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AI-driven Bayesian inference of statistical microstructure descriptors from finite-frequency waves

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Paper abstractTimelineTable: Further ResourcesReferences
Is a
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Academic paper
1

Academic Paper attributes

arXiv ID
2104.081141
arXiv Classification
Physics
Physics
1
Publication URL
arxiv.org/pdf/2104.0...14.pdf1
Publisher
ArXiv
ArXiv
1
DOI
doi.org/10.48550/ar...04.081141
Paid/Free
Free1
Academic Discipline
Physics
Physics
1
‌
Geophysics
1
Materials science
Materials science
1
Electrical engineering
Electrical engineering
1
Condensed matter physics
Condensed matter physics
1
Submission Date
April 16, 2021
2
Author Names
Ivan Vasconcelos1
Wouter Klessens1
Yang Jiao1
Paper abstract

The ability to image materials at the microscale from long-wavelength wave data is a major challenge to the geophysical, engineering and medical fields. Here, we present a framework to constrain microstructure geometry and properties from long-scale waves. To realistically quantify microstructures we use two-point statistics, from which we derive scale-dependent effective wave properties - wavespeed and attenuation - using strong-contrast expansions (SCE) for (visco)elastic wavefields. By evaluating various two-point correlation functions we observe that both effective wavespeeds and attenuation of long-scale waves predominantly depend on volume fraction and phase properties, and that especially attenuation at small scales is highly sensitive to the geometry of microstructure heterogeneity (e.g. geometric hyperuniformity) due to incoherent inference of sub-wavelength multiple scattering. Our goal is to infer microstructure properties from observed effective wave parameters. To this end, we use the supervised machine learning method of Random Forests (RF) to construct a Bayesian inference approach. We can accurately resolve two-point correlation functions sampled from various microstructural configurations, including: a bead pack, Berea sandstone and Ketton limestone samples. Importantly, we show that inversion of small scale-induced effective elastic waves yields the best results, particularly compared to single-wave-mode (e.g., acoustic only) information. Additionally, we show that the retrieval of microscale medium contrasts is more difficult - as it is highly ill-posed - and can only be achieved with specific a priori knowledge. Our results are promising for many applications, such as earthquake hazard monitoring,non-destructive testing, imaging fluid flow in porous media, quantifying tissue properties in medical ultrasound, or designing materials with tailor-made wave properties.

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