> Has anybody the problem with "peak results"? > I mean, when you record the data from anything, for example force > affecting on facet or sphere, > sometimes you get "pick results" which are twice or more larger than > normal result. > It happens just for a short period, like a noise.
Eh, probably everybody has had that problem. Taking force on 1 particle makes no sense, you have to average it somehow. DEM doesn't solve for equilibrium, therefore you can either let the simulation stabilize somehow (dissipate all the kinetic energy), or average somehow what you see over larger area (or both). You can compute forces on a specimen cross-section or some meaningfully defined set of particles; if you have a facet that touches many spheres, that could be a good candidate as well, as long as the sphere move independently. You can try taking force from 1 single particle and smooth it using moving average or similar techniques (they are available in the numpy package), but that is just "graph aesthetics". e.g. examples/concrete/uniaxial sums forces (in UniaxialStrainer) on all particles that are considered supports and lower and higher supports are then averaged. There are still some osciallations (as there are waves going back and forth in the specimen), but that is not so marked unless you go to very high loading rates. The same example also plots cross-section forces (i.e. forces in interactions that cross that plane) and you can see that they differ. Vaclav _______________________________________________ Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~yade-users Post to : [email protected] Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~yade-users More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp _______________________________________________ yade-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/yade-users
