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Wolfram Mathematica 12.2 now features "Named Partial Differential Equation Terms"

For specific physics fields, relevant PDE terms have been packaged as components and augmented with boundary condition functions typically encountered in the field.

I'm interested in Mass Transport PDEs and Boundary Conditions and particularly on how to introduce a migration term, i.e a physical potential or force terms to a diffusion problem. This is to model the time evolution of the probability to find diffusing particles experiencing forces in solution.

An example PDE without potentials is

With[
 {
  length = 500,
  height = 30
  },
 Ω = Rectangle[{0, 0}, {length, height}]; (* Domain *)
 pars = <| (* Parameters *)
   "DiffusionCoefficient" -> 10,
   Vavg -> 10,
   "MassConvectionVelocity" -> {2 Vavg*(1 - ((y - height/2)/(height/2))^2), 0},
   "Method" -> "StiffnessSwitching"
   |>;
 vars = {c[t, x, y], t, {x, y}}; (* Variables *)
 Gin = MassConcentrationCondition[x == 0, vars, pars, <|"MassConcentration" -> 0|>];
 Gbottom = 
  MassFluxValue[
  y == 0,
  vars, 
  pars,
  <|"MassFlux" -> 2 UnitBox[(x - 100)/50] Exp[-(1/2) (t - 2)^2], 
    "BoundaryUnitNormal" -> {0, 1}|>];
 Gtop = MassImpermeableBoundaryValue[y == height, vars, pars, <|"BoundaryUnitNormal" -> {0, -1}|>];
 ics = { c[0, x, y] == 0};
 pde = {
   MassTransportPDEComponent[vars, pars] == Gtop + Gbottom
   , Gin
   , ics
   };
 ]

With solution

First@AbsoluteTiming[
  cfun = NDSolveValue[
     pde
     , c
     , {t, 0, 20}
     , {x, y} ∈ Ω
     , InterpolationOrder -> 2
     , AccuracyGoal -> 14
     , Method -> Automatic
     , MaxStepFraction -> 1/6000
     ];
  ]

enter image description here

How do I add an attractive potential using the packaged named terms?

For the interested reader, think Smoluchowski or Fokker-Planck equations as described in chapter 4 here.

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  • $\begingroup$ Hi, is the answer I posted in any way useful? $\endgroup$
    – user21
    Commented Mar 18, 2021 at 8:31
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ Thank to @user21 and TimLaska for the answers. I'm splitting my time in two different tasks and I haven't fully digested them yet. Please give some a couple of days to implement and compare your answers. I will comment or/and accept then. Cheers! $\endgroup$
    – rhermans
    Commented Mar 18, 2021 at 8:35
  • $\begingroup$ Pining again to check if any of this is useful? $\endgroup$
    – user21
    Commented Apr 8, 2021 at 11:15
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ There is an example of the Fokker-Plank equation and the Smoluchowski diffusion equation in the documentation of version 12.3. Hope that is useful. $\endgroup$
    – user21
    Commented Jun 2, 2021 at 5:19

2 Answers 2

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I am anything else than an expert in statistics and I can not directly answer your question. However, I can show how I modeled a Fokker-Planck equation in the hope that this helps you move forward. I Have grabbed the first PDF that a search for FEM + Fokker-Planck gave me and I am going to show how to replicate that example.

Before I do that, I'd like to point you to an undocumented function that shows the string parameter names a specific PDE component responds to:

PDEModels`PDEModelParameters[MassTransportPDEComponent]

{"DiffusionCoefficient", "MassConvectionVelocity", \
"MassReactionRate", "MassSource", "ModelForm"}

Next, I'd like to model equation 7 from the mentioned paper, which is a Fokker-Planck equation. To do so, I myself go in steps. I start with a default setup.

vars = {c[t, x, y], t, {x, y}};
pars = <||>;
MassTransportPDEComponent[vars, pars]

Inactive[Div][{{-1, 0}, {0, -1}} . Inactive[Grad][c[t, x, y], {x, y}], 
  {x, y}] + Derivative[1, 0, 0][c][t, x, y]

First, I set the diffusion coefficient such that it corresponds to the one one in the paper. This is symbolic for now.

pars["DiffusionCoefficient"] = {{0, 0}, {0, D}};
MassTransportPDEComponent[vars, pars]

Inactive[Div][{{0, 0}, {0, -D}} . Inactive[Grad][c[t, x, y], {x, y}], 
  {x, y}] + Derivative[1, 0, 0][c][t, x, y]

Next is the conservative convection part. Conservative vs. non-conservative is explained in the ref page or in the MassTransport tutorial

pars["ModelForm"] = "Conservative";
pars["MassConvectionVelocity"] = {y, -2 \[Xi] \[Omega] y - x};
MassTransportPDEComponent[vars, pars]

Inactive[Div][{{0, 0}, {0, -D}} . Inactive[Grad][c[t, x, y], {x, y}], 
  {x, y}] + Inactive[Div][{y*c[t, x, y], (-x - 2*y*\[Xi]*\[Omega])*c[t, x, y]}, 
  {x, y}] + Derivative[1, 0, 0][c][t, x, y]

To cross check this I used:

temp = MassTransportPDEComponent[{p[t, x, y], {x, y}}, pars];
(-temp) // Activate // Simplify

This should be equivalent to equation 8 from the paper.

