4,299 research outputs found

    Equilibrium of anchored interfaces with quenched disordered growth

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    The roughening behavior of a one-dimensional interface fluctuating under quenched disorder growth is examined while keeping an anchored boundary. The latter introduces detailed balance conditions which allows for a thorough analysis of equilibrium aspects at both macroscopic and microscopic scales. It is found that the interface roughens linearly with the substrate size only in the vicinity of special disorder realizations. Otherwise, it remains stiff and tilted.Comment: 6 pages, 3 postscript figure

    Short-time scaling behavior of growing interfaces

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    The short-time evolution of a growing interface is studied within the framework of the dynamic renormalization group approach for the Kadar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) equation and for an idealized continuum model of molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). The scaling behavior of response and correlation functions is reminiscent of the ``initial slip'' behavior found in purely dissipative critical relaxation (model A) and critical relaxation with conserved order parameter (model B), respectively. Unlike model A the initial slip exponent for the KPZ equation can be expressed by the dynamical exponent z. In 1+1 dimensions, for which z is known exactly, the analytical theory for the KPZ equation is confirmed by a Monte-Carlo simulation of a simple ballistic deposition model. In 2+1 dimensions z is estimated from the short-time evolution of the correlation function.Comment: 27 pages LaTeX with epsf style, 4 figures in eps format, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Drift causes anomalous exponents in growth processes

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    The effect of a drift term in the presence of fixed boundaries is studied for the one-dimensional Edwards-Wilkinson equation, to reveal a general mechanism that causes a change of exponents for a very broad class of growth processes. This mechanism represents a relevant perturbation and therefore is important for the interpretation of experimental and numerical results. In effect, the mechanism leads to the roughness exponent assuming the same value as the growth exponent. In the case of the Edwards-Wilkinson equation this implies exponents deviating from those expected by dimensional analysis.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, REVTeX; accepted for publication in PRL; added note and reference

    Driven Lattice Gases with Quenched Disorder: Exact Results and Different Macroscopic Regimes

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    We study the effect of quenched spatial disorder on the steady states of driven systems of interacting particles. Two sorts of models are studied: disordered drop-push processes and their generalizations, and the disordered asymmetric simple exclusion process. We write down the exact steady-state measure, and consequently a number of physical quantities explicitly, for the drop-push dynamics in any dimensions for arbitrary disorder. We find that three qualitatively different regimes of behaviour are possible in 1-dd disordered driven systems. In the Vanishing-Current regime, the steady-state current approaches zero in the thermodynamic limit. A system with a non-zero current can either be in the Homogeneous regime, chracterized by a single macroscopic density, or the Segregated-Density regime, with macroscopic regions of different densities. We comment on certain important constraints to be taken care of in any field theory of disordered systems.Comment: RevTex, 17pages, 18 figures included using psfig.st

    Linear theory of unstable growth on rough surfaces

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    Unstable homoepitaxy on rough substrates is treated within a linear continuum theory. The time dependence of the surface width W(t)W(t) is governed by three length scales: The characteristic scale l0l_0 of the substrate roughness, the terrace size lDl_D and the Ehrlich-Schwoebel length lESl_{ES}. If lESlDl_{ES} \ll l_D (weak step edge barriers) and l0lmlDlD/lESl_0 \ll l_m \sim l_D \sqrt{l_D/l_{ES}}, then W(t)W(t) displays a minimum at a coverage θmin(lD/lES)2\theta_{\rm min} \sim (l_D/l_{ES})^2, where the initial surface width is reduced by a factor l0/lml_0/l_m. The r\^{o}le of deposition and diffusion noise is analyzed. The results are applied to recent experiments on the growth of InAs buffer layers [M.F. Gyure {\em et al.}, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 81}, 4931 (1998)]. The overall features of the observed roughness evolution are captured by the linear theory, but the detailed time dependence shows distinct deviations which suggest a significant influence of nonlinearities

