This repository contains the object model data sets of the case study specimens from the related publication:
Gil Pérez, M., Zechmeister, C., Kannenberg, F., Mindermann, P., Balangé, L., Guo, Y., Hügle, S., Gienger, A., Forster, D., Bischoff, M., Tarín, C., Middendorf, P., Schwieger, V., Gresser, G. T., Menges, A., Knippers, J.: 2022, Computational co-design framework for coreless wound fibre-polymer composite structures. Journal of Computational Design and Engineering, 9(2), pp. 310-329. (doi:
10.1093/jcde/qwab081)
Abstract: In coreless filament winding, resin-impregnated fibre filaments are wound around anchor points without an additional mould. The final geometry of the produced part results from the interaction of fibres in space and is initially undetermined. Therefore, the success of large-scale coreless wound fibre composite structures for architectural applications relies on the reciprocal collaboration of simulation, fabrication, quality evaluation, and data integration domains. The correlation of data from those domains enables the optimization of the design towards ideal performance and material efficiency. This paper elaborates on a computational co-design framework to enable new modes of collaboration for coreless wound fibre–polymer composite structures. It introduces the use of a shared object model acting as a central data repository that facilitates interdisciplinary data exchange and the investigation of correlations between domains. The application of the developed computational co-design framework is demonstrated in a case study in which the data are successfully mapped, linked, and analysed across the different fields of expertise. The results showcase the framework’s potential to gain a deeper understanding of large-scale coreless wound filament structures and their fabrication and geometrical implications for design optimization.
The data set contains data from three sets of ten coreless filament wound fiber-polymer composite testing specimens that were digitally simulated, robotically manufactured, laser scanned and mechanically tested. The data contains contributions from different domains: simulation, fabrication, quality evaluation, and data integration. The data was stored via an open-source object model (
BHoM) that was extended for its use in coreless filament winding.
"The BHoM (Buildings and Habitats object Model) is a collaborative computational development project for the built environment. BHoM aims to standardise the data and functionality that AEC domain experts use to design across all disciplines." (Source:
https://bhom.xyz/documentation/)
The files are named by specimen type and ID (SX-Y.json) - X refers to the specimen type and Y refers to the specimen ID.