A real-time digital twin of azimuthal thermoacoustic instabilities
Andrea N\'ovoa, Nicolas Noiray, James R. Dawson, Luca Magri

TL;DR
This paper presents a real-time digital twin for azimuthal thermoacoustic instabilities in hydrogen combustors, combining physics-based modeling with data assimilation and machine learning to predict and analyze dynamic behaviors.
Contribution
It introduces a novel real-time digital twin framework that integrates a low-order physics model, a bias-regularized ensemble Kalman filter, and a reservoir computer for azimuthal thermoacoustic analysis.
Findings
The digital twin accurately predicts azimuthal dynamics.
It effectively filters raw experimental data to reveal physical pressure.
The model captures time-varying parameters across different conditions.
Abstract
When they occur, azimuthal thermoacoustic oscillations can detrimentally affect the safe operation of gas turbines and aeroengines. We develop a real-time digital twin of azimuthal thermoacoustics of a hydrogen-based annular combustor. The digital twin seamlessly combines two sources of information about the system (i) a physics-based low-order model; and (ii) raw and sparse experimental data from microphones, which contain both aleatoric noise and turbulent fluctuations. First, we derive a low-order thermoacoustic model for azimuthal instabilities, which is deterministic. Second, we propose a real-time data assimilation framework to infer the acoustic pressure, the physical parameters, and the model and measurement biases simultaneously. This is the bias-regularized ensemble Kalman filter (r-EnKF), for which we find an analytical solution that solves the optimization problem. Third, we…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsCombustion and flame dynamics · Advanced Thermodynamic Systems and Engines · Laser Design and Applications
