1. Introduction
Many phenomena in nature have uncertainty, and there are many methods to describe uncertainty, among which differential inclusion is one of the most commonly used methods. Differential inclusion theory is an important branch of nonlinear analysis theory, and the existence of solutions for differential inclusion and the controllability of systems are fundamental concepts and focused topics within this theory. Compared with systems described by general differential equations, differential inclusion systems have greater versatility. They not only play a very important role in many disciplines, such as physics, engineering, medicine and biology, but also have close connections with other branches of mathematics, such as optimization and optimal control. Therefore, in the past thirty years, differential inclusion systems have become a major research topic—for example, see [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6] and the references therein.
On the other hand, fractional calculus has become an important research subject in the field of mathematics because of its wide applicability. However, with the deepening of scientific research, people have found that traditional integer-order calculus is inadequate in dealing with some complex phenomena. These phenomena include fractal structures, chaotic systems, viscoelastic materials, etc. Their evolution processes often exhibit nonlinearity and nonlocality, making it difficult to describe them accurately using traditional integer-order calculus. Against this backdrop, fractional calculus emerged accordingly. By extending the order of calculus from integers to real numbers, fractional calculus provides new mathematical tools for these complex phenomena. Fractional calculus not only inherits the advantages of traditional calculus but also possesses greater flexibility and adaptability, enabling it to better describe and explain many phenomena in nature.
Fractional differential inclusions refer to differential inclusions containing derivatives of any order. In disciplines such as biology, economics, and optimal control, differential inclusion models are established to conduct theoretical analysis and research on some practical problems. Many researchers have pointed out that fractional calculus is more suitable for characterizing materials and processes with genetic and memory properties than integer calculus. However, due to the nonlocality and singularity of fractional differential operators, theoretical research on fractional differential inclusions is very difficult. Therefore, the study of fractional differential inclusions has important theoretical significance and practical value. For more details, readers can refer to [
7,
8,
9,
10] and the recent references.
In the past decade, the study of fractional differential inclusions has become a major topic, and a number of studies have focused on the existence and controllability of fractional evolution equations. For example, Agarwal et al. [
11] obtained the existence results for functional differential inclusions involving Riemann–Liouville fractional derivatives. In [
12], Wang and Zhou investigated the existence and controllability of fractional evolution inclusions with Caputo derivatives.
Hilfer [
7] proposed a new fractional derivative called the general Riemann–Liouville fractional derivative or the Hilfer fractional derivative, which is described as an interpolation of the Riemann–Liouville and Caputo fractional derivatives in the theoretical modeling of the broadband dielectric relaxation spectroscopy of glasses [
7]. In addition to defining the order of the Hilfer fractional derivative, he also introduced a new parameter, the type
, such that
gives the Riemann–Liouville derivative,
gives the Caputo fractional derivative, and
gives the interpolation of the two derivatives. Many authors have studied the well-posedness and controllability of initial value problems for evolution equations with Hilfer fractional derivatives (see [
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18,
19]). However, much less is known about the fractional evolution inclusions with Hilfer fractional derivatives. The purpose of this paper is to establish some criteria for the existence of Hilfer fractional evolution inclusions with almost sectorial operators.
Consider the following Hilfer fractional evolution inclusions
where
is the Hilfer fractional derivative of order
and type
,
A is an almost sectorial operator in Banach space
X,
is a Riemann–Liouville fractional integral of order
, and
is a nonempty, convex, bounded, and closed multivalued map,
.
In this paper, we obtain some existence results regarding mild solutions for the inclusion (
1). The novelties and most important aspects of this manuscript are listed below.
- (i)
We generalize prior results on evolution inclusions for Riemann–Liouville and Caputo derivatives to the Hilfer case (), which unifies both derivatives.
- (ii)
For compact semigroups case, the existence of mild solutions is proved by using Bohnenblust–Karlin’s fixed-point theorem and the properties of multivalued maps. For the noncompact semigroup case, we use Kuratowski’s measure of noncompactness to handle this problem under weaker conditions.
- (iii)
We identify and resolve a flaw in prior research (Theorem 3.1 of [
20]), where incorrect operator definitions led to invalid conclusions. We rigorously redefine the solution operators to ensure continuity at
. Our results improve and extend some known results in the relevant references.
The remaining part of the paper is organized as follows. In
Section 2, we introduce some preliminaries on multivalued maps, fractional calculus, almost sectorial operators, the measure of noncompactness, and the resolvent operators. In
Section 3, we state some basic hypotheses for this article. For two cases in which the almost sector operators are compact and noncompact, we establish two new solvable results of mild solutions. Our main theorems essentially improve and generalize some known results in the literature. Finally, an example is given to illustrate the theory.
2. Preliminaries
We shall begin by stating some basic facts about multivalued maps. For more details, we refer to [
21,
22].
