Open AccessBook
Introduction to percolation theory
Dietrich Stauffer,Amnon Aharony +1 more
- 01 Jan 1992
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TL;DR: In this article, a scaling solution for the Bethe lattice is proposed for cluster numbers and a scaling assumption for cluster number scaling assumptions for cluster radius and fractal dimension is proposed.
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Abstract: Preface to the Second Edition Preface to the First Edition Introduction: Forest Fires, Fractal Oil Fields, and Diffusion What is percolation? Forest fires Oil fields and fractals Diffusion in disordered media Coming attractions Further reading Cluster Numbers The truth about percolation Exact solution in one dimension Small clusters and animals in d dimensions Exact solution for the Bethe lattice Towards a scaling solution for cluster numbers Scaling assumptions for cluster numbers Numerical tests Cluster numbers away from Pc Further reading Cluster Structure Is the cluster perimeter a real perimeter? Cluster radius and fractal dimension Another view on scaling The infinite cluster at the threshold Further reading Finite-size Scaling and the Renormalization Group Finite-size scaling Small cell renormalization Scaling revisited Large cell and Monte Carlo renormalization Connection to geometry Further reading Conductivity and Related Properties Conductivity of random resistor networks Internal structure of the infinite cluster Multitude of fractal dimensions on the incipient infinite cluster Multifractals Fractal models Renormalization group for internal cluster structure Continuum percolation, Swiss-cheese models and broad distributions Elastic networks Further reading Walks, Dynamics and Quantum Effects Ants in the labyrinth Probability distributions Fractons and superlocalization Hulls and external accessible perimeters Diffusion fronts Invasion percolation Further reading Application to Thermal Phase Transitions Statistical physics and the Ising model Dilute magnets at low temperatures History of droplet descriptions for fluids Droplet definition for the Ising model in zero field The trouble with Kertesz Applications Dilute magnets at finite temperatures Spin glasses Further reading Summary Numerical Techniques
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Citations
Experimental observation of the Anderson metal-insulator transition with atomic matter waves.
Julien Chabé,Gabriel Lemarié,Benoît Grémaud,Dominique Delande,Pascal Szriftgiser,Jean Claude Garreau +5 more
TL;DR: An atom-optics quantum-chaotic system, the quasiperiodic kicked rotor, is realized experimentally, which is equivalent to a 3D disordered system that allows us to demonstrate the Anderson metal-insulator transition.
The self-assembly, aggregation and phase transitions of food protein systems in one, two and three dimensions
Raffaele Mezzenga,Peter Fischer +1 more
TL;DR: This review will tackle the current understanding of protein aggregation in the framework of foods, which is possibly one of the broadest contexts, yet is of tremendous daily relevance.
525
Towards a Theory of Scale-Free Graphs: Definition, Properties, and Implications
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce a structural metric that allows us to differentiate between simple, connected graphs having an identical degree sequence, which is of particular interest when that sequence satisfies a power law relationship.
Statistical models of fracture
TL;DR: An overview of the results obtained with lattice models of the fracture, highlighting the relations with statistical physics theories and more conventional fracture mechanics approaches is presented.
518
Water-based and biocompatible 2D crystal inks for all-inkjet-printed heterostructures
Daryl McManus,Sandra Vranic,Freddie Withers,Veronica Sanchez-Romaguera,Massimo Macucci,Huafeng Yang,Roberto Sorrentino,Khaled Parvez,Seok-Kyun Son,Giuseppe Iannaccone,Kostas Kostarelos,Gianluca Fiori,Cinzia Casiraghi +12 more
TL;DR: A general approach to achieve inkjet-printable, water-based, two-dimensional crystal formulations, which also provide optimal film formation for multi-stack fabrication and in vitro dose-escalation cytotoxicity assays confirm the biocompatibility of the inks, extending their possible use to biomedical applications.
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