Tracking in-silico Lagrangian sensors in a lab-scale stirred tank reactor
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Lagrangian sensors have shown promise to improve operator awareness of conditions inside a chemical reactor but three-dimensional tracking remains a mostly unsolved challenge. We explore a setup where in-silico sensors, based on a recently proposed real-world design, are tracked using data from an accelerometer and magnetometer available from a built-in inertial measurement unit. Filtering algorithms, using a bespoke dynamical model, are used to process these readings into position estimates. We compare tracking performance of an extended Kalman filter, a particle filter and the unscented Kalman filter implemented in the pykalman library. Our numerical experiments track in-silico particles moving in an analytically given three dimensional vortex as well as in the experimentally measured flow-field of a lab-scale stirred tank reactor. Using the Maxey-Riley-Gatignol equations for the movement of inertial particles as ground-truth, we demonstrate that trajectories can be reconstructed from noisy synthetic data with errors below 10%.
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