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Counting Perfect Matchings and Benzenoids

from I - Classroom-tested Projects

Fred J. Rispoli
Affiliation:
Dowling College
Brian Hopkins
Affiliation:
Saint Peter's College
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Summary

Summary

The connection between perfect matchings and benzene was discovered by the German chemist Kekulé in the mid 1800s. Subsequently, chemists have learned that the number of perfect matchings contained in a molecular model is an important parameter related to chemical stability. Hence, counting perfect matchings has been an important problem in chemistry for over 50 years. However, counting perfect matchings in general graphs is a computationally difficult problem. Consequently, chemists and graph theorists have developed efficient counting methods for certain classes of graphs that arise in modeling special hydrocarbons called benzenoids. Many of these methods involve counting principles usually discussed in discrete mathematics courses. In this article we discuss several of these methods and show how to implement a general determinant based formula.

Notes for the instructor

This project works well as an enrichment topic for an advanced discrete mathematics course focused on applications. Students should be familiar with counting techniques, graphs and determinants. I usually give the paper to students to read and then present a summary of the material at the end of the course. I spend roughly one class meeting on it. Exercises that reinforce and extend some key ideas are given in the last section, along with selected solutions.

Bibliography

[1] J. Aihara, “Why Aromatic Compounds Are Stable,” Scientific American 266(3) (1992) 62–68.

[2] S. Cyvin and I. Gutman, Kekulé Structures in Benzenoid Hydrocarbons, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1988.

Type
Chapter
Information
Resources for Teaching Discrete Mathematics
Classroom Projects, History Modules, and Articles
, pp. 131 - 142
Publisher: Mathematical Association of America
Print publication year: 2009

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