Kinetic Ising model in an oscillating field: Avrami theory for the hysteretic response and finite-size scaling for the dynamic phase transition
S.W. Sides, P.A. Rikvold, and M.A. Novotny (Florida State University)

TL;DR
This study combines Monte Carlo simulations and analytical theory to analyze hysteresis and dynamic phase transitions in a 2D kinetic Ising model under oscillating fields, revealing slow asymptotic behavior and critical scaling.
Contribution
It introduces a time-dependent Avrami theory to predict hysteresis properties and applies finite-size scaling to characterize the nonequilibrium phase transition.
Findings
Logarithmic approach of loop area to asymptote at low frequencies
Identification of a dynamic phase transition at higher frequencies
Estimation of critical exponents and transition frequency
Abstract
Hysteresis is studied for a two-dimensional, spin-1/2, nearest-neighbor, kinetic Ising ferromagnet in an oscillating field, using Monte Carlo simulations and analytical theory. Attention is focused on large systems and strong field amplitudes at a temperature below T_c. In this parameter regime, the magnetization switches through random nucleation and subsequent growth of many droplets of spins aligned with the applied field. Using a time-dependent extension of the Kolmogorov-Johnson-Mehl-Avrami (KJMA) theory of metastable decay, we analyze the statistical properties of the hysteresis-loop area and the correlation between the magnetization and the applied field. This analysis enables us to accurately predict the results of extensive Monte Carlo simulations. The average loop area exhibits an extremely slow approach to an asymptotic, logarithmic dependence on the product of the amplitude…
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