Re: Simulating electrochemical reactions with Mathematica



On 6/8/05 4:40 PM, in article Ud6dnRzyE_fC02nfRVn-rw@xxxxxxxxxxx, "Nick J."
<nospam@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Evgenij,
>
> I've only briefly skimmed through LEVMW's 167-page manual but I'm amazed at
> the depth to this package and its documentation. This is an impressive
> amount of work to make freely available (I saw no license restrictions at
> all)! Its looks like it would be a powerful suite of tools for fitting data
> to parametric models in the hands of those skilled in EIS. However, it
> appears to assume a high level of EIS sophistication on the part of the
> user. I had the impression that the Mathematica package was more of an
> introductory tutorial kind of package, but unfortunately I was unable to
> download the demo (got a "bad link" message).

The link has now been fixed:

http://www.ijournals.net/SERM/sample.zip

Non Mathematica users who are curious can read the sample notebook by
downloading "MatheReader" from Wolfram.com (a link is provided).

Mike

I was hoping to obtain some
> kind of introductory tutorial to EIS and its modeling on a PC. Judging from
> the LEVMW manual, I can see why EIS might not be a very widely used method
> since there's obviously a formidable learning curve.
>
> Regards,
> Nick
>
> "Evgenij Barsukov" <evgenij_b_no_spam@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:dcr3dl$174$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> Nick J. wrote:
>>
>>> It would be tempting to spend $2000 on Mathematica and SERM if it
> included
>>> an EIS simulation and fitting package. ;-)
>>
>> Or just get LEVMW from Ross Macdonald web-site for free...
>> http://www.physics.unc.edu/~macd/
>>
>> It will direct you to Solartron site, where software can be
>> downloaded after registration.
>> Note that LEVMW is a windows program with graphical interface,
>> as oposite to original dos-y LEVM.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Evgenij
>>
>>
>>>
>>> "Mike" <m.HoneychurcNOSPAMh@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
>>> news:BF14E653.AF1E%m.HoneychurcNOSPAMh@xxxxxxxxxxxx
>>>
>>>> Some small changes to "Simulating electrochemical reactions with
>>>> Mathematica" (SERM) have been made. These are mostly typographical
>>>> corrections and changes to the stylesheets. A notebook has also been
>>>> included that compares the Thomas algorithm to the sparse matrix solver
>>>
>>> that
>>>
>>>> is now inbuilt into Mathematica versions 5.0 and above.
>>>>
>>>> Information about the SERM package can be found at:
>>>>
>>>> http://www.ijournals.net/SERM/
>>>>
>>>> Mike Honeychurch
>>>> SermREMOVETHIS@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
>

.