25,507 research outputs found

    Comment on "Dynamic Scaling of Non-Euclidean Interfaces" [arXiv:0804.1898]

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    This is the revised version of a Comment on a paper by C. Escudero (Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 116101, 2008; arXiv:0804.1898)

    Anti-Coarsening and Complex Dynamics of Step Bunches on Vicinal Surfaces during Sublimation

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    A sublimating vicinal crystal surface can undergo a step bunching instability when the attachment-detachment kinetics is asymmetric, in the sense of a normal Ehrlich-Schwoebel effect. Here we investigate this instability in a model that takes into account the subtle interplay between sublimation and step-step interactions, which breaks the volume-conserving character of the dynamics assumed in previous work. On the basis of a systematically derived continuum equation for the surface profile, we argue that the non-conservative terms pose a limitation on the size of emerging step bunches. This conclusion is supported by extensive simulations of the discrete step dynamics, which show breakup of large bunches into smaller ones as well as arrested coarsening and periodic oscillations between states with different numbers of bunches.Comment: 26 pages, 11 figure

    Power laws in surface physics: The deep, the shallow and the useful

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    The growth and dynamics of solid surfaces displays a multitude of power law relationships, which are often associated with geometric self-similarity. In many cases the mechanisms behind these power laws are comparatively trivial, and require little more than dimensional analysis for their derivation. The information of interest to surface physicists then resides in the prefactors. This point will be illustrated by recent experimental and theoretical work on the growth-induced roughening of thin films and step fluctuations on vicinal surfaces. The conventional distinction between trivial and nontrivial power laws will be critically examined in general, and specifically in the context of persistence of step fluctuations.Comment: To appear in a special issue of Physica A in memory of Per Ba

    Dynamic phase transitions in electromigration-induced step bunching

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    Electromigration-induced step bunching in the presence of sublimation or deposition is studied theoretically in the attachment-limited regime. We predict a phase transition as a function of the relative strength of kinetic asymmetry and step drift. For weak asymmetry the number of steps between bunches grows logarithmically with bunch size, whereas for strong asymmetry at most a single step crosses between two bunches. In the latter phase the emission and absorption of steps is a collective process which sets in only above a critical bunch size and/or step interaction strength.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Scaling regimes for second layer nucleation

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    Nucleation on top of two-dimensional islands with step edge barriers is investigated using scaling arguments. The nucleation rate is expressed in terms of three basic time scales: The time interval between deposition events, the residence time of atoms on the island, and the encounter time required for i+1i^\ast + 1 atoms forming a stable nucleus to meet. Application to the problem of second-layer nucleation on growing first layer islands yields a sequence of scaling regimes with different scaling exponents relating the critical island size, at which nucleation takes place, to the diffusion and deposition rates. Second layer nucleation is fluctuation-dominated, in the sense that the typical number of atoms on the island is small compared to i+1i^\ast + 1, when the first layer island density exponent χ\chi satisfies χ(i+1)<2\chi (i^\ast + 1) < 2. The upper critical nucleus size, above which the conventional mean-field theory of second layer nucleation is valid, increases with decreasing dimensionality. In the related case of nucleation on top of multilayer mounds fluctuation-dominated and mean-field like regimes coexist for arbitrary values of the critical nucleus size ii^\ast.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure

    Persistence of Kardar-Parisi-Zhang Interfaces

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    The probabilities P±(t0,t)P_\pm(t_0,t) that a growing Kardar-Parisi-Zhang interface remains above or below the mean height in the time interval (t0,t)(t_0, t) are shown numerically to decay as P±(t0/t)θ±P_\pm \sim (t_0/t)^{\theta_\pm} with θ+=1.18±0.08\theta_+ = 1.18 \pm 0.08 and θ=1.64±0.08\theta_- = 1.64 \pm 0.08. Bounds on θ±\theta_\pm are derived from the height autocorrelation function under the assumption of Gaussian statistics. The autocorrelation exponent λˉ\bar \lambda for a dd--dimensional interface with roughness and dynamic exponents β\beta and zz is conjectured to be λˉ=β+d/z\bar \lambda = \beta + d/z. For a recently proposed discretization of the KPZ equation we find oscillatory persistence probabilities, indicating hidden temporal correlations.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, uses revtex and psfi

    Growth of Nanosize and Colloid Particles by Controlled Addition of Singlets

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    We outline a theoretical framework for estimating the evolution of the particle size distribution in colloid and nanoparticle synthesis, when the primary growth mode is by externally controlled addition of singlet building blocks. The master equations, analyzed in the leading "non-diffusive" expansion approximation, are reduced to a set of easily numerically programmable relations that yield information on the time evolution of the particle size distribution.Comment: 9 pages in PD

    Public Finance in China since the Late Qing Dynasty

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    How is "public finance" organized in China? Is China’s public finance system different from that of other countries? Can we detect features which link today’s system to the past?Public finance refers to more than annual state budgets and constitutional procedures. It includes foreign debt, state monopolies or monetary policies, all of which played a crucial role in China’s public finance during the last hundred years. A purely legislative definition obscures the fact that changes in public finance have contributed to the collapse of political regimes such as Imperial China (1911), Republican China (1927), and KMT-China (1945), as well engendered regime changes in 1949, 1961 and 1978. From a more comprehensive economic perspective public finance in China encompasses institutions, organizations and policies.public finance;China;KMT-China;imperial China;republican China
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