On the Design of Complex EM Devices and Systems through the System-by-Design Paradigm -- A Framework for Dealing with the Computational Complexity
Andrea Massa, Marco Salucci

TL;DR
The paper introduces the System-by-Design framework for optimizing complex electromagnetic devices by reformulating design problems as optimization tasks, utilizing surrogate models, and integrating efficient tools to manage computational complexity.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive description of the SbD framework, strategies for customization, and insights into future trends for designing complex EM systems.
Findings
Effective surrogate models reduce computational costs
Framework enables optimization of complex EM devices
Benchmarks demonstrate advantages and limitations of SbD
Abstract
The System-by-Design (SbD) is an emerging engineering framework for the optimization-driven design of complex electromagnetic (EM) devices and systems. More specifically, the computational complexity of the design problem at hand is addressed by means of a suitable selection and integration of functional blocks comprising problem-dependent and computationally-efficient modeling and analysis tools as well as reliable prediction and optimization strategies. Thanks to the suitable re-formulation of the problem at hand as an optimization one, the profitable minimum-size coding of the degrees-of-freedom (DoFs), the "smart" replacement of expensive full-wave (FW) simulators with proper surrogate models (SMs), which yield fast yet accurate predictions starting from minimum size/reduced CPU-costs training sets, a favorable "environment" for an optimal exploitation of the features of global…
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