Now, we set up the parameters.

rules = {\[Mu] -> {5, 5}, \[Sigma] -> 1/9*IdentityMatrix[2], \[Xi] -> 
   1/20, \[Omega] -> 1, D -> 1/10}

We could very well also put these in pars.

The initial condition:

ics = c[0, x, y] == 
  PDF[MultinormalDistribution[\[Mu], \[Sigma]] /. rules, {x, y}]

The boundary condition:

G1 = NeumannValue[0, True]

(we do not really need this)

Domain and time:

\[CapitalOmega] = Rectangle[{-10, -10}, {10, 10}];
tEnd = 100;

According to the paper, a first order mesh is OK:

Needs["NDSolve`FEM`"]
mesh = ToElementMesh[\[CapitalOmega], MaxCellMeasure -> 0.05, 
   "MeshOrder" -> 1];
mesh["Wireframe"]

enter image description here

Now we solve the equation, note that this can be memory consuming, also mentioned in the paper.

op = MassTransportPDEComponent[vars, pars];
if = Monitor[
  NDSolveValue[{op == G1, ics} /. rules, 
   c, {t, 0, tEnd}, {x, y} \[Element] mesh, 
   EvaluationMonitor :> (monitor = Row[{"t = ", CForm[t]}])], monitor]

Visualize:

Plot[if[t, 0, 0], {t, 0, tEnd}, 
 Ticks -> {Automatic, Range[0, 0.18, 0.02]}, 
 GridLines -> {Automatic, Range[0, 0.18, 0.02]}]

enter image description here

which replicates figure 1 from the paper.

frames = ContourPlot[if[#, x, y], {x, y} \[Element] \[CapitalOmega], 
     PlotRange -> All, ColorFunction -> "TemperatureMap", 
     Contours -> Range[0.05, 2, 0.05]] & /@ Range[0, tEnd, 1];

ListAnimate[frames]

enter image description here

Update

The explicit example you requested can be done along the same procedure from above.

vars = {p[t, x], t, {x}};
pars = <||>;
pars["DiffusionCoefficient"] = {{D}};
pars["ModelForm"] = "Conservative";
(* Eqn 4.17 ff *)
potential[x_] := c x
pars["MassConvectionVelocity"] = \[Beta] *(-Grad[potential[x], {x}]);
MassTransportPDEComponent[vars, pars]

Inactive[Div][{{-D}} . Inactive[Grad][p[t, x], {x}], {x}] + 
 Inactive[Div][{-(c*\[Beta]*p[t, x])}, {x}] + Derivative[1, 0][p][t, x]

Set up some parameters, the region and the analytical solution:

\[CapitalOmega] = Line[{{-s}, {s}}] /. s -> 8;
rules = {D -> 1, \[Beta] -> 1, c -> 1};
anaSol[t_, x_] := Evaluate[With[{x0 = 0, t0 = 0},
    1/Sqrt[4 \[Pi] D (t - t0)]*
     Exp[-(x - x0 + D \[Beta] c (t - t0))^2 / (4 D *(t - t0))]] /. 
   rules]

Generate the initial conditions:

tStart = 1/10;
ics = p[tStart, x] == anaSol[tStart, x];

Solve the PDE:

op = MassTransportPDEComponent[vars, pars] /. rules;
tEnd = 1;
if = NDSolveValue[{op == 0, ics}, 
  p, {t, tStart, tEnd}, {x} \[Element] \[CapitalOmega]]

Visualize:

Manipulate[
 Plot[{anaSol[t, x], if[t, x]}, {x} \[Element] \[CapitalOmega], 
  PlotRange -> All], {t, tStart, tEnd}]

Error:

Plot[{anaSol[tEnd, x] - if[tEnd, x]}, {x} \[Element] \[CapitalOmega], 
 PlotRange -> All]

enter image description here

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  • 1
    $\begingroup$ Thanks @user21, I'm trying your answer now, but as a preliminary comment, you chose to work on a different example than mine, and don't mention explicitly which terms play the role of forces or potentials, which is the core of my question. I hate to move the goalpost, but it would be nice to have an answer that can be contrasted with an analytical solution, like eqn 4.39 in here $\endgroup$
    – rhermans
    Commented Mar 18, 2021 at 10:10
  • 3
    $\begingroup$ @rhermans, see update, same procedure. I think what you might have missed is the -Grad[U[X],{x}] == F[X] $\endgroup$
    – user21
    Commented Mar 18, 2021 at 15:42
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From my reading of the documentation for the MassTransportPDEComponent, it appears to be currently missing the ability to add a migration term. Consider, for example, the Nernst-Planck equation:

$$\frac{{\partial {c_i}}}{{\partial t}} + \nabla \cdot\underbrace {\left( { - {D_{AB}}\nabla {c_i} - {c_i}{\bf{u}} + {z_i}{u_i}{c_i}E} \right)}_{{{\bf{N}}_i}} - {R_i} = 0$$

