“…In the last two decades, it has been increasingly popular in a variety of sectors of science and engineering (Alawaideh et al, 2020;Al-Oqali et al, 2016;Herzallah and Baleanu, 2014;Herzallah et al, 2011;Jaradat, 2017;Muslih and Baleanu, 2005). Fractional derivatives have been used in a variety of fields, including classical mechanics (Yu and Wang, 2017), scaling phenomena (Cattani et al, 2014), fractal spacetime (He, 2014), dispersion and turbulence (Chen et al, 2013), astrophysics (Abdel-Salam et al, 2020), potential theory (Bogdan and Byczkowski, 2000), viscoelasticity (Novikov and Voitsekhovskii, 2000), electrodynamics (La Nave et al, 2019), optics (Asjad et al, 2021;Gutiérrez-Vega, 2007a;2007b), and thermodynamics (Magomedov et al, 2018). Fractional derivatives research dates back to Leibniz, and it is still going strong today.…”