Scaling properties of driven interfaces in disordered media
L.A.N. Amaral, A.-L. Barabasi, H.A. Makse, and H.E. Stanley (Center, for Polymer Studies, Dept. of Physics, Boston University)

TL;DR
This paper classifies driven disordered interface models into two universality classes, analyzes their scaling properties above the depinning transition, and provides new critical exponents and scaling relations to better understand experimental and numerical results.
Contribution
It identifies two main universality classes for driven interfaces in disordered media and investigates their scaling behavior above the depinning transition, revealing new exponents and scaling relations.
Findings
Two universality classes: DPD and QEW.
Distinct behavior of the nonlinear coefficient λ at depinning.
New roughness and growth exponents above depinning.
Abstract
We perform a systematic study of several models that have been proposed for the purpose of understanding the motion of driven interfaces in disordered media. We identify two distinct universality classes: (i) One of these, referred to as directed percolation depinning (DPD), can be described by a Langevin equation similar to the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation, but with quenched disorder. (ii) The other, referred to as quenched Edwards-Wilkinson (QEW), can be described by a Langevin equation similar to the Edwards-Wilkinson equation but with quenched disorder. We find that for the DPD universality class the coefficient of the nonlinear term diverges at the depinning transition, while for the QEW universality class either or as the depinning transition is approached. The identification of the two universality classes allows us to better understand…
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