“…The fractional calculus, as the generalization from the integer order calculus, can be traced back to the discussion in a letter between German mathematician Leibniz and French mathematician L'Hospital in 1695. In recent decades, researchers pay more and more attention to the fractional calculus since it can accurately describe some strange phenomena in many scientific research fields, such as the porous media (Xiao et al , 2019; Wang, 2023a; Xiao et al , 2021; Wang and Shi, 2023a), non-smooth boundary (He et al , 2021; Wang et al , 2023a; Wang, 2022a), image analysis (Ghamisi et al , 2012), control (Ladaci and Charef, 2006), diffusion (Ammi et al , 2019; Atangana, 2016) and so on (Wang et al , 2023a; Ghanbari and Abdon, 2020; Wang, 2022b). In recent years, as a new theory of fractional calculus, the local fractional calculus has been successfully used to explain many non-differentiable (ND) scientific problems, for instance, the shallow water surfaces (Yang et al , 2016), rheological (Yang et al , 2017a), physics (Wang et al , 2023b, 2023c; Yang, 2017; Wang and Shi, 2023b; Wang, 2023c), circuits (Yang et al , 2017b; Zhao et al , 2017; Wang, 2023b; Banchuin, 2022; Banchuin, 2023; Wang et al , 2020), vibration (Yang and Srivastava, 2015) and others.…”