A system formed by a crowded environment of catalytic obstacles and complex
oscillatory chemical reactions is inquired. The obstacles are static spheres of
equal radius, which are placed in a random way. The chemical reactions are
carried out in a fluid following a multiparticle collision scheme where the
mass, energy and local momentum are conserved. Firstly, it is explored how the
presence of catalytic obstacles changes the oscillatory dynamics from a limit
cycle to a fix point reached after a damping. The damping is characterized by
the decay constant, which grows linearly with volume fraction for low values of
the mesoscale collision time and the catalytic reaction constant. Additionally,
it is shown that, although the distribution of obstacles is random, there are
regions in the system where the catalytic chemical reactions are favored. This
entails that in average the radius of gyrations of catalytic chemical reaction
does not match with the radius of gyration of obstacles, that is, clusters of
reactions emerge on the catalytic obstacles, even when the diffusion is
significant.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure