Computing local sensitivity and tolerances for stellarator physics properties using shape gradients
Matt Landreman, Elizabeth J Paul

TL;DR
This paper introduces a method to compute local sensitivities and tolerances for stellarator physics properties using shape gradients, linking physics optimization with engineering constraints for improved design accuracy.
Contribution
It develops a novel approach to determine shape gradients for plasma and coil shapes, enabling local sensitivity analysis and tolerances directly related to engineering constraints.
Findings
Shape gradients can be computed for plasma and coil shapes.
Magnetic sensitivity can be derived from shape gradients.
Local tolerances inform coil placement and manufacturing precision.
Abstract
Tight tolerances have been a leading driver of cost in recent stellarator experiments, so improved definition and control of tolerances can have significant impact on progress in the field. Here we relate tolerances to the shape gradient representation that has been useful for shape optimization in industry, used for example to determine which regions of a car or aerofoil most affect drag, and we demonstrate how the shape gradient can be computed for physics properties of toroidal plasmas. The shape gradient gives the local differential contribution to some scalar figure of merit (shape functional) caused by normal displacement of the shape. In contrast to derivatives with respect to quantities parameterizing a shape (e.g. Fourier amplitudes), which have been used previously for optimizing plasma and coil shapes, the shape gradient gives spatially local information and so is more easily…
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