L-2

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Stochastic Interfaces and growth processes

The physical properties of many materials are controlled by the interfaces embedded in it. This is the case of the dislocations in a crystal, the domain walls in a ferromagnet or the vortices in a supercoductors. In the next lecture we will discuss how impurities affect the behviour of these interfaces. Today we focus on thermal fluctuations and introduce two important equations for the interface dynamics: the Edward Wilkinson euqation and the Kardar Parisi Zhang equation.

An interface at Equilibrium: the Edward Wilkinson equation

Consider domain wall fluctuating at equilibrium at the temparature . Here is time, defines the d-dimensional coordinate of the interface and is the scalar height field. Hence, the domain wall separating two phases in a film has , in a solid instead .

Two assumptions are done:

  • Overhangs, pinch-off are neglected, so that is a scalar univalued function.
  • The dynamics is overdamped, so that we can neglect the inertial term.

The Langevin equation of motion is

Failed to parse (syntax error): {\displaystyle \partial_t h(r,t)= - \mu \frac{\delta E_{pot}}{\delta h(r,t)} + \eta(r,t) \\ \langle \eta(r,t) \rangle =0 \; \langle \eta(r',t')\eta(r,t) \rangle = 2 D \delta^d(r-r') \delta(t-t') }

The first term is the elastic force trying to smooth the interface, the mobility is inversily proportional to the viscosity and the diffusion constant is fixed by the Eistein relation (fluctuation-dissipation theorem):

The potential energy of surface tension is

Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle E_{pot} = \sigma \int d^d r\sqrt{1 +(\grad h)^2} \sim \text{const.} + \frac{\sigma}{2} \int d^d r (\grad h)^2 }