematically determined in the motion directions. In this paper, the KSD-method is extended such that it can also be applied without joint-data, such that it is not necessary to maintain a database with joint-data. This paper also shows that the method can be used for mechanisms containing joints that allow full spatial motion. Several variants of the KSD-method are presented and evaluated for accuracy and required computation time. One variant, which uses joint-data, is 21 times faster and shows errors in stress and stiffness below 1% compared to a conventional multibody analysis on the same model. Another variant, which does not use joint-data, reduces the computation time by a factor of 14, keeping errors below 1%. The KSD-method is shown to be helpful in design optimizations of complex flexure mechanisms for large range of motion.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleEfficient Computation of Large Deformation of Spatial Flexure-Based Mechanisms in Design Optimizations
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume15
    journal issue2
    journal titleJournal of Mechanisms and Robotics
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4054730
    journal fristpage21011
    journal lastpage21011_11
    page11
    treeJournal of Mechanisms and Robotics:;2022:;volume( 015 ):;issue: 002
    contenttypeFulltext
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