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A Lagrange multiplier method for semilinear elliptic state constrained optimal control problems
(2020)
In this paper we apply an augmented Lagrange method to a class of semilinear ellip-tic optimal control problems with pointwise state constraints. We show strong con-vergence of subsequences of the primal variables to a local solution of the original problem as well as weak convergence of the adjoint states and weak-* convergence of the multipliers associated to the state constraint. Moreover, we show existence of stationary points in arbitrary small neighborhoods of local solutions of the original problem. Additionally, various numerical results are presented.
This thesis is concerned with the solution of control and state constrained optimal control problems, which are governed by elliptic partial differential equations. Problems of this type are challenging since they suffer from the low regularity of the multiplier corresponding to the state constraint. Applying an augmented Lagrangian method we overcome these difficulties by working with multiplier approximations in $L^2(\Omega)$. For each problem class, we introduce the solution algorithm, carry out a thoroughly convergence analysis and illustrate our theoretical findings with numerical examples.
The thesis is divided into two parts. The first part focuses on classical PDE constrained optimal control problems. We start by studying linear-quadratic objective functionals, which include the standard tracking type term and an additional regularization term as well as the case, where the regularization term is replaced by an $L^1(\Omega)$-norm term, which makes the problem ill-posed. We deepen our study of the augmented Lagrangian algorithm by examining the more complicated class of optimal control problems that are governed by a semilinear partial differential equation.
The second part investigates the broader class of multi-player control problems. While the examination of jointly convex generalized Nash equilibrium problems (GNEP) is a simple extension of the linear elliptic optimal control case, the complexity is increased significantly for pure GNEPs. The existence of solutions of jointly convex GNEPs is well-studied. However, solution algorithms may suffer from non-uniqueness of solutions. Therefore, the last part of this thesis is devoted to the analysis of the uniqueness of normalized equilibria.
A new approach to modelling pedestrians' avoidance dynamics based on a Fokker–Planck (FP) Nash game framework is presented. In this framework, two interacting pedestrians are considered, whose motion variability is modelled through the corresponding probability density functions (PDFs) governed by FP equations. Based on these equations, a Nash differential game is formulated where the game strategies represent controls aiming at avoidance by minimizing appropriate collision cost functionals. The existence of Nash equilibria solutions is proved and characterized as a solution to an optimal control problem that is solved numerically. Results of numerical experiments are presented that successfully compare the computed Nash equilibria to the output of real experiments (conducted with humans) for four test cases.
Ill-posed optimization problems appear in a wide range of mathematical applications, and their numerical solution requires the use of appropriate regularization techniques. In order to understand these techniques, a thorough analysis is inevitable.
The main subject of this book are quadratic optimal control problems subject to elliptic linear or semi-linear partial differential equations. Depending on the structure of the differential equation, different regularization techniques are employed, and their analysis leads to novel results such as rate of convergence estimates.
In this work, multi-particle quantum optimal control problems are studied in the framework of time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT).
Quantum control problems are of great importance in both fundamental research and application of atomic and molecular systems. Typical applications are laser induced chemical reactions, nuclear magnetic resonance experiments, and quantum computing.
Theoretically, the problem of how to describe a non-relativistic system of multiple particles is solved by the Schrödinger equation (SE). However, due to the exponential increase in numerical complexity with the number of particles, it is impossible to directly solve the Schrödinger equation for large systems of interest. An efficient and successful approach to overcome this difficulty is the framework of TDDFT and the use of the time-dependent Kohn-Sham (TDKS) equations therein.
This is done by replacing the multi-particle SE with a set of nonlinear single-particle Schrödinger equations that are coupled through an additional potential.
Despite the fact that TDDFT is widely used for physical and quantum chemical calculation and software packages for its use are readily available, its mathematical foundation is still under active development and even fundamental issues remain unproven today.
The main purpose of this thesis is to provide a consistent and rigorous setting for the TDKS equations and of the related optimal control problems.
In the first part of the thesis, the framework of density functional theory (DFT) and TDDFT are introduced. This includes a detailed presentation of the different functional sets forming DFT. Furthermore, the known equivalence of the TDKS system to the original SE problem is further discussed.
To implement the TDDFT framework for multi-particle computations, the TDKS equations provide one of the most successful approaches nowadays. However, only few mathematical results concerning these equations are available and these results do not cover all issues that arise in the formulation of optimal control problems governed by the TDKS model.
It is the purpose of the second part of this thesis to address these issues such as higher regularity of TDKS solutions and the case of weaker requirements on external (control) potentials that are instrumental for the formulation of well-posed TDKS control problems. For this purpose, in this work, existence and uniqueness of TDKS solutions are investigated in the Galerkin framework and using energy estimates for the nonlinear TDKS equations.
In the third part of this thesis, optimal control problems governed by the TDKS model are formulated and investigated. For this purpose, relevant cost functionals that model the purpose of the control are discussed.
Henceforth, TDKS control problems result from the requirement of optimising the given cost functionals subject to the differential constraint given by the TDKS equations. The analysis of these problems is novel and represents one of the main contributions of the present thesis.
In particular, existence of minimizers is proved and their characterization by TDKS optimality systems is discussed in detail.
To this end, Fréchet differentiability of the TDKS model and of the cost functionals is addressed considering \(H^1\) cost of the control.
This part is concluded by deriving the reduced gradient in the \(L^2\) and \(H^1\) inner product.
While the \(L^2\) optimization is widespread in the literature, the choice of the \(H^1\) gradient is motivated in this work by theoretical consideration and by resulting numerical advantages.
The last part of the thesis is devoted to the numerical approximation of the TDKS optimality systems and to their solution by gradient-based optimization techniques.
