Catalytic Coagulation
P. L. Krapivsky, S. Redner

TL;DR
This paper introduces a catalytic coagulation model inspired by prebiotic self-replicating reactions, analyzing its kinetics and contrasting it with classic aggregation, revealing unique decay behaviors and extending the model to various scenarios.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel autocatalytic aggregation model with explicit catalytic interactions, providing analytical solutions and extending it to mass-dependent rates and steady input conditions.
Findings
Total cluster density decays as t^{-1/3}.
Cluster density of fixed mass decays as t^{-2/3}.
Contrasts with classic aggregation decay behaviors.
Abstract
We introduce an autocatalytic aggregation model in which the rate at which two clusters merge to form a cluster is controlled by the presence of a third "catalytic" cluster whose mass must equal to the mass of one of the reaction partners. The catalyst is unaffected by the joining event and is available to either participate in or catalyze subsequent reactions. This model is meant to mimic the self-replicating reactions that occur in models for the origin of life. We solve the kinetics of this catalytic coagulation model for the case of mass-independent rates and show that the total cluster density decays as , while the density of clusters of any fixed mass decays as . These behaviors contrast with the corresponding and scalings for classic aggregation. We extend our model to mass-dependent reaction rates, to situations where only "magic" mass…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEnzyme Production and Characterization · Enzyme-mediated dye degradation
