Denbigh Reaction: Difference between revisions
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<span id="Luus">[2]</span> Rein Luus, Iterative Dynamic Programming. CHAPMAN & HALL/CRC Monographs and Surveys in Pure and Applied Mathematics, New York, 2000.<br> | <span id="Luus">[2]</span> Rein Luus, Iterative Dynamic Programming. CHAPMAN & HALL/CRC Monographs and Surveys in Pure and Applied Mathematics, New York, 2000.<br> | ||
<span id="Denbigh">[3]</span> Kenneth Denbigh, Chemical Reactor Theory an Introduction, Cambridge University Press, London, 1965.<br> | <span id="Denbigh">[3]</span> Kenneth Denbigh, Chemical Reactor Theory an Introduction, Cambridge University Press, London, 1965.<br> | ||
<span id="Tomlab">[ | <span id="Tomlab">[4]</span> Tomlab optimization: https://tomopt.com/docs/propt/tomlab_propt030.php<br> | ||
[[Category:MIOCP]] | [[Category:MIOCP]] | ||
[[Category:Bang bang]] | [[Category:Bang bang]] | ||
Revision as of 10:59, 21 August 2025
| Denbigh Reaction | |
|---|---|
| State dimension: | 1 |
| Differential states: | 3 |
| Discrete control functions: | 1 |
The Mountain Car problem s based on the system of chemical reactions initially considered by Denbigh (1958), which was also studied by Aris (1960) and more recently by Luus (1994):
where is an intermediate, is the desired product, and and are waste products. The optimal control problem is to find (the temperature of the reactor as a function of time) so that the yield of is maximized at the end of the given batch time .
Its dynamics are given by a three-dimensional ODE model. The optimal integer control functions exhibits a bang bang structure.
Mathematical formulation
Parameters
| Symbol | Value |
Reference Solutions
Here is one local solution to the above control problem.
- Reference solution plots
-
States and discretized control for a local optimum.
Miscellaneous and Further Reading
This formulation and a detailed description can be found in [1].
References
[1] Rutherford Aris. The Optimal Design of Chemical Reactors A Study in Dynamic Programming. Academic Press, London, 1961.
[2] Rein Luus, Iterative Dynamic Programming. CHAPMAN & HALL/CRC Monographs and Surveys in Pure and Applied Mathematics, New York, 2000.
[3] Kenneth Denbigh, Chemical Reactor Theory an Introduction, Cambridge University Press, London, 1965.
[4] Tomlab optimization: https://tomopt.com/docs/propt/tomlab_propt030.php