Today, the capability and reach of artificial intelligence (AI) is continually expanding as the technology grows in complexity. As a result, mining engineers are faced with new challenges as they are tasked with integrating AI into systems.
Part of the complexity stems from the recognition that AI models are only as effective as the data they’re trained with – if that data is insufficient, inaccurate, or biased, the model’s calculations will be too.
At a high level, there are three key ways AI and simulation are intersecting. The first has to do with addressing the challenge of insufficient data, as simulation models can be used to synthesise data that might be difficult or expensive to collect. The second is the use of AI models as approximations for complex high-fidelity simulations that are computationally expensive, also referred to as reduced-order modelling. The third is the use of AI models in embedded systems for applications such as controls, signal processing, and embedded vision, where simulation has become a key part of the design process.
As engineers are finding new ways to develop more effective AI models for mining businesses, this piece will explore how simulation and AI combine to solve challenges of time, model reliability, and data quality.
Challenge 1: Data for training and validating AI models
The process of collecting real-world data and creating good, clean, and catalogued data is difficult and time consuming. Mining engineers also must be mindful of the fact that while most AI models are static (they run using fixed parameter values), they are constantly exposed to new data and that data might not necessarily be captured in the training set.
Projects are more likely to fail without robust data to help train a model, making data preparation a crucial step in the AI workflow. ‘Bad’ data can leave an engineer spending hours trying to determine why the model is not working, without the promise of insightful results.
Simulation can help mining engineers overcome these challenges. In recent years, data-centric AI has brought the AI community’s focus to the importance of training data. Rather than spending all a project’s time tweaking the AI model’s architecture and parameters, it has been shown that time spent improving the training data can often yield larger improvements in accuracy. The use of simulation to augment existing training data has multiple benefits:
• Computational simulation is in general much less costly than physical experiments
• The engineer has full control over the environment and can simulate scenarios that are difficult or too dangerous to create in the real world
• The simulation gives access to internal states that might not be measured in an experimental setup, which can be very useful when debugging why an AI model doesn’t perform well in certain situations
With a model’s performance so dependent on the quality of the data it is being trained with, mining engineers can improve outcomes with an iterative process of simulating data, updating an AI model, observing what conditions it cannot predict well, and collecting more simulated data for those conditions.
Using industry tools such as Simulink and Simscape, engineers can generate simulated data that mirrors real-world scenarios. The combination of Simulink and MATLAB enables engineers to simulate their data in the same environment that they build their AI models, meaning they can automate more of the process and not have to worry about switching toolchains.
Challenge 2: Approximating complex systems with AI
When designing algorithms that interact with physical systems, such as an algorithm to control a SAG mill, a simulation-based model of the system is key to enabling rapid design iteration for your algorithms. This is what is called the “plant model”; a simulation-based model that gives you the necessary accuracy to recreate the physical system your algorithms interact with.
The problem with this approach is that to achieve the “necessary accuracy”, mining engineers have historically built high-fidelity models from first principles, which for complex systems can take a long time to both build and simulate. Long-running simulations mean that less design iteration will be possible, meaning there may not be enough time to evaluate potentially better design alternatives.
AI comes into the picture here as engineers can take that high-fidelity model of the physical system that they’ve built and approximate it with an AI model (a reduced-order model). In other situations, they might just train the AI model from experimental data, completely bypassing the creation of a physics-based model. The benefit is that the reduced-order model is much less computationally expensive than the first-principles model, meaning that the engineer can perform more exploration of the design space. And, if a physics-based model of the system does exist, the engineer can always use that model later in the process to validate the design determined using the AI model.
Recent advances in the AI space, such as neural ODEs (Ordinary Differential Equations), combine AI training techniques with models that have physics-based principles embedded within them. Such models can be useful when there are certain aspects of the physical system that the engineer wishes to retain, while approximating the rest of the system with a more data-centric approach.
Challenge 3: AI for algorithm development
Engineers in applications like mining control systems have come to rely more-and-more on simulations when designing their algorithms. In many cases, these engineers are developing virtual sensors, observers that attempt to calculate a value that isn’t directly measured from the available sensors. A variety of approaches are used including linear models and Kalman filters.
But the ability of these methods to capture the nonlinear behaviour present in many real-world systems is limited, so mining engineers are turning to AI-based approaches which have the flexibility to model the complexities. They use data (either measured or simulated) to train an AI model that can predict the unobserved state from the observed states, and then integrate that AI model with the system.
In this case, the AI model is included as part of the controls algorithm that ends up on the physical hardware, which has performance/memory limitations, and typically needs to be programmed in a lower-level language like C/C++. These requirements can impose restrictions on the types of machine learning models that are appropriate for such applications, so the engineers may need to try multiple models and compare trade-offs in accuracy and on-device performance.
The future of AI for simulation
Overall, as models grow in size and complexity to serve increasingly complex applications, AI and simulation will become even more essential tools in the mining engineer’s toolbox. Industry tools like Simulink and MATLAB have empowered engineers to increase uptime and improve throughput by incorporating techniques such as synthetic data generation, reduced-order modelling, and embedded AI algorithms for controls, soft sensors and digital twins.
By Stephane Marouani, country manager ANZ at Mathworks.
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