COMP-PHLGFLU-DYNMay 22, 2024

Enhancing lattice kinetic schemes for fluid dynamics with Lattice-Equivariant Neural Networks

arXiv:2405.13850v13 citationsh-index: 20AIAA J
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for efficient and stable machine learning-augmented computational fluid dynamics simulations, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing frameworks for symmetry-aware neural networks.

The authors tackled the problem of improving neural network-based surrogate models for Lattice Boltzmann collision operators in fluid dynamics by introducing Lattice-Equivariant Neural Networks (LENNs) that respect lattice symmetries, resulting in enhanced accuracy, stability, and speed, with LENNs being about one order of magnitude faster than group-averaged networks in 3D.

We present a new class of equivariant neural networks, hereby dubbed Lattice-Equivariant Neural Networks (LENNs), designed to satisfy local symmetries of a lattice structure. Our approach develops within a recently introduced framework aimed at learning neural network-based surrogate models Lattice Boltzmann collision operators. Whenever neural networks are employed to model physical systems, respecting symmetries and equivariance properties has been shown to be key for accuracy, numerical stability, and performance. Here, hinging on ideas from group representation theory, we define trainable layers whose algebraic structure is equivariant with respect to the symmetries of the lattice cell. Our method naturally allows for efficient implementations, both in terms of memory usage and computational costs, supporting scalable training/testing for lattices in two spatial dimensions and higher, as the size of symmetry group grows. We validate and test our approach considering 2D and 3D flowing dynamics, both in laminar and turbulent regimes. We compare with group averaged-based symmetric networks and with plain, non-symmetric, networks, showing how our approach unlocks the (a-posteriori) accuracy and training stability of the former models, and the train/inference speed of the latter networks (LENNs are about one order of magnitude faster than group-averaged networks in 3D). Our work opens towards practical utilization of machine learning-augmented Lattice Boltzmann CFD in real-world simulations.

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