Files
phasicFlow/src/PostprocessData

PostprocessData Module in phasicFlow

The PostprocessData module in phasicFlow provides powerful tools for analyzing particle-based simulations both during runtime (in-simulation) and after simulation completion (post-simulation). This document explains how to configure and use the postprocessing features through the dictionary-based input system.

Overview

Postprocessing in phasicFlow allows you to:

  • Extract information about particles in specific regions of the domain
  • Calculate statistical properties such as averages and sums of particle attributes
  • Track specific particles throughout the simulation
  • Apply different weighing methods when calculating statistics
  • Perform postprocessing at specific time intervals

Setting Up Postprocessing

Postprocessing is configured through a dictionary file named postprocessDataDict which should be placed in the settings directory. Below is a detailed explanation of the configuration options.

Basic Configuration

The input dictionary, settings/postprocessDataDict, may look like this:

// PostprocessData dictionary


// Enable/disable postprocessing during simulation
runTimeActive yes;  // Options: yes, no

// Shape type - only needed when doing post-simulation processing
shapeType sphere;   // Options depend on the simulation type: sphere, grain, etc.

// Default time control for postprocessing components
defaultTimeControl
{
    timeControl         timeStep;  // Options: timeStep, simulationTime, settings
    startTime           0;         // Start time for postprocessing
    endTime             1000;      // End time for postprocessing
    executionInterval   150;       // How frequently to run postprocessing
}

// List of postprocessing components
components
(
    // Component definitions here...
);

If you want to activate in-simulaiton postprocessing, you need to add these lines to the settings/settingsDict file:

libs   ("libPostprocessData.so");

auxFunctions    postprocessData;

This will link the postprocessing library to your simulation, allowing you to use its features. Note that, anytime you want to deactivate the in-simulation postprocessing, you can simply change the runTimeActive option to no in postprocessDataDict file.

Time Control Options

Each postprocessing component can either use the default time control settings or define its own. There are three main options for time control:

Option Description Required Parameters
timeStep Controls execution based on simulation time steps startTime, endTime, executionInterval
simulationTime Controls execution based on simulation time startTime, endTime, executionInterval
settings Uses parameters from settingsDict file None (defined elsewhere)
default Uses the default time control settings (uses defaultTimeControl settings) None (uses default)

If no time control is specified, the default option is used automatically.

Processing Methods

The postprocessing module provides several methods for processing particle data. They are categorized into two main groups: bulk and individual methods.

  • Bulk Methods: Operate on all particles that are located in a specified locations/regions (cells, spheres, etc.).
  • Individual Methods: Operate on specific particles, allowing for targeted particle property extraction.
Method Property type Description Formula
arithmetic bulk Simple arithmetic mean/sum with equal weights Each particle contributes equally
uniformDistribution bulk Each particle contributes inversely proportional to the total number of particles w_i = 1/n where n is the number of particles
GaussianDistribution bulk Weight contribution based on distance from center with Gaussian falloff w_i = \exp(-\|x_i - c\|^2/(2\sigma^2))/\sqrt{2\pi\sigma^2}
particleProbe individual Extracts values from specific particles Direct access to particle properties

Region Types

Regions define where in the domain the postprocessing operations are applied:

Region Type Description Required Parameters Compatible with
sphere A spherical region radius, center bulk
multipleSpheres Multiple spherical regions centers, radii bulk
line Spheres along a line with specified radius p1, p2, nSpheres, radius bulk
centerPoints Specific particles selected by ID ids individual

Processing Operations

Within each processing region of type bulk, you can define multiple operations to be performed:

Available Functions

Function Property type Description Formula Required Parameters
average bulk Weighted average of particle field values see Equation 1 field, phi (optional), threshold (optional), includeMask (optional), divideByVolume (optional)
sum bulk Weighted sum of particle field values see Equation 2 field, phi (optional),threshold (optional), includeMask (optional), divideByVolume (optional)

Equation 1:

\text{result} = \frac{\sum_j w_j \cdot \phi_j \cdot \text{field}_j}{\sum_i w_i \cdot \phi_i}

Equation 2:

\text{result} = \sum_j w_j \cdot \phi_j \cdot \text{field}_j

where:

  • j is the index of the particle in the region that also satisfies the includeMask
  • i is the index of the particle in the region
  • w_j is the weight of particle j based on the selected processing method
  • \phi_j is the value of the phi field for particle j (default is 1)
  • field_j is the value of the specified field for particle j

Derived Functions

In addition to the above basic functions, some derived functions are available for specific calculations:

Function Property type Description Formula Required Parameters
avMassVelocity bulk Average velocity weighted by mass \frac{\sum_{i \in \text{region}} m_i \cdot v_i}{\sum_{i \in \text{region}} m_i} -

Available Fields

All the pointFields in the simulation database (for in-simulation processing), or the ones stored in the time folders (for post-simulation processing) can be referenced in the operations. In addition to them, some extra fields are available for use in the operations. The following fields are available for use in the operations:

  1. Extra fileds to be used in post-processing operations:
Field Field Type Description Default Value
position realx3 Particle positions -
one real Value 1 for each particle 1
mass real Particle mass -
density real Particle density -
volume real Particle volume -
diameter real Particle diameter -
I real Moment of inertia -
  1. Common fields which are available in the simulation database/time folders:
Field Field Type Description
velocity realx3 Particle velocity
rVelocity realx3 Particle rotational velocity
acceleration realx3 Particle acceleration
rAcceleration realx3 Particle rotational acceleration
contactForce realx3 Particle contact force
contactTorque realx3 Particle contact torque
id integer Particle ID
shapeIndex integer Particle shape index

The above fields may vary from one type of simulation to other. Pleas note that this is only a tentative list.

