thesis_1995_vt


thesis_1995_vt, "Sensitivity Analyses and Computational Shape Optimization for Incompressible Flows", submitted to the Department of Mathematics at Virginia Tech in May 1995. My thesis adviser was Max Gunzburger.

Abstract: We consider the optimization of a cost functional defined for a fluid flowing through a channel. Parameters control the shape of an obstruction in the flow, and the strength of the flow. The problem is discretized using finite elements. Optimization algorithms are considered which use either finite differences or sensitivities to estimate the gradient of the cost functional. Problems of scaling, local minimization, and cost functional regularization are considered. Methods of improving the efficiency of the algorithm are proposed.

The most interesting thing to me about this thesis was the investigation of the properties of the sensitivities, which estimate how much the flow quantities change when some parameter is changed.

At first, I assumed that these were always equal to the standard derivative, or at least to a finite difference estimate of the derivative. Then it became clear that this was only true sometimes; in particular, for problems (like this one) in which the shape of the flow region changed, the sensitivities and the derivatives can differ by a quantity that measures the effects of geometry changes.

Once I realized this, I had to figure out whether this term could be accounted for, and also estimate the effects and sizes of the various kinds of approximation error that occurred.

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Last revised on 10 February 2024.