Feedback Control of Turbulent Shear Flows by Genetic Programming

Turbulent shear flows have triggered fundamental research in nonlinear dynamics, like transition scenarios, pattern formation and dynamical modeling. In particular, the control of nonlinear dynamics is subject of research since decades. In this publication, actuated turbulent shear flows serve as te...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2015-05
Hauptverfasser: Duriez, Thomas, Parezanović, Vladimir, Kai von Krbek, Bonnet, Jean-Paul, Cordier, Laurent, Noack, Bernd R, Segond, Marc, Abel, Markus, Gautier, Nicolas, Aider, Jean-Luc, Raibaudo, Cedric, Cuvier, Christophe, Michel, Stanislas, Debien, Antoine, Mazellier, Nicolas, Kourta, Azeddine, Brunton, Steven L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Turbulent shear flows have triggered fundamental research in nonlinear dynamics, like transition scenarios, pattern formation and dynamical modeling. In particular, the control of nonlinear dynamics is subject of research since decades. In this publication, actuated turbulent shear flows serve as test-bed for a nonlinear feedback control strategy which can optimize an arbitrary cost function in an automatic self-learning manner. This is facilitated by genetic programming providing an analytically treatable control law. Unlike control based on PID laws or neural networks, no structure of the control law needs to be specified in advance. The strategy is first applied to low-dimensional dynamical systems featuring aspects of turbulence and for which linear control methods fail. This includes stabilizing an unstable fixed point of a nonlinearly coupled oscillator model and maximizing mixing, i.e.\ the Lyapunov exponent, for forced Lorenz equations. For the first time, we demonstrate the applicability of genetic programming control to four shear flow experiments with strong nonlinearities and intrinsically noisy measurements. These experiments comprise mixing enhancement in a turbulent shear layer, the reduction of the recirculation zone behind a backward facing step, and the optimized reattachment of separating boundary layers. Genetic programming control has outperformed tested optimized state-of-the-art control and has even found novel actuation mechanisms.
ISSN:2331-8422