Abstract

We study the early time and coarsening dynamics in the Light-Heavy model, a system consisting of two species of particles ($light$ and $heavy$) coupled to a fluctuating surface (described by tilt fields). The dynamics of particles and tilts are coupled through local update rules, and are known to lead to different ordered and disordered steady state phases depending on the microscopic rates. We introduce a generalized balance mechanism in non-equilibrium systems, namely $bunchwise~balance$, in which incoming and outgoing transition currents are balanced between groups of configurations. This allows us to exactly determine the steady state in a subspace of the phase diagram of this model. We introduce the concept of $irreducible~sequences$ of interfaces and bends in this model. These sequences are non-local, and we show that they provide a coarsening length scale in the ordered phases at late times. Finally, we propose a $local$ correlation function ($\mathcal{S}$) that has a direct relation to the number of irreducible sequences, and is able to distinguish between several phases of this system through its coarsening properties. Starting from a totally disordered initial configuration, $\mathcal{S}$ displays an initial linear rise and a broad maximum. As the system evolves towards the ordered steady states, $\mathcal{S}$ further exhibits power law decays at late times that encode coarsening properties of the approach to the ordered phases. Focusing on early time dynamics, we posit coupled mean-field evolution equations governing the particles and tilts, which at short times are well approximated by a set of linearized equations, which we solve analytically. Beyond a timescale set by a lattice cutoff and preceding the onset of coarsening, our linearized theory predicts the existence of an intermediate power-law stretch, which we also find in simulations of the ordered regime of the system.

Highlights

  • Phase separation, coarsening, and dynamical arrest in interacting nonequilibrium systems arise in a variety of contexts in physics and biology

  • We introduce theoretical approaches to study the out-of-equilibrium behavior of the light-heavy (LH) model, a simple lattice model consisting of two species of hard-core particles interacting with a fluctuating surface

  • We uncover a subspace in the phase diagram of this model, where all configurations of the system occur with equal probability in the steady state. We show that this occurs due to a general balance condition, namely bunchwise balance, in which for every configuration, the incoming probability current from a bunch of incoming transitions is exactly balanced by the outgoing current from another uniquely specified group

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Phase separation, coarsening, and dynamical arrest in interacting nonequilibrium systems arise in a variety of contexts in physics and biology. Hard-core particle systems that model several types of materials often display glassy dynamics and provide examples of unusually slow coarsening toward phase separation, they remain hard to characterize theoretically. Driven hard-core particles in one dimension serve as useful models for transport along channels and surfaces, and have a long history of study [7]. Their coarse-grained properties have been related to the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) and Burgers equations that describe the hydrodynamics of surfaces and compressible fluids [8]

Fluctuating local drives
Summary of main results
LIGHT-HEAVY MODEL
Phase diagram
Subspaces with exactly known steady states
BUNCHWISE BALANCE
Steady-state balance
Nc where
Interfaces and bends in the LH model
Pairwise balance in the ASEP
Bunchwise balance in the LH model
Irreducible sequences
LOCAL CROSS-CORRELATION FUNCTION
EARLY-TIME EVOLUTION OF S FROM MEAN FIELD THEORY
Lattice mean field equations
Solving the linearized mean field equations
C δσ k
Evolution of S
Comparison with simulations
LATE-TIME BEHAVIOR OF S
Coarsening with two-point correlation functions
Irreducible sequences and coarsening length scale
Nsμys F
VIII. CONCLUSIONS AND DISCUSSION
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