Depinning in the quenched Kardar-Parisi-Zhang class. I. Mappings, simulations, and algorithm
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
American Physical Society
Fecha
2023-05-30Referencia bibliográfica
Gauthier Mukerjee, Juan A. Bonachela, Miguel A. Muñoz, and Kay Jörg Wiese Phys. Rev. E 107, 054136https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.107.054136]
Resumen
Depinning of elastic systems advancing on disordered media can usually be described by the quenched
Edwards-Wilkinson equation (qEW). However, additional ingredients such as anharmonicity and forces that
cannot be derived from a potential energy may generate a different scaling behavior at depinning. The most
experimentally relevant is the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) term, proportional to the square of the slope at each
site, which drives the critical behavior into the so-called quenched KPZ (qKPZ) universality class.We study this
universality class both numerically and analytically: by using exact mappings we show that at least for d = 1, 2
this class encompasses not only the qKPZ equation itself, but also anharmonic depinning and a well-known class
of cellular automata introduced by Tang and Leschhorn.We develop scaling arguments for all critical exponents,
including size and duration of avalanches. The scale is set by the confining potential strength m2. This allows
us to estimate numerically these exponents as well as the m-dependent effective force correlator (w), and its
correlation length ρ := (0)/|
(0)|. Finally, we present an algorithm to numerically estimate the effective
(m-dependent) elasticity c, and the effective KPZ nonlinearity λ. This allows us to define a dimensionless
universal KPZ amplitude A := ρλ/c, which takes the value A = 1.10(2) in all systems considered in d = 1.
This proves that qKPZ is the effective field theory for all these models. Our work paves the way for a deeper
understanding of depinning in the qKPZ class, and in particular, for the construction of a field theory that we
describe in a companion paper.





