Phase Transition with Non-Thermodynamic States in Reversible Polymerization
Abstract
We investigate a reversible polymerization process in which individual polymers aggregate and fragment at a rate proportional to their molecular weight. We find a nonequilibrium phase transition despite the fact that the dynamics are perfectly reversible. When the strength of the fragmentation process exceeds a critical threshold, the system reaches a thermodynamic steady state where the total number of polymers is proportional to the system size. The polymer length distribution has a sharp exponential tail in this case. When the strength of the fragmentation process falls below the critical threshold, the steady state becomes non-thermodynamic as the total number of polymers grows sub-linearly with the system size. Moreover, the length distribution has an algebraic tail and the characteristic exponent varies continuously with the fragmentation rate.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0803.2875,
title = {Phase Transition with Non-Thermodynamic States in Reversible Polymerization},
author = {E. Ben-Naim and P. L. Krapivsky},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0803.2875},
year = {2008}
}
Comments
9 pages, 4 figures