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Communication Dans Un Congrès Année : 2016

Simulating Future Test and Redesign Considering Epistemic Model Uncertainty

Résumé

At the initial design stage engineers often rely on low-fidelity models that have high epistemic uncertainty. Traditional safety-margin-based deterministic design resorts to testing to reduce epistemic uncertainty and achieve targeted levels of safety. Testing is used to calibrate models and prescribe redesign when tests are not passed. After calibration, reduced epistemic model uncertainty can be leveraged through redesign to restore safety or improve design performance; however, redesign may be associated with substantial costs or delays. In this paper, a methodology is described for optimizing the safety-margin-based design, testing, and redesign process to allow the designer to tradeoff between the risk of future redesign and the possible performance and reliability benefits. The proposed methodology represents the epistemic model uncertainty with a Kriging surrogate and is applicable in a wide range of design problems. The method is illustrated on a cantilever beam design problem where there is mixed epistemic model error and aleatory parameter uncertainty.
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Dates et versions

hal-01386664 , version 1 (14-11-2016)

Identifiants

Citer

Nathaniel B. Price, Mathieu Balesdent, Sébastien Defoort, Rodolphe Le Riche, Nam H. Kim, et al.. Simulating Future Test and Redesign Considering Epistemic Model Uncertainty. 18th AIAA Non-Deterministic Approaches Conference (AIAA SCITECH 2016), Jan 2016, SAN DIEGO, United States. ⟨10.2514/6.2016-0950⟩. ⟨hal-01386664⟩
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