16.5LGMar 11
Surrogate models for nuclear fusion with parametric Shallow Recurrent Decoder Networks: applications to magnetohydrodynamicsM. Lo Verso, C. Introini, E. Cervi et al.
Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) effects play a key role in the design and operation of nuclear fusion systems, where electrically conducting fluids (such as liquid metals or molten salts in reactor blankets) interact with magnetic fields of varying intensity and orientation, which affect the resulting flow. The numerical resolution of MHD models involves highly nonlinear multiphysics systems of equations and can become computationally expensive, particularly in multi-query, parametric, or real-time contexts. This work investigates a fully data-driven framework for MHD state reconstruction that combines dimensionality reduction via Singular Value Decomposition (SVD) with the SHallow REcurrent Decoder (SHRED), a neural network architecture designed to recover the full spatio-temporal state from sparse time-series measurements of a limited number of observables. The methodology is applied to a parametric MHD test case involving compressible lead-lithium flow in a stepped channel subjected to thermal gradients and magnetic fields spanning a broad range of intensities. To improve efficiency, the full-order dataset is first compressed using SVD, yielding a reduced representation used as reference truth for training. Only temperature measurements from three sensors are provided as input, while the network reconstructs the full fields of velocity, pressure, and temperature. To assess robustness with respect to sensor placement, thirty randomly generated sensor configurations are tested in ensemble mode. Results show that SHRED accurately reconstructs the full MHD state even for magnetic field intensities not included in the training set. These findings demonstrate the potential of SHRED as a computationally efficient surrogate modeling strategy for fusion-relevant multiphysics problems, enabling low-cost state estimation with possible applications in real-time monitoring and control.
12.0LGApr 2
Application of parametric Shallow Recurrent Decoder Network to magnetohydrodynamic flows in liquid metal blankets of fusion reactorsM. Lo Verso, C. Introini, E. Cervi et al.
Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) phenomena play a pivotal role in the design and operation of nuclear fusion systems, where electrically conducting fluids (such as liquid metals or molten salts employed in reactor blankets) interact with magnetic fields of varying intensity and orientation, influencing the resulting flow dynamics. The numerical solution of MHD models entails the resolution of highly nonlinear, multiphysics systems of equations, which can become computationally demanding, particularly in multi-query, parametric, or real-time contexts. This study investigates a fully data-driven framework for MHD state reconstruction that integrates dimensionality reduction through Singular Value Decomposition (SVD) with the SHallow REcurrent Decoder (SHRED), a neural network architecture designed to reconstruct the full spatio-temporal state from sparse time-series measurements of selected observables, including previously unseen parametric configurations. The SHRED methodology is applied to a three-dimensional geometry representative of a portion of a WCLL blanket cell, in which lead-lithium flows around a water-cooled tube. Multiple magnetic field configurations are examined, including constant toroidal fields, combined toroidal-poloidal fields, and time-dependent magnetic fields. Across all considered scenarios, SHRED achieves high reconstruction accuracy, robustness, and generalization to magnetic field intensities, orientations, and temporal evolutions not seen during training. Notably, in the presence of time-varying magnetic fields, the model accurately infers the temporal evolution of the magnetic field itself using temperature measurements alone. Overall, the findings identify SHRED as a computationally efficient, data-driven, and flexible approach for MHD state reconstruction, with significant potential for real-time monitoring, diagnostics and control in fusion reactor systems.
CVOct 15, 2013
Optimal Sensor Placement and Enhanced Sparsity for ClassificationB. W. Brunton, S. L. Brunton, J. L. Proctor et al.
The goal of compressive sensing is efficient reconstruction of data from few measurements, sometimes leading to a categorical decision. If only classification is required, reconstruction can be circumvented and the measurements needed are orders-of-magnitude sparser still. We define enhanced sparsity as the reduction in number of measurements required for classification over reconstruction. In this work, we exploit enhanced sparsity and learn spatial sensor locations that optimally inform a categorical decision. The algorithm solves an l1-minimization to find the fewest entries of the full measurement vector that exactly reconstruct the discriminant vector in feature space. Once the sensor locations have been identified from the training data, subsequent test samples are classified with remarkable efficiency, achieving performance comparable to that obtained by discrimination using the full image. Sensor locations may be learned from full images, or from a random subsample of pixels. For classification between more than two categories, we introduce a coupling parameter whose value tunes the number of sensors selected, trading accuracy for economy. We demonstrate the algorithm on example datasets from image recognition using PCA for feature extraction and LDA for discrimination; however, the method can be broadly applied to non-image data and adapted to work with other methods for feature extraction and discrimination.