Reconstruction of spatio-temporal flow datasets via kernel-based non-linear proper orthogonal decomposition

Author(s):  
Rebeca Marcondes ◽  
Tulio Rodarte Ricciardi ◽  
William Wolf
Author(s):  
Ioannis T. Georgiou ◽  
Christos I. Papadopoulos

Identification of the most energetic spatio-temporal patterns that govern the low-frequency dynamics of an air cavity excited by noise sources could lead to significant design improvements of enclosures for noise reduction / isolation and / or sound quality. In this work we show how the Proper Orthogonal Decomposition (POD) method can be applied to identify optimum spatio-temporal patterns governing the dynamics of the sound pressure field developed inside an air cavity. The novel feature of this approach resides into the fact that the POD technique is utilized to process databases for acoustic variables produced by state of the art computational methods in acoustics, such as the finite element method. For a cavity with rigid walls and excited by a harmonic point source, the POD technique reveals that the sound pressure field is composed of a very small number of Proper Orthogonal Modes, which are unique since they are optimum by construction. The POD technique identifies the shapes or patterns of these modes.


2019 ◽  
Vol 864 ◽  
pp. 614-639 ◽  
Author(s):  
Srikanth Derebail Muralidhar ◽  
Bérengère Podvin ◽  
Lionel Mathelin ◽  
Yann Fraigneau

An extension of proper orthogonal decomposition is applied to the wall layer of a turbulent channel flow ($Re_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}}=590$), so that empirical eigenfunctions are defined in both space and time. Due to the statistical symmetries of the flow, the eigenfunctions are associated with individual wavenumbers and frequencies. Self-similarity of the dominant eigenfunctions, consistent with wall-attached structures transferring energy into the core region, is established. The most energetic modes are characterized by a fundamental time scale in the range 200–300 viscous wall units. The full spatio-temporal decomposition provides a natural measure of the convection velocity of structures, with a characteristic value of 12$u_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}}$ in the wall layer. Finally, we show that the energy budget can be split into specific contributions for each mode, which provides a closed-form expression for nonlinear effects.


Solar Physics ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 251 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 163-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Vecchio ◽  
V. Carbone ◽  
F. Lepreti ◽  
L. Primavera ◽  
L. Sorriso-Valvo ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Dennis P. Prill ◽  
Andreas G. Class

Thermal-hydraulic coupling between power, flow rate and density, intensified by neutronics feedback are the main drivers of boiling water reactor (BWR) stability behavior. Studying potential power oscillations require focusing on BWR operation at high-power low-flow conditions interacting with unfavorable power distribution. Current design rules assure admissible operation conditions by exclusion regions determined by numerical calculations and analytical methods. Analyzing an exhaustive parameter space of the non-linear BWR system becomes feasible with methodologies based on reduced order models (ROMs) saving computational cost and improving the physical understanding. A general reduction technique is given by the proper orthogonal decomposition (POD). Model-specific options and aspects of the POD-ROM-methodology are considered. A first verification is illustrated by means of a chemical tubular reactor (TR) setup. Experimental and analytical results for natural convection in a closed circuit (NCC) [1, 2] serve as a second verification example. This setup shows a strongly non-linear character. The implemented model is validated by means of a linear stability map. Transient behavior of the NCC-POD-ROM can not only reproduce the input data but rather predict different states.


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