Abstract

Experimental spatio-temporal flow data often contain gaps or other types of undesired artifacts. To reconstruct flow data in the compromised or missing regions, a data completion method based on spectral proper orthogonal decomposition (SPOD) is developed. The algorithm leverages the temporal correlation of the SPOD modes with preceding and succeeding snapshots, and their spatial correlation with the surrounding data at the same time instant. For each gap, the algorithm first computes the SPOD of the remaining, unaffected data. In the next step, the compromised data are projected onto the basis of the SPOD modes. This corresponds to a local inversion of the SPOD problem and yields expansion coefficients that permit the reconstruction in the affected regions. This local reconstruction is successively applied to each gap. After all gaps are filled in, the procedure is repeated in an iterative manner until convergence. This method is demonstrated on two examples: direct numerical simulation of laminar flow around a cylinder, and time-resolved PIV data of turbulent cavity flow obtained by Zhang et al. (2019) [47]. Randomly added gaps correspond to 1%, 5%, and 20% of data loss. Even for 20% data corruption, and in the presence of measurement noise in the experimental data, the algorithm recovers 97% and 80% of the original data in the corrupted regions of the simulation and PIV data, respectively. These values are higher than those achieved by established methods like gappy POD and Kriging.

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