Abstract

The numerical treatment of fluid–particle systems is a very challenging problem because of the complex coupling phenomena occurring between the two phases. Although an accurate mathematical modelling is available to address this kind of applications, the computational cost of the numerical simulations is very expensive. The use of the most modern high performance computing infrastructures could help to mitigate such an issue but not completely to fix it. In this work we develop a non intrusive data-driven reduced order model (ROM) for Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) - Discrete Element Method (DEM) simulations. The ROM is built using the proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) for the computation of the reduced basis space and the Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) network for the computation of the reduced coefficients. We are interested to deal both with system identification and prediction. The most relevant novelties rely on (i) a filtering procedure of the full order snapshots to reduce the dimensionality of the reduced problem and (ii) a preliminary treatment of the particle phase. The accuracy of our ROM approach is assessed against the classic Goldschmidt fluidized bed benchmark problem. Finally, we also provide some insights about the efficiency of our ROM approach.

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