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Comsol Particle tracing + Brownian Force taking too long.

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I wish to add brownian motion to a single particle in a simple geometry (50X25mm).

What works so far is:

1. solved Laminar flow (STATIC).
2. Solved Particle tracing (time dependent with drag force) everything ok so far.
the previus two worked and were solved.

the third step for me is to add a brownian force and re-solve step 2. it takes super long!!!! (i dont let it complete due to overheating of the laptop).

is this normal?

ill be happy to send the model to someone to check it. (maybe i screwd up some parameter)



2 Replies Last Post 2016年11月14日 GMT-5 14:32
Daniel Smith COMSOL Employee

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Posted: 9 years ago 2015年4月2日 GMT-4 14:05
Hi John, you can relax the solver tolerances when including the Brownian force, which will let the model solve faster. This means changing the relative tolerance to say, 1e-3 in the Time Dependent study settings. You could also change the absolute tolerance which is present in the Study 1>Solver Configurations>Solution 1>Time-Dependent Solver 1 node. There is a section called Absolute Tolerance, which you could also change to 1e-3.

Dan
Hi John, you can relax the solver tolerances when including the Brownian force, which will let the model solve faster. This means changing the relative tolerance to say, 1e-3 in the Time Dependent study settings. You could also change the absolute tolerance which is present in the Study 1>Solver Configurations>Solution 1>Time-Dependent Solver 1 node. There is a section called Absolute Tolerance, which you could also change to 1e-3. Dan

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Posted: 8 years ago 2016年11月14日 GMT-5 14:32

Hi John, you can relax the solver tolerances when including the Brownian force, which will let the model solve faster. This means changing the relative tolerance to say, 1e-3 in the Time Dependent study settings. You could also change the absolute tolerance which is present in the Study 1>Solver Configurations>Solution 1>Time-Dependent Solver 1 node. There is a section called Absolute Tolerance, which you could also change to 1e-3.

Dan


Hi Dan,
I have met the same problem. However, if I change the tolerance according to your suggestions, it seems that the particles will not be injected in to the fluid domain and will stay at the initial locations.
Thank you in advance for any possible help.
Regards,
Bill
[QUOTE] Hi John, you can relax the solver tolerances when including the Brownian force, which will let the model solve faster. This means changing the relative tolerance to say, 1e-3 in the Time Dependent study settings. You could also change the absolute tolerance which is present in the Study 1>Solver Configurations>Solution 1>Time-Dependent Solver 1 node. There is a section called Absolute Tolerance, which you could also change to 1e-3. Dan [/QUOTE] Hi Dan, I have met the same problem. However, if I change the tolerance according to your suggestions, it seems that the particles will not be injected in to the fluid domain and will stay at the initial locations. Thank you in advance for any possible help. Regards, Bill

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