Three-dimensional generative adversarial networks for turbulent flow estimation from wall measurements

Bibliographic Details
Title: Three-dimensional generative adversarial networks for turbulent flow estimation from wall measurements
Authors: Cuéllar, Antonio, Güemes, Alejandro, Ianiro, Andrea, Flores, Óscar, Vinuesa, Ricardo, Discetti, Stefano
Source: Cu\'ellar, A., G\"uemes, A., Ianiro, A., Flores, \'O., Vinuesa, R., Discetti, S.: Three-dimensional generative adversarial networks for turbulent flow estimation from wall measurements. J. Fluid Mech. 991, A1 (2024)
Publication Year: 2024
Collection: Physics (Other)
Subject Terms: Physics - Fluid Dynamics
More Details: Different types of neural networks have been used to solve the flow sensing problem in turbulent flows, namely to estimate velocity in wall-parallel planes from wall measurements. Generative adversarial networks (GANs) are among the most promising methodologies, due to their more accurate estimations and better perceptual quality. This work tackles this flow sensing problem in the vicinity of the wall, addressing for the first time the reconstruction of the entire three-dimensional (3-D) field with a single network, i.e. a 3-D GAN. With this methodology, a single training and prediction process overcomes the limitation presented by the former approaches based on the independent estimation of wall-parallel planes. The network is capable of estimating the 3-D flow field with a level of error at each wall-normal distance comparable to that reported from wall-parallel plane estimations and at a lower training cost in terms of computational resources. The direct full 3-D reconstruction also unveils a direct interpretation in terms of coherent structures. It is shown that the accuracy of the network depends directly on the wall footprint of each individual turbulent structure. It is observed that wall-attached structures are predicted more accurately than wall-detached ones, especially at larger distances from the wall. Among wall-attached structures, smaller sweeps are reconstructed better than small ejections, while large ejections are reconstructed better than large sweeps as a consequence of their more intense footprint.
Document Type: Working Paper
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2024.432
Access URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2409.06548
Accession Number: edsarx.2409.06548
Database: arXiv
More Details
DOI:10.1017/jfm.2024.432