EOS Models
The mathematical descriptions of these models are presented below while the details of using them is presented in the description of the EOS API.
EOS Primer
An equation of state (EOS) is a constituitive model that generally relates thermodynamic quantities such as pressure, temperature, density, internal energy, free energy, and entropy consistent with the constraints of equillibrium thermodynamics.
singularity-eos
contains a number of equations of state that are most useful
in hydrodynamics codes. All of the equations of state presented here are
considered “complete” equations of state in the sense that they contain all the
information needed to derive a given thermodynamic quantity. However, not all
variables are exposed since the emphasis is on only those that are needed for
hydrodynamics codes. An incomplete equation of state is often sufficient for
pure hydrodynamics since it can relate pressure to a given energy-density state,
but it is missing information that relates the energy to temperature (which in
turn provides a means to calculate entropy).
An excellent resource on equations of state in the context of hydrodynamics is
the seminal work from Menikoff and Plohr. In particular, Appendix A contains
a number of thermodynamic relationships that can be useful for computing
additional quantities from those output in singularity-eos
.
The Mie-Gruneisen form
Many of the following equations of state are considered to be of the “Mie-Gruneisen form”, which has many implications but for our purposes means that the general form of the EOS is
where ‘ref’ denotes quantities along some reference curve, \(P\) is the pressure, \(\rho\) is the density, \(\Gamma\) is the Gruneisen parameter, and \(e\) is the specific internal energy. In this sense, an EOS of this form uses the Gruneisen parameter to describe the pressure behavior of the EOS away from the reference curve. Coupled with a relationship between energy and temperature (sometimes as simple as a constant heat capacity), the complete equation of state can be constructed.
To some degree it is the complexity of the reference state and the heat capacity that will determine an EOS’s ability to capture the complex behavior of a material. At the simplest level, the ideal gas EOS uses a reference state at zero pressure and energy, while more complex equations of state such as the Davis EOS use the material’s isentrope. In ths way, the reference curve indicates the conditions under which you can expect the EOS to represent the intended behavior.
Nomenclature
The EOS models in singularity-eos
are defined for the following sets of
dependent and independent variables through various member functions described
in the EOS API.
Function |
Dependent Variable |
Independent Variables |
---|---|---|
\(T(\rho, e)\) |
Temperature |
Density, Internal Energy |
\(P(\rho, e)\) |
Pressure |
|
\(e(\rho, T)\) |
Internal Energy |
Density, Temperature |
\(P(\rho, T)\) |
Pressure |
|
\(\rho(P, T)\) |
Density |
Pressure, Temperature |
\(e(P, T)\) |
Internal Energy |
|
\(C_V(\rho, T)\) |
Constant Volume Specific Heat Capacity |
Density, Temperature |
\(C_V(\rho, e)\) |
Density, Internal Energy |
|
\(B_S(\rho, T)\) |
Isentropic Bulk Modulus |
Density, Temperature |
\(B_S(\rho, e)\) |
Density, Internal Energy |
|
\(\Gamma(\rho, T)\) |
Gruneisen Parameter |
Density, Temperature |
\(\Gamma(\rho, e)\) |
Density, Internal Energy |
A point of note is that “specific” implies that the quantity is intensive on a per unit mass basis. It should be assumed that the internal energy is always specific since we are working in terms of density (the inverse of specific volume).
Disambiguation
Gruneisen Parameter
In this description of the EOS models, we use \(\Gamma\) to represent the Gruneisen coeficient since this is the most commonly-used symbol in the context of Mie-Gruneisen equations of state. The definition of the Gruneisen parameter is
\[\Gamma := \frac{1}{\rho} \left( \frac{\partial P}{\partial e} \right)_\rho\]
This should be differentiated from
\[\gamma := \frac{V}{P} \left( \frac{\partial P}{\partial V} \right)_S = \frac{B_S}{P}\]
though, which is the adiabatic exponent.
For an ideal gas, the adiabatic exponent is simply the ratio of the heat capacities,
\[\gamma_\mathrm{id} = \frac{C_P}{C_V} = \frac{B_S}{B_T}.\]
Here \(C_P\) is the specific heat capacity at constant pressure and \(B_T\) is the isothermal bulk modulus.
