Solid Elements
The SIMP method (Solid Isotropic Material with Penalty) is used in
OptiStruct. In the SIMP method, a pseudo material density is the design
variable, and hence it is often called
density method as well. The material density
varies continuously between 0 and 1, with 0 representing void state and 1 solid state. The SIMP
method applies a power-law penalization for stiffness-density relationship in order to push
density toward 0/1 (void/solid) distribution:
(1)
Where,
is the penalized stiffness matrix of an element,
is the real stiffness matrix of an element,
is
the density, and
is the penalization factor (always greater than 1).
Shell Elements
The SIMP method (Solid Isotropic Material with Penalty) is used in
OptiStruct. In the SIMP method, a pseudo material density is the design
variable, and hence it is often called
density method as well. The material density
varies continuously between 0 and 1., with 0 representing void state and 1 solid state. The SIMP
method applies a power-law penalization for stiffness-density relationship in order to push
density toward 0/1 (void/solid) distribution.
(2)
Where,
is the penalized stiffness matrix of an element,
is the real stiffness matrix of an element,
is
the density, and
is the penalization factor (always greater than 1).
For isotropic material a non-zero base plate thickness can be defined. For a composite plate
or a plate with anisotropic material, the base plate thickness must be zero (the limitation of
the current development).
Topology optimization of composites has certain unique characteristics and is discussed in
Composite Topology and Free-size Optimization.
1D Elements
Only the density method is implemented for topology optimization of 1D elements. Currently
available elements include
ROD,
BAR/
BEAM,
BUSH, and
WELD elements. Each element is controlled by a single design variable that
is the material density
of
this element that varies between 0 (numerically a small value is used) and 1.0. In essence, 0
represents nonexistence and 1.0 represents full existence of the corresponding element. The
following power law representation of elastic properties is used to penalize intermediate
density:
(3)
Where,
and
represent the penalized and the real stiffness matrix of an
element, respectively,
is the penalization factor which is always greater than 1. The
penalty is controlled by the DISCRETE or DISCRT1D
parameters, the value of these parameters correspond to (
- 1).