How do I add additional values for k into the function?
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clear; clc; close('all');
y = 0.2;
t = 0;
h = 0.01;
tn = 0.2;
[t, y] = Euler(t, y, h, tn);
function [t, y] = Euler(t0, y0, h, tn)
t = (t0:h:tn)';
y = zeros(size(t));
y(1) = y0;
for i = 1:1:length(t)-1
y(i+1) = y(i) + h*f(y(i),t(i));
end
fprintf('The concentration of H2O after 0.2 seconds (kf=30):\n')
disp(y(21))
end
function dydt = f(y,t)
k1 = 30;
c = 0.2;
b = 0.4;
a = 0.5;
dydt = k1*b*a;
end
So for example, the output I have now is:
The concentration of H2O after 0.2 seconds (kf=30): 1.4000
How do I add a k2 and a k3 to the function both with values of 20 and 40 and make my output:
The concentration of H2O after 0.2 seconds (kf=30): 1.4000
The concentration of H2O after 0.2 seconds (kf=20): _______
The concentration of H2O after 0.2 seconds (kf=40): _______
5 commentaires
Walter Roberson
le 25 Avr 2019
Is the 30 of kf the same as the 30 of k1 in f() ?
johnmurdock
le 25 Avr 2019
Walter Roberson
le 25 Avr 2019
See http://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/math/parameterizing-functions.html so you can control the k1 value from outside the f function.
Loop over index of hf parameters. Store the results in a 2D array with one of the dimensions being the index of the hf parameter. Do not emit any output until after all of the calculation is done.
Now you can iterate over hf parameter index for each time step, showing the values as appropriate.
johnmurdock
le 25 Avr 2019
johnmurdock
le 26 Avr 2019
Réponses (1)
Walter Roberson
le 26 Avr 2019
y = 0.2;
t = 0;
h = 0.01;
tn = 0.2;
kf_vals = [30 20 40];
for Kidx = 1 : length(kf_vals)
kf = kf_vals(Kidx);
%we assume that all the t values are the same
[t, y(:,Kidx)] = Euler(t, y, h, tn, kf);
end
for Kidx = 1 : length(kf_vals)
kf = kf_vals(Kidx);
fprintf('The concentration of H2O after %g seconds (kf=%g): %g\n', t(end), kf, y(end, Kidx));
end
function [t, y] = Euler(t0, y0, h, tn, kf)
t = (t0:h:tn)';
y = zeros(size(t));
y(1) = y0;
for i = 1:1:length(t)-1
y(i+1) = y(i) + h*f(y(i), t(i), kf);
end
end
function dydt = f(y, t, kf)
c = 0.2;
b = 0.4;
a = 0.5;
dydt = kf*b*a;
end
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