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Sequential Subspace Mode Adaptation for the Reduced-Order Homogenization of Dissipative Microstructures using E3C Hyper-Reduction

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arXiv:2606.02089v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Three-dimensional inelastic computational homogenization of complex engineering components requires a multitude of nonlinear microstructural simulations, making it computationally expensive. This work investigates a projection-based model order reduction (pMOR) method with 'Sequential Subspace Mode Adaptation', which can be easily integrated into existing codes using linear subspaces. Starting with a 'conventional' linear subspace strain...

arXiv:2606.02089v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Three-dimensional inelastic computational homogenization of complex engineering components requires a multitude of nonlinear microstructural simulations, making it computationally expensive. This work investigates a projection-based model order reduction (pMOR) method with 'Sequential Subspace Mode Adaptation', which can be easily integrated into existing codes using linear subspaces. Starting with a 'conventional' linear subspace strain approximation, the dynamic online construction of a second -- lower dimensional -- affine subspace embedded in the linear subspace determined offline leads to a further reduction of the dimensionality. A second novelty is the outline of the E3C hyper-reduction method for non-crystalline dissipative materials with internal variables, introducing a viscous regularization of non-differentiable stress-strain relations. In addition, a theoretical discussion is provided, illustrating that the E3C method aims at satisfaction of a projected and hyper-reduced variant of the classical Hill-Mandel macro-homogeneity condition. The latter theoretically implies equivalence with the high-dimensional model and satisfaction of both the hyper-reduced weak equilibrium and compatibility conditions. The influence of training batch size, material nonlinearity, and microstructure on the performance are evaluated through parameter studies. Three-dimensional elastoplastic two-scale simulations with hundreds of thousands of macroscopic degrees of freedom illustrate the efficiency and accuracy, with computational times approaching those of single scale simulations.
Dissipative Microstructures (ORG) linear (ORG) Hill-Mandel (ORG)
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