scholarly journals The nth-Order Comprehensive Adjoint Sensitivity Analysis Methodology for Response-Coupled Forward/Adjoint Linear Systems (nth-CASAM-L): II. Illustrative Application

Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (24) ◽  
pp. 8315
Author(s):  
Dan Gabriel Cacuci

This work illustrates the application of the nth-order comprehensive adjoint sensitivity analysis methodology for response-coupled forward/adjoint linear systems (abbreviated as “nth-CASAM-L”) to a paradigm model that describes the transmission of particles (neutrons and/or photons) through homogenized materials, as encountered in radiation protection and shielding. The first-, second-, and third-order sensitivities of responses that depend on both the forward and adjoint particle fluxes are obtained exactly, in closed-form, underscoring the principles and methodology underlying the nth-CASAM-L. The results presented in this work underscore the fundamentally important role of the nth-CASAM-L in the quest to overcome the “curse of dimensionality” in sensitivity analysis, uncertainty quantification and predictive modeling.

Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (24) ◽  
pp. 8314
Author(s):  
Dan Gabriel Cacuci

This work presents the mathematical framework of the nth-Order Comprehensive Adjoint Sensitivity Analysis Methodology for Response-Coupled Forward/Adjoint Linear Systems (abbreviated as “nth-CASAM-L”), which is conceived for obtaining the exact expressions of arbitrarily-high-order (nth-order) sensitivities of a generic system response with respect to all of the parameters (including boundary and initial conditions) underlying the respective forward/adjoint systems. Since many of the most important responses for linear systems involve the solutions of both the forward and the adjoint linear models that correspond to the respective physical system, the sensitivity analysis of such responses makes it necessary to treat linear systems in their own right, rather than treating them as particular cases of nonlinear systems. This is in contradistinction to responses for nonlinear systems, which can depend only on the forward functions, since nonlinear operators do not admit bona-fide adjoint operators (only a linearized form of a nonlinear operator admits an adjoint operator). The nth-CASAM-L determines the exact expression of arbitrarily-high order sensitivities of responses to the parameters underlying both the forward and adjoint models of a nonlinear system, thus enable the most efficient and accurate computation of such sensitivities. The mathematical framework underlying the nth-CASAM is developed in linearly increasing higher-dimensional Hilbert spaces, as opposed to the exponentially increasing “parameter-dimensional” spaces in which response sensitivities are computed by other methods, thus providing the basis for overcoming the “curse of dimensionality” in sensitivity analysis and all other fields (uncertainty quantification, predictive modeling, etc.) which need such sensitivities. In particular, for a scalar-valued valued response associated with a nonlinear model comprising TP parameters, the 1st-−CASAM-L requires 1 additional large-scale adjoint computation (as opposed to TP large-scale computations, as required by other methods) for computing exactly all of the 1st-−order response sensitivities. All of the (mixed) 2nd-order sensitivities are computed exactly by the 2nd-CASAM-L in at most TP computations, as opposed to TP(TP + 1)/2 computations required by all other methods, and so on. For every lower-order sensitivity of interest, the nth-CASAM-L computes the “TP next-higher-order” sensitivities in one adjoint computation performed in a linearly increasing higher-dimensional Hilbert space. Very importantly, the nth-CASAM-L computes the higher-level adjoint functions using the same forward and adjoint solvers (i.e., computer codes) as used for solving the original forward and adjoint systems, thus requiring relatively minor additional software development for computing the various-order sensitivities.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (10) ◽  
pp. 2580 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruixian Fang ◽  
Dan G. Cacuci

This work applies the Second-Order Adjoint Sensitivity Analysis Methodology (2nd-ASAM) to compute the mixed 2nd-order sensitivities of a polyethylene-reflected plutonium (PERP) benchmark’s leakage response with respect to the benchmark’s imprecisely known isotopic number densities and the other benchmark imprecisely known parameters, including: (i) the 6 × 180 mixed 2nd-order sensitivities involving the total microscopic cross sections; (ii) the 6 × 21,600 mixed 2nd-order sensitivities involving the scattering microscopic cross sections; (iii) the 6 × 60 mixed 2nd-order sensitivities involving the fission microscopic cross sections; and (iv) the 6 × 60 mixed 2nd-order sensitivities involving the average number of neutrons produced per fission. It is shown that many of these mixed 2nd-order sensitivities involving the isotopic number densities have very large values. Most of the large sensitivities involve the isotopic number density of 239Pu, and the microscopic total, scattering or fission cross sections for the 12th or 30th energy groups of 239Pu or 1H, respectively. The 2nd-order mixed sensitivity of the PERP leakage response with respect to the isotopic number density of 239Pu and the microscopic total cross section for the 30th energy group of 1H is the largest of the above mentioned sensitivities, attaining the value −94.91.


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