Units and conversions
The default units for singularity-eos
are cgs which results in the following
units for thermodynamic quantities:
Quantity |
Default Units |
cgµ conversion |
mm-mg-µs conversion |
---|---|---|---|
\(P\) |
µbar |
10-12 Mbar |
10-10 GPa |
\(\rho\) |
g/cm3 |
1 |
1 mg/mm3 |
\(e\) |
erg/g |
10-12 Terg/g |
10-10 J/mg |
\(T\) |
K |
1 |
1 |
\(C_V\) |
erg/g/K |
10-12 Terg/g/K |
10-10 J/mg/K |
\(B_S\) |
µbar |
10-12 Mbar |
10-10 GPa |
\(\Gamma\) |
unitless |
– |
– |
Note: some temperatures are measured in eV for which the conversion is 8.617333262e-05 eV/K.
Sesame units are equivalent to the mm-mg-µs unit system.
Implemented EOS models
Ideal Gas
The ideal gas (aka perfect or gamma-law gas) model in singularity-eos
takes
the form
where quantities are defined in the nomenclature section.
The settable parameters are the Gruneisen parameter and specific heat capacity.
Although this differs from the traditional representation of the ideal gas law as \(P\tilde{V} = RT\), the forms are equivalent by recognizing that \(\Gamma = \frac{R}{\tilde{C_V}}\) where \(R\) is the ideal gas constant in units of energy per mole per Kelvin and \(\tilde{C_\mathrm{V}}\) is the molar heat capacity, relatable to the specific heat capacity through the molecular weight of the gas. Since \(\tilde{C_\mathrm{V}} = \frac{5}{2} R\) for a diatomic ideal gas, the corresponding Gruneisen parameter should be 0.4.
A common point of confusion is \(\Gamma\) versus \(\gamma\) with the latter being the adiabatic exponent. For an ideal gas, they are related through
The IdealGas
EOS constructor has two arguments, gm1
, which is
the Gruneisen parameter \(\Gamma\), and Cv
, which is the
specific heat \(C_V\):
IdealGas(Real gm1, Real Cv)
Gruneisen EOS
One of the most commonly-used EOS to represent solids is the Steinberg variation of the Mie-Gruneisen EOS, often just shortened to “Gruneisen” EOS. This EOS uses the Hugoniot as the reference curve and thus is extremly powerful because the basic shock response of a material can be modeled using minimal parameters.
The pressure follows the traditional Mie-Gruneisen form,
Here the subscript \(H\) is a reminder that the reference curve is a Hugoniot. Other quantities are defined in the nomenclature section.
The above is an incomplete equation of state because it only relates the pressure to the density and energy, the minimum required in a solution to the Euler equations. To complete the EOS and determine the temperature, a constant heat capacity is assumed so that
The user should note that this implies that \(e=0\) at the reference temperature, \(T_0\). Given this simple relationship, the user should treat the temperature from this EOS as only a rough estimate.
Given a reference density, \(\rho_0\), we first parameterize the EOS using \(\eta\) as a measure of compression given by
This is convenient because \(eta = 0\) when \(\rho = \rho_0\), \(\eta = 1\) at the infinite density limit, and \(\eta = -\infty\) at the zero density limit. The Gruneisen parameter, \(\Gamma\) can be expressed in terms of \(\eta\) as
When the unitless user parameter \(b=0\), the Gruneisen parameter is of a form where \(\rho\Gamma =\) constant in compression, i.e. when \(\eta > 0\).
The reference pressure along the Hugoniot is determined by
where \(P_0\) is the reference pressure and \(c_0\), \(s_1\), \(s_2\), and \(s_3\) are fitting paramters to the \(U_s\)-\(u_p\) curve such that
Here \(U_s\) is the shock velocity and \(u_p\) is the particle velocity. For many materials, this relationship is roughly linear so only the \(s_1\) parameter is needed. The units for \(c_0\) are velocity while the rest are unitless.
