Enhancing solar energy conversion efficiency: Thermophysical property predicting of MXene/Graphene hybrid nanofluids via bayesian-optimized artificial neural networks

Accurately predicting thermo-physical properties (TPPs) of MXene/graphene-based nanofluids is crucial for photovoltaic/thermal solar systems, driving focused research on developing precise TPP predictive models. This study presents optimized multi-layer perceptron neural network (MLPNN) models, leve...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Results in Engineering
Main Author: jasim D.J.; Rajab H.; Alizadeh A.; Sharma K.; Ahmed M.; Kassim M.; AbdulAmeer S.; Alwan A.A.; Salahshour S.; Maleki H.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier B.V. 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85203523133&doi=10.1016%2fj.rineng.2024.102858&partnerID=40&md5=a24c870224e28b4a1a7056ad518c0165
Description
Summary:Accurately predicting thermo-physical properties (TPPs) of MXene/graphene-based nanofluids is crucial for photovoltaic/thermal solar systems, driving focused research on developing precise TPP predictive models. This study presents optimized multi-layer perceptron neural network (MLPNN) models, leveraging Bayesian optimization to refine architectural and training hyperparameters, including hidden layers, neurons, activation functions, standardization, and regularization terms. A comparative analysis of Bayesian acquisition functions—the probability of improvement (POI), lower confidence bound (LCB), expected improvement (EI), expected improvement plus (EIP), expected improvement per second plus (EIPSP), and expected improvement per second (EIPS)—demonstrated that the POI-MLPNN achieves the most accurate results, as evidenced by the lowest MAPE of 1.0923 % and exceptional consistency with an R-value of 0.99811. The EI-MLPNN and EIP-MLPNN models recorded the same outputs. The EI/EIP-MLPNN (R = 0.99668) model excels in consistency over LCB-MLPNN (R = 0.99529) and EIPSP-MLPNN (R = 0.99667). The optimized models offer a reliable, cost-efficient alternate for experimental and computational TPP analyses. Leveraging insights from these models enables better control over nanofluid TPPs in solar systems, enhancing energy conversion efficiency. © 2024 The Authors
ISSN:25901230
DOI:10.1016/j.rineng.2024.102858