Further Comparisons of Finite Difference Schemes for Computational Modelling of Biosensors

被引:27
作者
Britz, D. [1 ]
Baronas, R. [2 ,3 ]
Gaidamauskaite, E. [2 ]
Ivanauskas, F. [2 ]
机构
[1] Aarhus Univ, Dept Chem, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark
[2] Vilnius Univ, Fac Math & Informat, LT-03225 Vilnius, Lithuania
[3] Inst Math & Informat, LT-08663 Vilnius, Lithuania
来源
NONLINEAR ANALYSIS-MODELLING AND CONTROL | 2009年 / 14卷 / 04期
关键词
numerical simulation; computational electrochemistry; reaction-diffusion; amperometric sensor;
D O I
10.15388/NA.2009.14.4.14467
中图分类号
O29 [应用数学];
学科分类号
070104 ;
摘要
Simulations are presented for a reaction-diffusion system within a thin layer containing an enzyme, fed with a substrate from the surrounding electrolyte. The chemical term is of the nonlinear Michaelis-Menten type and requires a technique such as Newton iteration for solution. It is shown that approximating the nonlinear chemical term in these systems by a linearised form reduces both the accuracy and, in the case of second-order methods such as Crank-Nicolson, reduces the global error order from O(delta T-2) to O(delta T). The first-order methods plain backwards implicit with and without linearisation, and Crank-Nicolson with linearisation are all of O (delta T) and very similar in performance, requiring, for a given accuracy target, an order of magnitude more CPU time than the efficient methods backward implicit with extrapolation and Crank-Nicolson, both with Newton iteration to handle the nonlinearity. Steady state computations agree with expectations, tending to the known solutions for limiting cases. The Crank-Nicolson method shows some concentration oscillations close to the outer layer boundary but this does not propagate to the inner boundary at the electrode. The backward implicit methods do not result in such oscillations and if concentration profiles are of interest, may be preferred.
引用
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页码:419 / 433
页数:15
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