mkinmod(..., use_of_ff = "min", speclist = NULL, quiet = FALSE, verbose = FALSE)
type
, specifying the type of kinetics to use
for the variable. Currently, single first order kinetics "SFO",
indeterminate order rate equation kinetics "IORE", or
single first order with reversible binding "SFORB" are implemented for all
variables, while
"FOMC", "DFOP" and "HS" can additionally be chosen for the first
variable which is assumed to be the source compartment.
Additionally, each component of the list can include a character vector to
,
specifying names of variables to which a transfer is to be assumed in the
model.
If the argument use_of_ff
is set to "min" (default) and the model for
the compartment is "SFO" or "SFORB", an additional component of the list
can be "sink=FALSE" effectively fixing the flux to sink to zero.
TRUE
, passed to cfunction
if applicable to give
detailed information about the C function being built.
The function usually takes several expressions, each assigning a compound name to a list, specifying the kinetic model type and reaction or transfer to other observed compartments. Instead of specifying several expressions, a list of lists can be given in the speclist argument.
For the definition of model types and their parameters, the equations given in the FOCUS and NAFTA guidance documents are used.
mkinmod
for use with mkinfit
, containing
use_of_ff
is passed on in this list component. The IORE submodel is not well tested (yet). When using this model for metabolites,
you may want to read the second note in the help page to
mkinfit
.
FOCUS (2006) Guidance Document on Estimating Persistence and Degradation Kinetics from Environmental Fate Studies on Pesticides in EU Registration Report of the FOCUS Work Group on Degradation Kinetics, EC Document Reference Sanco/10058/2005 version 2.0, 434 pp, http://focus.jrc.ec.europa.eu/dk
NAFTA Technical Working Group on Pesticides (not dated) Guidance for Evaluating and Calculating Degradation Kinetics in Environmental Media
# Specify the SFO model (this is not needed any more, as we can now mkinfit("SFO", ...) SFO <- mkinmod(parent = list(type = "SFO")) # One parent compound, one metabolite, both single first order SFO_SFO <- mkinmod( parent = mkinsub("SFO", "m1"), m1 = mkinsub("SFO"))Successfully compiled differential equation model from auto-generated C code.# The above model used to be specified like this, before the advent of mkinsub() SFO_SFO <- mkinmod( parent = list(type = "SFO", to = "m1"), m1 = list(type = "SFO"))Successfully compiled differential equation model from auto-generated C code.# Show details of creating the C function SFO_SFO <- mkinmod( parent = mkinsub("SFO", "m1"), m1 = mkinsub("SFO"), verbose = TRUE)Compilation argument: /usr/lib/R/bin/R CMD SHLIB file5a355b71ca9.c 2> file5a355b71ca9.c.err.txt Program source: 1: #include <R.h> 2: 3: 4: static double parms [3]; 5: #define k_parent_sink parms[0] 6: #define k_parent_m1 parms[1] 7: #define k_m1_sink parms[2] 8: 9: void initpar(void (* odeparms)(int *, double *)) { 10: int N = 3; 11: odeparms(&N, parms); 12: } 13: 14: 15: void func ( int * n, double * t, double * y, double * f, double * rpar, int * ipar ) { 16: 17: f[0] = - k_parent_sink * y[0] - k_parent_m1 * y[0]; 18: f[1] = + k_parent_m1 * y[0] - k_m1_sink * y[1]; 19: }Successfully compiled differential equation model from auto-generated C code.# If we have several parallel metabolites # (compare tests/testthat/test_synthetic_data_for_UBA_2014.R) m_synth_DFOP_par <- mkinmod(parent = mkinsub("DFOP", c("M1", "M2")), M1 = mkinsub("SFO"), M2 = mkinsub("SFO"), use_of_ff = "max", quiet = TRUE) ## Not run: # fit_DFOP_par_c <- mkinfit(m_synth_DFOP_par, # synthetic_data_for_UBA_2014[[12]]$data, # quiet = TRUE) # ## End(Not run)