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Data-Driven Modelling of the Reynolds Stress Tensor using Random Forests with Invariance

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 Added by Mikael Kaandorp
 Publication date 2018
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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A novel machine learning algorithm is presented, serving as a data-driven turbulence modeling tool for Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) simulations. This machine learning algorithm, called the Tensor Basis Random Forest (TBRF), is used to predict the Reynolds-stress anisotropy tensor, while guaranteeing Galilean invariance by making use of a tensor basis. By modifying a random forest algorithm to accept such a tensor basis, a robust, easy to implement, and easy to train algorithm is created. The algorithm is trained on several flow cases using DNS/LES data, and used to predict the Reynolds stress anisotropy tensor for new, unseen flows. The resulting predictions of turbulence anisotropy are used as a turbulence model within a custom RANS solver. Stabilization of this solver is necessary, and is achieved by a continuation method and a modified $k$-equation. Results are compared to the neural network approach of Ling et al. [J. Fluid Mech, 807(2016):155-166, (2016)]. Results show that the TBRF algorithm is able to accurately predict the anisotropy tensor for various flow cases, with realizable predictions close to the DNS/LES reference data. Corresponding mean flows for a square duct flow case and a backward facing step flow case show good agreement with DNS and experimental data-sets. Overall, these results are seen as a next step towards improved data-driven modelling of turbulence. This creates an opportunity to generate custom turbulence closures for specific classes of flows, limited only by the availability of LES/DNS data.



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Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) equations are presently one of the most popular models for simulating turbulence. Performing RANS simulation requires additional modeling for the anisotropic Reynolds stress tensor, but traditional Reynolds stress closure models lead to only partially reliable predictions. Recently, data-driven turbulence models for the Reynolds anisotropy tensor involving novel machine learning techniques have garnered considerable attention and have been rapidly developed. Focusing on modeling the Reynolds stress closure for the specific case of turbulent channel flow, this paper proposes three modifications to a standard neural network to account for the no-slip boundary condition of the anisotropy tensor, the Reynolds number dependence, and spatial non-locality. The modified models are shown to provide increased predicative accuracy compared to the standard neural network when they are trained and tested on channel flow at different Reynolds numbers. The best performance is yielded by the model combining the boundary condition enforcement and Reynolds number injection. This model also outperforms the Tensor Basis Neural Network (Ling et al., 2016) on the turbulent channel flow dataset.
Despite their well-known limitations, RANS models remain the most commonly employed tool for modeling turbulent flows in engineering practice. RANS models are predicated on the solution of the RANS equations, but these equations involve an unclosed term, the Reynolds stress tensor, which must be modeled. The Reynolds stress tensor is often modeled as an algebraic function of mean flow field variables and turbulence variables. This introduces a discrepancy between the Reynolds stress tensor predicted by the model and the exact Reynolds stress tensor. This discrepancy can result in inaccurate mean flow field predictions. In this paper, we introduce a data-informed approach for arriving at Reynolds stress models with improved predictive performance. Our approach relies on learning the components of the Reynolds stress discrepancy tensor associated with a given Reynolds stress model in the mean strain-rate tensor eigenframe. These components are typically smooth and hence simple to learn using state-of-the-art machine learning strategies and regression techniques. Our approach automatically yields Reynolds stress models that are symmetric, and it yields Reynolds stress models that are both Galilean and frame invariant provided the inputs are themselves Galilean and frame invariant. To arrive at computable models of the discrepancy tensor, we employ feed-forward neural networks and an input space spanning the integrity basis of the mean strain-rate tensor, the mean rotation-rate tensor, the mean pressure gradient, and the turbulent kinetic energy gradient, and we introduce a framework for dimensional reduction of the input space to further reduce computational cost. Numerical results illustrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach for data-informed Reynolds stress closure for a suite of turbulent flow problems of increasing complexity.
142 - Bo Liu , Huiyang Yu , Haibo Huang 2021
A nonlocal subgrid-scale stress (SGS) model is developed based on the convolution neural network (CNN), a powerful supervised data-driven approach. The CNN is an ideal approach to naturally consider nonlocal spatial information in prediction due to its wide receptive field. The CNN-based models used here only take primitive flow variables as input, then the flow features are automatically extracted without any $priori$ guidance. The nonlocal models trained by direct numerical simulation (DNS) data of a turbulent channel flow at $Re_{tau}=178$ are accessed in both the $priori$ and $posteriori$ test, providing physically reasonable flow statistics (like mean velocity and velocity fluctuations) closing to the DNS results even when extrapolating to a higher Reynolds number $Re_{tau}=600$. In our model, the backscatter is also predicted well and the numerical simulation is stable. The nonlocal models outperform local data-driven models like artificial neural network and some SGS models, e.g. the Smagorinsky model in actual large eddy simulation (LES). The model is also robust since stable solutions can be obtained when examining the grid resolution from one-half to double of the spatial resolution used in training. We also investigate the influence of receptive fields and suggest using the two-point correlation analysis as a quantitative method to guide the design of nonlocal physical models. To facilitate the combination of machine learning (ML) algorithms to computational fluid dynamics (CFD), a novel heterogeneous ML-CFD framework is proposed. The present study provides the effective data-driven nonlocal methods for SGS modelling in the LES of complex anisotropic turbulent flows.
A new scaling is derived that yields a Reynolds number independent profile for all components of the Reynolds stress in the near-wall region of wall bounded flows. The scaling demonstrates the important role played by the wall shear stress fluctuations and how the large eddies determine the Reynolds number dependence of the near-wall turbulence behavior.
The Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) equations are widely used in turbulence applications. They require accurately modeling the anisotropic Reynolds stress tensor, for which traditional Reynolds stress closure models only yield reliable results in some flow configurations. In the last few years, there has been a surge of work aiming at using data-driven approaches to tackle this problem. The majority of previous work has focused on the development of fully-connected networks for modeling the anisotropic Reynolds stress tensor. In this paper, we expand upon recent work for turbulent channel flow and develop new convolutional neural network (CNN) models that are able to accurately predict the normalized anisotropic Reynolds stress tensor. We apply the new CNN model to a number of one-dimensional turbulent flows. Additionally, we present interpretability techniques that help drive the model design and provide guidance on the model behavior in relation to the underlying physics.
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