Where

$${{\bf{N}}_i} = - \overbrace {{D_i}\nabla {c_i}}^{Diff} - \overbrace {{c_i}{\bf{u}}}^{Conv} + \overbrace {{z_i}{u_i}{c_i}E}^{Migr}$$

It is not difficult to add a migration term through the use of the PDE building block DerivativePDETerm. In coefficient form, the PDE may be expressed as:

$$m\frac{{{\partial ^2}}}{{\partial {t^2}}}u + d\frac{\partial }{{\partial t}}u + \nabla \cdot\left( { - c\nabla u - \alpha u + \gamma } \right) + \beta \cdot\nabla u + au - f = 0$$

Therefore, $\gamma=Migration=DerivativePDETerm$. Here is an example how we can add it to the pde:

With[{length = 500, height = 30}, Ω = 
  Rectangle[{0, 0}, {length, height}];(*Domain*)
 pars = <|(*Parameters*)"DiffusionCoefficient" -> 10, Vavg -> 10, 
   "MassConvectionVelocity" -> {2 Vavg*(1 - ((y - height/2)/(height/
             2))^2), 0}, "Method" -> "StiffnessSwitching"|>;
 vars = {c[t, x, y], t, {x, y}};(*Variables*)
 Gin = MassConcentrationCondition[x == 0, vars, 
   pars, <|"MassConcentration" -> 0|>];
 Gbottom = 
  MassFluxValue[y == 0, vars, 
   pars, <|"MassFlux" -> 
     2 UnitBox[(x - 100)/50] Exp[-(1/2) (t - 2)^2], 
    "BoundaryUnitNormal" -> {0, 1}|>];
 Gtop = MassImpermeableBoundaryValue[y == height, vars, 
   pars, <|"BoundaryUnitNormal" -> {0, -1}|>];
 ics = {c[0, x, y] == 0};
 pde = {MassTransportPDEComponent[vars, pars] + 
     DerivativePDETerm[vars, {- 8 c[t, x, y], c[t, x, y]}] == 
    Gtop + Gbottom, Gin, ics};]

Now, we can set up and solve the system and observe that it is different from the original solution.

First@AbsoluteTiming[
  cfun = NDSolveValue[pde, 
     c, {t, 0, 20}, {x, y} ∈ Ω, 
     InterpolationOrder -> 2, AccuracyGoal -> 14, Method -> Automatic,
      MaxStepFraction -> 1/6000];]
DensityPlot[cfun[20, x, y], {x, y} ∈ Ω, 
 ColorFunction -> "SunsetColors", AspectRatio -> Automatic, 
 ImageSize -> 800]

Force field modified

Original solution:

Original solution

There could be implications for how this term interacts with boundary conditions. You may want to request a migration term be added to the MassTransportPDEComponent to the Future enhancements for the finite element method page to ensure that it gets handled properly.

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  • $\begingroup$ Thanks! Can you elaborate on the boundary conditions it may affect so I can dig on how to tackle that problem? As suggested, I have added an entry to "Future enhancements for the finite element method " in here. Cheers! $\endgroup$
    – rhermans
    Commented Mar 13, 2021 at 8:48
  • 2
    $\begingroup$ @rhermans If you look at the Partial Differential Equations and Boundary Conditions section in the Solving Partial Differential Equations with Finite Elements, they talk about a generalized Neumann boundary value also known as a Robin value. It takes the form of $\mathord{\buildrel{\lower3pt\hbox{$\scriptscriptstyle\rightharpoonup$}} \over n} \cdot\left( {c\nabla u + \alpha u - \gamma } \right) = \left( {g - qu} \right)$ that contains $\gamma$. It seems there is a potential to interact with Robin values. $\endgroup$
    – Tim Laska
    Commented Mar 13, 2021 at 14:14
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ Thanks Tim. If a migration term is z u c E and c is the dependent variable, could one not put this in the conservative convection coefficient alpha? $\endgroup$
    – user21
    Commented Mar 15, 2021 at 8:39
  • 2
    $\begingroup$ @user21 Yes, it appears you could do that in the Nernst Planck case and it may be a solution to many other cases of interest. I initially tried that approach and ran into some problems. Perhaps I need to revisit. Unfortunately, my experience in this class of physics (i.e., adding a force field) is very limited so I do not have a good feel for what the types of terms are and what good solutions look like. $\endgroup$
    – Tim Laska
    Commented Mar 15, 2021 at 14:01
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ @TimLaska, same problem here, lack of experience, that's why there is no example of this type. We will see where this question leads too. $\endgroup$
    – user21
    Commented Mar 15, 2021 at 15:18

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