SUMMARYThe Evolutionary Electronics refers to the design method of electronic circuits with the help of Evolutionary Algorithms. Over the years huge experience has been accumulated and tremendous results have been achieved in this field. Two obvious tendencies are prevailing in the area over designers to improve the performance of Evolutionary Algorithms. First of all, as with any solution-search-algorithm, the designers try to reduce the potential solution space in order to reach the optimum solution faster, putting some constrains onto search algorithm as well as onto potential solutions. At the same time, the second tendency of unconstraining the Evolutionary Algorithms in its search gives unpredictable breakthroughs in results. Enabling the evolution to optimize with more experimental parameters devoted to drive the evolution and adjusted previously manually, is one of an example where such kind of unconstraining takes place. The evolution with the maximum freedom of search can be addressed as unconstrained evolution. The unconstrained evolution has already been applied in the past towards the design of digital circuits, and extraordinary results have been obtained, including generation of circuits with smaller number of electronic components. Recently, the similar method has been introduced by authors of this paper towards the design of analogue circuits. The new algorithm has produced promising results in terms of quality of the circuits evolved and evolutionary resources required. It differed from constrained method by its simplicity and represented one of the first attempts to apply Evolutionary Strategy towards the analogue circuit design. In this paper both conventional constrained evolution and newly developed unconstrained evolution in analogue domain are compared in detail on the example of "LC" low-pass filter design. The unconstrained evolution demonstrates the superior behaviour over the constrained one and exceeds by quality of results the best filter evolved previously by 240%. The experimental results are presented along with detailed analysis. Also, the obtained results are compared in details with low-pass filters designed previously. key words: evolutionary electronics, unconstrained evolution, analogue passive low-pass filter
There are very few reports in the past on applications of Evolutionary Strategy (ES) towards the synthesis of analogue circuits. Moreover, even fewer reports are on the synthesis of computational circuits. Last fact is mainly due to the difficulty in designing of the complex nonlinear functions that these circuits perform. In this paper, the evolving power of the ES is challenged to design four computational circuits: cube root, cubing, square root and squaring functions. The synthesis succeeded due to the usage of oscillating length genotype strategy and the substructure reuse. The approach is characterized by its simplicity and represents one of the first attempts of application of ES towards the synthesis of “QR” circuits. The obtained experimental results significantly exceed the results published before in terms of the circuit quality, economy in components and computing resources utilized, revealing the great potential of the technique proposed to design large scale analog circuits
Abstract-The unconstrained evolution has already been applied in the past towards design of digital circuits, and extraordinary results have been obtained, including generation of circuits with smaller number of electronic components. In this paper both constrained and unconstrained evolutions, blended with oscillating length genotype sweeping strategy, are applied towards design of analogue "LCR" circuits. The comparison of both evolutions is made and the promising results are obtained. The new algorithm has produced the best results in terms of quality of the circuits evolved and evolutionary resources required. It differs from previous ones by its simplicity and represents one of the first attempts to apply Evolutionary Strategy towards the analogue circuit design. The obtained results are compared in details with lowpass filters previously designed.
Analogue circuits synthesised by means of open-ended evolutionary algorithms often have unconventional designs. However, these circuits are typically highly compact, and the general nature of the evolutionary search methodology allows such designs to be used in many applications. Previous work on the evolutionary design of analogue circuits has focused on circuits that lie well within analogue application domain. In contrast, our paper considers the evolution of analogue circuits that are usually synthesised in digital logic. We have developed four computational circuits, two voltage distributor circuits and a time interval metre circuit. The approach, despite its simplicity, succeeds over the design tasks owing to the employment of substructure reuse and incremental evolution. Our findings expand the range of applications that are considered suitable for evolutionary electronics.
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