“…Optimal control theory has a wide range of applications from classical control of solid structures [45,60,64,77,84] to optimal flow control [33,43,44,61,65] including recent control formulation for fluid-structure interaction systems [13,14,62,[80][81][82]. The objective can be a desired deformed configuration of an elastic solid controlled by a set of load parameters [45], drag force reduction of a flow system by shape optimisation [33,61,65] or active turbulence control at the boundary layer [15,22,46,50,59,61]; it could also be velocity tracking by controlling a body force [3,36,38,40,43,44,55,57,58,66] or boundary force [3,4,26,28,37,38,41]; the objective may also be reducing vorticity [1,3,66] or matching a turbulence kinetic energy …”