RT Journal Article ID 0c1dab6215fcbf63 A1 Mousaviraad, S. Maysam A1 He, Wei A1 Diez, Matteo A1 Stern, Frederick T1 FRAMEWORK FOR CONVERGENCE AND VALIDATION OF STOCHASTIC UNCERTAINTY QUANTIFICATION AND RELATIONSHIP TO DETERMINISTIC VERIFICATION AND VALIDATION JF International Journal for Uncertainty Quantification JO IJUQ YR 2013 FD 2013-03-12 VO 3 IS 5 SP 371 OP 395 K1 deterministic verification and validation K1 nonintrusive stochastic uncertainty quantification K1 convergence criteria K1 UQ validation K1 RANS CFD simulation AB A framework is described for convergence and validation of nonintrusive uncertainty quantification (UQ) methods; the relationship between deterministic verification and validation (V&V) and stochastic UQ is studied, and an example is provided for a unit problem. Convergence procedures are developed for Monte Carlo (MC) without and with metamodels, showing that in addition to the usual user-defined acceptable confidence intervals, convergence studies with systematic refinement ratio are required. A UQ validation procedure is developed using the benchmark UQ results and defining the comparison error and its uncertainty to evaluate validation. A stochastic influence factor is defined to evaluate the effects of input variability on the performance expectation and four possibilities are identified in making design decisions. The unit problem studies a two-dimensional airfoil with variable Re and normal distribution using high-fidelity Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) simulations. Deterministic V&V studies achieve monotonic grid convergence and validation at the validation uncertainty interval of 2.2% D, averaged between lift and drag, with an average error of 0.25% D. For MC with Latin hypercube sampling the converged results are obtained with 400 computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations and are used as validation benchmark in the absence of experimental UQ. The stochastic influence factor is small such that the output expected value is not distinguishable from the deterministic solution. The output uncertainty is one order of magnitude smaller for lift than drag, implying that lift is only weakly dependent on Re. Several metamodels are used with MC, reducing the number of CFD simulations to a minimum of 4. The results are converged and validated at the average intervals of 0.1% for expected value (EV) and 10.7% for standard deviation (SD). The Gauss quadrature and the polynomial chaos (PC) method are validated using 8 and 7 CFD simulations, respectively, at the average intervals of 0.08% for EV and 7.5% for SD. The error values are smallest for the metamodels, followed by the PC method and then the Gauss quadratures. PB Begell House LK https://www.dl.begellhouse.com/journals/52034eb04b657aea,2cb8d8b565b6c7f1,0c1dab6215fcbf63.html