78,009 research outputs found
Pipelined genetic propagation
© 2015 IEEE.Genetic Algorithms (GAs) are a class of numerical and combinatorial optimisers which are especially useful for solving complex non-linear and non-convex problems. However, the required execution time often limits their application to small-scale or latency-insensitive problems, so techniques to increase the computational efficiency of GAs are needed. FPGA-based acceleration has significant potential for speeding up genetic algorithms, but existing FPGA GAs are limited by the generational approaches inherited from software GAs. Many parts of the generational approach do not map well to hardware, such as the large shared population memory and intrinsic loop-carried dependency. To address this problem, this paper proposes a new hardware-oriented approach to GAs, called Pipelined Genetic Propagation (PGP), which is intrinsically distributed and pipelined. PGP represents a GA solver as a graph of loosely coupled genetic operators, which allows the solution to be scaled to the available resources, and also to dynamically change topology at run-time to explore different solution strategies. Experiments show that pipelined genetic propagation is effective in solving seven different applications. Our PGP design is 5 times faster than a recent FPGA-based GA system, and 90 times faster than a CPU-based GA system
Cutout reinforcements for shear loaded laminate and sandwich composite panels
This paper presents the numerical and experimental studies of shear loaded
laminated and sandwich carbon/epoxy composite panels with cutouts and
reinforcements aiming at reducing the cutout stress concentration and increasing
the buckling stability of the panels. The effect of different cutout sizes and
the design and materials of cutout reinforcements on the stress and buckling
behaviour of the panels are evaluated. For the sandwich panels with a range of
cutout size and a constant weight, an optimal ratio of the core to the face
thickness has been studied for the maximum buckling stability. The finite
element method and an analytical method are employed to perform parametric
studies. In both constant stress and constant displacement shear loading
conditions, the results are in very good agreement with those obtained from
experiment for selected cutout reinforcement cases. Conclusions are drawn on the
cutout reinforcement design and improvement of stress concentration and buckling
behaviour of shear loaded laminated and sandwich composite panels with cutouts
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