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  4. 2011
Showing papers on "Finite difference method published in 2011"
Journal Article•10.1016/J.CAMWA.2011.03.054•
The Grünwald-Letnikov method for fractional differential equations

[...]

Rudolf Scherer1, Shyam L. Kalla, Yifa Tang2, Jianfei Huang2•
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology1, Chinese Academy of Sciences2
01 Aug 2011-Computers & Mathematics With Applications
TL;DR: The asymptotic stability and the absolute stability of these methods are proved and error representations and estimates for the truncation, propagation and global error are derived.
Abstract: This paper is devoted to the numerical treatment of fractional differential equations. Based on the Grunwald-Letnikov definition of fractional derivatives, finite difference schemes for the approximation of the solution are discussed. The main properties of these explicit and implicit methods concerning the stability, the convergence and the error behavior are studied related to linear test equations. The asymptotic stability and the absolute stability of these methods are proved. Error representations and estimates for the truncation, propagation and global error are derived. Numerical experiments are given.

397 citations

Journal Article•10.1137/090752675•
An Energy Stable and Convergent Finite-Difference Scheme for the Modified Phase Field Crystal Equation

[...]

Cheng Wang, Steven M. Wise
01 May 2011-SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis
TL;DR: A local-in-time error estimate is presented that ensures the pointwise convergence of the scheme, which is based on a convex splitting of a discrete pseudoenergy and is semi-implicit.
Abstract: We present an unconditionally energy stable finite difference scheme for the Modified Phase Field Crystal equation, a generalized damped wave equation for which the usual Phase Field Crystal equation is a special degenerate case. The method is based on a convex splitting of a discrete pseudoenergy and is semi-implicit. The equation at the implicit time level is nonlinear but represents the gradient of a strictly convex function and is thus uniquely solvable, regardless of time step-size. We present a local-in-time error estimate that ensures the pointwise convergence of the scheme.

314 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/J.CNSNS.2010.09.007•
On the numerical solutions for the fractional diffusion equation

[...]

Mohamed M. Khader1•
Banha University1
01 Jun 2011-Communications in Nonlinear Science and Numerical Simulation
TL;DR: In this article, an efficient numerical method for solving the fractional diffusion equation (FDE) is considered based upon Chebyshev approximations, which reduces FDE to a system of ordinary differential equations, which is solved by the finite difference method.

298 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/J.IJTHERMALSCI.2010.10.008•
Falkner–Skan problem for a static or moving wedge in nanofluids

[...]

Nor Azizah Yacob1, Anuar Mohd Ishak2, Anuar Mohd Ishak3, Ioan Pop•
Universiti Teknologi MARA1, National University of Malaysia2, University of Malaya3
01 Feb 2011-International Journal of Thermal Sciences
TL;DR: In this article, the steady two-dimensional boundary layer flow past a static or a moving wedge immersed in nanofluids is investigated numerically using an implicit finite difference scheme known as the Keller-box method and the NAG routine DO2HAF.

254 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/J.JCP.2010.09.020•
A diffuse-interface method for two-phase flows with soluble surfactants

[...]

Knut Erik Teigen1, Peng Song2, John Lowengrub2, Axel Voigt3•
Norwegian University of Science and Technology1, University of California, Irvine2, Dresden University of Technology3
01 Jan 2011-Journal of Computational Physics
TL;DR: A method is presented to solve two-phase problems involving soluble surfactants using a non-linear multigrid method based on the use of a diffuse interface, which allows a simple implementation using standard finite difference or finite element techniques.

249 citations

Journal Article•10.1190/1.3554411•
A stable TTI reverse time migration and its implementation

[...]

Yu Zhang1, Houzhu Zhang1, Guanquan Zhang2•
CGG1, Chinese Academy of Sciences2
23 May 2011-Geophysics
TL;DR: In this article, a vertical transversely isotropic wave system of equations that is equivalent to their elastic counterpart is derived and introduced to stabilize the TTI acoustic wave equations, and a stable solution can be found by either a pseudospectral method or a high-order explicit finite difference scheme.
Abstract: Modeling and reverse time migration based on the tilted transverse isotropic (TTI) acoustic wave equation suffers from instability in media of general inhomogeniety, especially in areas where the tilt abruptly changes. We develop a stable TTI acoustic wave equation implementation based on the original elastic anisotropic wave equation. We, specifically, derive a vertical transversely isotropic wave system of equations that is equivalent to their elastic counterpart and introduce the self-adjoint differential operators in rotated coordinates to stabilize the TTI acoustic wave equations. Compared to the conventional formulations, the new system of equations does not add numerical complexity; a stable solution can be found by either a pseudospectral method or a high-order explicit finite difference scheme. We demonstrate by examples that our method provides stable and high-quality TTI reverse time migration images.