    Interfaces with a single growth inhomogeneity and anchored boundaries

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    The dynamics of a one dimensional growth model involving attachment and detachment of particles is studied in the presence of a localized growth inhomogeneity along with anchored boundary conditions. At large times, the latter enforce an equilibrium stationary regime which allows for an exact calculation of roughening exponents. The stochastic evolution is related to a spin Hamiltonian whose spectrum gap embodies the dynamic scaling exponent of late stages. For vanishing gaps the interface can exhibit a slow morphological transition followed by a change of scaling regimes which are studied numerically. Instead, a faceting dynamics arises for gapful situations.Comment: REVTeX, 11 pages, 9 Postscript figure

    Adaptation dynamics of the quasispecies model

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    We study the adaptation dynamics of an initially maladapted population evolving via the elementary processes of mutation and selection. The evolution occurs on rugged fitness landscapes which are defined on the multi-dimensional genotypic space and have many local peaks separated by low fitness valleys. We mainly focus on the Eigen's model that describes the deterministic dynamics of an infinite number of self-replicating molecules. In the stationary state, for small mutation rates such a population forms a {\it quasispecies} which consists of the fittest genotype and its closely related mutants. The quasispecies dynamics on rugged fitness landscape follow a punctuated (or step-like) pattern in which a population jumps from a low fitness peak to a higher one, stays there for a considerable time before shifting the peak again and eventually reaches the global maximum of the fitness landscape. We calculate exactly several properties of this dynamical process within a simplified version of the quasispecies model.Comment: Proceedings of Statphys conference at IIT Guwahati, to be published in Praman

    Crossover effects in the Wolf-Villain model of epitaxial growth in 1+1 and 2+1 dimensions

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    A simple model of epitaxial growth proposed by Wolf and Villain is investigated using extensive computer simulations. We find an unexpectedly complex crossover behavior of the original model in both 1+1 and 2+1 dimensions. A crossover from the effective growth exponent βeff ⁣ ⁣0.37\beta_{\rm eff}\!\approx\!0.37 to βeff ⁣ ⁣0.33\beta_{\rm eff}\!\approx\!0.33 is observed in 1+1 dimensions, whereas additional crossovers, which we believe are to the scaling behavior of an Edwards--Wilkinson type, are observed in both 1+1 and 2+1 dimensions. Anomalous scaling due to power--law growth of the average step height is found in 1+1 D, and also at short time and length scales in 2+1~D. The roughness exponents ζeffc\zeta_{\rm eff}^{\rm c} obtained from the height--height correlation functions in 1+1~D ( ⁣3/4\approx\!3/4) and 2+1~D ( ⁣2/3\approx\!2/3) cannot be simultaneously explained by any of the continuum equations proposed so far to describe epitaxial growth.Comment: 11 pages, REVTeX 3.0, IC-DDV-93-00

    Dynamic Scaling in a 2+1 Dimensional Limited Mobility Model of Epitaxial Growth

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    We study statistical scale invariance and dynamic scaling in a simple solid-on-solid 2+1 - dimensional limited mobility discrete model of nonequilibrium surface growth, which we believe should describe the low temperature kinetic roughening properties of molecular beam epitaxy. The model exhibits long-lived ``transient'' anomalous and multiaffine dynamic scaling properties similar to that found in the corresponding 1+1 - dimensional problem. Using large-scale simulations we obtain the relevant scaling exponents, and compare with continuum theories.Comment: 5 pages, 4 ps figures included, RevTe

    Nonmonotonic roughness evolution in unstable growth

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    The roughness of vapor-deposited thin films can display a nonmonotonic dependence on film thickness, if the smoothening of the small-scale features of the substrate dominates over growth-induced roughening in the early stage of evolution. We present a detailed analysis of this phenomenon in the framework of the continuum theory of unstable homoepitaxy. Using the spherical approximation of phase ordering kinetics, the effect of nonlinearities and noise can be treated explicitly. The substrate roughness is characterized by the dimensionless parameter Q=W0/(k0a2)Q = W_0/(k_0 a^2), where W0W_0 denotes the roughness amplitude, k0k_0 is the small scale cutoff wavenumber of the roughness spectrum, and aa is the lattice constant. Depending on QQ, the diffusion length lDl_D and the Ehrlich-Schwoebel length lESl_{ES}, five regimes are identified in which the position of the roughness minimum is determined by different physical mechanisms. The analytic estimates are compared by numerical simulations of the full nonlinear evolution equation.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, to appear on Phys. Rev.
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