Model synthesis and identifiability analysis of stiff chemical reaction systems with inVAErt networks

📅 2026-05-05
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📝 Abstract
We consider the problem of learning data-driven replicas for stiff systems of ordinary differential equations arising in chemical kinetics that can be evaluated with high computational efficiency. We first focus on training emulators for families of reaction equations under varying reaction rates, using conditional residual networks or long-short term memory architectures. We then apply a recently proposed data-driven framework known as ``inVAErt networks'' to address the ill-posed inverse problem of inferring reaction rates, integration time, and possibly initial conditions from a target set of species concentrations - a problem that has received relatively little attention in the literature. The proposed approach is demonstrated on chemical systems with reversible and irreversible kinetics, spanning 2 to 20 differential equations, 3 to 20 chemical species, and 3 to 25 reaction rate parameters. Relative root mean squared errors produced by the proposed emulators range from $10^{-5}$ for lower-dimensional systems to $10^{-4}$ and $10^{-3}$ for an air pollution model and a hydrogen-air reaction system, respectively. Manifolds of non-identifiable reaction rates recovered by the proposed approach can be analytically verified for simple systems and are consistent with local identifiability analysis in higher dimensions.
Problem

Research questions and friction points this paper is trying to address.

stiff chemical reaction systems
inverse problem
reaction rate inference
identifiability analysis
species concentration
Innovation

Methods, ideas, or system contributions that make the work stand out.

inVAErt networks
stiff chemical kinetics
data-driven emulation
inverse problem
parameter identifiability