Hybrid Central Composite Design
Hybrid Central Composite Design (Hybrid CCD) is a class of response surface designs introduced by Roquemore (1976) that combines the structural properties of classical central composite designs with modified or reduced point configurations to achieve rotatability or near-rotatability with fewer experimental runs than a standard CCD, making it especially practical when the number of factors is three to six and experimental resources are limited.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
- Roquemore, K. G. (1976). Hybrid designs for quadratic response surfaces. Technometrics, 18(4), 419–423. · DOI 10.1080/00401706.1976.10489473
- Myers, R. H., Montgomery, D. C., & Anderson-Cook, C. M. (2009). Response Surface Methodology: Process and Product Optimization Using Designed Experiments (3rd ed.). Wiley. · ISBN 978-0470174463
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Related methods
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