4.7 Article

SSIA: A sensitivity-supervised interlock algorithm for high-performance microkinetic solving

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 154, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0032228

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFA0208602]
  2. NSFC [21873028, 91945302, 21703067]
  3. National Ten Thousand Talent Program for Young Top-notch Talents in China
  4. Shanghai ShuGuang project [17SG30]
  5. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

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The SSIA algorithm achieves a 100% success rate in solving the steady state of heterogeneous catalytic systems, outperforming traditional methods in both speed and computational cost savings. It introduces coverage sensitivity and exponential space for initial coverage generation, providing a more effective simulation of practical coverage variations among intermediates.
Microkinetic modeling has drawn increasing attention for quantitatively analyzing catalytic networks in recent decades, in which the speed and stability of the solver play a crucial role. However, for the multi-step complex systems with a wide variation of rate constants, the often encountered stiff problem leads to the low success rate and high computational cost in the numerical solution. Here, we report a new efficient sensitivity-supervised interlock algorithm (SSIA), which enables us to solve the steady state of heterogeneous catalytic systems in the microkinetic modeling with a 100% success rate. In SSIA, we introduce the coverage sensitivity of surface intermediates to monitor the low-precision time-integration of ordinary differential equations, through which a quasi-steady-state is located. Further optimized by the high-precision damped Newton's method, this quasi-steady-state can converge with a low computational cost. Besides, to simulate the large differences (usually by orders of magnitude) among the practical coverages of different intermediates, we propose the initial coverages in SSIA to be generated in exponential space, which allows a larger and more realistic search scope. On examining three representative catalytic models, we demonstrate that SSIA is superior in both speed and robustness compared with its traditional counterparts. This efficient algorithm can be promisingly applied in existing microkinetic solvers to achieve large-scale modeling of stiff catalytic networks.

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