138 research outputs found
The role of electron-hole recombination in organic magnetoresistance
Magneto-electrical measurements were performed on diodes and bulk
heterojunction solar cells (BHSCs) to clarify the role of formation of
coulombically bound electron-hole (e-h) pairs on the magnetoresistance (MR)
response in organic thin film devices. BHSCs are suitable model systems because
they effectively quench excitons but the probability of forming e-h pairs in
them can be tuned over orders of magnitude by the choice of material and
solvent in the blend. We have systematically varied the e-h recombination
coefficients, which are directly proportional to the probability for the charge
carriers to meet in space, and found that a reduced probability of electrons
and holes meeting in space lead to disappearance of the MR. Our results clearly
show that MR is a direct consequence of e-h pair formation. We also found that
the MR line shape follows a power law-dependence of B0.5 at higher fields
A scale-free network hidden in the collapsing polymer
We show that the collapsed globular phase of a polymer accommodates a
scale-free incompatibility graph of its contacts. The degree distribution of
this network is found to decay with the exponent up to a
cut-off degree , where is the loop exponent for dense
polymers ( in two dimensions) and is the length of the polymer. Our
results exemplify how a scale-free network (SFN) can emerge from standard
criticality.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, address correcte
Polymer desorption under pulling: a novel dichotomic phase transition
We show that the structural properties and phase behavior of a self-avoiding
polymer chain on adhesive substrate, subject to pulling at the chain end, can
be obtained by means of a Grand Canonical Ensemble (GCE) approach. We derive
analytical expressions for the mean length of the basic structural units of
adsorbed polymer, such as loops and tails, in terms of the adhesive potential
and detachment force, and determine values of the universal exponents which
govern their probability distributions. Most notably, the hitherto
controversial value of the critical adsorption exponent is found to
depend essentially on the interaction between different loops. The chain
detachment transition turns out to be of the first order, albeit dichotomic,
i.e., no coexistence of different phase states exists. These novel theoretical
predictions and the suggested phase diagram of the adsorption-desorption
transformation under external pulling force are verified by means of extensive
Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Trading interactions for topology in scale-free networks
Scale-free networks with topology-dependent interactions are studied. It is
shown that the universality classes of critical behavior, which conventionally
depend only on topology, can also be explored by tuning the interactions. A
mapping, , describes how a shift of the
standard exponent of the degree distribution can absorb the
effect of degree-dependent pair interactions .
Replica technique, cavity method and Monte Carlo simulation support the
physical picture suggested by Landau theory for the critical exponents and by
the Bethe-Peierls approximation for the critical temperature. The equivalence
of topology and interaction holds for equilibrium and non-equilibrium systems,
and is illustrated with interdisciplinary applications.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Universality of collapsing two-dimensional self-avoiding trails
Results of a numerically exact transfer matrix calculation for the model of
Interacting Self-Avoiding Trails are presented. The results lead to the
conclusion that, at the collapse transition, Self-Avoiding Trails are in the
same universality class as the O(n=0) model of Blote and Nienhuis (or
vertex-interacting self-avoiding walk), which has thermal exponent ,
contrary to previous conjectures.Comment: Final version, accepted for publication in Journal of Physics A; 9
pages; 3 figure
On the number of contacts of a floating polymer chain cross-linked with a surface adsorbed chain on fractal structures
We study the interaction problem of a linear polymer chain, floating in
fractal containers that belong to the three-dimensional Sierpinski gasket (3D
SG) family of fractals, with a surface-adsorbed linear polymer chain. Each
member of the 3D SG fractal family has a fractal impenetrable 2D adsorbing
surface, which appears to be 2D SG fractal. The two-polymer system is modelled
by two mutually crossing self-avoiding walks. By applying the Monte Carlo
Renormalization Group (MCRG) method, we calculate the critical exponents
, associated with the number of contacts of the 3D SG floating polymer
chain, and the 2D SG adsorbed polymer chain, for a sequence of SG fractals with
. Besides, we propose the codimension additivity (CA) argument
formula for , and compare its predictions with our reliable set of the
MCRG data. We find that monotonically decreases with increasing ,
that is, with increase of the container fractal dimension. Finally, we discuss
the relations between different contact exponents, and analyze their possible
behaviour in the fractal-to-Euclidean crossover region .Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure
Sequence randomness and polymer collapse transitions
Contrary to expectations based on Harris' criterion, chain disorder with
frustration can modify the universality class of scaling at the theta
transition of heteropolymers. This is shown for a model with random two-body
potentials in 2D on the basis of exact enumeration and accurate Monte Carlo
results. When frustration grows beyond a certain finite threshold, the
temperature below which disorder becomes relevant coincides with the theta one
and scaling exponents definitely start deviating from those valid for
homopolymers.Comment: 4 pages, 4 eps figure
Vertex Models and Random Labyrinths: Phase Diagrams for Ice-type Vertex Models
We propose a simple geometric recipe for constructing phase diagrams for a
general class of vertex models obeying the ice rule. The disordered phase maps
onto the intersecting loop model which is interesting in its own right and is
related to several other statistical mechanical models. This mapping is also
useful in understanding some ordered phases of these vertex models as they
correspond to the polymer loop models with cross-links in their vulcanised
phase.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Bethe approximation for self-interacting lattice trees
In this paper we develop a Bethe approximation, based on the cluster
variation method, which is apt to study lattice models of branched polymers. We
show that the method is extremely accurate in cases where exact results are
known as, for instance, in the enumeration of spanning trees. Moreover, the
expressions we obtain for the asymptotic number of spanning trees and lattice
trees on a graph coincide with analogous expressions derived through different
approaches. We study the phase diagram of lattice trees with nearest-neighbour
attraction and branching energies. We find a collapse transition at a
tricritical theta point, which separates an expanded phase from a compact
phase. We compare our results for the theta transition in two and three
dimensions with available numerical estimates.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Europhysics Letter
Adsorption-like Collapse of Diblock Copolymers
A linear copolymer made of two reciprocally attracting N-monomer blocks
collapses to a compact phase through a novel transition, whose exponents are
determined with extensive MC simulations in two and three dimensions. In the
former case, an identification with the statistical geometry of suitable
percolation paths allows to predict that the number of contacts between the
blocks grows like . In the compact phase the blocks are mixed and, in
two dimensions, also zipped, in such a way to form a spiral, double chain
structure.Comment: 4 pages, 5 Postscript figure
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