Cluster-based control of a separating flow over a smoothly contoured ramp |
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Authors: | Eurika Kaiser Bernd R. Noack Andreas Spohn Louis N. Cattafesta Marek Morzyński |
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Affiliation: | 1.Mechanical Engineering Department,University of Washington,Seattle,USA;2.Institut PPRIME,UPR 3346 CNRS – Université de Poitiers – ENSMA,Futuroscope Chasseneuil,France;3.LIMSI-CNRS, UPR 3251,Orsay Cedex,France;4.Technische Universit?t Braunschweig,Braunschweig,Germany;5.Florida Center for Advanced Aero-Propulsion,Florida State University,Tallahassee,USA;6.Chair of Virtual Engineering,Poznan University of Technology,Poznań,Poland |
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Abstract: | The ability to manipulate and control fluid flows is of great importance in many scientific and engineering applications. The proposed closed-loop control framework addresses a key issue of model-based control: The actuation effect often results from slow dynamics of strongly nonlinear interactions which the flow reveals at timescales much longer than the prediction horizon of any model. Hence, we employ a probabilistic approach based on a cluster-based discretization of the Liouville equation for the evolution of the probability distribution. The proposed methodology frames high-dimensional, nonlinear dynamics into low-dimensional, probabilistic, linear dynamics which considerably simplifies the optimal control problem while preserving nonlinear actuation mechanisms. The data-driven approach builds upon a state space discretization using a clustering algorithm which groups kinematically similar flow states into a low number of clusters. The temporal evolution of the probability distribution on this set of clusters is then described by a control-dependent Markov model. This Markov model can be used as predictor for the ergodic probability distribution for a particular control law. This probability distribution approximates the long-term behavior of the original system on which basis the optimal control law is determined. We examine how the approach can be used to improve the open-loop actuation in a separating flow dominated by Kelvin–Helmholtz shedding. For this purpose, the feature space, in which the model is learned, and the admissible control inputs are tailored to strongly oscillatory flows. |
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