239 citations

Posted Content•
Re-initialization Free Level Set Evolution via Reaction Diffusion

[...]

Kaihua Zhang, Lei Zhang, Huihui Song, David Zhang
07 Dec 2011-arXiv: Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
TL;DR: By successfully applying diffusion to LSE, the RD-LSE model is stable by means of the simple finite difference method, which is very easy to implement.
Abstract: This paper presents a novel reaction-diffusion (RD) method for implicit active contours, which is completely free of the costly re-initialization procedure in level set evolution (LSE). A diffusion term is introduced into LSE, resulting in a RD-LSE equation, to which a piecewise constant solution can be derived. In order to have a stable numerical solution of the RD based LSE, we propose a two-step splitting method (TSSM) to iteratively solve the RD-LSE equation: first iterating the LSE equation, and then solving the diffusion equation. The second step regularizes the level set function obtained in the first step to ensure stability, and thus the complex and costly re-initialization procedure is completely eliminated from LSE. By successfully applying diffusion to LSE, the RD-LSE model is stable by means of the simple finite difference method, which is very easy to implement. The proposed RD method can be generalized to solve the LSE for both variational level set method and PDE-based level set method. The RD-LSE method shows very good performance on boundary anti-leakage, and it can be readily extended to high dimensional level set method. The extensive and promising experimental results on synthetic and real images validate the effectiveness of the proposed RD-LSE approach.

186 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/J.ICHEATMASSTRANSFER.2011.08.013•
Numerical investigations of flow and heat transfer enhancement in a corrugated channel using nanofluid

[...]

M.A. Ahmed1, Norshah Hafeez Shuaib1, Mohd Zamri Yusoff1, Amir Al-Falahi1•
Universiti Tenaga Nasional1
01 Dec 2011-International Communications in Heat and Mass Transfer
TL;DR: In this paper, a numerical simulation is carried out by solving the governing continuity, momentum and energy equations for laminar flow in curvilinear coordinates using the Finite Difference (FD) approach.

161 citations

Journal Article•10.1051/MMNP/20116302•
A High-Order Unifying Discontinuous Formulation for the Navier-Stokes Equations on 3D Mixed Grids

[...]

Takanori Haga1, Haiyang Gao1, Zhi J. Wang1•
Iowa State University1
16 May 2011-Mathematical Modelling of Natural Phenomena
TL;DR: The newly developed unifying discontinuous formulation named the correction pro- cedure via reconstruction (CPR) for conservation laws is extended to solve the Navier-Stokes equations for 3D mixed grids to demonstrate its performance.
Abstract: The newly developed unifying discontinuous formulation named the correction pro- cedure via reconstruction (CPR) for conservation laws is extended to solve the Navier-Stokes equations for 3D mixed grids. In the current development, tetrahedrons and triangular prisms are considered. The CPR method can unify several popular high order methods including the dis- continuous Galerkin and the spectral volume methods into a more efficient differential form. By selecting the solution points to coincide with the flux points, solution reconstruction can be com- pletely avoided. Accuracy studies confirmed that the optimal order of accuracy can be achieved with the method. Several benchmark test cases are computed by solving the Euler and compress- ible Navier-Stokes equations to demonstrate its performance.

133 citations

Posted Content•
A weighted finite difference method for the fractional diffusion equation based on the Riemann-Liouville derivative

[...]

Ercília Sousa1, Can Li2•
University of Coimbra1, Lanzhou University2
11 Sep 2011-arXiv: Numerical Analysis
TL;DR: In this article, a one dimensional fractional diffusion model with the Riemann-Liouville fractional derivative is studied, and an unconditionally stable weighted average finite difference method is derived.
Abstract: A one dimensional fractional diffusion model with the Riemann-Liouville fractional derivative is studied. First, a second order discretization for this derivative is presented and then an unconditionally stable weighted average finite difference method is derived. The stability of this scheme is established by von Neumann analysis. Some numerical results are shown, which demonstrate the efficiency and convergence of the method. Additionally, some physical properties of this fractional diffusion system are simulated, which further confirm the effectiveness of our method.

