23 research outputs found
Lattice Magnetic Walks
Sums of walks for charged particles (e.g. Hofstadter electrons) on a square
lattice in the presence of a magnetic field are evaluated. Returning loops are
systematically added to directed paths to obtain the unrestricted propagators.
Expressions are obtained for special values of the magnetic flux-per-plaquette
commensurate with the flux quantum. For commensurate and incommensurate values
of the flux, the addition of small returning loops does not affect the general
features found earlier for directed paths. Lattice Green's functions are also
obtained for staggered flux configurations encountered in models of high-Tc
superconductors.Comment: 31 pages, Plain TeX, 2 figures (available upon request),
UR-CM-93-10-1
Maximal Height Scaling of Kinetically Growing Surfaces
The scaling properties of the maximal height of a growing self-affine surface
with a lateral extent are considered. In the late-time regime its value
measured relative to the evolving average height scales like the roughness:
. For large values its distribution obeys
, charaterized by the
exponential-tail exponent . In the early-time regime where the roughness
grows as , we find where either or is the corresponding
exponent of the velocity distribution. These properties are derived from
scaling and extreme-values arguments. They are corroborated by numerical
simulations and supported by exact results for surfaces in 1D with the
asymptotic behavior of a Brownian path.Comment: One reference added. Minor stylistic changes in the abstarct and the
paper. 4 pages, 3 figure
Localization and Quantum Percolation
Electronic wave functions are studied on dilute lattices, at dimensionalities 1⩽d⩽8. Generalized average inverse participation ratios are expanded in powers of the bond concentration, p. Dlog Padé approximants indicate that these ratios diverge as (pq−p)-γq, signaling the appearance of extended states for p\u3epq. These Anderson transitions occur above classical percolation. No divergence is detected at d=2. These results are consistent with the existence of localized states at the center of the band
Fractal-Mound Growth of Pentacene Thin Films
The growth mechanism of pentacene film formation on SiO2 substrate was
investigated with a combination of atomic force microscopy measurements and
numerical modeling. In addition to the diffusion-limited aggregation (DLA) that
has already been shown to govern the growth of the ordered pentacene thin
films, it is shown here for the first time that the Schwoebel barrier effect
steps in and disrupts the desired epitaxial growth for the subsequent layers,
leading to mound growth. The terraces of the growing mounds have a fractal
dimension of 1.6, indicating a lateral DLA shape. This novel growth morphology
thus combines horizontal DLA-like growth with vertical mound growth.Comment: (5 Figures). Accepted to PR B (in print
Continuous Versus First Order Transitions in Compressible Diluted Magnets
The interplay between disorder and compressibility in Ising magnets is
studied. Contrary to pure systems in which a weak compressibility drives the
transition first order, we find from a renormalization group analysis that it
has no effect on disordered systems which keep undergoing continuous transition
with rigid random-bond Ising model critical exponents. The mean field
calculation exhibits a dilution-dependent tricritical point beyond which, at
stronger compressibility the transition is first order. The different behavior
of XY and Heisenberg magnets is discussed.Comment: 16 pages, latex, 2 figures not include
Scaling Behavior of Cyclical Surface Growth
The scaling behavior of cyclical surface growth (e.g. deposition/desorption),
with the number of cycles n, is investigated. The roughness of surfaces grown
by two linear primary processes follows a scaling behavior with asymptotic
exponents inherited from the dominant process while the effective amplitudes
are determined by both. Relevant non-linear effects in the primary processes
may remain so or be rendered irrelevant. Numerical simulations for several
pairs of generic primary processes confirm these conclusions. Experimental
results for the surface roughness during cyclical electrodeposition/dissolution
of silver show a power-law dependence on n, consistent with the scaling
description.Comment: 2 figures adde
Kinetic Roughening in Surfaces of Crystals Growing on Disordered Substrates
Substrate disorder effects on the scaling properties of growing crystalline
surfaces in solidification or epitaxial deposition processes are investigated.
Within the harmonic approach there is a phase transition into a low-temperature
(low-noise) superrough phase with a continuously varying dynamic exponent z>2
and a non-linear response. In the presence of the KPZ nonlinearity the disorder
causes the lattice efects to decay on large scales with an intermediate
crossover behavior. The mobility of the rough surface hes a complex dependence
on the temperature and the other physical parameters.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures (not included). Submitted to Phys. Rev. Letts.
Use Latex twic
Roughness Scaling in Cyclical Surface Growth
The scaling behavior of cyclical growth (e.g. cycles of alternating
deposition and desorption primary processes) is investigated theoretically and
probed experimentally. The scaling approach to kinetic roughening is
generalized to cyclical processes by substituting the time by the number of
cycles . The roughness is predicted to grow as where is
the cyclical growth exponent. The roughness saturates to a value which scales
with the system size as , where is the cyclical
roughness exponent. The relations between the cyclical exponents and the
corresponding exponents of the primary processes are studied. Exact relations
are found for cycles composed of primary linear processes. An approximate
renormalization group approach is introduced to analyze non-linear effects in
the primary processes. The analytical results are backed by extensive numerical
simulations of different pairs of primary processes, both linear and
non-linear. Experimentally, silver surfaces are grown by a cyclical process
composed of electrodeposition followed by 50% electrodissolution. The roughness
is found to increase as a power-law of , consistent with the scaling
behavior anticipated theoretically. Potential applications of cyclical scaling
include accelerated testing of rechargeable batteries, and improved
chemotherapeutic treatment of cancerous tumors
Excitonic Funneling in Extended Dendrimers with Non-Linear and Random Potentials
The mean first passage time (MFPT) for photoexcitations diffusion in a
funneling potential of artificial tree-like light-harvesting antennae
(phenylacetylene dendrimers with generation-dependent segment lengths) is
computed. Effects of the non-linearity of the realistic funneling potential and
slow random solvent fluctuations considerably slow down the center-bound
diffusion beyond a temperature-dependent optimal size. Diffusion on a
disordered Cayley tree with a linear potential is investigated analytically. At
low temperatures we predict a phase in which the MFPT is dominated by a few
paths.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, To be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Disorder and Funneling Effects on Exciton Migration in Tree-Like Dendrimers
The center-bound excitonic diffusion on dendrimers subjected to several types
of non-homogeneous funneling potentials, is considered. We first study the
mean-first passage time (MFPT) for diffusion in a linear potential with
different types of correlated and uncorrelated random perturbations. Increasing
the funneling force, there is a transition from a phase in which the MFPT grows
exponentially with the number of generations , to one in which it does so
linearly. Overall the disorder slows down the diffusion, but the effect is much
more pronounced in the exponential compared to the linear phase. When the
disorder gives rise to uncorrelated random forces there is, in addition, a
transition as the temperature is lowered. This is a transition from a
high- regime in which all paths contribute to the MFPT to a low- regime
in which only a few of them do. We further explore the funneling within a
realistic non-linear potential for extended dendrimers in which the dependence
of the lowest excitonic energy level on the segment length was derived using
the Time-Dependent Hatree-Fock approximation. Under this potential the MFPT
grows initially linearly with but crosses-over, beyond a molecular-specific
and -dependent optimal size, to an exponential increase. Finally we consider
geometrical disorder in the form of a small concentration of long connections
as in the {\it small world} model. Beyond a critical concentration of
connections the MFPT decreases significantly and it changes to a power-law or
to a logarithmic scaling with , depending on the strength of the funneling
force.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure