This is a Julia package for solving partial differential equations (PDEs) of the form
in two dimensions using the finite volume method, with support also provided for steady-state problems and for systems of PDEs of the above form. In addition to this generic form above, we also provide support for specific problems that can be solved in a more efficient manner, namely:
-
DiffusionEquation
s:$\partial_tu = \boldsymbol\nabla\boldsymbol\cdot[D(\boldsymbol x)\boldsymbol\nabla u]$ . -
MeanExitTimeProblem
s:$\boldsymbol\nabla\boldsymbol\cdot[D(\boldsymbol x)\boldsymbol\nabla T(\boldsymbol x)] = -1$ . -
LinearReactionDiffusionEquation
s:$\partial_tu = \boldsymbol\nabla\boldsymbol\cdot[D(\boldsymbol x)\boldsymbol\nabla u] + f(\boldsymbol x)u$ . -
PoissonsEquation
:$\boldsymbol\nabla\boldsymbol\cdot[D(\boldsymbol x)\boldsymbol\nabla u] = f(\boldsymbol x)$ . -
LaplacesEquation
:$\boldsymbol\nabla\boldsymbol\cdot[D(\boldsymbol x)\boldsymbol\nabla u] = 0$ .
See the documentation for more information.
If this package doesn't suit what you need, you may like to review some of the other PDE packages shown here.
As a very quick demonstration, here is how we could solve a diffusion equation with Dirichlet boundary conditions on a square domain using the standard FVMProblem
formulation; please see the docs for more information.
using FiniteVolumeMethod, DelaunayTriangulation, CairoMakie, OrdinaryDiffEq
a, b, c, d = 0.0, 2.0, 0.0, 2.0
nx, ny = 50, 50
tri = triangulate_rectangle(a, b, c, d, nx, ny, single_boundary=true)
mesh = FVMGeometry(tri)
bc = (x, y, t, u, p) -> zero(u)
BCs = BoundaryConditions(mesh, bc, Dirichlet)
f = (x, y) -> y ≤ 1.0 ? 50.0 : 0.0
initial_condition = [f(x, y) for (x, y) in DelaunayTriangulation.each_point(tri)]
D = (x, y, t, u, p) -> 1 / 9
final_time = 0.5
prob = FVMProblem(mesh, BCs; diffusion_function=D, initial_condition, final_time)
sol = solve(prob, Tsit5(), saveat=0.001)
u = Observable(sol.u[1])
fig, ax, sc = tricontourf(tri, u, levels=0:5:50, colormap=:matter)
tightlimits!(ax)
record(fig, "anim.gif", eachindex(sol)) do i
u[] = sol.u[i]
end
We could have equivalently used the DiffusionEquation
template, so that prob
could have also been defined by
prob = DiffusionEquation(mesh, BCs; diffusion_function=D, initial_condition, final_time)
and be solved much more efficiently. See the documentation for more information.