A detailed study of the simplest three-variable model exhibiting mixed-mode oscillations and chaos is presented. We show that mixed-mode oscillations appear due to a sequence of bifurcations which is characterized by a combination of the Farey tree that is broken by chaotic windows and period adding. This scenario is supported by a family of one-dimensional return maps. The model also exhibits hysteresis between stable steady state and mixed modes.
Dynamic behavior of the pH-regulated oscillations has been studied for the hydrogen peroxide oxidation of thiosulfate ions in the presence of trace amounts of copper(II) ions in a semibatch reactor. A solution of 0.08 M Na(2)S(2)O(3) and 0.112 M NaOH was flowed at 0.160 mL/min into 300 mL of solution containing the H(2)O(2) and Cu(2+) in a vessel. There exists a critical value of the H(2)O(2) or Cu(2+) concentrations below which the system does not oscillate. The oscillations appear due to an infinite period bifurcation at low initial concentrations of the H(2)O(2). The initial concentration of Cu(2+) may be considered as a bifurcation parameter in this case. Increase of the initial hydrogen peroxide concentration causes the pH-regulated oscillations through a nondegenerate supercritical Hopf bifurcation. The classification of bifurcations is based on the analysis of the behavior of oscillation amplitude and period at different initial concentrations of the H(2)O(2) and Cu(2+). Our results show a possibility to distinguish different scenarios for the appearance of transient oscillations in semibatch experiments. (c) 1996 American Institute of Physics.
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