Velocity reconstruction in puffing pool fires with physics-informed neural networks

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

Michael Philip Sitte (Siemens AG Osterreich)

N. A.K. Doan (TU Delft - Aerodynamics)

Research Group
Aerodynamics
Copyright
© 2022 Michael Philip Sitte, Nguyen Anh Khoa Doan
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0097496
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 Michael Philip Sitte, Nguyen Anh Khoa Doan
Research Group
Aerodynamics
Issue number
8
Volume number
34
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Abstract

Pool fires are canonical representations of many accidental fires which can exhibit an unstable unsteady behavior, known as puffing, which involves a strong coupling between the temperature and velocity fields. Despite their practical relevance to fire research, their experimental study can be limited due to the complexity of measuring relevant quantities in parallel. In this work, we analyze the use of a recent physics-informed machine learning approach, called hidden fluid mechanics (HFM), to reconstruct unmeasured quantities in a puffing pool fire from measured quantities. The HFM framework relies on a physics-informed neural network (PINN) for this task. A PINN is a neural network that uses both the available data, here the measured quantities, and the physical equations governing the system, here the reacting Navier-Stokes equations, to infer the full fluid dynamic state. This framework is used to infer the velocity field in a puffing pool fire from measurements of density, pressure, and temperature. In this work, the dataset used for this test was generated from numerical simulations. It is shown that the PINN is able to reconstruct the velocity field accurately and to infer most features of the velocity field. In addition, it is shown that the reconstruction accuracy is robust with respect to noisy data, and a reduction in the number of measured quantities is explored and discussed. This study opens up the possibility of using PINNs for the reconstruction of unmeasured quantities from measured ones, providing the potential groundwork for their use in experiments for fire research.