Lars Gregersen
                                                                                                                                                    COMSOL Employee
                                                         
                            
                                                                                                                                                
                         
                                                
    
        Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
     
    
 
                                                Posted:
                            
                                8 years ago                            
                            
                                19 mai 2017, 03:42 UTC−4                            
                        
                        
                                                    Hi Clyde
I'm sure that I fully understand what you are trying to do, but it should be possible to calculate the integral using projection couplings. See this section "EXAMPLES OF PROJECTION COUPLINGS" in the Reference Manual for some examples.
--
Lars Gregersen
Comsol Denmark                                                
                                                
                            Hi Clyde
I'm sure that I fully understand what you are trying to do, but it should be possible to calculate the integral using projection couplings. See this section "EXAMPLES OF PROJECTION COUPLINGS" in the Reference Manual for some examples.
--
Lars Gregersen
Comsol Denmark                        
                                                
                                                                                                            
                                             
                        
                        
                                                
    
        Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
     
    
 
                                                Posted:
                            
                                8 years ago                            
                            
                                19 mai 2017, 11:27 UTC−4                            
                        
                        Updated:
                            
                                8 years ago                            
                            
                                19 mai 2017, 13:26 UTC−4                            
                        
                        
                                                    Thanks Lars,
I had reviewed the section on Extrusion, Projection, & Scalar coupling operators; however, the examples in the Reference Manual were a bit vague. Would you know of a good resource showing a practical example?
As for what I'm working with, I have values of ion concentration over a simulated 2D contour over time, using an Extremely Fine Rectangular Mesh. The contour results in a 41 x 41 value matrix at each instance in time. To simply my scenario, let me illustrate with a 3 x 3 matrix: Let c(x,y,t) at t = tn be
| 2.4   4.5   5.1 | = | c(0,2,tn)   c(1,2,tn)   c(2,2,tn) |
| 1.3   3.6   1.8 | = | c(0,1,tn)   c(1,1,tn)   c(2,1,tn) |
| 0.7   1.2   0.3 | = | c(0,0,tn)   c(1,0,tn)   c(2,0,tn) |
Using Coefficient Form PDE, I can calculate the average over y as:
| 1.5   3.1   2.4 | = | <c(x,2,tn)>: this row is the mean of c(x,0,tn), c(x,1,tn), c(x,2,tn)
| 1.0   2.4   1.1 | = | <c(x,1,tn)>: this row is the mean of c(x,0,tn), c(x,1,tn)
| 0.7   1.2   0.3 | = | <c(x,0,tn)>: this row is just c(x,0,tn)
Now, I'd like to take the values of <c(x,2,tn)> copied over all rows to subtract c(x,y,tn), i.e.,
| 1.5   3.1   2.4 | - | 2.4   4.5   5.1 |
| 1.5   3.1   2.4 | - | 1.3   3.6   1.8 |
| 1.5   3.1   2.4 | - | 0.7   1.2   0.3 |
I'm thinking a Linear Extrusion would be the method to use. Would this be the best approach?                                                
                                                
                            Thanks Lars,
I had reviewed the section on Extrusion, Projection, & Scalar coupling operators; however, the examples in the Reference Manual were a bit vague. Would you know of a good resource showing a practical example?
As for what I'm working with, I have values of ion concentration over a simulated 2D contour over time, using an Extremely Fine Rectangular Mesh. The contour results in a 41 x 41 value matrix at each instance in time. To simply my scenario, let me illustrate with a 3 x 3 matrix: Let c(x,y,t) at t = tn be
| 2.4   4.5   5.1 | = | c(0,2,tn)   c(1,2,tn)   c(2,2,tn) |
| 1.3   3.6   1.8 | = | c(0,1,tn)   c(1,1,tn)   c(2,1,tn) |
| 0.7   1.2   0.3 | = | c(0,0,tn)   c(1,0,tn)   c(2,0,tn) |
Using Coefficient Form PDE, I can calculate the average over y as:
| 1.5   3.1   2.4 | = | : this row is the mean of c(x,0,tn), c(x,1,tn), c(x,2,tn)
| 1.0   2.4   1.1 | = | : this row is the mean of c(x,0,tn), c(x,1,tn)
| 0.7   1.2   0.3 | = | : this row is just c(x,0,tn)
Now, I'd like to take the values of  copied over all rows to subtract c(x,y,tn), i.e.,
| 1.5   3.1   2.4 | - | 2.4   4.5   5.1 |
| 1.5   3.1   2.4 | - | 1.3   3.6   1.8 |
| 1.5   3.1   2.4 | - | 0.7   1.2   0.3 |
I'm thinking a Linear Extrusion would be the method to use. Would this be the best approach?