TY - GEN
T1 - GA-hardness of aerodynamic optimization problems
T2 - 18th AIAA Computational Fluid Dynamics Conference
AU - Cinnella, P.
AU - Congedo, P. M.
PY - 2007/1/1
Y1 - 2007/1/1
N2 - A study about convergence of Genetic Algorithms (GAs) applied to aerodynamic optimization problems for transonic flows of dilute and dense gases is presented. Specific attention is devoted to working fluids of the Bethe - Zel'dovich - Thompson (BZT) type, which exhibit non classical dynamic behaviors in the transonic/supersonic regime, such as the disintegration of compression shocks. A reference, single-objective optimization problem, namely, wave drag minimization for a non-lifting transonic flow past a symmetric airfoil is considered. Several optimizations runs are performed for perfect and BZT gases at different flow conditions using a GA coupled with a flow solver. For each case, GA-hardness, i.e. the capability of converging more or less easily toward the global optimum for a given problem, is measured by means of statistical tools. For GA-hard problems, reduced convergence rate and high sensitivity to the choice of the starting population are observed. Results show that GA-hardness is greater for flow problems characterized by very weak shocks, and is strongly affected by numerical inaccuracies in the evaluation of the objective function. Then, some possible cures to GA-hardness are proposed and numerically verified. An efficient objective-function evaluation procedure based on Richardson extrapolation is proposed, which drastically reduces GA-hardness with a very moderate increase (and sometimes a slight decrease) in computational cost of optimization runs. Finally, an application of the proposed strategy to a multi-objective optimization problem is provided, clearly demonstrating the advantages deriving by the use of the proposed technique.
AB - A study about convergence of Genetic Algorithms (GAs) applied to aerodynamic optimization problems for transonic flows of dilute and dense gases is presented. Specific attention is devoted to working fluids of the Bethe - Zel'dovich - Thompson (BZT) type, which exhibit non classical dynamic behaviors in the transonic/supersonic regime, such as the disintegration of compression shocks. A reference, single-objective optimization problem, namely, wave drag minimization for a non-lifting transonic flow past a symmetric airfoil is considered. Several optimizations runs are performed for perfect and BZT gases at different flow conditions using a GA coupled with a flow solver. For each case, GA-hardness, i.e. the capability of converging more or less easily toward the global optimum for a given problem, is measured by means of statistical tools. For GA-hard problems, reduced convergence rate and high sensitivity to the choice of the starting population are observed. Results show that GA-hardness is greater for flow problems characterized by very weak shocks, and is strongly affected by numerical inaccuracies in the evaluation of the objective function. Then, some possible cures to GA-hardness are proposed and numerically verified. An efficient objective-function evaluation procedure based on Richardson extrapolation is proposed, which drastically reduces GA-hardness with a very moderate increase (and sometimes a slight decrease) in computational cost of optimization runs. Finally, an application of the proposed strategy to a multi-objective optimization problem is provided, clearly demonstrating the advantages deriving by the use of the proposed technique.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/35648956641
U2 - 10.2514/6.2007-3828
DO - 10.2514/6.2007-3828
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:35648956641
SN - 1563478994
SN - 9781563478994
T3 - Collection of Technical Papers - 18th AIAA Computational Fluid Dynamics Conference
SP - 86
EP - 99
BT - Collection of Technical Papers - 18th AIAA Computational Fluid Dynamics Conference
PB - American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Inc.
Y2 - 25 June 2007 through 28 June 2007
ER -