121 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/J.JCP.2011.07.003•
An O(N log2N) alternating-direction finite difference method for two-dimensional fractional diffusion equations

[...]

Hong Wang1, Kaixin Wang2•
University of South Carolina1, Shandong University2
01 Sep 2011-Journal of Computational Physics
TL;DR: This paper develops a fast alternating-direction implicit finite difference method for space-fractional diffusion equations in two space dimensions that has a significant reduction of the CPU time from more than 2 months and 1 week consumed by a traditional finite Difference method to 1.5h, using less than one thousandth of memory the standard method does.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.JSV.2010.12.023•
Three-dimensional dynamics of a fluid-conveying cantilevered pipe fitted with an additional spring-support and an end-mass

[...]

Mergen H. Ghayesh1, Michael P. Païdoussis1, Yahya Modarres-Sadeghi2•
McGill University1, University of Massachusetts Amherst2
06 Jun 2011-Journal of Sound and Vibration
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined how the dynamics of a cantilevered pipe with additional spring-support is modified by the presence of a small mass attached at the free end.
Journal Article•10.1002/NME.3223•
Time-dependent fractional advection-diffusion equations by an implicit MLS meshless method

[...]

Pinghui Zhuang1, YuanTong Gu2, Fawang Liu2, Ian Turner2, Prasad Yarlagadda2 •
Xiamen University1, Queensland University of Technology2
30 Dec 2011-International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering
TL;DR: In this article, an implicit meshless approach based on the moving least squares (MLS) approximation was developed for numerical simulation of fractional advection-diffusion equations (FADE), which is a typical FPDE.
Abstract: Recently, many new applications in engineering and science are governed by a series of fractional partial differential equations (FPDEs). Unlike the normal partial differential equations (PDEs), the differential order in a FPDE is with a fractional order, which will lead to new challenges for numerical simulation, because most existing numerical simulation techniques are developed for the PDE with an integer differential order. The current dominant numerical method for FPDEs is Finite Difference Method (FDM), which is usually difficult to handle a complex problem domain, and also hard to use irregular nodal distribution. This paper aims to develop an implicit meshless approach based on the moving least squares (MLS) approximation for numerical simulation of fractional advection-diffusion equations (FADE), which is a typical FPDE. The discrete system of equations is obtained by using the MLS meshless shape functions and the meshless strong-forms. The stability and convergence related to the time discretization of this approach are then discussed and theoretically proven. Several numerical examples with different problem domains and different nodal distributions are used to validate and investigate accuracy and efficiency of the newly developed meshless formulation. It is concluded that the present meshless formulation is very effective for the modeling and simulation of the FADE.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.CAM.2010.05.026•
Application of the generalized finite difference method to solve the advection-diffusion equation

[...]

Francisco Ureña Prieto1, Juan José Benito Muñoz2, Luis Antonio Gavete Corvinos•
University of Castilla–La Mancha1, National University of Distance Education2
01 Feb 2011-Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics
TL;DR: The generalized finite difference method is applied to solve the advection-diffusion equation by the explicit method and an example has been solved using the explicit finite difference formulae and the criterion of stability.
Journal Article•10.1137/090777529•
A Second-order Finite Difference Method for Option Pricing Under Jump-diffusion Models

[...]

Yonghoon Kwon1, Younhee Lee1•
Pohang University of Science and Technology1
01 Nov 2011-SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis
TL;DR: The stability of the proposed finite difference method and the second-order convergence rate with respect to a discrete $\ell^{2}$-norm are proved.
Abstract: We develop a finite difference method to solve partial integro-differential equations which describe the behavior of option prices under jump-diffusion models. With localization to a bounded domain of the spatial variable, these equations are discretized on uniform grid points over a finite domain of time and spatial variables. The proposed method is based on three time levels and leads to linear systems with tridiagonal matrices. In this paper the stability of the proposed method and the second-order convergence rate with respect to a discrete $\ell^{2}$-norm are proved. Numerical results obtained with European put options under the Merton and Kou models show the behaviors of the stability and the second-order convergence rate.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.MCM.2011.02.003•
Finite difference schemes for multilayer diffusion

[...]

