Publication | Open Access
Drifting spatial structures in a system with oppositely driven species
19
Citations
16
References
1997
Year
EngineeringFluid MechanicsDriven SpeciesPopulation DynamicNumerical SimulationTransport PhenomenaChaotic MixingBiophysicsParticle-laden FlowSpatial StructuresPhysicsActive MatterNon-equilibrium ProcessExcluded Volume InteractionPattern FormationDeterministic Dynamical SystemApplied PhysicsMedicineSpatial StructureCritical PhenomenonMultiscale Modeling
A system consisting of two conservative, oppositely driven species of particles with excluded volume interaction alone is studied on a torus. The system undergoes a phase transition between homogeneous and inhomogeneous phases, as the particle densities are varied. Focusing on the inhomogeneous phase with generally unequal numbers of the two species, the spatial structure is found to drift counterintuitively against the majority species at a constant velocity that depends on the external field, system size, and particle densities. Such dependences are derived from a coarse-grained continuum theory, and a microscopic mechanism for the drift is explained. With virtually no tuning parameter, various theoretical predictions, notably a field-system-size scaling, agree extremely well with the simulations.
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