Abstract

In fluid dynamics, constitutive models are often used to describe the unresolved turbulence and to close the Reynolds averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS) equations. Traditional PDE-based constitutive models are usually too rigid to calibrate with a large set of high-fidelity data. Moreover, commonly used turbulence models are based on the weak equilibrium assumption, which cannot adequately capture the nonlocal physics of turbulence. In this work, we propose using a vector-cloud neural network (VCNN) to learn the nonlocal constitutive model, which maps a regional mean flow field to the local turbulence quantities without solving the transport PDEs. The network is strictly invariant to coordinate translation, rotation, and uniform motion, as well as ordering of the input points. The VCNN-based nonlocal constitutive model is trained and evaluated on flows over a family of parameterized periodic hills. Numerical results demonstrate its predictive capability on target turbulence quantities of turbulent kinetic energy k and dissipation ɛ. More importantly, we investigate the robustness and stability of the method by coupling the trained model back to RANS solver. The solver shows good convergence with the simulated velocity field comparable to that based on k–ɛ model when starting from a reasonable initial condition. This study, as a proof of concept, highlights the feasibility of using a nonlocal, frame-independent, neural network-based constitutive model to close the RANS equations, paving the way for the further emulation of the Reynolds stress transport models.

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