4.3 Article

Deep reinforcement learning for turbulent drag reduction in channel flows

Journal

EUROPEAN PHYSICAL JOURNAL E
Volume 46, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1140/epje/s10189-023-00285-8

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This research introduces a reinforcement learning environment for designing and evaluating control strategies to reduce drag in turbulent fluid flows in a channel. The environment provides a computationally efficient, parallelized, high-fidelity fluid simulation framework that can interface with established RL agent programming interfaces. This allows for testing existing DRL algorithms and advancing our understanding of complex turbulent physical systems.
We introduce a reinforcement learning (RL) environment to design and benchmark control strategies aimed at reducing drag in turbulent fluid flows enclosed in a channel. The environment provides a framework for computationally efficient, parallelized, high-fidelity fluid simulations, ready to interface with established RL agent programming interfaces. This allows for both testing existing deep reinforcement learning (DRL) algorithms against a challenging task, and advancing our knowledge of a complex, turbulent physical system that has been a major topic of research for over two centuries, and remains, even today, the subject of many unanswered questions. The control is applied in the form of blowing and suction at the wall, while the observable state is configurable, allowing to choose different variables such as velocity and pressure, in different locations of the domain. Given the complex nonlinear nature of turbulent flows, the control strategies proposed so far in the literature are physically grounded, but too simple. DRL, by contrast, enables leveraging the high-dimensional data that can be sampled from flow simulations to design advanced control strategies. In an effort to establish a benchmark for testing data-driven control strategies, we compare opposition control, a state-of-the-art turbulence-control strategy from the literature, and a commonly used DRL algorithm, deep deterministic policy gradient. Our results show that DRL leads to 43% and 30% drag reduction in a minimal and a larger channel (at a friction Reynolds number of 180), respectively, outperforming the classical opposition control by around 20 and 10 percentage points, respectively.

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