Local stabilizability implies global controllability in catalytic reaction systems
Local stabilizability implies global controllability in catalytic reaction systems
Controlling complex reaction networks is a fundamental challenge in the fields of physics, biology, and systems engineering. Here, we prove a general principle for catalytic reaction systems with kinetics where the reaction order and the stoichiometric coefficient match: the local stabilizability of a given state implies global controllability within its stoichiometric compatibility class. In other words, if a target state can be maintained against small perturbations, the system can be controlled from any initial condition to that state. This result highlights a tight link between the local and global dynamics of nonlinear chemical reaction systems, providing a mathematical criterion for global reachability that is often elusive in high-dimensional systems. The finding illuminate the robustness of biochemical systems and offers a way to control catalytic reaction systems in a generic framework.
Yusuke Himeoka、Shuhei A. Horiguchi、Naoto Shiraishi、Fangzhou Xiao、Tetsuya J. Kobayashi
化学
Yusuke Himeoka,Shuhei A. Horiguchi,Naoto Shiraishi,Fangzhou Xiao,Tetsuya J. Kobayashi.Local stabilizability implies global controllability in catalytic reaction systems[EB/OL].(2025-05-11)[2025-06-17].https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.06834.点此复制
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