A ``booster method for singular perturbation problems arising in chemical reactor theory
DOI10.1016/S0096-3003(98)00014-9zbMath0940.65081MaRDI QIDQ1294281
Publication date: 29 June 1999
Published in: Applied Mathematics and Computation (Search for Journal in Brave)
singular perturbationnumerical examplesboundary layersexponentially fitted difference schemechemical reactor theorybooster method
Nonlinear boundary value problems for ordinary differential equations (34B15) Chemically reacting flows (80A32) Numerical solution of boundary value problems involving ordinary differential equations (65L10) Singular perturbations for ordinary differential equations (34E15) Finite difference and finite volume methods for ordinary differential equations (65L12)
Related Items (16)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Asymptotic and numerical analysis of singular perturbation problems: A survey
- Improvement of numerical solution of boundary layer problems by incorpotation of asymptotic approximations
- Singular perturbation methods for ordinary differential equations
- Initial-value technique for singularly perturbed boundary-value problems for second-order ordinary differential equations arising in chemical reactor theory
- A numerical method for singular perturbation problems arising in chemical reactor theory
- A computational method for solving singular perturbation problems using exponentially fitted finite difference schemes
- Nonlinear singular perturbation phenomena: theory and applications
- Applications of the Maximum Principle to Singular Perturbation Problems
- On singular perturbation of nonlinear two-point boundary value problems
- The Numerical Solution of Boundary Value Problems for Stiff Differential Equations
- Multiple Stable Solutions of Nonlinear Boundary Value Problems Arising in Chemical Reactor Theory
- Multiple Solutions of Singular Perturbation Problems
This page was built for publication: A ``booster method for singular perturbation problems arising in chemical reactor theory