“…Several of methods have been proposed to compute MWD, including the molecular weight moment method (Timothy and Kyu, 1997), the lumping method (Arno et al, 1978), the continuous variable methods (Stanley and Gerald, 1967), the numerical Monte Carlo method (Al-Harthi et al, 2006, 2007Yao et al, 2012), the transformed domains method (Miller et al, 1996;Mills, 1986), the discrete Galerkin method (Deuflhard and Wulkow, 1989;Wulkow, 1996), the reduced stiffness via quasi-steady-state approximation method (Enrique et al, 2010;Zapata-Gonzales et al, 2012), the serial variable decoupling method (Chen et al, 2009), and Flory method (Flory, 1953;Soares, 2001;Soares and McKenna, 2012). Timothy and Kyu (1997) proposed a novel method that utilizes polymerization kinetic equations and molecular weight moment equations in conjunction with a function that describes the weight fraction of the polymer in a finite chain length interval; in this method, the entire range of molecular weight is divided into a finite number of intervals, and the weight fractions of the polymers in these intervals are calculated.…”