Addressing turbulent convection experimental data challenges in PINNs with appropriate physical sampling
Résumé
Numerical and experimental approaches are becoming more complementary approaches to address
highly turbulent regimes thanks to improvements in computation resources. Nonetheless, experimen-
tal results, such as meshless 3D3C Particle Tracking Velocimetry, are often spatially sparse, somewhat
discontinuous, subject to measurement noise and incomplete, while CFD simulations still require in-
tensive resources to solve all the time scales. To address these issues, we employ Physics Informed
Neural Networks (PINNs) [2], which provide a meshless way to enrich and complement experimental
data [1]. In the case of turbulent convection, our framework allows 3D temperature discovery, denois-
ing, and generating continuous field representations [3]. Departing from the idealized case of Eulerian
training-reconstruction, we propose a spatio-temporal sampling framework to tailor our DNS database
to closely resemble experimental measurements. This poses additional challenges to PINNs particularly
on addressing spatial gaps, tracking loss and scarcity of experimental-type labels. An important ques-
tion arises on the optimal choice of collocation points to help alleviating these constraints. Our analysis
focuses on the impact of PDE collocation points density through parallel GPU computations. Addition-
ally, we explore the effectiveness of smart adaptive spatial PDE sampling to mitigate information loss
with respect to relevant turbulent quantities caused by inherently noisy and sparse data.
Domaines
Sciences de l'ingénieur [physics]Origine | Fichiers produits par l'(les) auteur(s) |
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