Hf. Meng et Egd. Cohen, GROWTH, SELF-RANDOMIZATION, AND PROPAGATION IN A LORENTZ LATTICE-GAS, Physical review. E, Statistical physics, plasmas, fluids, and related interdisciplinary topics, 50(4), 1994, pp. 2482-2487
A systematic study is carried out of a Lorentz lattice gas in order to
model the growth dynamics of order-disorder interfaces. In the model,
a particle, initially at the origin, moves on the bonds of an initial
ly ordered square lattice, with sites covered by periodically repeated
square blocks of 1, 4, or 9 right or left scattering rotators, whose
orientations change after collisions with the particle. Depending then
on the initial conditions of the blocks and the particle, one observe
s the following: (a) the particle randomizes the rotator orientations
completely, in an ever growing disordered ''liquid'' phase inside the
ordered ''solid'' phase on the rest of the lattice; (b) the particle p
ropagates suddenly after a transient randomization period as in (a); o
r (c) the particle propagates through the ordered lattice immediately.
A simple picture for the growth of the randomized region, which proce
eds via an interface of fractal dimension 0.75, is discussed. The natu
re of the propagation for the cases mentioned can be modified by colli
sions with impurities.