1 research outputs found

    Efficient mesh deformation using radial basis functions with a grouping-circular-based greedy algorithm

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    A grouping-circular-based (GCB) greedy algorithm is proposed to promote the efficiency of mesh deformation. By incorporating the multigrid concept that the computational errors on the fine mesh can be approximated with those on the coarse mesh, this algorithm stochastically divides all boundary nodes into mm groups and uses the locally maximum radial basis functions (RBF) interpolation error of each group as an approximation to the globally maximum one of all boundary nodes in each iterative procedure for reducing the RBF support nodes. For this reason, it avoids the interpolation conducted at all boundary nodes and thus reduces the corresponding computational complexity from O(Nc2Nb)O\left({N_c^2{N_b}} \right) to O(Nc3)O\left( {N_c^3} \right). Besides, after mm iterations, the interpolation errors of all boundary nodes are computed once, thus allowing all boundary nodes can contribute to error control. Two canonical deformation problems of the ONERA M6 wing and the DLR-F6 Wing-Body-Nacelle-Pylon configuration are computed to validate the GCB greedy algorithm. The computational results show that the GCB greedy algorithm is able to remarkably promote the efficiency of computing the interpolation errors in the data reducing procedure by dozens of times. Because an increase of mm results in an increase of NcN_c, an appropriate range of [Nb/Nc,2Nb/Nc]\left[ {{N_b}/{N_c},{\rm{ }}2{N_b}/{N_c}}\right] for mm is suggested to prevent too much additional computations for solving the linear algebraic system and computing the displacements of volume nodes induced by the increase of NcN_c . The results also show that the GCB greedy algorithm tends to generate a more significant efficiency improvement for mesh deformation when a larger-scale mesh is applied
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