A Spatiotemporal Machine Learning Framework for Nearshore Wave Modelling
Chen, J
Date: 7 May 2024
Thesis or dissertation
Publisher
University of Exeter
Degree Title
PhD in Renewable Energy
Abstract
Accurate, real-time wave forecasting in the spatiotemporal domain is crucial for
the sustainable operation of nearshore marine renewable energy devices. Machine
Learning (ML) has shown great promise in nearshore wave modelling, reducing
computational costs through its data-driven approach. Nevertheless, ML-based
models face significant ...
Accurate, real-time wave forecasting in the spatiotemporal domain is crucial for
the sustainable operation of nearshore marine renewable energy devices. Machine
Learning (ML) has shown great promise in nearshore wave modelling, reducing
computational costs through its data-driven approach. Nevertheless, ML-based
models face significant challenges. These include accurately capturing high-resolution
nearshore waves in both spatial and temporal domains, dealing with missing values
in observational data, and generalising the model for various conditions. To address
these challenges, this thesis proposed a model framework that decomposed the spatiotemporal
problem into discrete spatial and temporal components, each capitalising
on the strengths of physics-based numerical model outputs and in-situ observations,
respectively. This bifurcated approach enhances modelling efficiency. The spatial
dimension is represented by a surrogate model that utilises a Multi-output Random
Forest (MRF) model to extrapolate from discrete grid points with existing
observations to the entire gridded domain. Meanwhile, the temporal dimension is
captured through a Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) neural network model,
offering a 12-hour sequential forecast with a half-hourly interval for multiple buoy
locations. This LSTM-based model benefits from a tensor completion approach
that fills gaps within historical observation data. Integrating these spatial and
temporal models promotes a comprehensive and effective spatiotemporal forecast
model framework. Testing the model framework in the waters off Cornwall, UK,
the proposed model matches the accuracy of advanced UK Met Office numerical
forecasts in estimating significant wave height (Hs) and surpasses it in estimating
zero-crossing wave period (Tz) at validation buoy locations for up to 12-hour forecast
horizons, while requiring significantly less computational resources. The proposed model’s modular design provides flexibility, facilitating the replacement of spatial
and temporal components, and its adaptability to diverse data sources allows the
integration of ship-as-a-wave-buoy into the observing network. In conclusion,
this model framework offers a low-cost, resource-efficient approach for delivering
short-term forecasts and demonstrating compatibility with existing methodologies.
Its performance, comparable to leading physics-based numerical wave predictions, indicates
substantial potential in pioneering a new class of rapidly updating met-ocean
capabilities.
Doctoral Theses
Doctoral College
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