1. Introduction
Fractional calculus is a generalization of ordinary calculus, where derivatives and integrals of arbitrary (non-integer) order are defined. The concept of fractional operators has been introduced almost simultaneously with the development of the classical ones. The idea of these operators first appeared in a letter between L’Hopital and Leibniz in which the question of a half-order derivative was posed [
1,
2,
3]. Some important contributions to science, engineering, applied mathematics, economics and biomechanics have been reported in the literature. There are good textbooks for the fractional calculus [
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10].
Several types of fractional derivatives have been introduced to date, among which the Riemann–Liouville, Caputo, Hadamard, Caputo–Hadamard, Erdélyi–Kober, Weyl, Marchaud and Riesz are just a few to name [
11]. All of them also satisfy the following important properties: fractional operators are linear, that is if
L is a fractional derivative, then:
for any functions
and
. Unfortunately, all these fractional derivatives have many unusual properties [
12], for example:
Not all fractional derivatives obey the familiar product rule for two functions:
Not all fractional derivatives obey the chain rule:
These properties lead to some difficulties in the application of fractional derivatives in physics and engineering. To overcome some of these and other difficulties, Khalil et al. [
13] proposed the so-called conformable fractional derivative of order
,
, in order to generalize classical properties of integer-order calculus and proved the conformable fractional Leibniz rule. Furthermore, the author in [
14], generalizing the conformable operators to higher orders, presented for instance the chain rule, integration by parts and Taylor series expansion. Consequently, the conformable derivative satisfies almost all the classical properties that the derivative holds. This suggests that one may try to solve conformable fractional differential equations using the same techniques for solving ordinary differential equations.
Real-world phenomena often are modeled by the nonlinear fractional differential equations. Its applications are rapidly increasing in remodeling different dynamical models and an emerging variety of methods with this definition [
15,
16,
17,
18]. Adding to this, integral transforms are also ground-breaking inventions in fractional calculus. In general, most of the fractional differential equations do not have exact solutions. An effective and convenient method for solving fractional differential equations is needed. Abdeljawad [
14] introduced a method based on the conformable Laplace transform technique; it is suitable for a large class of initial value problems for fractional differential equations. On the other hand, not every function has a conformable Laplace transform, because the defining integral can fail to converge. Then, the interest arose to sort this out and to be able to use them properly.
Integral inequalities are very useful in the study of ordinary differential and integral equations. For example, the Gronwall inequality and its generalizations play an important role in the discussion of the existence, uniqueness and qualitative behavior of solutions (see [
19,
20]). Motivated by applications of fractional integral inequalities (see [
21,
22,
23]), we study the reliability of the conformable Laplace transform method for solving linear fractional differential equations with constant coefficients:
where
is the conformable fractional derivative operator of order
,
and
is a continuous function, which is called the forcing term or driving term. The advantages of our conformable fractional results are clear. Indeed, conformable derivatives have many advantages in the solution procedure of fractional differential equations.
Abdeljawad [
14] introduced a method based on the conformable Laplace transform technique; it is suitable for a large class of initial value problems for conformable fractional differential equations. In this paper, the reliability of the conformable Laplace transform is investigated and applied in Bernoulli-type equations, i.e., differential equations that can be linearized.
This paper is organized as follows. In
Section 2, some basic properties of conformable fractional calculus are given. In
Section 3, we enunciate and probe the reliability of the conformable Laplace transform method for solving linear fractional differential equations with constant coefficients. In
Section 4, analytical solutions of the fractional models are obtained. Initial value problems are considered and a few concluding remarks given in
Section 5.
2. Brief on Conformable Fractional Calculus
Let us review the conformable calculus [
13,
14]. The interest for this new approach was born from the notion that makes a dependency just on the basic limit definition of the derivative.
Definition 1 ([
13])
. Let be a function. Then, the conformable fractional derivative of f of order α, , is defined by,for all . Every real function that is satisfied in Equation (
2), and corresponding limit that exists, is called the
-differentiable function. In addition, if
f is
-differentiable in some
and
exists, then we define:
The relationship between the conformable derivative and the first derivative can be represented:
Consider the limit
. In this case, for
, we obtain the classical definition for the derivative of a function,
. This shows that the conformable derivative is a generalization of the integer-order derivative. Moreover, the physical interpretation of the conformable derivative is a modification of the classical derivative in direction and magnitude [
15].
Remark 1. Differentiability implies α-differentiability, but the contrary is not true: a non-differentiable function can be α-differentiable. For a discussion of this issue, see [13]. Notation 1. We can write for to denote the conformable fractional derivatives of f of order α.
The work in [
14] demonstrated that the chain rule is valid for conformable fractional derivatives.
Theorem 1. Let f be differentiable at and g a α-differentiable function defined in the range of f at . Then: The analogous definition of the integral operator corresponding to the derivative operator is given by the following definition.
Definition 2 (Conformable fractional integral)
. Let and . The conformable fractional integral of f of order α from zero to t is defined by:where the above integral is the usual improper Riemann integral. Lemma 1. Assume that f is a continuous function on and . Then, for all , we have
Definition 3 ([
14])
. The conformable fractional exponential function is defined for every by:where and . Resulting from Equation (
3):
that is the famous stretched exponential function
[
24] is an eigenfunction of
with an eigenvalue of one. Moreover, a conformable fractional exponential function can just be the short-time limit of a one-parameter Mittag–Leffler function [
25,
26,
27].
Integral inequalities play an important role in the qualitative analysis of the solutions to differential and integral equations [
20]. A conformable fractional version of the Gronwall theorem follows, which plays an important role in stability analysis of the conformable fractional systems.
