Abstract
A phenomenological description of transition from an unstable to a (meta)stable phase state, including microscopic and mesoscopic scales, is presented. It is based on the introduction of specific memory functions which take into account contributions to the driving force of transformation from the past. A region of applicability for phase-field crystals and Swift-Hohenberg-type models is extended by inclusion of inertia effects into the equations of motion through a memory function of an exponential form. The inertia allows us to predict fast degrees of freedom in the form of damping perturbations with finite relaxation time in the instability of homogeneous and periodic model solutions.
- Received 21 January 2009
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.79.051110
©2009 American Physical Society