Samenvatting
This paper presents a spatial optimization methodology that extends the Spatial Packaging of Interconnected Systems with Physical Interaction (SPI2) framework to support arbitrary, non-convex design boundaries. We introduce a smooth, differentiable inside-outside evaluation for components represented using the Maximal Disjoint Ball Decomposition (MDBD) method. The framework also incorporates center-of-gravity and moment-of-inertia calculations directly into the optimization, and provides an end-to-end computer-aided design (CAD) workflow for importing components and reconstructing the optimized assembly. The method is demonstrated on a fictional aircraft auxiliary unit. Results show that the optimizer can place multiple interconnected components within a custom geometry while simultaneously handling routing and physics-based objectives. The approach maintains geometric feasibility within numerical tolerance and illustrates the potential of MDBD-based SPI2 methods for practical engineering design applications.
| Originele taal-2 | Engels |
|---|---|
| Uitgever | arXiv.org |
| Aantal pagina's | 7 |
| Volume | 2605.17387 |
| DOI's | |
| Status | Gepubliceerd - 17 mei 2026 |
Bibliografische nota
n/aVingerafdruk
Duik in de onderzoeksthema's van 'Spatial Optimization of Interconnected Systems in Non-Convex Design Spaces'. Samen vormen ze een unieke vingerafdruk.Citeer dit
- APA
- Author
- BIBTEX
- Harvard
- Standard
- RIS
- Vancouver