Optional Parameters

Parameter Description Default Options
divideByVolume Divide result by region volume no yes, no
threshold Exclude regions with fewer particles 1 Integer value
includeMask Filter particles based on a field value all all, lessThan, greaterThan, between, lessThanOrEq, greaterThanEq, betweenEq

Examples

Example 1: Probing Individual Particles

velocityProb
{
    processMethod    particleProbe;
    processRegion    centerPoints;
    selector         id;
    field            component(position,y);
    ids              (0 10 100);
    timeControl      default;
}

This example extracts the y-component of the position for particles with IDs 0, 10, and 100.

Example 2: Processing in a Spherical Region

on_single_sphere
{
    processMethod    arithmetic;
    processRegion    sphere;
    
    sphereInfo
    {
        radius  0.01;
        center  (-0.08 -0.08 0.015);
    }
    
    timeControl default;
    
    operations
    (
        averageVel
        {
            function        average;
            field           mag(velocity);
            divideByVolume  no;
            threshold       3;
            includeMask     all;
        }
        
        par1Fraction
        {
            function        average;
            field           one;
            phi             one;
            divideByVolume  no;
            includeMask     lessThan;
            
            lessThanInfo
            {
                field       diameter;
                value       0.0031;
            }
        }
        
        numberDensity
        {
            function        sum;
            field           one;
            phi             one;
            divideByVolume  yes;
        }
    );
}

This example defines a sphere region and performs three operations:

  1. Calculate the average of velocity magnitude of particles
  2. Calculate the fraction of particles with diameter less than 0.0031
  3. Calculate the number density by summing and dividing by volume

Example 3: Processing Along a Line

In this example, a line region is defined. The lineInfo section specifies the start and end points of the line, the number of spheres to create along the line, and the radius of each point. Bulk properties are calculated in each sphere, based on the properties of particles contained in each sphere.

along_a_line
{
      processMethod    arithmetic;
      processRegion    line;
      
      timeControl simulationTime;
      startTime   1.0;
      endTime     3.0;
      executionInterval 0.1;
      
      lineInfo
      {
        p1   (0 0 0);
        p2   (0 0.15 0.15);
        nSpheres    10;
        radius    0.01;
      }
      
      operations
      (
          bulkDensity
          {
              function       sum;
              field          mass;
              phi            one;
              divideByVolume yes;
          }
          
          volumeDensity
          {
            function         sum;
            field            volume;
            divideByVolume   yes;
          }
     );
}

This example creates 10 spherical regions along a line from (0,0,0) to (0,0.15,0.15) and calculates the bulk density and volume density in each region.

Advanced Features

Special functions applied on fields

You can access specific components of vector fields (realx3) using the component function:

field  component(position,y);  // Access the y-component of position

Here is a complete list of these special functions:

Function Name Valid field Type Example
component realx3 component(velocity,x)
abs real abs(s)
square real square(I)
cube real cube(diameter)
squre root real sqrt(mass)
magnitude realx3 mag(contactForce)
magnitude square realx3 magSquare(velocity)
magnitude cube realx3 magCube(velocity)
magnitude square root realx3 magSqrt(acceleration)

Particle Filtering with includeMask

The includeMask parameter allows you to filter particles based on field values:

includeMask  lessThan;
lessThanInfo
{
    field   diameter;
    value   0.0031;
}

Supported masks:

  • all: Include all particles (default)
  • lessThan: Include particles where field < value
  • greaterThan: Include particles where field > value
  • between: Include particles where value1 < field < value2
  • lessThanOrEq: Include particles where field ≤ value
  • greaterThanOrEq: Include particles where field ≥ value
  • betweenEq: Include particles where value1 ≤ field ≤ value2

Implementation Notes

  • The postprocessing system can work both during simulation (runTimeActive yes) or after simulation completion.
  • When using post-simulation mode, you must specify the correct shapeType to properly initialize the shape objects.
  • Results are written to output files in the case directory with timestamps.
  • The threshold parameter helps eliminate statistical noise in regions with few particles.
  • Setting divideByVolume to yes normalizes results by the volume of the region, useful for calculating densities.

Mathematical Formulations

For weighted bulk properties calculation:

\text{average} = \frac{\sum_{i \in \text{region and includeMask}} w_i \cdot \phi_i \cdot \text{field}_i}{\sum_{i \in \text{region}} w_i \cdot \phi_i}

For weighted summing:

\text{sum} = \sum_{i \in \text{region and includeMask}} w_i \cdot \phi_i \cdot \text{field}_i

If divideByVolume is set to yes, the result is divided by the volume of the region:

\text{volumetric result} = \frac{\text{result}}{V_{\text{region}}}