Computationally Efficient CFD Prediction of Bubbly Flow using Physics-Guided Deep Learning
This addresses the need for efficient industrial design of two-phase flow systems, though it is incremental as it builds on existing CFD and deep learning methods.
The paper tackled efficient computational fluid dynamics (CFD) prediction of bubbly flow by developing a physics-guided deep learning framework, achieving comparable accuracy to fine-mesh simulations with faster computation.
To realize efficient computational fluid dynamics (CFD) prediction of two-phase flow, a multi-scale framework was proposed in this paper by applying a physics-guided data-driven approach. Instrumental to this framework, Feature Similarity Measurement (FSM) technique was developed for error estimation in two-phase flow simulation using coarse-mesh CFD, to achieve a comparable accuracy as fine-mesh simulations with fast-running feature. By defining physics-guided parameters and variable gradients as physical features, FSM has the capability to capture the underlying local patterns in the coarse-mesh CFD simulation. Massive low-fidelity data and respective high-fidelity data are used to explore the underlying information relevant to the main simulation errors and the effects of phenomenological scaling. By learning from previous simulation data, a surrogate model using deep feedforward neural network (DFNN) can be developed and trained to estimate the simulation error of coarse-mesh CFD. The research documented supports the feasibility of the physics-guided deep learning methods for coarse mesh CFD simulations which has a potential for the efficient industrial design.