Finally the energy along the Hugoniot is given by
One should note that in this form neither the expansion region nor the overall temperature are thermodynamically consistent with the rest of the EOS. Since the EOS is a fit to the principal Hugoniot, the EOS will obviously reproduce single shocks quite well, but it may not be as appropriate when there are multiple shocks or for modeling the release behavior of a material.
The constructor for the Gruneisen
EOS has the signature
Gruneisen(const Real C0, const Real s1, const Real s2, const Real s3, const Real G0,
const Real b, const Real rho0, const Real T0, const Real P0, const Real Cv,
const Real rho_max)
where C0
is \(C_0\), s1
is \(s_1\), s2
is
\(s_2\), s3
is \(s_3\), G0
is \(\Gamma_0\), b
is \(b\), rho0
is \(\rho_0\), T0
is \(T_0\),
P0
is \(P_0\), and Cv
is \(C_v\). rho_max
is the
maximum value of density for which the reference pressure curve is
valid. Input densities above rho_max
are pinned to rho_max
.
There is an overload of the Gruneisen
class which computes
rho_max
automatically without the user needing to specify:
Gruneisen(const Real C0, const Real s1, const Real s2, const Real s3, const Real G0,
const Real b, const Real rho0, const Real T0, const Real P0, const Real Cv)
JWL EOS
The Jones-Wilkins-Lee (JWL) EOS is used mainly for detonation products of high explosives. Similar to the other EOS here, the JWL EOS can be written in a Mie-Gruneisen form as
where the reference curve is an isentrope of the form
Here \(\eta = \frac{\rho_0}{\rho}\) and \(R_1\), \(R_2\), \(A\), \(B\), and \(w\) are constants particular to the material. Note that the parameter \(w\) is simply the Gruneisen parameter and is assumed constant for the EOS (which is fairly reasonable since the detonation products are gasses).
Finally, to complete the EOS the energy is related to the temperature by
where \(C_V\) is the constant volume specific heat capacity.
The constructor for the JWL EOS is
JWL(const Real A, const Real B, const Real R1, const Real R2,
const Real w, const Real rho0, const Real Cv)
where A
is \(A\), B
is \(B\), R1
is \(R_1\),
R2
is \(R_2\), w
is \(w\), rho0
is \(\rho_0\),
and Cv
is \(C_V\).
Davis EOS
The Davis reactants and products EOS are both of Mie-Gruneisen forms that use isentropes for the reference curves. The equations of state are typically used to represent high explosives and their detonation products and the reference curves are calibrated to several sets of experimental data.
For both the reactants and products EOS, the pressure and energy take the forms
where the subscript \(S\) denotes quantities along the reference isentrope and other quantities are defined in the nomenclature section.
Davis Reactants EOS
The Davis reactants EOS uses an isentrope passing through a reference state and assumes that the heat capacity varies linearly with entropy such that
where subscript \(0\) refers to the reference state and \(\alpha\) is a dimensionless constant specified by the user.
The \(e(\rho, P)\) lookup is quite awkward, so the energy is more-conveniently cast in terms of termperature such that
which can easily be inverted to find \(T(\rho, e)\).
The Gruneisen parameter takes on a linear form such that
where \(Z\) and \(y\) are dimensionless parameters.
Finally, the pressure, energy, and temperature along the isentrope are given by
where \(A\), \(B\), \(C\), \(y\), and \(Z\) are all user-settable parameters and again quantities with a subcript of \(0\) refer to the reference state. The variable \(\bar{\rho}\) is simply an integration variable. The parameter \(C\) is especially useful for ensuring that the high-pressure portion of the shock Hugoniot does not cross that of the products.
The settable parameters are the dimensionless parameters listed above as well as the pressure, density, temperature, energy, Gruneisen parameter, and constant volume specific heat capacity at the reference state.
The constructor for the Davis Reactants EOS is
DavisReactants(const Real rho0, const Real e0, const Real P0, const Real T0,
const Real A, const Real B, const Real C, const Real G0, const Real Z,
const Real alpha, const Real Cv0)
where rho0
is \(\rho_0\), e0
is \(e_0\), P0
is
\(P_0\), T0
is \(T_0\), A
is \(A\), B
is
\(B\), C
is \(C\), G0
is \(\Gamma_0\), Z
is
\(Z\), alpha
is \(\alpha\), and Cv0
is the specific
heat capacity at the reference state.
