The sodym package provides key functionality for material flow analysis, including
- the class
MFASystem
acting as a template (parent class) for users to create their own material flow models - the class
NamedDimArray
handling mathematical operations between multi-dimensional arrays - different classes like
DynamicStockModel
representing stocks accumulation, in- and outflows based on age cohort tracking and lifetime distributions. Those can be integrated in theMFASystem
. - different options for data input and export, as well as visualization
sodym is an adaptation of:
ODYM
Copyright (c) 2018 Industrial Ecology
author: Stefan Pauliuk, Uni Freiburg, Germany
https://github.com/IndEcol/ODYM
sodym dependencies are managed with pip.
To install as a user: run python -m pip install sodym@git+https://github.com/pik-piam/sodym.git
To install as a developer:
- Clone the sodym repository using git.
- From the project main directory, run
pip install -e ".[test,docs,examples]"
to obtain all the necessary dependencies, including those for running the tests, making the documentation, and running the examples.
Note that it is advisable to do this within a virtual environment.
The notebooks in the examples folder provide usage examples of the code.
MFA models mainly consist on mathematical operations on different multi-dimensional arrays.
For example, the generation of different waste types waste
might be a 3D-array defined over the dimensions time end_of_life_products
(defined over time, region, and product type waste_share
mapping from product type to waste type.
In numpy, the according matrix multiplication can be carried out nicely with the einsum
function, were an index string indicates the involved dimensions:
waste = np.einsum('trw,pw->trp', end_of_life_products, waste_share)
sodym uses this function under the hood, but wraps it in a data type NamedDimArray
, which stores the dimensions of the array and internally manages the dimensions of different arrays involved in mathematical operations.
With this, the above example reduces to
waste[...] = end_of_life_products * waste_share
This gives a sodym-based MFA models the following properties:
- Simplicity: Since dimensions are automatically managed by the user, coding array operations becomes much easier. No knowledge about the einsum function, about the dimensions of each involved array or their order are required.
- Sustainability: When changing the dimensionality of any array in your code, you only have to apply the change once, where the array is defined, instead of adapting every operation involving it. This also allows, for example, to add or remove an entire dimension from your model with minimal effort.
- Versatility: We offer different levels of sodym use: Users can choose to use the standard methods implemented for data read-in, system setup and visualization, or only use only some of the data types like
NamedDimArray
, and custom methods for the rest. - Robustness: Through the use of Pydantic, the setup of the system and data read-in are type-checked, highlighting errors early-on.
- Performance: The use of numpy ndarrays ensures low model runtimes compared with dimension matching through pandas dataframes.