Roslyn I. Hickson1, S. I. Barry1, Geoffry N. Mercer1, Harvinder S. Sidhu1•
University of New South Wales1
01 Jul 2011-Mathematical and Computer Modelling
TL;DR: Finite difference schemes for multilayered materials with a range of matching conditions between the layers are presented, in particular for a jump matching condition.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.CAMWA.2010.12.072•
The non-standard finite difference scheme for linear fractional PDEs in fluid mechanics

[...]

K. Moaddy1, Shaher Momani2, Ishak Hashim1•
National University of Malaysia1, University of Jordan2
01 Feb 2011-Computers & Mathematics With Applications
TL;DR: Numerical results reveal that the non-standard finite difference scheme is very effective and convenient for solving linear partial differential equations of fractional order.
Abstract: A non-standard finite difference scheme is developed to solve the linear partial differential equations with time- and space-fractional derivatives. The Grunwald-Letnikov method is used to approximate the fractional derivatives. Numerical illustrations that include the linear inhomogeneous time-fractional equation, linear space-fractional telegraph equation, linear inhomogeneous fractional Burgers equation and the fractional wave equation are investigated to show the pertinent features of the technique. Numerical results are presented graphically and reveal that the non-standard finite difference scheme is very effective and convenient for solving linear partial differential equations of fractional order.
Book Chapter•10.1007/978-3-642-20671-9_89•
3D Benchmark on Discretization Schemes for Anisotropic Diffusion Problems on General Grids

[...]

Robert Eymard1, Gérard Henry2, Raphaèle Herbin2, Florence Hubert2, Robert Klöfkorn3, Gianmarco Manzini4 •
University of Paris1, Aix-Marseille University2, University of Freiburg3, Cessna4
6 Jun 2011
TL;DR: A number of test cases and meshes that were designed as a benchmark for numerical schemes dedicated to the approximation of three-dimensional anisotropic and heterogeneous diffusion problems and compare the performance of several iterative or direct linear solvers for the resolution of the linear systems issued from the presented schemes.
Abstract: We present a number of test cases and meshes that were designed as a benchmark for numerical schemes dedicated to the approximation of three-dimensional anisotropic and heterogeneous diffusion problems. These numerical schemes may be applied to general, possibly non conforming, meshes composed of tetrahedra, hexahedra and quite distorted general polyhedra. A number of methods were tested among which conforming finite element methods, discontinuous Galerkin finite element methods, cell-centered finite volume methods, discrete duality finite volume methods, mimetic finite difference methods, mixed finite element methods, and gradient schemes. We summarize the results presented by the participants to the benchmark, which range from the number of unknowns, the approximation errors of the solution and its gradient, to the minimum and maximum values and energy. We also compare the performance of several iterative or direct linear solvers for the resolution of the linear systems issued from the presented schemes.
Journal Article•10.1109/JQE.2009.2020998•
Accuracy of transfer matrix approaches for solving the effective mass Schr\"{o}dinger equation

[...]

Christian Jirauschek
16 Jun 2011-arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the accuracy of different transfer matrix approaches, widely used to solve the stationary effective mass Schrodinger equation for arbitrary one-dimensional potentials, and showed that a symmetrized transfer matrix approach yields a similar accuracy as the Airy function method at a significantly reduced numerical cost.
Abstract: The accuracy of different transfer matrix approaches, widely used to solve the stationary effective mass Schrodinger equation for arbitrary one-dimensional potentials, is investigated analytically and numerically. Both the case of a constant and a position dependent effective mass are considered. Comparisons with a finite difference method are also performed. Based on analytical model potentials as well as self-consistent Schrodinger-Poisson simulations of a heterostructure device, it is shown that a symmetrized transfer matrix approach yields a similar accuracy as the Airy function method at a significantly reduced numerical cost, moreover avoiding the numerical problems associated with Airy functions.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.JCP.2011.03.040•
Optimal low-dispersion low-dissipation LBM schemes for computational aeroacoustics

[...]

Hui Xu1, Pierre Sagaut1•
Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University1
01 Jun 2011-Journal of Computational Physics
TL;DR: A dispersion-relation-preserving LBM (DRP-LBM) is obtained to circumvent the minimized dispersion error of the MRT-L BM and the optimized dispersion/dissipation relations considering monochromatic wave solutions are validated.
Journal Article•10.1155/2011/480378•
The Fractional SIRC Model and Influenza A

[...]

