January 9, 2017
Journal Article

Bayesian Treed Calibration: an application to carbon capture with AX sorbent

Abstract

In cases where field or experimental measurements are not available, computer models can model real physical or engineering systems to reproduce their outcomes. They are usually calibrated in light of experimental data to create a better representation of the real system. Statistical methods, based on Gaussian processes, for calibration and prediction have been especially important when the computer models are expensive and experimental data limited. In this paper, we develop the Bayesian treed calibration (BTC) as an extension of standard Gaussian process calibration methods to deal with non-stationarity computer models and/or their discrepancy from the field (or experimental) data. Our proposed method partitions both the calibration and observable input space, based on a binary tree partitioning, into sub-regions where existing model calibration methods can be applied to connect a computer model with the real system. The estimation of the parameters in the proposed model is carried out using Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) computational techniques. Different strategies have been applied to improve mixing. We illustrate our method in two artificial examples and a real application that concerns the capture of carbon dioxide with AX amine based sorbents. The source code and the examples analyzed in this paper are available as part of the supplementary materials.

Revised: May 18, 2017 | Published: January 9, 2017

Citation

Konomi B.A., G. Karagiannis, C. Lai, and G. Lin. 2017. Bayesian Treed Calibration: an application to carbon capture with AX sorbent. Journal of the American Statistical Association 112, no. 517:37-53. PNNL-SA-117823. doi:10.1080/01621459.2016.1190279