In this blog post I describe the advantages of taking a stochastic view of chemical systems based on the work of D. T. Gillespie and subsequent publications. Gillespie presented his formalism for considering stochastic chemical kinetics, now referred to as the Gillespie Algorithm, in two papers published in 1976 and 1977 (Gillespie, D. T. J. Comp. Phys. 1976, Gillespie D. T. J. Phys. Chem. 1977) – if you want to see the full derivation for the Gillespie Algorithm along with many examples I recommend giving them both a read.
The essential question of chemical kinetics as stated by Gillespie is:
“If a fixed volume V contains a spatially uniform mixture of N chemical species which can inter-react through M specified chemical reaction channels, then given the numbers of molecules of each species present at some initial time, what will these molecular population levels be at any later time?”
Continue reading