论文标题
在非平衡POTTS模型中的熵生产
Entropy production at criticality in a nonequilibrium Potts model
论文作者
论文摘要
与平衡情况相比,了解非平衡系统以及不可逆性对系统行为的后果是统计物理学的一个基本问题。在这里,我们研究了两种类型的非排期相变类,即二阶和无限级相变,它是在典型的Q-State矢量Potts模型中,通过在两个不同的温度下旋转以热浴进行热浴,从平衡中驱动了平衡。我们讨论了(平衡)相变附近通常考虑的数量的行为,例如特定的热量,并研究了熵产生(EP)的行为,该行为直接量化了该过程的不可逆性。对于二阶相变,我们表明通用类别保持与平衡相同。此外,EP速率相对于温度在临界点上与幂律的差异相差,但显示非全临界指数,该指数取决于温度差,即驾驶的强度。对于无限级过渡,EP的衍生物在无序相中表现出最大值,类似于特定的热量。但是,与特定的热量相比,其最大热量与驾驶强度无关,EP的衍生物的最大值随温度差的增加而增长。我们还考虑熵波动,并发现它们的偏度随着二阶过渡附近以及无限级过渡的附近的驱动强度而增加。
Understanding nonequilibrium systems and the consequences of irreversibility for the system's behavior as compared to the equilibrium case, is a fundamental question in statistical physics. Here, we investigate two types of nonequilbrium phase transitions, a second-order and an infinite-order phase transition, in a prototypical q-state vector Potts model which is driven out of equilibrium by coupling the spins to heat baths at two different temperatures. We discuss the behavior of the quantities that are typically considered in the vicinity of (equilibrium) phase transitions, like the specific heat, and moreover investigate the behavior of the entropy production (EP), which directly quantifies the irreversibility of the process. For the second-order phase transition, we show that the universality class remains the same as in equilibrium. Further, the derivative of the EP rate with respect to the temperature diverges with a power-law at the critical point, but displays a non-universal critical exponent, which depends on the temperature difference, i.e., the strength of the driving. For the infinite-order transition, the derivative of the EP exhibits a maximum in the disordered phase, similar to the specific heat. However, in contrast to the specific heat, whose maximum is independent of the strength of the driving, the maximum of the derivative of the EP grows with increasing temperature difference. We also consider entropy fluctuations and find that their skewness increases with the driving strength, in both cases, in the vicinity of the second-order transition, as well as around the infinite-order transition.