Moustafa El-Shahed1, Moustafa El-Shahed2, Ahmed Alsaedi2•
Qassim University1, King Abdulaziz University2
15 Nov 2011-Mathematical Problems in Engineering
TL;DR: In this article, the authors dealt with the fractional-order SIRC model associated with the evolution of influenza A disease in human population and gave a detailed analysis for the asymptotic stability of disease-free and positive fixed points.
Abstract: This paper deals with the fractional-order SIRC model associated with the evolution of influenza A disease in human population. Qualitative dynamics of the model is determined by the basic reproduction number, R0. We give a detailed analysis for the asymptotic stability of disease-free and positive fixed points. Nonstandard finite difference methods have been used to solve and simulate the system of differential equations.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.JCP.2010.09.007•
The mimetic finite difference method for the 3D magnetostatic field problems on polyhedral meshes

[...]

Konstantin Lipnikov1, Gianmarco Manzini2, Franco Brezzi3, Annalisa Buffa•
Los Alamos National Laboratory1, Cessna2, Istituto Universitario Di Studi Superiori Di Pavia3
01 Jan 2011-Journal of Computational Physics
TL;DR: This work introduces three sets of degrees of freedom that are attached to the vertices, the edges, and the faces of the mesh, and two discrete operators mimicking the curl and the gradient operator of the differential setting for the numerical discretization of the domain integrals of the div-curl variational formulation of the magnetostatic equations.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.APM.2010.11.074•
A parameter-uniform numerical method for time-dependent singularly perturbed differential-difference equations☆

[...]

Devendra Kumar1, Mohan K. Kadalbajoo•
Birla Institute of Technology and Science1
01 Jun 2011-Applied Mathematical Modelling
TL;DR: In this article, a numerical study is made for solving a class of time-dependent singularly perturbed convection-diffusion problems with retarded terms which often arise in computational neuroscience.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.MCM.2010.04.003•
Tumor location and parameter estimation by thermography

[...]

J. P. Agnelli1, Andres Barrea1, Cristina Turner1•
National University of Cordoba1
01 Apr 2011-Mathematical and Computer Modelling
TL;DR: In this study an estimation methodology is presented to determine unknown thermophysical or geometrical parameters of a tumor region using the temperature profile on the skin surface that may be obtained by infrared thermography.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.ENGANABOUND.2011.02.001•
Meshless local Petrov–Galerkin method for coupled thermoelasticity analysis of a functionally graded thick hollow cylinder

[...]

Seyed Mahmoud Hosseini1, Jan Sladek2, Vladimir Sladek2•
Ferdowsi University of Mashhad1, Slovak Academy of Sciences2
01 Jun 2011-Engineering Analysis With Boundary Elements
TL;DR: In this article, the meshless local Petrov-Galerkin method is developed to solve the boundary value problem for functional graded (FG) hollow cylinders, and the Newmark finite difference method is used to treat the time dependence of the variables for transient problems.
Abstract: In this article, coupled thermoelasticity (without energy dissipation) based on Green–Naghdi model is applied to functionally graded (FG) thick hollow cylinder. The meshless local Petrov–Galerkin method is developed to solve the boundary value problem. The Newmark finite difference method is used to treat the time dependence of the variables for transient problems. The FG cylinder is considered to be under axisymmetric and plane strain conditions and bounding surfaces of cylinder to be under thermal shock loading. The mechanical properties of FG cylinder are assumed to vary across thickness of cylinder in terms of volume fraction as nonlinear function. A weak formulation for the set of governing equations is transformed into local integral equations on local subdomains by using a Heaviside test function. Nodal points are regularly distributed along the radius of the cylinder and each node is surrounded by a uni-directional subdomain to which a local integral equation is applied. The Green–Naghdi coupled thermoelasticity equations are valid in each isotropic subdomain. The temperature and radial displacement distributions are obtained for some grading patterns of FGM at various time instants. The propagation of thermal and elastic waves is discussed in details. The presented method shows high capability and efficiency for coupled thermoelasticity problems.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.IJNONLINMEC.2011.03.011•
Dynamic response of composite sandwich plates subjected to time-dependent pressure pulses

[...]