Davis Products EOS
The Davis products EOS is created from the reference isentrope passing through the CJ state of the high explosive along with a constant heat capacity. The constant heat capacity leads to the energy being a simple funciton of the temperature deviation from the reference isentrope such that
The Gruneisen parameter is given by
where \(b\) is a user-settable dimensionless parameter and \(F(\rho)\) is given by
Here the calibration parameters \(a\) and \(n\) are dimensionless while \(V_{\mathrm{C}}\) is given in units of specific volume.
Finally, the pressure, energy, and temperature along the isentrope are given by
where
and
Here, there are four dimensionless parameters that are settable by the user, \(a\), \(b\), \(k\), and \(n\), while \(P_\mathrm{C}\), \(e_\mathrm{C}\), \(V_\mathrm{C}\) and \(T_\mathrm{C}\) are tuning parameters with units related to their non-subscripted counterparts.
The constructor for the Davis Products EOS is
DavisProducts(const Real a, const Real b, const Real k, const Real n, const Real vc,
const Real pc, const Real Cv, const Real E0)
where a
is \(a\), b
is \(b\), k
is \(k\),
n
is \(n\), vc
is \(V_\mathrm{C}\), pc
is
\(P_\mathrm{C}\), Cv
is \(C_{V,0}\), and E0
is
\(e_\mathrm{C}\).
Spiner EOS
Spiner EOS is a tabulated reader for the Sesame database of material
equations of state. Materials include things like water, dry air,
iron, or steel. This model comes in two flavors:
SpinerEOSDependsRhoT
and SpinerEOSDependsRhoSie
. The former
tabulates all quantities of interest in terms of density and
temperature. The latter also includes tables in terms of density and
specific internal energy.
Tabulating in terms of density and pressure means that computing, e.g., pressure in terms of density and internal energy requires solving the equation:
for temperature \(T\) given density \(\rho\) and specific
internal energy \(e_0\). This is in general not closed
algebraically and must be solved using a
root-find. SpinerEOSDependsRhoT
performs this root find in-line,
and the result is performant, thanks to library’s ability to take and
cache initial guesses. SpinerEOSDependsRhoSie
circumvents this
issue by tabulating in terms of both specific internal energy and
temperature.
Both models use (approximately) log-linear interpolation on a grid that is (approximately) uniformly spaced on a log scale. Thermodynamic derivatives are tabulated and interpolated, rather than computed from the interpolating function. This approach allows for significantly higher fidelity approximations of these derivatives.
Both SpinerEOS
classes benefit from a lambda
parameter, as
described in the EOS API section`. In particular, if
an array of size 2 is passed in to the scalar call (or one per point
for the vector call), the model will leverage this scratch space to
cache initial guesses for root finds.
To avoid race conditions, at least one array should be allocated per thread. Depending on the call pattern, one per point may be best. In the vector case, one per point is necessary.
The constructor for SpinerEOSDependsRhoT
is given by two overloads:
SpinerEOSDependsRhoT(const std::string &filename, int matid,
bool reproduciblity_mode = false);
SpinerEOSDependsRhoT(const std::string &filename, const std::string &materialName,
bool reproducibility_mode = false);
where here filename
is the input file, matid
is the unique
material ID in the database in the file, materialName
is the name
of the material in the file, and reproducability_mode
is a boolean
which slightly changes how initial guesses for root finds are
computed. The constructor for SpinerEOSDependsRhoSie
is identical.
sp5
files and sesame2spiner
The SpinerEOS
models use their own file format built on hdf5
,
which we call sp5
. These files can be generated by hand, or they
can be generated from the sesame database (assuming eospac is
installed) via the tool sesame2spiner
, which is packaged with
singularity-eos
. Buld sesame2spiner
by specifying
-DSINGULARITY_USE_HDF5=ON -DSPINGULARITY_USE_EOSPAC=ON -DSINGULARITY_BUILD_SESAME2SPINER=ON
at configure time. The call to sesame2spiner
is of the form
sesame2spiner -s output_file_name.sp5 input1.dat input2.dat ...
for any number of input files. Verbosity flags -p
and -v
are
also available. Use -h
for a help message. The -s
flag is
optional and the output file name defaults to materials.sp5
.
