dc.description.abstract |
A problem frequently encountered in all disciplines of science is to obtain all the solutions
for a system of non-linear equations. A similar problem exists for reaction systems
with many reactants, products, and intermediates. Such systems may have many
steady states. Here one would like to have a list of all such steady states. Conventional
methods rely on multiple initial start points, which means that they are initialization dependent
and also might converge to trivial or unfeasible solutions. Such methods give
one or a very limited set of steady states. The objective in thesis is to investigate how
useful method of interval analysis is for determining the steady states of reaction systems.
In particular, we are interested in solving kinetic equations of reactions involved
in transition metal heterogeneous catalysis. The method of interval analysis can yield
all steady states of a reaction system with mathematical certainty and are initialization
independent. Here we will address how costly these methods are, and up to what size
of the systems that one can reasonably handle. |
en_US |