Kriging, Polynomial Chaos Expansion, and Low-Rank Approximations in Material Science and Big Data Analytics.

Big Data

Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, USA.

Published: August 2024

In material science and engineering, the estimation of material properties and their failure modes is associated with physical experiments followed by modeling and optimization. However, proper optimization is challenging and computationally expensive. The main reason is the highly nonlinear behavior of brittle materials such as concrete. In this study, the application of surrogate models to predict the mechanical characteristics of concrete is investigated. Specifically, meta-models such as polynomial chaos expansion, Kriging, and canonical low-rank approximation are used for predicting the compressive strength of two different types of concrete (collected from experimental data in the literature). Various assumptions in surrogate models are examined, and the accuracy of each one is evaluated for the problem at hand. Finally, the optimal solution is provided. This study paves the road for other applications of surrogate models in material science and engineering.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/big.2022.0124DOI Listing

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