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Learning Groundwater Contaminant Diffusion-Sorption Processes with a Finite Volume Neural Network
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  • Timothy Praditia,
  • Matthias Karlbauer,
  • Sebastian Otte,
  • Sergey Oladyshkin,
  • Martin V. Butz,
  • Wolfgang Nowak
Timothy Praditia
University of Stuttgart

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Matthias Karlbauer
University of Tübingen
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Sebastian Otte
University of Tübingen
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Sergey Oladyshkin
University of Stuttgart
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Martin V. Butz
University of Tübingen
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Wolfgang Nowak
Universität Stuttgart
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Abstract

Improved understanding of complex hydrosystem processes is key to advance water resources research. Nevertheless, the conventional way of modeling these processes suffers from a high conceptual uncertainty, due to almost ubiquitous simplifying assumptions used in model parameterizations/closures. Machine learning (ML) models are considered as a potential alternative, but their generalization abilities remain limited. For example, they normally fail to predict across different boundary conditions. Moreover, as a black box, they do not add to our process understanding or to discover improved parameterizations/closures. To tackle this issue, we propose the hybrid modeling framework FINN (finite volume neural network). It merges existing numerical methods for partial differential equations (PDEs) with the learning abilities of artificial neural networks (ANNs). FINN is applied on discrete control volumes and learns components of the investigated system equations, such as numerical stencils, model parameters, and arbitrary closure/constitutive relations. Consequently, FINN yields highly interpretable results. To show this, we demonstrate FINN on a diffusion-sorption problem in clay. Results on numerically generated data show that FINN outperforms other ML models when tested under modified boundary conditions, and that it can successfully differentiate between the usual, known sorption isotherms. Moreover, we also equip FINN with uncertainty quantification methods to lay open the total uncertainty of scientific learning, and then apply it to a laboratory experiment. The results show that FINN performs better than calibrated PDE-based models as it is not restricted to choose among a limited set of sorption isotherms.