TR2023-042
Comparison of Learning-based Surrogate Models for Electric Motors
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- "Comparison of Learning-based Surrogate Models for Electric Motors", Conference on the Computation of Electromagnetic Fields (COMPUMAG), DOI: 10.1109/COMPUMAG56388.2023.10411811, May 2023, pp. 1-4.BibTeX TR2023-042 PDF
- @inproceedings{Xu2023may,
- author = {Xu, Yihao and Wang, Bingnan and Sakamoto, Yusuke and Yamamoto, Tatsuya and Nishimura, Yuki},
- title = {Comparison of Learning-based Surrogate Models for Electric Motors},
- booktitle = {2023 24th International Conference on the Computation of Electromagnetic Fields (COMPUMAG)},
- year = 2023,
- pages = {1--4},
- month = may,
- publisher = {IEEE},
- doi = {10.1109/COMPUMAG56388.2023.10411811},
- url = {https://www.merl.com/publications/TR2023-042}
- }
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- "Comparison of Learning-based Surrogate Models for Electric Motors", Conference on the Computation of Electromagnetic Fields (COMPUMAG), DOI: 10.1109/COMPUMAG56388.2023.10411811, May 2023, pp. 1-4.
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MERL Contact:
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Research Areas:
Applied Physics, Artificial Intelligence, Electric Systems, Multi-Physical Modeling
Abstract:
Multi-objective optimization is frequently employed in electric motor design, where iterative numerical simulations are required to evaluate a large number of design candidates. A trial-and-error design methodology like this is very time-consuming. In this paper, we propose learning-based surrogate models that use trained deep neural networks (NNs) to accomplish the rapid evaluation of motor designs. A motor design candidate can be described with either a list of geometrical parameters of the motor design, or a colored image of the motor cross-section. Different deep learning models can be constructed with either parameter-based input or image-based inputs. Our analysis reveals that deep convolutional neural networks (CNNs) utilizing image-based inputs exhibit a higher degree of predictive accuracy for more intricate responses, such as cogging torque, in comparison to models employing parameter-based inputs, albeit at the cost of increased training time.