Anonymous
×
Create a new article
Write your page title here:
We currently have 106 articles on MOR Wiki. Type your article name above or click on one of the titles below and start writing!



Revision as of 11:24, 1 April 2018 by Yue (talk | contribs) (References)

Note: This page has not been verified by our editors.

Description

Figure 1
Figure 2

This is an example for a model in the frequency domain of the form

Kdxω2Mx=fy=f*x

where f represents a unit point load in one unknown of the state vector. M is a symmetric positive-definite matrix and Kd=(1+iγ)K where K is symmetric positive semi-definite.

The test problem is a structural model of a car windscreen. This is a 3D problem discretized with 7564 nodes and 5400 linear hexahedral elements (3 layers of 60×30 elements). The mesh is shown in xx--CrossReference--dft--fig1--xx. The material is glass with the following properties: The Young modulus is 7×1010N/m2, the density is 2490kg/m3, and the Poisson ratio is 0.23. The natural damping is 10%, i.e. γ=0.1. The structural boundaries are free (free-free boundary conditions). The windscreen is subjected to a point force applied on a corner. The goal of the model reduction is the fast evaluation of y. [1] Model reduction is used as a fast linear solver for a sequence of parametrized linear systems.

The discretized problem has dimension n=22692. The goal is to estimate x(ω) for ω[0.5,200]. In order to generate the plots the frequency range was discretized as {ω1,,ωm}={0.5j,j=1,,m} with m=400.

xx--CrossReference--dft--fig1--xx shows the mesh of the car windscreen and xx--CrossReference--dft--fig2--xx the frequency response |(y(ω))|.

Origin

This benchmark is part of the Oberwolfach Benchmark Collection[2]; No. 38886.

Data

Download matrices in the Matrix Market format:

The archive contains files windscreen.K, windscreen.M and windscreen.B representing Kd, M and f accordingly.

Dimensions

System structure:

(K+ω2M)x=By=BTx

with ω[0.5,200].

System dimensions:

K22692×22692, M22692×22692, B22692×1.

Citation

To cite this benchmark, use the following references:

  • For the benchmark itself and its data:
Oberwolfach Benchmark Collection Windscreen. hosted at MORwiki - Model Order Reduction Wiki, 2004. http://modelreduction.org/index.php/Windscreen
   @MISC{morwiki_windscreen,
     author =       {Oberwolfach Benchmark Collection},
     title =        {Windscreen},
     howpublished = {hosted at {MORwiki} -- Model Order Reduction Wiki},
     url =          {http://modelreduction.org/index.php/Windscreen},
     year =         2004
   }

References

  1. K. Meerbergen, [1], International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering, 73(1): 96--106, 2007.
  2. J.G. Korvink, E.B. Rudnyi, Oberwolfach Benchmark Collection, In: Dimension Reduction of Large-Scale Systems, Lecture Notes in Computational Science and Engineering, vol 45: 311--315, 2005.