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Data-enabled discovery of specific and generalisable turbulence closures

Zhongxin Yang, Xianglin Shan, Xiang I. A. Yang, Weiwei Zhang

2025Journal of Fluid Mechanics13 citationsDOI

Abstract

Turbulence closures are essential for predictive fluid flow simulations in both natural and engineering systems. While machine learning offers promising avenues, existing data-driven turbulence models often fail to generalise beyond their training datasets. This study identifies the root cause of this limitation as the conflation of generalisable flow physics and dataset-specific behaviours. We address this challenge using symbolic regression, which yields interpretable, white-box expressions. By decomposing the learned corrections into inner-layer, outer-layer and pressure-gradient components, we isolate universal physics from flow-specific features. The model is trained progressively using high-fidelity datasets for plane channel flows, zero-pressure-gradient turbulent boundary layers (ZPGTBLs), and adverse pressure-gradient turbulent boundary layers (PGTBLs). For example, direct application of a model trained on channel flow data to ZPGTBLs results in incorrect skin friction predictions. However, when only the generalisable inner-layer component is retained and combined with an outer-layer correction specific to ZPGTBLs, predictions improve significantly. Similarly, a pressure-gradient correction derived from PGTBL data enables accurate modelling of aerofoil flows with both favourable and adverse pressure gradients. The resulting symbolic corrections are compact, interpretable, and generalise across configurations – including unseen geometries such as aerofoils and Reynolds numbers outside the training set. The models outperform baseline Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes closures (e.g. the Spalart–Allmaras and shear stress transport models) in both a priori and a posteriori tests. These results demonstrate that explicit identification and retention of generalisable components is key to overcoming the generalisation challenge in machine-learned turbulence closures.

Topics & Concepts

TurbulenceComputer scienceMechanicsPhysicsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent FlowsWind and Air Flow StudiesFluid Dynamics and Vibration Analysis
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