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Fast species ranking for iterative species-oriented skeletal reduction of chemistry sets
Author(s) -
Martin Haničinec,
Sebastian Mohr,
Jonathan Tennyson
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plasma sources science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.9
H-Index - 108
eISSN - 1361-6595
pISSN - 0963-0252
DOI - 10.1088/1361-6595/abcd53
Subject(s) - ranking (information retrieval) , graph , chemistry , representation (politics) , set (abstract data type) , reduction (mathematics) , graph theory , computer science , algorithm , mathematics , theoretical computer science , combinatorics , information retrieval , geometry , politics , political science , law , programming language
A fast algorithm is developed for ranking the species in a chemistry set according to their importance to the modeled densities of user-specified species of interest. The species ranking can be constructed for any set of user-specified plasma conditions, but here we focus predominantly on low-temperature plasmas, with gas temperatures between 300 and 1500 K covering the typical range of ICP and CCP plasma sources. This ranking scheme can be used to acquire insight into complex chemistry sets for modeling plasma phenomena or for a species-oriented reduction of the given chemistry set. The species-ranking method presented is based on a graph-theoretical representation of the detailed chemistry set and establishing indirect asymmetric coupling coefficients between pairs of species by the means of widely used graph search algorithms. Several alternative species-ranking schemes are proposed, all building on the theory behind different flavors of the directed relation graph method. The best-performing ranking method is identified statistically, by performing and evaluating a species-oriented iterative skeletal reduction on six, previously available, test chemistry sets (including O 2 –He and N 2 –H 2 ) with varying plasma conditions. The species-ranking method presented leads to reductions of between 10 and 75% in the number of species compared to the original detailed chemistry set, depending on the specific test chemistry set and plasma conditions.

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