English

Non-equilibrium phase coexistence in boundary-driven diffusive systems

Statistical Mechanics 2024-11-28 v2

Abstract

Liquid-gas phase coexistence in a boundary-driven diffusive system is studied by analyzing fluctuating hydrodynamics of a density field defined on a one-dimensional lattice with a space interval Λ\Lambda. When an interface width \ell is much larger than Λ\Lambda, the discrete model becomes the standard fluctuating hydrodynamics, where the phase coexistence condition is given by the local equilibrium thermodynamics. In contrast, when <Λ\ell < \Lambda, the most probable density profile is determined by a new variational principle, where the chemical potential at the interface is found to deviate from the equilibrium coexistence chemical potential. This means that metastable states at equilibrium stably appear near the interface as the influence of the particle current. The variational function derived in the theoretical analysis is also found to be equivalent to the variational function formulated in an extended framework of thermodynamics called global thermodynamics. Finally, the validity of the theoretical result is confirmed by numerical simulations.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2407.12353,
  title  = {Non-equilibrium phase coexistence in boundary-driven diffusive systems},
  author = {Shin-ichi Sasa and Naoko Nakagawa},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2407.12353},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

29 pages, 8 figures. Revised version

R2 v1 2026-06-28T17:44:07.566Z