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Posted:
6 years ago
2018年11月5日 GMT-5 07:32
Hi,
and need to implement it at the boundary beween the implant and the eye.
What exactly do you mean by "at the boundary"?
Do you want to display the (average) concentration along the boundary between implant and eye?
For this you can use a probe. Component>definitions>rightclick>probes>boundary probe and then select the boundary between implant and eye.
Hope this helps!
Best,
Tobias
Hi,
> and need to implement it at the boundary beween the implant and the eye.
What exactly do you mean by "at the boundary"?
Do you want to display the (average) concentration along the boundary between implant and eye?
For this you can use a probe. Component>definitions>rightclick>probes>boundary probe and then select the boundary between implant and eye.
Hope this helps!
Best,
Tobias
Jeff Hiller
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
6 years ago
2018年11月5日 GMT-5 11:47
Updated:
6 years ago
2018年11月6日 GMT-5 13:32
Hello Inayeth,
Since you have a single graph for the concentration in the implant, I presume that the concentration in the implant is spatially independent. If that's so, then you can deduce the total amount of drug in the implant by multiplying by the volume of the implant, and the total flux into the eye is then minus the time-derivative of that. Assuming that the flow of drug from the implant into the eye is also spatially independent, you can compute that flux per unit area by dividing the total flux by the surface area, and enter that into COMSOL as a boundary condition.
In the above, I have assumed that you have an analytical expression for the concentration in the implant and can differentiate it analytically. If do no have such an expression, you could obtain one by curve fitting, for instance.
Jeff
-------------------
Jeff Hiller
Hello Inayeth,
Since you have a single graph for the concentration in the implant, I presume that the concentration in the implant is spatially independent. If that's so, then you can deduce the total amount of drug in the implant by multiplying by the volume of the implant, and the total flux into the eye is then minus the time-derivative of that. Assuming that the flow of drug from the implant into the eye is also spatially independent, you can compute that flux per unit area by dividing the total flux by the surface area, and enter that into COMSOL as a boundary condition.
In the above, I have assumed that you have an analytical expression for the concentration in the implant and can differentiate it analytically. If do no have such an expression, you could obtain one by curve fitting, for instance.
Jeff