nashiong / cantera

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jacobian error at high temperature than 500K #253

Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 9 years ago

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
What steps will reproduce the problem?
1.initiate temperature to 500K
2.program is not solving the velocity
3.

What is the expected output? What do you see instead?
output obtained:
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "F:\Book\VIII Project\Diffusion\free_h2_air.py", line 58, in <module>
    f.solve(loglevel, refine_grid)
  File "C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\Cantera\OneD\FreeFlame.py", line 73, in solve
    Stack.solve(self, loglevel = loglevel, refine_grid = refine_grid)
  File "C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\Cantera\OneD\onedim.py", line 581, in solve
    return _cantera.sim1D_solve(self._hndl, loglevel, refine_grid)
error: 

************************************************
                Cantera Error!                  
************************************************

Procedure: MultiNewton::step
Error:   Jacobian is singular for domain flame, component CH3CHO at point 6
(Matrix row 400) 
see file bandmatrix.csv

What version of the product are you using? On what operating system?
python 2.7

Please provide any additional information below.

Original issue reported on code.google.com by rkthedud...@gmail.com on 24 Feb 2015 at 9:06

Attachments:

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
Hello,

You appear to be using the old version of Cantera (as shown by the capital C 
import Cantera at the top of your script). A number of improvements have been 
made to the 1-D solvers in more recent versions, so I would encourage you to 
update.

Best,
Bryan

Original comment by bryan.w....@gmail.com on 24 Feb 2015 at 9:35

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
I believe this is caused by the fact that in the legacy Python module, the 
default value for the temperature fixed point is 500K. This can be changed by 
providing a value to the FreeFlame constructor:

    f = FreeFlame(gas = gas, grid = initial_grid, tfix=600)

In the new Python module, the fixed point temperature is set to be halfway 
between the unburned and burned gas temperatures, so this problem does not 
occur.

Original comment by yarmond on 25 Feb 2015 at 7:32