Virginia Tech
    • Log in
    View Item 
    •   VTechWorks Home
    • VTechWorks Archives
    • VTechWorks Administration
    • All Faculty Deposits
    • View Item
    •   VTechWorks Home
    • VTechWorks Archives
    • VTechWorks Administration
    • All Faculty Deposits
    • View Item
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Parallel temperature interfaces in the Katz-Lebowitz-Spohn driven lattice gas

    Thumbnail
    View/Open
    Accepted version (4.348Mb)
    Downloads: 6
    Date
    2020-11-27
    Author
    Mukhamadiarov, Ruslan
    Priyanka, Priyanka
    Tauber, Uwe C.
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    We explore a variant of the Katz–Lebowitz–Spohn (KLS) driven lattice gas in two dimensions, where the lattice is split into two regions that are coupled to heat baths with distinct temperatures. The geometry was arranged such that the temperature boundaries are oriented parallel to the external particle drive and resulting net current. We have explored the changes in the dynamical behavior that are induced by our choice of the hopping rates across the temperature boundaries. If these hopping rates at the interfaces satisfy particle-hole symmetry, the current difference across them generates a vector flow diagram akin to a vortex sheet. We have studied the finite-size scaling of the particle density fluctuations in both temperature regions, and observed that it is controlled by the respective temperature values. Specifically, if the colder subsystem is maintained at the KLS critical temperature, while the hotter subsystem’s temperature is set much higher, the interface current greatly suppresses particle exchange between the two regions. As a result of the ensuing effective subsystem decoupling, strong fluctuations persist in the critical region, whence the particle density fluctuations scale with the KLS critical exponents. However, if both temperatures are set well above the critical temperature, the particle density fluctuations scale according to the totally asymmetric exclusion process (TASEP). In addition, we have measured the entropy production rate in both subsystems; it displays intriguing algebraic decay in the critical region, while it saturates quickly at a small but non-zero level in the hotter region. We have also considered another possible choice of the hopping rates across the temperature interfaces that explicitly breaks particle-hole symmetry. In that case the boundary rates induce a net particle flux across the interfaces that displays power-law behavior, until ultimately the particle exlusion constraints generate a clogging transition to an inert state.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10919/101815
    Collections
    • All Faculty Deposits [2262]
    • Scholarly Works, Center for Soft Matter and Biological Physics [36]
    • Scholarly Works, Department of Physics [807]

    If you believe that any material in VTechWorks should be removed, please see our policy and procedure for Requesting that Material be Amended or Removed. All takedown requests will be promptly acknowledged and investigated.

    Virginia Tech | University Libraries | Contact Us
     

     

    VTechWorks

    AboutPoliciesHelp

    Browse

    All of VTechWorksCommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

    My Account

    Log inRegister

    Statistics

    View Usage Statistics

    If you believe that any material in VTechWorks should be removed, please see our policy and procedure for Requesting that Material be Amended or Removed. All takedown requests will be promptly acknowledged and investigated.

    Virginia Tech | University Libraries | Contact Us