A multi-objective optimization framework for terrain modification based on a combined hydrological and earthwork cost-benefit

Publikation: Working paperPreprintForskning

Standard

A multi-objective optimization framework for terrain modification based on a combined hydrological and earthwork cost-benefit. / Xu, Hanwen; Randall, Mark; Li, Lei; Tan, Yuyi; Balstrøm, Thomas.

arxiv.org, 2024.

Publikation: Working paperPreprintForskning

Harvard

Xu, H, Randall, M, Li, L, Tan, Y & Balstrøm, T 2024 'A multi-objective optimization framework for terrain modification based on a combined hydrological and earthwork cost-benefit' arxiv.org. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2401.02698

APA

Xu, H., Randall, M., Li, L., Tan, Y., & Balstrøm, T. (2024). A multi-objective optimization framework for terrain modification based on a combined hydrological and earthwork cost-benefit. arxiv.org. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2401.02698

Vancouver

Xu H, Randall M, Li L, Tan Y, Balstrøm T. A multi-objective optimization framework for terrain modification based on a combined hydrological and earthwork cost-benefit. arxiv.org. 2024. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2401.02698

Author

Xu, Hanwen ; Randall, Mark ; Li, Lei ; Tan, Yuyi ; Balstrøm, Thomas. / A multi-objective optimization framework for terrain modification based on a combined hydrological and earthwork cost-benefit. arxiv.org, 2024.

Bibtex

@techreport{8a863c0198d946f4b579f4ca34212dce,
title = "A multi-objective optimization framework for terrain modification based on a combined hydrological and earthwork cost-benefit",
abstract = " The escalating risk of urban inundation has drawn increased attention to urban stormwater management. This study proposes a multi-objective optimization for terrain modification, combining the Non-dominated Sorting Genetic Algorithm II (NSGA-II) with digital elevation model (DEM)-based hydrological cost factor analysis. To reduce the precipitation erosive forces and runoff kinetic energy, the resulting framework offers the possibility of efficiently searching numerous solutions for trade-off sets that meet three conflicting objectives: minimizing maximum flow velocity, maximizing runoff path length and minimizing earthwork costs. Our application case study in H{\o}je Taastrup, Denmark, demonstrates the ability of the optimization framework to iteratively generate diversified modification scenarios, which form the reference for topography planning. The three individual objective preferred solutions, a balanced solution, and twenty solutions under regular ordering are selected and visualized to determine the limits of the optimization and the cost-effectiveness tendency. Integrating genetic algorithms with DEM-based hydrological analysis demonstrates the potential to consider more complicated hydrological benefit objectives with open-ended characteristics. It provides a novel and efficient way to optimize topographic characteristics for improving holistic stormwater management strategies. ",
keywords = "cs.CE",
author = "Hanwen Xu and Mark Randall and Lei Li and Yuyi Tan and Thomas Balstr{\o}m",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.48550/arXiv.2401.02698",
language = "English",
publisher = "arxiv.org",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "arxiv.org",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - A multi-objective optimization framework for terrain modification based on a combined hydrological and earthwork cost-benefit

AU - Xu, Hanwen

AU - Randall, Mark

AU - Li, Lei

AU - Tan, Yuyi

AU - Balstrøm, Thomas

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - The escalating risk of urban inundation has drawn increased attention to urban stormwater management. This study proposes a multi-objective optimization for terrain modification, combining the Non-dominated Sorting Genetic Algorithm II (NSGA-II) with digital elevation model (DEM)-based hydrological cost factor analysis. To reduce the precipitation erosive forces and runoff kinetic energy, the resulting framework offers the possibility of efficiently searching numerous solutions for trade-off sets that meet three conflicting objectives: minimizing maximum flow velocity, maximizing runoff path length and minimizing earthwork costs. Our application case study in H{\o}je Taastrup, Denmark, demonstrates the ability of the optimization framework to iteratively generate diversified modification scenarios, which form the reference for topography planning. The three individual objective preferred solutions, a balanced solution, and twenty solutions under regular ordering are selected and visualized to determine the limits of the optimization and the cost-effectiveness tendency. Integrating genetic algorithms with DEM-based hydrological analysis demonstrates the potential to consider more complicated hydrological benefit objectives with open-ended characteristics. It provides a novel and efficient way to optimize topographic characteristics for improving holistic stormwater management strategies.

AB - The escalating risk of urban inundation has drawn increased attention to urban stormwater management. This study proposes a multi-objective optimization for terrain modification, combining the Non-dominated Sorting Genetic Algorithm II (NSGA-II) with digital elevation model (DEM)-based hydrological cost factor analysis. To reduce the precipitation erosive forces and runoff kinetic energy, the resulting framework offers the possibility of efficiently searching numerous solutions for trade-off sets that meet three conflicting objectives: minimizing maximum flow velocity, maximizing runoff path length and minimizing earthwork costs. Our application case study in H{\o}je Taastrup, Denmark, demonstrates the ability of the optimization framework to iteratively generate diversified modification scenarios, which form the reference for topography planning. The three individual objective preferred solutions, a balanced solution, and twenty solutions under regular ordering are selected and visualized to determine the limits of the optimization and the cost-effectiveness tendency. Integrating genetic algorithms with DEM-based hydrological analysis demonstrates the potential to consider more complicated hydrological benefit objectives with open-ended characteristics. It provides a novel and efficient way to optimize topographic characteristics for improving holistic stormwater management strategies.

KW - cs.CE

U2 - 10.48550/arXiv.2401.02698

DO - 10.48550/arXiv.2401.02698

M3 - Preprint

BT - A multi-objective optimization framework for terrain modification based on a combined hydrological and earthwork cost-benefit

PB - arxiv.org

ER -

ID: 395360816