Resumen
The paper presents the use of a supervised active learning approach for the solution of a simulation-driven design optimization (SDDO) problem, pertaining to the resistance reduction of a destroyer-type vessel in calm water. The optimization is formulated as a single-objective, single-point problem with both geometrical and operational constraints. The latter also considers seakeeping performance at multiple conditions. A surrogate model is used, based on stochastic radial basis functions with lower confidence bounding, as a supervised active learning approach. Furthermore, a multi-fidelity formulation, leveraging on unsteady Reynolds-averaged Navier?Stokes equations and potential flow solvers, is used in order to reduce the computational cost of the SDDO procedure. Exploring a five-dimensional design space based on free-form deformation under limited computational resources, the optimal configuration achieves a resistance reduction of about 3% at the escape speed and about 6.4% on average over the operational speed range.