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Determine Arrenhius damage integral for a solution
Posted 12 août 2009, 16:05 UTC−4 Heat Transfer & Phase Change, Modeling Tools & Definitions, Parameters, Variables, & Functions, Studies & Solvers Version 3.5a, Version 4.0 16 Replies
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Adi = int(A*exp(-E/(R*T),t)
where Adi is the Arrenhius damage integral, int stands for integral and A, E, and R are constants. T is the nodal tissue temperature and t is time.
Is there a way to apply this into the Global Equations by taking the derivative of Adi? Thus making the equation:
Adit = A*exp(-E/(R*T)
I tried this, but received an error that T could not be solved for. Do I need to do something in order for Global Equations to access my dependent variables?
Thanks for any help...I am also interested in any other way that anybody can think of!
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We have had some success in using the following Arrenhius form:
k = A * e^(-Ea/R T)
ln(k) = -(Ea/R) ( 1/ T ) + ln(A)
Similar to:
Y = M * X + B
but care must be taken to use the absolute temperature scale (Kelvin or Rankine) so that solutions at 0degF or 0degC can be properly evaluated.
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were you successful in finding the solution to your problem? I have a similar problem, where I cannot access a dependent variable from a subdomain and use it in a global equation.
Thank you,
Aleksandra
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Use the PDE, Coeffient Form (c)
Select the subdomains that will be active for the calculation... In Roberts case, the tissue...
Set f (source term) to A*exp(-deltaE/(R*T))
Set da (damping/Mass coefficient) to 1
All other variables to 0
I use Omega for c when I initiate the physics in the modeler...
Your equation will then be dOmega/dt = A*exp(-deltaE/(R*T)) or rearranged dOmega = integral (A*exp(-deltaE/(R*T)),dt) - see attached...
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One way to improve this is limit the magnitude of Omega. Since Omega greater than 5 is indicative of cellular destruction and destruction is not reversible, there is no need to keep accumulating damage much beyond 5 and create a huge Omega gradient that can lead to inaccuracies.
One way to implement this is to set f (source term) to a variable which is equal to a user-defined function rather than to A*exp(-deltaE/(R*T)). The function can be imported as a look-up table from Excel or matlab. I use excel to compute Omega from 273 K to the upper limit of my temperature range. Then I edit the table to clip the value of Omega to say 7 and import this modified table into COMSOL.
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I need help! I am trying to apply an Arrenhius damage integral DURING the solution of an thermal ablation problem using the heat Transfer and PDE coefficient form Modules (T and u are the dependent variables). In the end of the simulation, it appears the following message:
"Error:
Failed to find consistent initial values.
Out_of_memory_LU_factorization
Last time step is not converged."
Any help is WELCOME!
Best regards,
Cleber
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It has been a while since I implemented this but I do not remember a u variable.... Only Temperature. What are you using for Ea and A?
-Jason
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I have committed a mistake: I forgot to inform the description of fluid mechanics on my simulation. Actually, I am using the heat transfer, PDE coefficient Form(c) and incompressible Navier-Stokes modules. The u variable describes the fluid velocity in this last modality of Physics.
The values for Ea and A are:
Ea=6.65x10^5 J/mol;
A=1.98x10^106 1/s
The link below illustrates the window of the software COMSOL:
www.comsol.com/community/forums/general/download/file/12973/error%20Failed%20to%20find%20consistent%20initial%20values.JPG
Sincerely yours,
Cleber Pinheiro
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The variables used in the simulation are:
T - HEAT TRANSFER MODULE;
u - VELOCITY OF THE FLUID;
u2 - VARIABLE FOR PDE COEFFICENT FORM (c).
The damage integral is defined as u2=integral(A*exp(-Ea/(R*T)dt). Moreover, one solves the equation d/dt(u2)=A*exp(-Ea/(R*T). I use u2 to designate Omega. The source term f is equal to A*exp(-Ea/(R*T))
The boundary conditions are set up as follow:
1) ZERO FLUX;
2) INITIAL VALUES: u2=0 and d/dt(u2)=0.
Best Regards,
Cleber Pinheiro
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yes, I run the thermal/fluid interaction without the Arrenhius damage integral (NO PROBLEMS in this simulation). So, the thermal/fluid interaction is independent of the damage integral.
Best regards,
Cleber Pinheiro
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Here's something that pertains to discussion! The problem of convergence was resolved. Only I modified the mesh characteristics. I used the mesh type "fine". However, the arrhenius damage integral assumed negative values in COMSOL MULTIPHYSICS. What's this mean? What is the meaning of these values?
Sincerely yours,
--
Cleber Pinheiro
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Couldn't you do the same thing by limiting f to calculating f up to 7.... (f<=7)(A*exp(-deltaE/(R*T))) that way it will only sum if the f term is less than or equal to 7.
Hello,
I know this post is kind of old, but can you elaborate on this approach?
Thanks,
EH
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