Litcius/Paper detail

Physics-informed neural networks for gravity currents reconstruction from limited data

Mickaël Delcey, Yoann Cheny, Sébastien Kiesgen de Richter

2023Physics of Fluids22 citationsDOI

Abstract

The present work investigates the use of physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) for the three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction of unsteady gravity currents from limited data. In the PINN context, the flow fields are reconstructed by training a neural network whose objective function penalizes the mismatch between the network predictions and the observed data and embeds the underlying equations using automatic differentiation. This study relies on a high-fidelity numerical experiment of the canonical lock-exchange configuration. This allows us to benchmark quantitatively the PINNs reconstruction capabilities on several training databases that mimic state-of-the-art experimental measurement techniques for density and velocity. Notably, spatially averaged density measurements by the light attenuation technique (LAT) are employed for the training procedure. We propose an experimental setup that combines density measurement by LAT and two independent planar velocity measurements by particle image velocimetry (PIV). The so-called LAT-2PIV setup gives the most promising results for flow reconstruction by PINNs, with respect to its accuracy and cost efficiency.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsArtificial neural networkBenchmark (surveying)Context (archaeology)Particle image velocimetryFlow (mathematics)AlgorithmClassical mechanicsStatistical physicsArtificial intelligenceMechanicsComputer scienceTurbulenceBiologyPaleontologyGeographyGeodesyModel Reduction and Neural NetworksFluid Dynamics and Turbulent FlowsFluid Dynamics and Vibration Analysis