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Coarsening Dynamics of a One-Dimensional Driven Cahn-Hilliard System

Abstract

We study the one-dimensional Cahn-Hilliard equation with an additional driving term representing, say, the effect of gravity. We find that the driving field EE has an asymmetric effect on the solution for a single stationary domain wall (or `kink'), the direction of the field determining whether the analytic solutions found by Leung [J.Stat.Phys.{\bf 61}, 345 (1990)] are unique. The dynamics of a kink-antikink pair (`bubble') is then studied. The behaviour of a bubble is dependent on the relative sizes of a characteristic length scale E1E^{-1}, where EE is the driving field, and the separation, LL, of the interfaces. For EL1EL \gg 1 the velocities of the interfaces are negligible, while in the opposite limit a travelling-wave solution is found with a velocity vE/Lv \propto E/L. For this latter case (EL1EL \ll 1) a set of reduced equations, describing the evolution of the domain lengths, is obtained for a system with a large number of interfaces, and implies a characteristic length scale growing as (Et)1/2(Et)^{1/2}. Numerical results for the domain-size distribution and structure factor confirm this behavior, and show that the system exhibits dynamical scaling from very early times.Comment: 20 pages, revtex, 10 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

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    Last time updated on 01/04/2019