H.D. Dulman, R.H. Pantell, et al.
Physical Review B
We compare the exact kinetics of the Langevin equation and two kinetic Ising models for the case of true mean-field interactions. Kinetic Ising model I is the traditional Monte Carlo approach-spins are picked at random and flipped according to a heat-bath probabiilty function. In analogy to diffusive mechanisms in crystals, model II incorporates a large energy barrier to motion and the spin-flip rate is exponentially activated. The behaviors of these two spin-flip models are in general fundamentally different. The model-I kinetics saturate with increasing driving enthalpy while the model-II kinetics do not. If the Langevin kinetic coefficient Γ is taken to be constant, agreement between the Langevin and spin-flip kinetics is limited to the linear-response regime. However, if Γ is allowed to vary with the instantaneous magnetization, good agreement extends to the intermediate-driving-force regime scrF∼0.5kBT. For large driving forces scrFkBT, the Langevin kinetics is intrinsically different from that of either spin model. © 1992 The American Physical Society.
H.D. Dulman, R.H. Pantell, et al.
Physical Review B
Frank R. Libsch, Takatoshi Tsujimura
Active Matrix Liquid Crystal Displays Technology and Applications 1997
P. Alnot, D.J. Auerbach, et al.
Surface Science
Arvind Kumar, Jeffrey J. Welser, et al.
MRS Spring 2000