Lemma 2 (Conformable Gronwall inequality [
14])
. Let r be a continuous, nonnegative function on (some ) and a and b be nonnegative constants such that:on this interval. Then: Here, we deal with the fractional Laplace transform, which was first defined by Abdeljawad [
14].
Definition 4. Let and be real valued function. Then, the fractional Laplace transform of order α starting from zero of f is defined by: The Laplace transform for the conformable fractional-order derivative is described as follows:
The relation between the usual and the fractional Laplace transforms is given below.
Theorem 2 ([
14])
. Let be a function such that exists. Then:where It is easy to show that:
Theorem 3 ([
28])
. If exists for , then:If c is a constant, then: If c, q are arbitrary constants:
Remark 2. One can easily see the proof by using the definition of the conformable Laplace transform and Theorem 2.
Theorem 4 ([
16])
. Let be real valued functions and . Then, if and both exist for , then: Definition 5. A function f is said to be conformable exponentially bounded if it satisfies an inequality of the form , where are positive real constants and , for all sufficiently large t.
A function f is piecewise continuous on the interval if is continuous on every finite interval , except possibly at a finite number of points in at which f has a jump discontinuity.
3. Validity of the Conformable Laplace Transform for Linear Fractional-Order Equations
In this section, we discuss what is necessary to apply the conformable Laplace transform for solving Equation (6).
Theorem 5. Let f be piecewise continuous on and conformable exponentially bounded. If , then .
Proof. Since
f is conformable exponentially bounded, there exists
, such that
, for
. Furthermore,
f is piecewise continuous on
and hence bounded there, say
, for
. This means that, a constant
M can be chosen sufficiently large so that
, for
. Therefore,
Letting
, we see that:
The proof is complete. ☐
As a consequence, for example, , , are not conformable Laplace transforms of any function f and .
Theorem 6. Assume that the Equation (1) has a unique continuous solutions ; if is continuous on and conformable exponentially bounded, then and its derivative are both conformable exponentially bounded, and thus, their conformable Laplace transforms exist. Proof. Since
is conformable exponentially bounded, we have that there exist positive constants
and enough large
T such that
for all
. Furthermore, every solution of Equation (
1) is also a solution of the Volterra integral equation given below and vice versa.
For
, Equation (
15) can be rewritten as:
By the continuity of
, then
is bounded on
, i.e., there exists a constant
such that
. We have:
Multiply this inequality by
and note that
and
to obtain:
From Equation (
1), we obtain:
This concludes the proof of Theorem 6. ☐
4. Illustrative Examples
In this section, we present three examples, which indicate how our theorem can be applied to concrete problems. For instance, the logistic model, the Bertalanffy model and the von Foerster model are suitable to describe continuous growth models. The latter model is the one-parameter deformations for the exponential function widely used in the context of non-extensive statisticalmechanics [
29].
We consider the scalar fractional differential nonlinear equation of the form:
with order
. We remark that Pospíšil [
17] had given necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence and uniqueness of the solution of Equation (
20).
Remark 3. Considering the limit when in Equation (20), it becomes a Bernoulli-type differential equation. If
, we make the change of variables:
Consequently, from Theorem 1, we have the linear fractional differential equations of order
:
The linearized fractional conformable form of Equation (
20) is:
whose exact closed form solution (see [
16]) can be found efficiently by Theorem 6.
Example 1. Regard the given conformable differential equation of the logistic type (see [30]) below:Using the change of variable , we have:Applying the conformable Laplace transform to both sides of Equation (25):Applying the inverse conformable Laplace transform to Equation (27) and with the help of convolution operations, we obtain (see Figure 1): Example 2 (von Foerster model)
. Equation (6) can however be viewed as a special case of a more general equation:with the initial condition . The exact solution of Equation (29) is given bywhen . Substituting Equation (21) into Equation (29), we find:subject to the initial condition . After an algebraic manipulation: So we get the solution as (see Figure 2)with . Remark 4. In the context of nonextensive thermostatistics, the Equation (30) is the so called q-exponential function. It has become common to call the corresponding statistics ‘q-statistics’ [31]. In this work we show a generalization of the q-exponential function. Example 3. Consider the following fractional Bertalanffy-logistic differential equation:subject to the initial condition . For , Equation (35) is the standard Bertalanffy-logistic equation: The exact solution to this problem is: The von Bertalanffy equation is a logistic model widely applied to describe the growth of different types of populations [32,33,34]. By using Equation (21) in Equation (35), we find: Applying the conformable Laplace transform to both sides of Equation (37): Finally, applying the inverse Laplace transform, we have (see Figure 3): This can be seen when
in Equation (
39); we get the classical solution given by Equation (
36) (see
Figure 3).
5. Concluding Remarks
The exact solutions of fractional differential equations play a crucial role in mathematical physics. Similarly to integer-order derivatives, by the conformable Gronwall inequality, the solutions of fractional-order equations are shown to be conformable exponentially bounded. Therefore, the validity of the Laplace transform of fractional-order equations is justified, but it requires an observation of the term forcing, so not every differential fractional equation with a constant coefficient can be solved by the method of conformable Laplace transform. We apply the conformable Laplace transform to linearized fractional-order Bernoulli equations. Analytical solutions of these models for various fractional orders and the solution of the corresponding classical equation were recovered as a particular case. We observe, in the various graphs studied, that the different values of the fractional-order of the derivative allow very different behaviors of the solution, especially in the time of convergence to the equilibrium state, which makes the model convenient to model, among others, growth phenomena.