Digital Twins in the era of generative AI — Application to Geological CO2 Storage

Series
GT-MAP Seminar
Time
Friday, September 20, 2024 - 3:00pm for 2 hours
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Felix J. Herrmann – GT CSE, ECE, and EAS – felix.herrmann@gatech.eduhttps://slim.gatech.edu
Organizer
Molei Tao

Please Note: Felix J. Herrmann Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar Chair in Energy Seismic Laboratory for Imaging and Modeling Schools of Earth & Atmospheric Sciences, Computational Science & Engineering, Electrical and Computer Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology https://slim.gatech.edu Felix J. Herrmann is a professor with appointments at the College of Sciences (EAS), Computing (CSE), and Engineering (ECE) at the Georgia Institute of Technology. He leads the Seismic Laboratory for Imaging and modeling (SLIM) and he is co-founder/director of the Center for Machine Learning for Seismic (ML4Seismic). This Center is designed to foster industrial research partnerships and drive innovations in artificial-intelligence assisted seismic imaging, interpretation, analysis, and time-lapse monitoring. In 2019, he toured the world presenting the SEG Distinguished Lecture. In 2020, he was the recipient of the SEG Reginald Fessenden Award for his contributions to seismic data acquisition with compressive sensing. Since his arrival at Georgia Tech in 2017, he expanded his research program to include machine learning for Bayesian wave-equation based inference using techniques from simulation-based inference. More recently, he started a research program on seismic monitoring of Geological Carbon Storage, which includes the development of an uncertainty-aware Digital Twin. In 2023, the manuscript entitled “Learned multiphysics inversion with differentiable programming and machine learning” was the most downloaded paper of 2023 in Society of Exploration Geophysicist’s The Leading Edge.

As a society, we are faced with important challenges to combat climate change. Geological Carbon Storage, during which gigatonnes of super-critical CO2 are stored underground, is arguably the only scalable net-negative negative CO2-emission technology that is available. Recent advances in generative AI offer unique opportunities—especially in the context of Digital Twins for subsurface CO2-storage monitoring, decision making, and control—to help scale this technology, optimize its operations, lower its costs, and reduce its risks, so assurances can be made whether storage projects proceed as expected and whether CO2 remains underground.

During this talk, it is shown how techniques from Simulation-Based Inference and Ensemble Bayesian Filtering can be extended to establish probabilistic baselines and assimilate multimodal data for problems challenged by large degrees of freedom, nonlinear multiphysics, and computationally expensive to evaluate simulations. Key concepts that will be reviewed include neural Wave-Based Inference with Amortized Uncertainty Quantification and physics-based Summary Statistics, Ensemble Bayesian Filtering with Conditional Neural Networks, and learned multiphysics inversion with Differentiable Programming.

This is joint work with Rafael Orozco.