4.7 Article

Data-driven Whitney forms for structure-preserving control volume analysis

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL PHYSICS
Volume 496, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcp.2023.112520

Keywords

Scientific machine learning; Whitney forms; Finite element exterior calculus; Partition of unity; Data-driven modeling

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This article introduces a scientific machine learning framework that uses a partition of unity architecture to model physics through control volume analysis. The framework can extract reduced models from full field data while preserving the physics. It is applicable to manifolds in arbitrary dimension and has been demonstrated effective in specific problems.
Control volume analysis models physics via the exchange of generalized fluxes between subdomains. We introduce a scientific machine learning framework adopting a partition of unity architecture to identify physically-relevant control volumes, with generalized fluxes between subdomains encoded via Whitney forms. The approach provides a differentiable parameterization of geometry which may be trained in an end-to-end fashion to extract reduced models from full field data while exactly preserving physics. The architecture admits a data-driven finite element exterior calculus allowing discovery of mixed finite element spaces with closed form quadrature rules. An equivalence between Whitney forms and graph networks reveals that the geometric problem of control volume learning is equivalent to an unsupervised graph discovery problem. The framework is developed for manifolds in arbitrary dimension, with examples provided for H(div) problems in Double-struck capital R2 establishing convergence and structure preservation properties. Finally, we consider a lithium-ion battery problem where we discover a reduced finite element space encoding transport pathways from high-fidelity microstructure resolved simulations. The approach reduces the 5.89M finite element simulation to 136 elements while reproducing pressure to under 0.1% error and preserving conservation.

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