Diffusion Spreadability as a Probe of the Microstructure of Complex Media Across Length Scales
Salvatore Torquato

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new measure called spreadability to analyze the microstructure of complex media through diffusion, providing exact formulas and behaviors that distinguish different microstructural classes, including hyperuniform and nonhyperuniform media.
Contribution
It derives exact formulas for spreadability in any dimension, linking microstructure to diffusion behavior and revealing new connections to geometry and imaging techniques.
Findings
Exact formulas for spreadability in any Euclidean dimension.
Long-time behavior distinguishes microstructure classes, including hyperuniformity.
Hyperuniform media exhibit exponentially faster decay of excess spreadability.
Abstract
Consider the time-dependent problem of mass transfer of a solute between two phases and assume that the solute is initially distributed in one phase (phase 2) and absent from the other (phase 1). We desire the fraction of total solute present in phase 1 as a function of time, , which we call the {\it spreadability}, since it is a measure of the spreadability of diffusion information as a function of time. We derive exact direct-space formulas for in any Euclidean space dimension in terms of the autocovariance function as well as corresponding Fourier representations of in terms of the spectral density. We derive closed-form general formulas for the short- and long-time behaviors of the spreadability in terms of crucial small- and large-scale microstructural information, respectively. The long-time behavior of enables one to…
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