Data-driven sub-grid model development for large eddy simulations of turbulence
Abstract
Turbulence modeling remains an active area of research due to its significant impact on a diverse set of challenges such as those pertaining to the aerospace and geophysical communities. Researchers continue to search for modeling strategies that improve the representation of high-wavenumber content in practical computational fluid dynamics applications. The recent successes of machine learning in the physical sciences have motivated a number of studies into the modeling of turbulence from a data-driven point of view. In this research, we utilize physics-informed machine learning to reconstruct the effect of unresolved frequencies (i.e., small-scale turbulence) on grid-resolved flow-variables obtained through large eddy simulation. In general, it is seen that the successful development of any data-driven strategy relies on two phases - learning and a-posteriori deployment. The former requires the synthesis of labeled data from direct numerical simulations of our target phenomenon whereas the latter requires the development of stability preserving modifications instead of a direct deployment of learning predictions. These stability preserving techniques may be through prediction modulation - where learning outputs are deployed via an intermediate statistical truncation. They may also be through the utilization of model classifiers where the traditional $L_2$-minimization strategy is avoided for a categorical cross-entropy error which flags for the most stable model deployment at a point on the computational grid. In this thesis, we outline several investigations utilizing the aforementioned philosophies and come to the conclusion that sub-grid turbulence models built through the utilization of machine learning are capable of recovering viable statistical trends in stabilized a-posteriori deployments for Kraichnan and Kolmogorov turbulence. Therefore, they represent a promising tool for the generation of closures that may be utilized in flows that belong to different configurations and have different sub-grid modeling requirements.
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- OSU Dissertations [11222]