Each input file corresponds to a material and consists of simple key-value pairs. For exampe the following input deck is for air:
matid = 5030
# These set the number of grid points per decade
# for each variable. The default is 50 points
# per decade.
numrho/decade = 40
numT/decade = 40
numSie/decade = 40
# Defaults pulled from the sesame file if possible
name = air
rhomin = 1e-2
rhomax = 10
Tmin = 252
Tmax = 1e4
siemin = 1e12
siemax = 1e16
# These shrink the logarithm of the bounds by a fraction of the
# total inteval <= 1.
# Note that these may be deprecated in the near future.
shrinklRhoBounds = 0.15
shrinklTBounds = 0.15
shrinkleBounds = 0.5
The only required value in an input file is the matid, in this
case 5030. All other values will be inferred from the original sesame
database if possible and if no value in the input file is
provided. Comments are prefixed with #
.
eospac uses environment variables and files to locate files in the
sesame database, and sesame2spiner
uses eospac. So the
location of the sesame
database need not be provided by the
command line. For how to specify sesame file locations, see the
eospac manual.
Stellar Collapse EOS
This model provides finite temperature nuclear equations of state suitable for core collapse supernova and compact object (such as neutron star) simulations. These models assume nuclear statistical equilibrium (NSE). It reads tabulated data in the Stellar Collapse format, as first presented by OConnor and Ott.
Like SpinerEOSDependsRhoT
, StellarCollapse
tabulateds all
quantities in terms of density and temperature on a logarithmically
spaced grid. And similarly, it requires an in-line root-find to
compute quantities in terms of density and specific internal
energy. Unlike most of the other models in singularity-eos
,
StellarCollapse
also depends on a third quantity, the electron
fraction,
which measures the number fraction of electrons to baryons. Symmetric matter has a \(Y_e\) of 0.5, while cold neutron stars, have a \(Y_e\) approximately less than 0.1.
As with SpinerEOSDependsRhoT
, the Stellar Collapse tables tabulate
thermodynamic derivatives separately, rather than reconstruct them
from interpolants. However, the tabulated values can contain
artifacts, such as unphysical spikes. To mitigate this issue, the
thermodynamic derivatives are cleaned via a median filter. The bulk
modulus is then recomputed from these thermodynamic derivatives via:
Note that StellarCollapse
is a relativistic model, and thus the
sound speed is given by
where \(w = \rho h\) for specific entalpy \(h\) is the enthalpy by volume, rather than the density \(rho\). This ensures the sound speed is bounded from above by the speed of light.
The StellarCollapse
model requires a lambda
parameter of size
2, as described in the EOS API section`. The zeroth
element of the lambda
array contains the electron fraction. The
first element is reserved for caching. It currently contains the
natural log of the temperature, but this should not be assumed.
To avoid race conditions, at least one array should be allocated per thread. Depending on the call pattern, one per point may be best. In the vector case, one per point is necessary.
The StellarCollpase
model can read files in either the original
format found on the Stellar Collapse website, or in the sp5
format described above.
Warning
Note that the data contained in an sp5
file for the
StellarCollapse
EOS and the SpinerEOS
models is not
identical and the files are not interchangeable.
The constructor for the StellarCollapse
EOS class looks like
StellarCollapse(const std::string &filename, bool use_sp5 = false,
bool filter_bmod = true)
where filename
is the file containing the tabulated model,
use_sp5
specifies whether to read an sp5
file or a file in the
original Stellar Collapse format, and filter_bmod
specifies
whether or not to apply the above-described median filter.
StellarCollapse
also provides
-
void Save(const std::string &filename)
which saves the current EOS data in sp5
format.
EOSPAC EOS
This is a striaghtforward wrapper of the EOSPAC library for the
Sesame database. The constructor for the EOSPAC
model looks like
EOSPAC(int matid, bool invert_at_setup = false)
where matid
is the unique material number in the database and
invert_at_setup
specifies whether or not pre-compute tables of
temperature as a function of density and energy.