MLLGJul 4, 2019

Transfer learning enhanced physics informed neural network for phase-field modeling of fracture

arXiv:1907.02531v1803 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This incremental improvement addresses computational efficiency and accuracy challenges in fracture mechanics simulations for engineering applications.

The researchers tackled brittle fracture modeling by developing a physics-informed neural network that minimizes variational energy instead of PDE residuals, achieving better accuracy than conventional PINN approaches while simplifying boundary condition enforcement and reducing computational cost.

We present a new physics informed neural network (PINN) algorithm for solving brittle fracture problems. While most of the PINN algorithms available in the literature minimize the residual of the governing partial differential equation, the proposed approach takes a different path by minimizing the variational energy of the system. Additionally, we modify the neural network output such that the boundary conditions associated with the problem are exactly satisfied. Compared to conventional residual based PINN, the proposed approach has two major advantages. First, the imposition of boundary conditions is relatively simpler and more robust. Second, the order of derivatives present in the functional form of the variational energy is of lower order than in the residual form. Hence, training the network is faster. To compute the total variational energy of the system, an efficient scheme that takes as input a geometry described by spline based CAD model and employs Gauss quadrature rules for numerical integration has been proposed. Moreover, we utilize the concept of transfer learning to obtain the crack path in an efficient manner. The proposed approach is used to solve four fracture mechanics problems. For all the examples, results obtained using the proposed approach match closely with the results available in the literature. For the first two examples, we compare the results obtained using the proposed approach with the conventional residual based neural network results. For both the problems, the proposed approach is found to yield better accuracy compared to conventional residual based PINN algorithms.

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