Let X be a Banach space with the norm . Suppose that and . Denote as the Banach space of all continuous functions from J to X with the norm . By , we denote the space of all bounded linear operators from X to X with the usual operator norm .
Let be a multivalued map. If is convex (closed) for all , then we call F convex (closed) valued. If for any bounded set of X, then F is bounded on bounded sets.
Definition 1. Assume that the set is a nonempty closed subset of X for each , and there exists an open neighborhood V of such that for each open set Ω of X containing . Then, F is called upper semicontinuous (u.s.c. for short) on X.
Definition 2. If is relatively compact for every bounded subset Ω of X, then F is called completely continuous.
If the multivalued map F is completely continuous with nonempty values, then F is u.s.c. if and only if F has a closed graph, i.e., , , , implying . G has a fixed point if there is a such that .
Lemma 1 ([
23])
. Let J be a compact real interval; be the set of all nonempty, bounded, closed, and convex subsets of X; and G be a multivalued map satisfying that is measurable to t for each fixed and u.s.c. to x for each , and, for each , the set is nonempty. Let be linear continuous from to , and the operatoris a closed graph operator in . Lemma 2 ([
24])
. Let be a nonempty, convex, bounded, and closed subset of X. Assume that is u.s.c. with closed, convex values, such that and is compact. Then, F has a fixed point. We also state some definitions of almost sectorial operators. For more details, we refer to [
25,
26,
27].
Let A be a linear operator from X to itself. Denote by the domain of A and by its spectrum, while is the resolvent set of A. Let with be the open sector , and be its closure, i.e., .
Definition 3. Assume that and . By , we denote a family of all linear closed operators which satisfy
- (i)
;
- (ii)
, there exists a constant such thatwhere the resolvent of A for .
Define the power of
A as
where
is an appropriate path oriented counterclockwise and
. Then, the linear power space
can be defined and
is a Banach space with the graph norm
.
Next, let us introduce the semigroup associated with
A. Denote the semigroup
by
where
and
is oriented counterclockwise.
Lemma 3 ([
25,
26])
. Assume that and . Set . Then,- (i)
, for any ;
- (ii)
there exists a constant such that , for any .
Next, we introduce some basic concepts of fractional calculus. For more details, we refer to [
7,
8]
Definition 4 ([
8])
. The fractional integral of order p for a function is defined aswhere is the gamma function. Definition 5. Suppose that and . The Hilfer fractional derivative of order p and type q for a function is defined as Remark 1. (i)
If , , thenwhere is the Riemann–Liouville derivative.(ii)
If , , thenwhere is the Caputo derivative. Definition 6 ([
28])
. The Wright function is defined as follows:which satisfies Next, we recall the measure of noncompactness and its properties.
Assume that
D is a nonempty subset of
X. The Kuratowski measure of noncompactness
is said to be
where the diameter of
is given by diam
,
Proposition 1 ([
10])
. Let and be two bounded sets of a Banach space X. Then,- (i)
if and only if is relatively compact in X;
- (ii)
if ;
- (iii)
for every and every nonempty subset ;
- (iv)
, where ;
- (v)
;
- (vi)
for any .
Let
. We define
where
.
Proposition 2 ([
29])
. If is bounded and equicontinuous, then is also bounded and equicontinuous. Proposition 3 ([
10])
. Set is bounded and equicontinuous. Then, is continuous on J, and Proposition 4 ([
10])
. Let W be bounded. Then, for each , there is a sequence , such that Proposition 5 ([
29])
. Let X be a Banach space, and let be a continuous function family. Assume that there exists such thatThen, is integrable on , and Based on our previous work [
10], we introduce some definitions and lemmas.
Definition 7. A function is said to be a mild solution of the inclusion (
1)
if and there exists such that on andwhere Lemma 4 ([
15])
. Let the operator be compact. Then, the operators and are also compact. Lemma 5 ([
20])
. Let the operator be compact. Then, is equicontinuous. Lemma 6 ([
19])
. , , and are linear operators for any fixed . For any and ,where Lemma 7 ([
15])
. Let be equicontinuous. , , and are strongly continuous; that is, for any and , 3. Existence
In the following, we always assume that , , and , with .
Clearly,
is a Banach space with the norm
We first state some basic hypotheses for this article as follows.
- (H1)
is equicontinuous.
- (H2)
is a multivalued map such that
- (i)
the map is measurable;
- (ii)
the map is u.s.c.;
- (iii)
for each
, the set
is nonempty.
- (H3)
There exists a function
such that
where
satisfies
From (H3),
is bounded on
. Therefore, there exists a constant
such that
i.e.,
where
,
are defined as in (
2).
Set
and
Clearly,
and
are nonempty, closed, and convex subsets of
and
, respectively.
3.1. Compact Operator Case
Assume that the operator is compact for any .
