Long linear polymers in strongly disordered media are well described by self-avoiding walks (SAWs) on percolation clusters and a lot can be learned about the statistics of these polymers by studying the length distribution of SAWs on percolation clusters. This distribution encompasses 2 distinct averages, viz., the average over the conformations of the underlying cluster and the SAW conformations. For the latter average, there are two basic options, one being static and one being kinetic. It is well known for static averaging that if the disorder of the underlying medium is weak, this disorder is redundant in the sense the renormalization group; i.e., differences to the ordered case appear merely in nonuniversal quantities. Using dynamical field theory, we show that the same holds true for kinetic averaging. Our main focus, however, lies on strong disorder, i.e., the medium being close to the percolation point, where disorder is relevant. Employing a field theory for the nonlinear random resistor network in conjunction with a real-world interpretation of the corresponding Feynman diagrams, we calculate the scaling exponents for the shortest, the longest, and the mean or average SAW to 2-loop order. In addition, we calculate to 2-loop order the entire family of multifractal exponents that governs the moments of the the statistical weights of the elementary constituents (bonds or sites of the underlying fractal cluster) contributing to the SAWs. Our RG analysis reveals that kinetic averaging leads to renormalizability whereas static averaging does not, and hence, we argue that the latter does not lead to a well-defined scaling limit. We discuss the possible implications of this finding for experiments and numerical simulations which have produced widespread results for the exponent of the average SAW. To corroborate our results, we also study the well-known Meir-Harris model for SAWs on percolation clusters. We demonstrate that the Meir-Harris model leads back up to 2-loop order to the renormalizable real-world formulation with kinetic averaging if the replica limit is consistently performed at the first possible instant in the course of the calculation.
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Sci Rep
January 2025
School of Mechanics and Engineering, Liaoning Technical University, Fuxin, 123000, China.
Uniaxial compression experiments were conducted on coal rock utilizing a computed tomography (CT) scanning system for real-time monitoring to explain the issue of gas volume significantly exceeding reservoir capacity during coal and gas outbursts. A percolation factor a which can make a significant contribution to the research on premonitory information of gas outbursts is introduced to determine whether percolation occurs in coal rock, and supports the outburst percolation theory. It was found that percolation probability and correlation length increase with greater porosity, and that the number of pore clusters decreases as porosity increases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommun Math Phys
January 2025
Centro de Modelamiento Matemático (AFB170001), UMI-CNRS 2807, Universidad de Chile, Beauchef 851, Santiago, Chile.
Our motivation in this paper is twofold. First, we study the geometry of a class of exploration sets, called , which are naturally associated with a 2D vector-valued Gaussian Free Field : . We prove that, somewhat surprisingly, these sets are a.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
April 2025
Dept. of Engineering, University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli, Real Casa dell'Annunziata, via Roma 29, 81031 Aversa, CE, Italy. Electronic address:
Hypothesis: The porosity affects the rheological response of porous particle suspensions.
Experiments: Non-Brownian suspensions of porous particles immersed in a Newtonian Polyisobutene are investigated. Three different particles, with different porosity, pore structure and similar size, and non-porous irregular particles are used.
Phys Rev E
November 2024
Department of General Physics, The National Technical University of Ukraine "Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute," Kyiv, Ukraine and Institute for Information Recording, NAS of Ukraine, Mykoly Shpaka Street 2, 03113 Kiev, Ukraine.
Structure changes or transitions are common in growing networks (complex networks, graphs, etc.) and must be precisely determined. The introduced quantitative measure of the structural complexity of the network based on a procedure similar to the renormalization process allows one to reveal such changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
November 2024
Sonny Astani Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089-2531, USA.
Statistics of diffusion, modeled by random walks, such as the mean number of distinct sites visited S(t) at time t, the mean probability P_{0}(t) of being at the origin of the walk, and the mean-squared displacements 〈R^{2}(t)〉 of the random walkers have been studied extensively in the past in both regular lattices and such disordered media as percolation clusters and other fractal structures, and universal power laws for such quantities have been derived. S(t) provides insight into reaction properties of geological formations, while P_{0}(t) is directly linked with the problem of back diffusion in remediation of groundwater aquifers. In all such studies, it was assumed that the conductances of the bonds that connect nearest-neighbor sites of the lattices are equal.
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