Publications Details
Machine Learning for Turbulence Modeling
Ling, Julia L.; Templeton, Jeremy A.
This work was conducted as part of a Harry S. Truman Fellowship Laboratory Directed Research and Development project. The goal was to use machine learning methods to provide uncertainty quantification and model improvements for Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) turbulence models. For applications of interest in energy, safety, and security, it is critical to be able to model turbulence accurately. Current RANS models are unreliable for many flows of engineering relevance. Machine learning provides an avenue for developing improved models based on the data generated by high fidelity simulations. In this project, machine learning methods were used to predict when current RANS models would fail. They were also used to develop improved RANS closure models. A key aim was developing a tight feedback loop between scientific domain knowledge and data driven methods. To this end, a methodology for incorporating known invariance constraints into the machine learning models was proposed and evaluated. This work demonstrated that incorporating known constraints into the data driven models provided improved performance and reduced computational cost. This research represents one of the first applications of deep learning to turbulence modeling.