DTE AICCOMAS 2025

Bridging the Gap between Isogeometric Analysis and Deep Operator Learning

  • Möller, Matthias (Delft University of Technology, Department of Applied Mathematics Mekelweg 4, 2628CD Delft)

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Many engineering problems of practical interest are modelled by systems of partial differential equations equipped with initial and boundary conditions and complemented by problem-specific constitutive laws. For decades, numerical methods like the finite element method have been the method of choice for computing approximate solutions to problems that cannot be solved analytically. Starting with the seminal paper [1] on physics-informed neural networks, whose idea dates back to the earlier work by Lagaris et al. [2], a new paradigm has entered the stage: learning the behavior of the problem instead of discretizing it and solving the resulting linear(ized) systems of equations numerically. Several alternative approaches like DeepONets [3] and Fourier neural networks [4] have been proposed in recent years. Their ease of implementation and fast response time, once training is completed, makes learning-based methods particularly attractive for engineering applications as they offer the opportunity to explore many different designs without costly simulation. In this talk we propose a novel approach to embed the physics-informed machine learning paradigm into the framework of Isogeometric Analysis (IGA) to combine the best of both worlds. In contrast to other learning-based approaches, which predict point-wise solution values to (initial-)boundary-value problems directly, our IgaNets [5, 6] learn solutions in terms of their expansion coefficients relative to a given B-Spline or NURBS basis. This approach is furthermore used to encode the geometry and other problem parameters such as boundary conditions and parameters of the constitutive laws and feed them into the feed-forward neural network as inputs. Once trained, our IgaNets make it possible to explore various designs from a family of similar problem configurations efficiently without the need to perform a computationally expensive simulation for each new problem configuration. Next to discussing the method conceptually and presenting numerical results, we will shed some light on the technical details [7]. In particular, we will discuss a matrix-based implementation of B-splines that is particularly suited for efficient backpropagation. We will furthermore present a first prototype of a web-based frontend for showcasing interactive and collaborative design-through-analysis workflows [8].