Reconstruction of Simulation-Based Physical Field by Reconstruction Neural Network Method
This work addresses the need for accurate and efficient physical field reconstruction in multidisciplinary engineering applications, but it appears incremental as it builds on existing CNN and GAN methods with specific modifications.
The study tackled the problem of reconstructing simulation-based physical fields, such as stress and strain, by proposing a Reconstruction Neural Network (ReConNN) method that combines CNN and GAN techniques, achieving potential capability in applications like heat transfer reconstruction for a pin fin heat sink.
A variety of modeling techniques have been developed in the past decade to reduce the computational expense and improve the accuracy of modeling. In this study, a new framework of modeling is suggested. Compared with other popular methods, a distinctive characteristic is "from image based model to analysis based model (e.g. stress, strain, and deformation)". In such a framework, a reconstruction neural network (ReConNN) model designed for simulation-based physical field's reconstruction is proposed. The ReConNN contains two submodels that are convolutional neural network (CNN) and generative adversarial net-work (GAN). The CNN is employed to construct the mapping between contour images of physical field and objective function. Subsequently, the GAN is utilized to generate more images which are similar to the existing contour images. Finally, Lagrange polynomial is applied to complete the reconstruction. However, the existing CNN models are commonly applied to the classification tasks, which seem to be difficult to handle with regression tasks of images. Meanwhile, the existing GAN architectures are insufficient to generate high-accuracy "pseudo contour images". Therefore, a ReConNN model based on a Convolution in Convolution (CIC) and a Convolutional AutoEncoder based on Wasserstein Generative Adversarial Network (WGAN-CAE) is suggested. To evaluate the performance of the proposed model representatively, a classical topology optimization procedure is considered. Then the ReConNN is utilized to the reconstruction of heat transfer process of a pin fin heat sink. It demonstrates that the proposed ReConNN model is proved to be a potential capability to reconstruct physical field for multidisciplinary, such as structural optimization.