Percolation analysis

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This entry focuses on the application of percolation analysis to problems in statistical mechanics. For a general discussion see Refs. [1] [2]

Sites, bonds, and clusters

This topic concerns the analysis of connectivity of elements (sites) distributed in different positions of a given large system. Using some connectivity rules it is possible to define bonds between pairs of sites. These bonds can be used to build up clusters of sites. Two sites in a cluster can be connected directly by a bond between them or indirectly by one or more sequences of bonds between pairs of sites. The sites of the system can belong to different types (species in the chemistry language). Bonds are usually permitted only between near sites.

Connectivity rules

The connectivity rules (bonding criteria) that permit the creation of bonds can be of different nature: distance between sites, energetic interaction, types of sites, etc. In addition the bonding criteria can be deterministic or probabilistic. In the statistical mechanics applications one can find different bonding criteria, for example:

  • Geometric distance: Two sites, i, j, are bonded if the distance between then satisfies: .
  • Energetic criteria: Two sites i, j, has a bonding probability given by

Percolation threshold

The sizes of the clusters of a given system depend on different control parameters: density and distribution of sites, bonding criteria (which could include the effect of temperature and energy interactions), etc.

Let us consider some initial conditions of the control parameters, in which, the bonding criteria leads to the formation of small clusters, i.e. all the cluster contain a small number of particles and the cluster size is much smaller than the linear dimension of the system. Now, if one varies gradually some control parameter(s) to increase the number of bonds in the system, then the number of clusters is expected to decrease, the number of sites per cluster and the cluster size will increase; and, eventually, the largest cluster size(s) will be similar to the overall system size (the system reaches the percolation threshold of the percolation transition).

Percolation and boundary conditions

There are different possible criteria to consider that a cluster has percolated. The choice of percolation criteria usually depends on computational convenience, type of boundary conditions, dimensionality of the space, etc. In the particular case of considering periodic boundary conditions, a cluster realization is usually considered as percolating when, at least, one of the clusters becomes of infinite size (length) in, at least, one direction. This infinite size occurs, obviously, via the replication of the system that appears due to the periodic boundary conditions.

Percolation and finite-size scaling analysis

Example

Let us consider a standard example of percolation theory, a two-dimensional square lattice in which:

  • Each site of the lattice can be occupied (by one particle) or empty, and
  • The probability of occupancy of each site is .
  • Two sites are considered to be bonded if and only if:
    • They are nearest neighbors and
    • Both sites are occupied.

Fraction of percolation realizations

On such a system, it is possible to perform simulations considering different system sizes (with sites), using periodic boundary conditions. In such simulations one can generate different system realizations for given values of , and compute the fraction, , of realizations with percolating clusters. For low values of , () we will get , whereas when , then . Considering the behavior of as a function of , for different values of the transition between and occurs more abruptly as increases. In addition, it is possible to compute the value of the occupancy probability at which the transition would take place for an infinite system (so to say, in the thermodynamic limit).

References

  1. Dietrich Stauffer and Ammon Aharony "Introduction to Percolation Theory", CRC Press (1994) ISBN 9780748402533
  2. S. Torquato "Random Heterogeneous Materials, Microscopic and Macroscopic Properties", Springer, New York (2002) ISBN 9780387951676