Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8900607 | Applied Mathematics and Computation | 2018 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
The atom-bond connectivity (ABC) index of a graph Gâ¯=â¯(V, E) is defined as ABC(G)=âvivjâE(di+djâ2)/(didj), where Vâ¯=â¯{v0,v1,â
â
â
, vnâ¯ââ¯1} and di denotes the degree of vertex vi of G. This molecular structure descriptor found interesting applications in chemistry, and has become one of the most actively studied vertex-degree-based graph invariants. However, the problem of characterizing n-vertex tree(s) with minimal ABC index remains open and was coined as the “ABC index conundrum”. In attempts to guess the general structure of such trees, several computer search algorithms were developed and tested up to nâ¯=â¯800. However, for large n, all current search programs seem too powerless. For example, the fastest one up to date reported recently in [30] costs 2.2 h for nâ¯=â¯800 on a single PC with two CPU cores. In this paper, we significantly refine the known features of the degree sequence of a tree with minimal ABC index. With the refined features a search program was implemented with OpenMP. Our program was tested on a single PC with 4 CPU cores, and identified all n-vertex tree(s) with minimal ABC index up to nâ¯=â¯1100 within 207.1 h. Some observations are made based on the search results, which indicate some possible directions in further investigation of the problem of characterizing n-vertex tree(s) with minimal ABC index.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Mathematics
Applied Mathematics
Authors
Lin Wenshui, Chen Jianfeng, Wu Zhixi, Darko Dimitrov, Huang Linshan,