Abstract

In situ adaptive tabulation (ISAT) is applied to dynamic process simulators for reducing computational run-time. Several enhancements of previous approaches are presented here, including a method for estimating the sensitivities using input−output data, along with different strategies for record distribution. A modified version of the original algorithm (mISAT) to improve performance of ISAT is also suggested. Case studies for first-principles and data-driven models using ISAT are performed to generate accurate trajectories, which are essentially the same as those obtained by direct integration. Computational speed-up using ISAT is also shown for these studies.

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