We study the effect of quenched disorder on the zero-range process (ZRP), a
system of interacting particles undergoing biased hopping on a one-dimensional
periodic lattice, with the disorder entering through random capacities of
sites. In the usual ZRP, sites can accommodate an arbitrary number of
particles, and for a class of hopping rates and high enough density, the steady
state exhibits a condensate which holds a finite fraction of the total number
of particles. The sites of the disordered zero-range process considered here
have finite capacities chosen randomly from the Pareto distribution. From the
exact steady state measure of the model, we identify the conditions for
condensate formation, in terms of parameters that involve both interactions
(through the hop rates) and randomness (through the distribution of the site
capacities). Our predictions are supported by results obtained from a direct
numerical sampling of the steady state and from Monte Carlo simulations. Our
study reveals that for a given realization of disorder, the condensate can
relocate on the subset of sites with largest capacities. We also study
sample-to-sample variation of the critical density required to observe
condensation, and show that the corresponding distribution obeys scaling, and
has a Gaussian or a Levy-stable form depending on the values of the relevant
parameters.Comment: Contribution to the JStatMech Special Issue dedicated to the Galileo
Galilei Institute, Florence Workshop "Advances in nonequilibrium statistical
mechanics",v2: close to the published versio