Designing thermal–fluid devices that reduce peak temperature while limiting pressure loss is challenging because high-fidelity (HF) Navier–Stokes–convection simulations make direct HF-driven topology optimization computationally expensive. This study presents a two-dimensional, steady, laminar multifidelity topology design framework for thermal–fluid devices operating in a low-to-moderate Reynolds number regime. A computationally efficient low-fidelity (LF) Darcy–convection model is used for topology optimization, where SEMDOT decouples geometric smoothness from the analysis field to produce CAD-ready boundaries. The LF optimization minimizes a P-norm aggregated temperature subject to a prescribed volume fraction constraint; the inlet–outlet pressure difference and the P-norm parameter are varied to generate a diverse candidate set. All candidates are then evaluated using a steady incompressible HF Navier–Stokes–convection model in COMSOL 6.3 under a consistent operating condition (fixed flow; pressure drop reported as an output). In representative single- and multi-channel case studies, SEMDOT designs reduce the HF peak temperature (e.g., ~337 K to ~323 K) while also reducing the pressure drop (e.g., ~18.7 Pa to ~12.6 Pa) relative to conventional straight-channel layouts under the same operating point. Compared with a conventional RAMP-based pipeline under the tested settings, the proposed approach yields a more favorable Pareto distribution (normalized hypervolume 1.000 vs. 0.923).
Sun et al. (Mon,) studied this question.