Phase-ordering kinetics in the Allen-Cahn (Model A) class: universal aspects elucidated by electrically-induced transition in liquid crystals
Renan A. L. Almeida, Kazumasa A. Takeuchi

TL;DR
This study experimentally verifies universal aspects of phase-ordering kinetics in the Allen-Cahn class using liquid crystal transitions, confirming theoretical predictions and revealing new insights into correlation functions and persistence phenomena.
Contribution
It provides experimental validation of key theoretical models for phase-ordering kinetics in 2D liquid crystals, including dynamic exponents and correlation function behaviors.
Findings
Confirmation of dynamic exponent z=2 and dynamic scaling hypothesis.
Validation of Bray-Humayun theory for Porod's regime.
Identification of local scaling invariance as best describing two-time correlators.
Abstract
The two-dimensional (2d) Ising model is the statistical physics textbook example for phase transitions and their kinetics. Quenched through the Curie point with Glauber rates, the late-time description of the ferromagnetic domain coarsening finds its place at the scalar sector of the Allen-Cahn (Model A) class. Resisting exact results sought since Lifshitz's account in 1962, central quantities in 2d Model A most scaling exponents and correlation functions remain known up to approximate theories whose disparate outcomes urge experimental assessment. Here, we perform such assessment from a comprehensive study of the coarsening of 2d twisted nematic liquid crystals whose kinetics is induced by a super-fast switching from a spatiotemporally chaotic state to a two-phase concurrent, equilibrium one. Tracking the dynamics via optical microscopy, we firstly show the sharp evidence of…
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