English

Reaction-controlled diffusion

Statistical Mechanics 2009-10-31 v4

Abstract

The dynamics of a coupled two-component nonequilibrium system is examined by means of continuum field theory representing the corresponding master equation. Particles of species A may perform hopping processes only when particles of different type B are present in their environment. Species B is subject to diffusion-limited reactions. If the density of B particles attains a finite asymptotic value (active state), the A species displays normal diffusion. On the other hand, if the B density decays algebraically ~t^{-a} at long times (inactive state), the effective attractive A-B interaction is weakened. The combination of B decay and activated A hopping processes gives rise to anomalous diffusion, with mean-square displacement < x_A(t)^2 > ~ t^{1-a} for a < 1. Such algebraic subdiffusive behavior ensues for n-th order B annihilation reactions (n B -> 0) with n >=3, and n = 2 for d < 2. The mean-square displacement of the A particles grows only logarithmically with time in the case of B pair annihilation (n = 2) and d >= 2 dimensions. For radioactive B decay (n = 1), the A particles remain localized. If the A particles may hop spontaneously as well, or if additional random forces are present, the A-B coupling becomes irrelevant, and conventional diffusion is recovered in the long-time limit.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.cond-mat/0001387,
  title  = {Reaction-controlled diffusion},
  author = {S. Trimper and U. C. Taeuber and G. M. Schuetz},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:cond-mat/0001387},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

7 pages, revtex, no figures; latest revised version