Miscellaneous Exercises 213
P.W. Carr [Fourier analysis of the transient response of potentiomet-
ric enzyme electrodes,Analytical Chemistry, 49 (1977): 799–802] stud-
ied the transient response of such an electrode via two partial differential
equations that describe the concentrations,SandP, of the substance be-
ing detected and the enzyme-reaction product as they diffuse and react
in the gel:
∂S
∂t=D
∂^2 S
∂x^2 −
VS
K+S,^0 <x<L,^0 <t, (1∗)
∂P
∂t=D
∂^2 P
∂x^2 +
VS
K+S,^0 <x<L,^0 <t. (2∗)
In these equations,Vis the specific enzyme activity (mol/ml s),Kis a
constant related to reaction rate, andDis the diffusion constant (cm^2 /s),
assumed to be the same for both substance and product.
Reasonable boundary conditions are
∂S
∂x
( 0 ,t)= 0 , ∂P
∂x
( 0 ,t)= 0 , 0 <t, (3∗)
representing no reaction or penetration at the electrode surface, and
S(L,t)=S 0 , P(L,t)= 0 , 0 <t, (4∗)
where the gel meets the test solution. Initially, we assume
S(x, 0 )= 0 , P(x, 0 )= 0 , 0 <x<L. (5∗)
Equation (1∗) is nonlinear because the unknown functionSappears in
the denominator of the last term. However, ifSis much smaller thanK,
we may replaceK+SbyK,andEq.(1∗)becomes
∂S
∂t
=D∂
(^2) S
∂x^2
−V
K
S, 0 <x<L, 0 <t. (6∗)
a.State and solve the steady-state problem for this equation, subject to
the boundary conditions onSin Eqs. (3∗)and(4∗).
b.Find the transient solution and then the complete solutionS(x,t).
35.Refer to Exercise 34. Equation (2∗), though linear, is not easy to solve.
However, if Eqs. (1∗)and(2∗)areaddedtogether,thenonlinearterms
cancel, leaving this homogeneous linear equation for the sum of the con-
centrations:
∂(S+P)
∂t =D
∂^2 (S+P)
∂x^2 ,^0 <x<L,^0 <t.