Tools for Multi-Objective and Multi-Disciplinary Optimization in Naval Ship Design

This thesis focuses on practical and quantitative methods for measuring effectiveness in naval ship design. An Overall Measure of Effectiveness (OMOE) model or function is an essential prerequisite for optimization and design trade-off. This effectiveness can be limited to individual ship missions...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Demko, Daniel Todd
Other Authors: Aerospace and Ocean Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31743
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04172006-220400/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-317432020-09-26T05:35:51Z Tools for Multi-Objective and Multi-Disciplinary Optimization in Naval Ship Design Demko, Daniel Todd Aerospace and Ocean Engineering Brown, Alan J. Neu, Wayne L. Hughes, Owen F. overall measure of effectiveness response surface model optimization analytical hierarchy process This thesis focuses on practical and quantitative methods for measuring effectiveness in naval ship design. An Overall Measure of Effectiveness (OMOE) model or function is an essential prerequisite for optimization and design trade-off. This effectiveness can be limited to individual ship missions or extend to missions within a task group or larger context. A method is presented that uses the Analytic Hierarchy Process combined with Multi-Attribute Value Theory to build an Overall Measure of Effectiveness and Overall Measure of Risk function to properly rank and approximately measure the relative mission effectiveness and risk of design alternatives, using trained expert opinion to replace complex analysis tools. A validation of this method is achieved through experimentation comparing ships ranked by the method with direct ranking of the ships through war gaming scenarios. The second part of this thesis presents a mathematical ship synthesis model to be used in early concept development stages of the ship design process. Tools to simplify and introduce greater accuracy are described and developed. Response Surface Models and Design of Experiments simplify and speed up the process. Finite element codes such as MAESTRO improve the accuracy of the ship synthesis models which in turn lower costs later in the design process. A case study of an Advanced Logistics Delivery Ship (ALDV) is performed to asses the use of RSM and DOE methods to minimize computation time when using high-fidelity codes early in the naval ship design process. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:33:47Z 2014-03-14T20:33:47Z 2005-05-11 2006-04-17 2006-05-24 2006-05-24 Thesis etd-04172006-220400 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31743 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04172006-220400/ Demko_Thesis_Final.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic overall measure of effectiveness
response surface model
optimization
analytical hierarchy process
spellingShingle overall measure of effectiveness
response surface model
optimization
analytical hierarchy process
Demko, Daniel Todd
Tools for Multi-Objective and Multi-Disciplinary Optimization in Naval Ship Design
description This thesis focuses on practical and quantitative methods for measuring effectiveness in naval ship design. An Overall Measure of Effectiveness (OMOE) model or function is an essential prerequisite for optimization and design trade-off. This effectiveness can be limited to individual ship missions or extend to missions within a task group or larger context. A method is presented that uses the Analytic Hierarchy Process combined with Multi-Attribute Value Theory to build an Overall Measure of Effectiveness and Overall Measure of Risk function to properly rank and approximately measure the relative mission effectiveness and risk of design alternatives, using trained expert opinion to replace complex analysis tools. A validation of this method is achieved through experimentation comparing ships ranked by the method with direct ranking of the ships through war gaming scenarios. The second part of this thesis presents a mathematical ship synthesis model to be used in early concept development stages of the ship design process. Tools to simplify and introduce greater accuracy are described and developed. Response Surface Models and Design of Experiments simplify and speed up the process. Finite element codes such as MAESTRO improve the accuracy of the ship synthesis models which in turn lower costs later in the design process. A case study of an Advanced Logistics Delivery Ship (ALDV) is performed to asses the use of RSM and DOE methods to minimize computation time when using high-fidelity codes early in the naval ship design process. === Master of Science
author2 Aerospace and Ocean Engineering
author_facet Aerospace and Ocean Engineering
Demko, Daniel Todd
author Demko, Daniel Todd
author_sort Demko, Daniel Todd
title Tools for Multi-Objective and Multi-Disciplinary Optimization in Naval Ship Design
title_short Tools for Multi-Objective and Multi-Disciplinary Optimization in Naval Ship Design
title_full Tools for Multi-Objective and Multi-Disciplinary Optimization in Naval Ship Design
title_fullStr Tools for Multi-Objective and Multi-Disciplinary Optimization in Naval Ship Design
title_full_unstemmed Tools for Multi-Objective and Multi-Disciplinary Optimization in Naval Ship Design
title_sort tools for multi-objective and multi-disciplinary optimization in naval ship design
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31743
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04172006-220400/
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