Neural inference of fluid-structure interactions from sparse off-body measurements
Rui Tang, Ke Zhou, Jifu Tan, Samuel J. Grauer

TL;DR
This paper introduces a physics-informed neural network framework that reconstructs unsteady fluid-structure interactions from sparse off-body flow measurements, accurately capturing flow and structural dynamics without needing surface data.
Contribution
It extends physics-informed neural networks to coupled FSI problems using only sparse off-body observations, without requiring surface measurements or constitutive models.
Findings
Accurately reconstructs flow and structural states from sparse data.
Demonstrates robustness to over-parameterization.
Validates approach on multiple FSI benchmarks and flow scenarios.
Abstract
We report a novel physics-informed neural framework for reconstructing unsteady fluid-structure interactions (FSI) from sparse, single-phase observations of the flow. Our approach combines a modal surface model with coordinate neural representations of the fluid and solid states, constrained by the fluid's governing equations and interface conditions. Using only off-body Lagrangian particle tracks and a moving-wall boundary condition, the method infers both flow fields and structural motion. It does not require a constitutive model for the solid or measurements of surface position, although including these can improve performance. We demonstrate the approach numerically on two canonical FSI benchmarks: vortex-induced oscillations of a 2D flapping plate and pulse-wave propagation in a 3D flexible pipe. We also demonstrate it on flow around a swimming fish. In all cases, the framework…
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