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1.2 The fundamentals of density-based and homogenization-based topology optimization
1.2.1 Density-based method
The goal of topology optimization is to find the material distribution within a prescribed design domain subject to the design objective and constraints. A classic formulation is the binary compliance minimization problem, to find a material distribution consisting of solids and voids that minimizes the structural compliance (maximize the deformation resistance) subject to a volume fraction constraint (use a limited amount of materials to realize lightweight design effect). However, the binary compliance minimization problem is known to be ill-posed[7]. One solution is to relax the binary condition by including intermediate material densities in the problem formulation. In general, the minimum compliance problem is defined as,
![](https://epubservercos.yuewen.com/A7EE30/30834933003814806/epubprivate/OEBPS/Images/48701_12_1.jpg?sign=1738872726-QcAdVUUb3Kw4396vARfNhYNYyJXNIxn4-0-8a5e4434c3cce410d176f879c35f6935)
where F is the vector of nodal forces and U (x) is the vector of nodal displacements. By incorporating a volume constraint, the minimum compliance optimization problem is further formulated into:
![](https://epubservercos.yuewen.com/A7EE30/30834933003814806/epubprivate/OEBPS/Images/48701_12_2.jpg?sign=1738872726-li6PZNztyq4udupcBchRA5JlZgJDDMZL-0-d2ec89e804a9e8ec6e78d1ad9c2d349c)
where x is the physical densities, n is the number of elements used to discretize the design domain, α is the vector for element volumes, and is the prescribed solid material volume upper limit. The nodal force vector F is independent of the design variables and the nodal displacement vector U (x) is the solution of KU=F.