MaLTESE: Large-Scale Simulation-Driven Machine Learning for Transient Driving Cycles

被引:4
作者
Aithal, Shashi M. [1 ]
Balaprakash, Prasanna [1 ]
机构
[1] Argonne Natl Lab, Lemont, IL 60439 USA
来源
HIGH PERFORMANCE COMPUTING, ISC HIGH PERFORMANCE 2019 | 2019年 / 11501卷
关键词
Transient driving cycle modeling; Surrogate modeling; Machine learning; Deep learning; Deep neural networks; ARTIFICIAL NEURAL-NETWORK; REGRESSION; EMISSIONS;
D O I
10.1007/978-3-030-20656-7_10
中图分类号
TP301 [理论、方法];
学科分类号
081202 ;
摘要
Optimal engine operation during a transient driving cycle is the key to achieving greater fuel economy, engine efficiency, and reduced emissions. In order to achieve continuously optimal engine operation, engine calibration methods use a combination of static correlations obtained from dynamometer tests for steady-state operating points and road and/or track performance data. As the parameter space of control variables, design variable constraints, and objective functions increases, the cost and duration for optimal calibration become prohibitively large. In order to reduce the number of dynamometer tests required for calibrating modern engines, a large-scale simulation-driven machine learning approach is presented in this work. A parallel, fast, robust, physics-based reduced-order engine simulator is used to obtain performance and emission characteristics of engines over a wide range of control parameters under various transient driving conditions (drive cycles). We scale the simulation up to 3,906 nodes of the Theta supercomputer at the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility to generate data required to train a machine learning model. The trained model is then used to predict various engine parameters of interest, and the results are compared with those predicted by the engine simulator. Our results show that a deepneural-network-based surrogate model achieves high accuracy: Pearson product-moment correlation values larger than 0.99 and mean absolute percentage error within 1.07% for various engine parameters such as exhaust temperature, exhaust pressure, nitric oxide, and engine torque. Once trained, the deep-neural-network-based surrogate model is fast for inference: it requires about 16 mu s for predicting the engine performance and emissions for a single design configuration compared with about 0.5 s per configuration with the engine simulator. Moreover, we demonstrate that transfer learning and retraining can be leveraged to incrementally retrain the surrogate model to cope with new configurations that fall outside the training data space.
引用
收藏
页码:186 / 205
页数:20
相关论文
共 26 条
[1]  
Abadi M., 2015, P 12 USENIX S OPERAT
[2]   Prediction of Voltage Signature in a Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition (HCCI) Engine Fueled with Propane and Acetylene [J].
Aithal, S. M. .
COMBUSTION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2013, 185 (08) :1184-1201
[3]   Analysis of the Current Signature in a Constant-Volume Combustion Chamber [J].
Aithal, S. M. .
COMBUSTION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2013, 185 (02) :336-349
[4]  
Aithal S.M, 2013, P SAE 11 INT C ENG V
[5]   ACCOLADES: A Scalable Workflow Framework for Large-Scale Simulation and Analyses of Automotive Engines [J].
Aithal, Shashi M. ;
Wild, Stefan M. .
HIGH PERFORMANCE COMPUTING, ISC HIGH PERFORMANCE 2015, 2015, 9137 :87-95
[6]  
BISHOP C. M., 2006, Pattern recognition and machine learning, DOI [DOI 10.1117/1.2819119, 10.1007/978-0-387-45528-0]
[7]   Random forests [J].
Breiman, L .
MACHINE LEARNING, 2001, 45 (01) :5-32
[8]   Random forests [J].
Breiman, L .
MACHINE LEARNING, 2001, 45 (01) :5-32
[9]   XGBoost: A Scalable Tree Boosting System [J].
Chen, Tianqi ;
Guestrin, Carlos .
KDD'16: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 22ND ACM SIGKDD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON KNOWLEDGE DISCOVERY AND DATA MINING, 2016, :785-794
[10]  
Chollet F., 2015, Keras