Zafer Kazancı1•
Turkish Air Force Academy1
01 Jun 2011-International Journal of Non-linear Mechanics
TL;DR: In this paper, the dynamic response of orthotropic sandwich composite plates impacted by time-dependent external blast pulses is studied by use of numerical techniques, including the large deformation effects, such as geometric nonlinearities, in-plane stiffness and inertias, and shear deformation.
Abstract: The dynamic response of orthotropic sandwich composite plates impacted by time-dependent external blast pulses is studied by use of numerical techniques. The theory is based on classical sandwich plate theory including the large deformation effects, such as geometric non-linearities, in-plane stiffness and inertias, and shear deformation. The equations of motion for the plate are derived by the use of the virtual work principle. Approximate solutions are assumed for the space domain and substituted into the equations of motion. Then the Galerkin Method is used to obtain the non-linear differential equations in the time domain. The finite difference method is applied to solve the system of coupled non-linear equations. The results of theoretical analyses are obtained and compared with ANSYS results. Effects of the face sheet number, as well as those related to the ply-thickness, core thickness, geometrical non-linearities, and of the aspect ratio are investigated. Detailed analyses of the influence of different type of pressure pulses on dynamic response are carried out.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.MCM.2011.05.040•
Solution of fractional bioheat equations by finite difference method and HPM

[...]

Jitendra Singh1, Praveen Kumar Gupta1, Kabindra Nath Rai1•
Banaras Hindu University1
01 Nov 2011-Mathematical and Computer Modelling
TL;DR: This paper presents a mathematical model of space–time fractional bioheat equation governing the process of heat transfer in tissues during thermal therapy using fractional backward finite difference scheme and homotopy perturbation method.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.CAMWA.2011.09.065•
Finite difference discretization of the extended Fisher-Kolmogorov equation in two dimensions

[...]

Noomen Khiari, Khaled Omrani
01 Dec 2011-Computers & Mathematics With Applications
TL;DR: In this article, the authors considered approximate solutions for the extended Fisher-Kolmogorov (EFK) equation in two space dimension with Dirichlet boundary conditions by a Crank-Nicolson type finite difference scheme.
Abstract: Approximate solutions are considered for the extended Fisher-Kolmogorov (EFK) equation in two space dimension with Dirichlet boundary conditions by a Crank-Nicolson type finite difference scheme. A priori bounds are proved using Lyapunov functional. Further, existence, uniqueness and convergence of difference solutions with order O(h^2+k^2) in the L^~-norm are proved. Numerical results are also given in order to check the properties of analytical solutions.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.AMC.2011.03.161•
An accurate numerical solution for the transient heating of an evaporating spherical droplet

[...]

Sarah L. Mitchell1, Michael Vynnycky1, I.G. Gusev2, Sergei Sazhin2•
University of Limerick1, University of Brighton2
15 Jul 2011-Applied Mathematics and Computation
TL;DR: A recently derived numerical algorithm for one-dimensional time-dependent Stefan problems is extended for the purposes of solving a moving boundary problem for the transient heating of an evaporating spherical droplet using the Keller box finite-difference scheme.
Journal Article•10.1016/J.CAMWA.2011.04.047•
Stability and non-standard finite difference method of the generalized Chua's circuit

[...]

Ahmed G. Radwan1, K. Moaddy2, Shaher Momani3•
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology1, National University of Malaysia2, University of Jordan3
01 Aug 2011-Computers & Mathematics With Applications
TL;DR: Numerical results reveal that the non-standard finite difference scheme is an effective and convenient method to solve fractional-order chaotic systems, and to validate their stability.
Abstract: In this paper, we develop a framework to obtain approximate numerical solutions of the fractional-order Chua's circuit with Memristor using a non-standard finite difference method. Chaotic response is obtained with fractional-order elements as well as integer-order elements. Stability analysis and the condition of oscillation for the integer-order system are discussed. In addition, the stability analyses for different fractional-order cases are investigated showing a great sensitivity to small order changes indicating the poles' locations inside the physical s-plane. The Grunwald-Letnikov method is used to approximate the fractional derivatives. Numerical results are presented graphically and reveal that the non-standard finite difference scheme is an effective and convenient method to solve fractional-order chaotic systems, and to validate their stability.
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