A growing self-avoiding walk in three dimensions and its relation to percolation
- 1 June 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review A
- Vol. 45 (12) , 8513-8524
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physreva.45.8513
Abstract
We introduce a growing self-avoiding walk in three dimensions (3D) that can terminate only by returning to its point of origin. This ‘‘tricolor walk’’ depends on two parameters, p and q, and is a direct generalization of the smart kinetic walk to 3D. Our walk is closely related to percolation with three colors (black, white, and gray): the tricolor walk directly constructs a loop formed by the confluence of a black, a white, and a gray cluster. The parameters p and q are the fraction of sites colored black and white, respectively. We present numerical and analytical evidence that for p=q=1/3, the fractal dimension of the tricolor walk is exactly 2. For p=qp≃0.2915. Our Monte Carlo simulations strongly suggest that this transition is not in the same universality class as the usual percolation transition in 3D. The mean length of the finite walks χ is divergent throughout an extended region of the parameter space.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diffusion-limited growth of polymer chainsPhysical Review A, 1986
- Monte Carlo study of linear diffusion-limited aggregationJournal of Physics A: General Physics, 1986
- Monte Carlo series analysis of irreversible self-avoiding walks. II. The growing self-avoiding walkJournal of Physics A: General Physics, 1986
- Monte Carlo series analysis of irreversible self-avoiding walks. I. The indefinitely-growing self-avoiding walk (IGSAW)Journal of Physics A: General Physics, 1985
- A new kinetic walk and percolation perimetersPhysical Review B, 1985
- Indefinitely Growing Self-Avoiding WalkPhysical Review Letters, 1985
- The growing self avoiding walkJournal of Physics A: General Physics, 1984
- An average self-avoiding random walk on the square lattice lasts 71 stepsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1984
- Kinetic Growth Walk: A New Model for Linear PolymersPhysical Review Letters, 1984
- Asymptotic behavior of the "true" self-avoiding walkPhysical Review B, 1983