For the former purpose, Strang time-splitting pseudo-spectral schemes are discussed including a review of some recent theoretical estimates for these schemes and a numerical validation of these estimates.
For the latter purpose, nonlinear (projected) conjugate gradient methods are implemented and are used to validate the theoretical analysis of this thesis with results of numerical experiments with different cost functional settings.
First-order proximal methods that solve linear and bilinear elliptic optimal control problems with a sparsity cost functional are discussed. In particular, fast convergence of these methods is proved. For benchmarking purposes, inexact proximal schemes are compared to an inexact semismooth Newton method. Results of numerical experiments are presented to demonstrate the computational effectiveness of proximal schemes applied to infinite-dimensional elliptic optimal control problems and to validate the theoretical estimates.
Mathematical modelling, simulation, and optimisation are core methodologies for future
developments in engineering, natural, and life sciences. This work aims at applying these
mathematical techniques in the field of biological processes with a focus on the wine
fermentation process that is chosen as a representative model.
In the literature, basic models for the wine fermentation process consist of a system of
ordinary differential equations. They model the evolution of the yeast population number
as well as the concentrations of assimilable nitrogen, sugar, and ethanol. In this thesis,
the concentration of molecular oxygen is also included in order to model the change of
the metabolism of the yeast from an aerobic to an anaerobic one. Further, a more sophisticated
toxicity function is used. It provides simulation results that match experimental
measurements better than a linear toxicity model. Moreover, a further equation for the
temperature plays a crucial role in this work as it opens a way to influence the fermentation
process in a desired way by changing the temperature of the system via a cooling
mechanism. From the view of the wine industry, it is necessary to cope with large scale
fermentation vessels, where spatial inhomogeneities of concentrations and temperature
are likely to arise. Therefore, a system of reaction-diffusion equations is formulated in
this work, which acts as an approximation for a model including computationally very
expensive fluid dynamics.
In addition to the modelling issues, an optimal control problem for the proposed
reaction-diffusion fermentation model with temperature boundary control is presented
and analysed. Variational methods are used to prove the existence of unique weak solutions
to this non-linear problem. In this framework, it is possible to exploit the Hilbert
space structure of state and control spaces to prove the existence of optimal controls.
Additionally, first-order necessary optimality conditions are presented. They characterise
controls that minimise an objective functional with the purpose to minimise the final
sugar concentration. A numerical experiment shows that the final concentration of sugar
can be reduced by a suitably chosen temperature control.
The second part of this thesis deals with the identification of an unknown function
that participates in a dynamical model. For models with ordinary differential equations,
where parts of the dynamic cannot be deduced due to the complexity of the underlying
phenomena, a minimisation problem is formulated. By minimising the deviations of simulation
results and measurements the best possible function from a trial function space
is found. The analysis of this function identification problem covers the proof of the
differentiability of the function–to–state operator, the existence of minimisers, and the
sensitivity analysis by means of the data–to–function mapping. Moreover, the presented
function identification method is extended to stochastic differential equations. Here, the
objective functional consists of the difference of measured values and the statistical expected
value of the stochastic process solving the stochastic differential equation. Using a
Fokker-Planck equation that governs the probability density function of the process, the
probabilistic problem of simulating a stochastic process is cast to a deterministic partial
differential equation. Proofs of unique solvability of the forward equation, the existence of
minimisers, and first-order necessary optimality conditions are presented. The application
of the function identification framework to the wine fermentation model aims at finding
the shape of the toxicity function and is carried out for the deterministic as well as the
stochastic case.
This thesis deals with the hp-finite element method (FEM) for linear quadratic optimal control problems. Here, a tracking type functional with control costs as regularization shall be minimized subject to an elliptic partial differential equation. In the presence of control constraints, the first order necessary conditions, which are typically used to find optimal solutions numerically, can be formulated as a semi-smooth projection formula. Consequently, optimal solutions may be non-smooth as well. The hp-discretization technique considers this fact and approximates rough functions on fine meshes while using higher order finite elements on domains where the solution is smooth.
The first main achievement of this thesis is the successful application of hp-FEM to two related problem classes: Neumann boundary and interface control problems. They are solved with an a-priori refinement strategy called boundary concentrated (bc) FEM and interface concentrated (ic) FEM, respectively. These strategies generate grids that are heavily refined towards the boundary or interface. We construct an elementwise interpolant that allows to prove algebraic decay of the approximation error for both techniques. Additionally, a detailed analysis of global and local regularity of solutions, which is critical for the speed of convergence, is included. Since the bc- and ic-FEM retain small polynomial degrees for elements touching the boundary and interface, respectively, we are able to deduce novel error estimates in the L2- and L∞-norm. The latter allows an a-priori strategy for updating the regularization parameter in the objective functional to solve bang-bang problems.
Furthermore, we apply the traditional idea of the hp-FEM, i.e., grading the mesh geometrically towards vertices of the domain, for solving optimal control problems (vc-FEM). In doing so, we obtain exponential convergence with respect to the number of unknowns. This is proved with a regularity result in countably normed spaces for the variables of the coupled optimality system.
The second main achievement of this thesis is the development of a fully adaptive hp-interior point method that can solve problems with distributed or Neumann control. The underlying barrier problem yields a non-linear optimality system, which poses a numerical challenge: the numerically stable evaluation of integrals over possibly singular functions in higher order elements. We successfully overcome this difficulty by monitoring the control variable at the integration points and enforcing feasibility in an additional smoothing step. In this work, we prove convergence of an interior point method with smoothing step and derive a-posteriori error estimators. The adaptive mesh refinement is based on the expansion of the solution in a Legendre series. The decay of the coefficients serves as an indicator for smoothness that guides between h- and p-refinement.