The exchange-driven growth model: basic properties and longtime behavior
Abstract
The exchange-driven growth model describes a process in which pairs of clusters interact through the exchange of single monomers. The rate of exchange is given by an interaction kernel K which depends on the size of the two interacting clusters. Well-posedness of the model is established for kernels growing at most linearly and arbitrary initial data. The longtime behavior is established under a detailed balance condition on the kernel. The total mass density , determined by the initial data, acts as an order parameter, in which the system shows a phase transition. There is a critical value c∈ (0,∞] characterized by the rate kernel. For ≤ c, there exists a unique equilibrium state ω and the solution converges strongly to ω. If > c the solution converges only weakly to ωc. In particular, the excess - c gets lost due to the formation of larger and larger clusters. In this regard, the model behaves similarly to the Becker-D\"oring equation. The main ingredient for the longtime behavior is the free energy acting as Lyapunov function for the evolution. It is also the driving functional for a gradient flow structure of the system under the detailed balance condition.
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