Abstract

For mass action kinetics, the capacity for multiple equilibria in an isothermal homogeneous continuous flow stirred tank reactor is determined by the structure of the underlying network of chemical reactions. We suggest a new graph-theoretical method for discriminating between complex reaction networks that can admit multiple equilibria and those that cannot. In particular, we associate with each network a species-reaction graph, which is similar to reaction network representations drawn by biochemists, and we show that, if the graph satisfies certain weak conditions, the differential equations corresponding to the network cannot admit multiple equilibria {\em no matter what values the rate constants take}. Because these conditions are very mild, they amount to powerful (and quite delicate) necessary conditions that a network must satisfy if it is to have the capacity to engender multiple equilibria. Broad qualitative results of this kind are especially apt, for individual reaction rate constants are rarely known fully for complex reaction networks (if they are known at all). Some concluding remarks address connections to biology.

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