Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
February 2014
We present numerical evidence for an extended order parameter and conjugate field for the dynamic phase transition in a Ginzburg-Landau mean-field model driven by an oscillating field. The order parameter, previously taken to be the time-averaged magnetization, comprises the deviations of the Fourier components of the magnetization from their values at the critical period. The conjugate field, previously taken to be the time-averaged magnetic field, comprises the even Fourier components of the field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Distributed robustness is thought to influence the buffering of random phenotypic variation through the scale-free topology of gene regulatory, metabolic, and protein-protein interaction networks. If this hypothesis is true, then the phenotypic response to the perturbation of particular nodes in such a network should be proportional to the number of links those nodes make with neighboring nodes. This suggests a probability distribution approximating an inverse power-law of random phenotypic variation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present results of computational modeling of the formation of uniform spherical silver particles prepared by rapid mixing of ascorbic acid and silver-amine complex solutions in the absence of a dispersing agent. Using an accelerated integration scheme to speed up the calculation of particle size distributions in the latter stages, we find that the recently reported experimental results-some of which are summarized here-can be modeled effectively by the two-stage formation mechanism used previously to model the preparation of uniform gold spheres. We treat both the equilibrium concentration of silver atoms and the surface tension of silver precursor nanocrystals as free parameters, and find that the experimental reaction time scale is fit by a narrow region of this two-parameter space.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe phenomenon of burst nucleation in solution, in which a period of apparent chemical inactivity is followed by a sudden and explosive growth of nucleated particles from a solute species, has been given a widely accepted qualitative explanation by LaMer and co-workers. Here, we present a model with the assumptions of instantaneous re-thermalization below the critical nucleus size and irreversible diffusive growth above the critical size, which for the first time formulates LaMer's explanation of burst nucleation in a manner allowing quantitative calculations. The behavior of the model at large times, t, is derived with the result that the average cluster size, as measured by the number of atoms, grows approximately t, while the width of the cluster distribution grows approximately (sq root)1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
May 2003
The magnetic hysteresis of a two-dimensional lattice of rotors with four-way anisotropy interaction and a Heisenberg exchange interaction is studied. The Hamiltonian dynamics of the lattice is thermostated using the Nosé thermostat, resulting in a system that approaches thermal equilibrium and which under certain conditions can remain in metastable states. Using physically realistic values for the interactions in a nanoparticle of monolayer thickness, we locate the Curie temperature of our lattice by determining the peak of the heat capacity curve.
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