LGSep 27, 2024

A physics-driven sensor placement optimization methodology for temperature field reconstruction

arXiv:2409.18423v18 citationsh-index: 25
Originality Incremental advance
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This addresses the challenge of sensor placement optimization in data-free scenarios for physical system monitoring, offering a novel approach that is incremental over existing data-driven methods.

The paper tackles the problem of reconstructing temperature fields from sparse sensors by proposing a physics-driven sensor placement optimization method, which improves reconstruction accuracy by nearly an order of magnitude compared to random and uniform selection methods.

Perceiving the global field from sparse sensors has been a grand challenge in the monitoring, analysis, and design of physical systems. In this context, sensor placement optimization is a crucial issue. Most existing works require large and sufficient data to construct data-based criteria, which are intractable in data-free scenarios without numerical and experimental data. To this end, we propose a novel physics-driven sensor placement optimization (PSPO) method for temperature field reconstruction using a physics-based criterion to optimize sensor locations. In our methodological framework, we firstly derive the theoretical upper and lower bounds of the reconstruction error under noise scenarios by analyzing the optimal solution, proving that error bounds correlate with the condition number determined by sensor locations. Furthermore, the condition number, as the physics-based criterion, is used to optimize sensor locations by the genetic algorithm. Finally, the best sensors are validated by reconstruction models, including non-invasive end-to-end models, non-invasive reduced-order models, and physics-informed models. Experimental results, both on a numerical and an application case, demonstrate that the PSPO method significantly outperforms random and uniform selection methods, improving the reconstruction accuracy by nearly an order of magnitude. Moreover, the PSPO method can achieve comparable reconstruction accuracy to the existing data-driven placement optimization methods.

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