Theorem 1. Suppose that (H1), (H2), and (H3) hold. Then, (
1)
is solvable on J. Proof. By (H2), the set
is nonempty. So, for any
, there exists a
. Define an operator
as follows:
where
We can easily prove that
In fact,
By Proposition 2.3 in [
9], we have
for all
. In view of
, (
3) holds.
Moreover, from Lemma 6 and (H2), we have
For each
, let us set
for
and
. From the continuity of factor
, we have
. For each
, since there is a
, it follows that there is also a
for
associated with each
y, and
By
, we define an operator
where
We consider the multivalued operator
:
,
Clearly, the solvability of problem (
1) follows the multivalued operator
satisfying all conditions of Lemma 2. We divide the proof of the theorem into five steps.
Step 1. is convex for any .
Let
belong to
. Then, there exist
such that, for each
,
Set
. We have, for each
,
Clearly,
is convex since
G has convex values. Thus,
. Hence,
Step 2. maps bounded sets into equicontinuous sets of .
For each
,
, there exists a
such that
Firstly, we show that
is equicontinuous.
By (
3), for
,
, we obtain
For any
and
, we have
Hence,
is equicontinuous.
Next, we show that is also equicontinuous.
For
,
, by (
4), we have
For
, we obtain
where
Since
, we find that
. It is also noticed that
Therefore,
which means
as
.
From (H2), for
, we obtain
where
From (H1) and Lemma 7, we easily obtain that as . Similarly to the process of proving that and , we see that and as . Thus, tends to zero as . Clearly, as .
Hence, is equicontinuous. Therefore, is equicontinuous.
Step 3. .
From Step 2,
. By (H4), for
and any
,
In the case where
, we know that
. Hence,
Therefore,
.
Step 4. is relatively compact in X.
Obviously,
is compact, and we only need to show the case where
. For
,
, and any
, we define
where
Since the operator
,
is compact in
X, the sets
are relatively compact in
X. On the other hand, for every
, we have
This means that the set can be arbitrarily approximated by relatively compact sets. Therefore, is relatively compact in X for all . Due to its compactness at t = 0, is relatively compact in X for all .
Step 5. has a closed graph.
Set
as
,
, and
as
. We will prove that
. Since
, there exists a
such that
We need show that there exists a
such that
Define the mapping
,
It is easy to see that
is linear and continuous.
For any
,
. The Lebesgue-dominated convergence theorem implies
Hence, for
,
By Lemma 1, we find that
is a closed graph operator. In addition, from the definition of
, we can obtain
Noting that
as
, it follows again by Lemma 1 that
for some
. Thus,
This proves that
.
Based on Steps 1–5 and the Arzela–Ascoli theorem, we can summarize that
is a compact multivalued map that is u.s.c. with convex closed values. By Lemma 2, we can conclude that
has a fixed point
. Set
for
. Then, there is
y belonging to
, defined as a subset of
Therefore,
y is a mild solution of (
1) in
. The proof is completed. □
3.2. Noncompact Operator Case
Next, we consider the case where the operator is almost sectorial A and generates a noncompact semigroup on X. The following assumption is required.
Theorem 2. Suppose that (H1), (H2), (H3), and (H4) hold. Then, (1) is solvable on J. Proof. By the proof of Theorem 1, it remains to prove that there exists a such that the set is relatively compact in X.
For any bounded subset
, let
By Propositions 3–5, for any
, there is a sequence
such that
Due to the arbitrariness of
, we obtain
By Propositions 3–5, for any
, there is a sequence
such that
Through mathematical induction, it can be shown that
Because
there exists a
such that
Thus,
In addition, by Proposition 2, we know that
is bounded and equicontinuous. From Proposition 3, we obtain
So,
Set
In view of [
30], we find
(i)
(ii)
Then, is a nonempty, convex, and compact subset in .
Thanks to the method in [
30], we can show that
Due to
we have
Thus,
Therefore,
so
By using the same method, we can show that
From [
30], we obtain
Hence,
is compact. As a consequence of Lemma 2, we can conclude that
has a fixed point
. Let
for
. Then,
y is a mild solution of (
1) in
. The proof is completed. □
Remark 2. In the recent paper [18], the authors studied the existence of (
1)
. Unfortunately, the results and proofs in [18] are incorrect. An operator Φ in Theorem 3.1 of [18] is defined bywhere is the semigroup associated with A, , . For example, if , by Proposition 2.3 in [9], we find that . So,Therefore, the proof of Theorem 3.1 in [18] is incorrect. Example 1. Let . Consider the following fractional partial differential inclusions on where We define an operator A by with the domain Then, A generates a compact, analytic, self-adjoint semigroup . Then, problem (9) can be rewritten as follows:where and , . Let , for . Then,where . This means that the condition (H3) is satisfied. By Theorem 1, (
9)
is solvable on J.