Active Flow Control for Drag Reduction Through Multi-agent Reinforcement Learning on a Turbulent Cylinder at ReD=3900

Review (2025)
Author(s)

Pol Suárez (KTH Royal Institute of Technology)

Francisco Alcántara-Ávila (KTH Royal Institute of Technology)

Arnau Miro (Barcelona Supercomputing Center)

Jean Rabault (Independent researcher)

B. Font (TU Delft - Ship Hydromechanics)

Oriol Lehmkuhl (Barcelona Supercomputing Center)

Ricardo Vinuesa (KTH Royal Institute of Technology)

Research Group
Ship Hydromechanics
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10494-025-00642-x
More Info
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Publication Year
2025
Language
English
Research Group
Ship Hydromechanics
Issue number
1
Volume number
115
Pages (from-to)
3-27
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Abstract

This study presents novel drag reduction active-flow-control (AFC) strategies for a three-dimensional cylinder immersed in a flow at a Reynolds number based on freestream velocity and cylinder diameter of ReD=3900. The cylinder in this subcritical flow regime has been extensively studied in the literature and is considered a classic case of turbulent flow arising from a bluff body. The strategies presented are explored through the use of deep reinforcement learning. The cylinder is equipped with 10 independent zero-net-mass-flux jet pairs, distributed on the top and bottom surfaces, which define the AFC setup. The method is based on the coupling between a computational-fluid-dynamics solver and a multi-agent reinforcement-learning (MARL) framework using the proximal-policy-optimization algorithm. This work introduces a multi-stage training approach to expand the exploration space and enhance drag reduction stabilization. By accelerating training through the exploitation of local invariants with MARL, a drag reduction of approximately 9% is achieved. The cooperative closed-loop strategy developed by the agents is sophisticated, as it utilizes a wide bandwidth of mass-flow-rate frequencies, which classical control methods are unable to match. Notably, the mass cost efficiency is demonstrated to be two orders of magnitude lower than that of classical control methods reported in the literature. These developments represent a significant advancement in active flow control in turbulent regimes, critical for industrial applications.