Driven interfaces in random media at finite temperature : is there an anomalous zero-velocity phase at small external force ?
Abstract
The motion of driven interfaces in random media at finite temperature and small external force is usually described by a linear displacement at large times, where the velocity vanishes according to the creep formula as for . In this paper, we question this picture on the specific example of the directed polymer in a two dimensional random medium. We have recently shown (C. Monthus and T. Garel, arxiv:0802.2502) that its dynamics for F=0 can be analyzed in terms of a strong disorder renormalization procedure, where the distribution of renormalized barriers flows towards some "infinite disorder fixed point". In the present paper, we obtain that for small , this "infinite disorder fixed point" becomes a "strong disorder fixed point" with an exponential distribution of renormalized barriers. The corresponding distribution of trapping times then only decays as a power-law , where the exponent vanishes as as . Our conclusion is that in the small force region , the divergence of the averaged trapping time induces strong non-self-averaging effects that invalidate the usual creep formula obtained by replacing all trapping times by the typical value. We find instead that the motion is only sub-linearly in time , i.e. the asymptotic velocity vanishes V=0. This analysis is confirmed by numerical simulations of a directed polymer with a metric constraint driven in a traps landscape. We moreover obtain that the roughness exponent, which is governed by the equilibrium value up to some large scale, becomes equal to at the largest scales.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0803.4125,
title = {Driven interfaces in random media at finite temperature : is there an anomalous zero-velocity phase at small external force ?},
author = {Cecile Monthus and Thomas Garel},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0803.4125},
year = {2008}
}
Comments
v3=final version