English

Implicit differentiation with second-order derivatives and benchmarks in finite-element-based differentiable physics

Computational Engineering, Finance, and Science 2025-05-20 v1

Abstract

Differentiable programming is revolutionizing computational science by enabling automatic differentiation (AD) of numerical simulations. While first-order gradients are well-established, second-order derivatives (Hessians) for implicit functions in finite-element-based differentiable physics remain underexplored. This work bridges this gap by deriving and implementing a framework for implicit Hessian computation in PDE-constrained optimization problems. We leverage primitive AD tools (Jacobian-vector product/vector-Jacobian product) to build an algorithm for Hessian-vector products and validate the accuracy against finite difference approximations. Four benchmarks spanning linear/nonlinear, 2D/3D, and single/coupled-variable problems demonstrate the utility of second-order information. Results show that the Newton-CG method with exact Hessians accelerates convergence for nonlinear inverse problems (e.g., traction force identification, shape optimization), while the L-BFGS-B method suffices for linear cases. Our work provides a robust foundation for integrating second-order implicit differentiation into differentiable physics engines, enabling faster and more reliable optimization.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2505.12646,
  title  = {Implicit differentiation with second-order derivatives and benchmarks in finite-element-based differentiable physics},
  author = {Tianju Xue},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2505.12646},
  year   = {2025}
}
R2 v1 2026-07-01T02:20:36.823Z