Robust design from systems physics

Abstract

A crucial challenge in engineering modern, integrated systems is to produce robust designs. However, quantifying the robustness of a design is less straightforward than quantifying the robustness of products. For products, in particular engineering materials, intuitive, plain language terms of strong versus weak and brittle versus ductile take on precise, quantitative meaning in terms of stress–strain relationships. Here, we show that a “systems physics” framing of integrated system design produces stress–strain relationships in design space. From these stress–strain relationships, we find that both the mathematical and intuitive notions of strong versus weak and brittle versus directly characterize the robustness of designs. We use this to show that the relative robustness of designs against changes in problem objectives has a simple graphical representation. This graphical representation, and its underlying stress–strain foundation, provide new metrics that can be applied to classes of designs to assess robustness from feature- to system-level.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Aug 31, 2020
Source ID
10.1038/s41598-020-70980-5

Entities

People

  • Alec Kirkley
  • Andrei A Klishin
  • David J. Singer
  • Greg van Anders

Organizations

  • Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
  • Office of Naval Research

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Mathematics

Readers

  • Neural Network Machine Learning.
  • Software Engineering
  • Systems Analysis and Design

Technology Areas

  • Space