Non-equilibrium processes: driven lattice gases, interface dynamics, and quenched disorder effects on density profiles and currents
Abstract
Properties of the one-dimensional totally asymmetric simple exclusion process (TASEP), and their connection with the dynamical scaling of moving interfaces described by a Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) equation are investigated. With periodic boundary conditions, scaling of interface widths (the latter defined via a discrete occupation-number-to-height mapping), gives the exponents , , . With open boundaries, results are as follows: (i) in the maximal-current phase, the exponents are the same as for the periodic case, and in agreement with recent Bethe ansatz results; (ii) in the low-density phase, curve collapse can be found to a rather good extent, with , , , which is apparently at variance with the Bethe ansatz prediction ; (iii) on the coexistence line between low- and high- density phases, , , , in relatively good agreement with the Bethe ansatz prediction . From a mean-field continuum formulation, a characteristic relaxation time, related to kinematic-wave propagation and having an effective exponent , is shown to be the limiting slow process for the low density phase, which accounts for the above-mentioned discrepancy with Bethe ansatz results. For TASEP with quenched bond disorder, interface width scaling gives , , . From a direct analytic approach to steady-state properties of TASEP with quenched disorder, closed-form expressions for the piecewise shape of averaged density profiles are given, as well as rather restrictive bounds on currents. All these are substantiated in numerical simulations.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0806.3439,
title = {Non-equilibrium processes: driven lattice gases, interface dynamics, and quenched disorder effects on density profiles and currents},
author = {S. L. A. de Queiroz and R. B. Stinchcombe},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0806.3439},
year = {2008}
}