Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 15 de 15
Filtrar
1.
Phys Rev E ; 109(4): L042102, 2024 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38755819

RESUMEN

Two-dimensional (2D) Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) growth is usually investigated on substrates of lateral sizes L_{x}=L_{y}, so that L_{x} and the correlation length (ξ) are the only relevant lengths determining the scaling behavior. However, in cylindrical geometry, as well as in flat rectangular substrates L_{x}≠L_{y} and, thus, the surfaces can become correlated in a single direction, when ξ∼L_{x}≪L_{y}. From extensive simulations of several KPZ models, we demonstrate that this yields a dimensional crossover in their dynamics, with the roughness scaling as W∼t^{ß_{2D}} for t≪t_{c} and W∼t^{ß_{1D}} for t≫t_{c}, where t_{c}∼L_{x}^{1/z_{2D}}. The height distributions (HDs) also cross over from the 2D flat (cylindrical) HD to the asymptotic Tracy-Widom Gaussian orthogonal ensemble (Gaussian unitary ensemble) distribution. Moreover, 2D to one-dimensional (1D) crossovers are found also in the asymptotic growth velocity and in the steady-state regime of flat systems, where a family of universal HDs exists, interpolating between the 2D and 1D ones as L_{y}/L_{x} increases. Importantly, the crossover scalings are fully determined and indicate a possible way to solve 2D KPZ models.

2.
Phys Rev E ; 107(6-1): 064140, 2023 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37464689

RESUMEN

While the one-point height distributions (HDs) and two-point covariances of (2+1) Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) systems have been investigated in several recent works for flat and spherical geometries, for the cylindrical one the HD was analyzed for few models and nothing is known about the spatial and temporal covariances. Here, we report results for these quantities, obtained from extensive numerical simulations of discrete KPZ models, for three different setups yielding cylindrical growth. Beyond demonstrating the universality of the HD and covariances, our results reveal other interesting features of this geometry. For example, the spatial covariances measured along the longitudinal and azimuthal directions are different, with the former being quite similar to the curve for flat (2+1) KPZ systems, while the latter resembles the Airy_{2} covariance of circular (1+1) KPZ interfaces. We also argue (and present numerical evidence) that, in general, the rescaled temporal covariance A(t/t_{0}) decays asymptotically as A(x)∼x^{-λ[over ¯]} with an exponent λ[over ¯]=ß+d^{*}/z, where d^{*} is the number of interface sides kept fixed during the growth (being d^{*}=1 for the systems analyzed here). Overall, these results complete the picture of the main statistics for the (2+1) KPZ class.

3.
Phys Rev E ; 108(6-1): 064802, 2023 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38243503

RESUMEN

We perform kinetic Monte Carlo simulations of film growth in simple cubic lattices with solid-on-solid conditions, Ehrlich-Schwoebel (ES) barriers at step edges, and a kinetic barrier related to the hidden off-plane diffusion at multilayer steps. Broad ranges of the diffusion-to-deposition ratio R, detachment probability per lateral neighbor, ε, and monolayer step crossing probability P=exp[-E_{ES}/(k_{B}T)] are studied. Without the ES barrier, four possible scaling regimes are shown as the coverage θ increases: nearly layer-by-layer growth with damped roughness oscillations; kinetic roughening in the Villain-Lai-Das Sarma (VLDS) universality class when the roughness is W∼1 (in lattice units); unstable roughening with mound nucleation and growth, where slopes of logW×logθ plots reach values larger than 0.5; and asymptotic statistical growth with W=θ^{1/2} solely due to the kinetic barrier at multilayer steps. If the ES barrier is present, the layer-by-layer growth crosses over directly to the unstable regime, with no transient VLDS scaling. However, in simulations up to θ=10^{4} (typical of films with a few micrometers), low temperatures (small R, Îµ, or P) may suppress the two or three initial regimes, while high temperatures and P∼1 produce smooth surfaces at all thicknesses. These crossovers help to explain proposals of nonuniversal exponents in previous works. We define a smooth film thickness θ_{c} where W=1 and show that VLDS scaling at that point indicates negligible ES barriers, while rapidly increasing roughness indicates a small ES barrier (E_{ES}∼k_{B}T). θ_{c} scales as ∼exp(const×P^{2/3}) if the other parameters are kept fixed, which represents a high sensitivity on the ES barrier. The analysis of recent experimental data in the light of our results distinguishes cases where E_{ES}/(k_{B}T) is negligible, ∼1, or ≪1.

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(45): 27856-27865, 2022 Nov 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36367016

RESUMEN

We study a thin-film electrodeposition model that represents the relaxation of the deposited material by adatom diffusion on quenched crystal topographies and considers simple mechanisms of cation flux in the electrolyte. The results of numerical simulations with collimated flux and a rapid cation reduction in contact with the deposit relate the surface roughness and the adatom hop numbers with two model parameters. A comparison with the results of a collective diffusion model for vapor deposition shows differences in the surface morphologies but similarities in scaling relations, which suggest thermally activated (Arrhenius) forms for the parameters of the electrodeposition model and relate one of them to the applied current. Simulations with purely diffusive cation flux and possible pore formation in simple cubic lattices show the growth of self-organized structures with leaf shapes (dendrites) above a compact layer that covers the flat electrode. The thickness of this layer and the average dendrite size also obey scaling relations in terms of the model parameters, which predict that both sizes decrease with the applied current, in agreement with recent experimental studies. Under all flux conditions, an increase in adatom diffusivity with temperature implies an increase in the average sizes of low-energy surface configurations, independently of their particular shapes. Finally, we note that a previously proposed model for electrodeposition produced similar morphologies, but the quantitative relations for the characteristic sizes differ from those of the present model, which also advances with a consistent interpretation of temperature effects.

5.
Phys Rev E ; 105(5-1): 054804, 2022 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35706246

RESUMEN

Fundamental properties of an interface evolving on a domain of size L, such as its height distribution (HD) and two-point covariances, are known to assume universal but different forms depending on whether L is fixed (flat geometry) or expands linearly in time (radial growth). The interesting situation where L varies nonlinearly, however, is far less explored and it has never been tackled for two-dimensional (2D) interfaces. Here, we study discrete Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) growth models deposited on square lattice substrates, whose (average) lateral size enlarges as L=L_{0}+ωt^{γ}. Our numerical simulations reveal that the competition between the substrate expansion and the increase of the correlation length parallel to the substrate, ξ≃ct^{1/z}, gives rise to a number of interesting results. For instance, when γ<1/z the interface becomes fully correlated, but its squared roughness, W_{2}, keeps increasing as W_{2}∼t^{2αγ}, as previously observed for one-dimensional (1D) systems. A careful analysis of this scaling, accounting for an intrinsic width on it, allows us to estimate the roughness exponent of the 2D KPZ class as α=0.387(1), which is very accurate and robust, once it was obtained averaging the exponents for different models and growth conditions (i.e., for various γ^{'}s and ω^{'}s). In this correlated regime, the HDs and covariances are consistent with those expected for the steady-state regime of the 2D KPZ class for flat geometry. For γ≈1/z, we find a family of distributions and covariances continuously interpolating between those for the steady-state and the growth regime of radial KPZ interfaces, as the ratio ω/c augments. When γ>1/z the system stays forever in the growth regime and the HDs always converge to the same asymptotic distribution, which is the one for the radial case. The spatial covariances, on the other hand, are (γ,ω)-dependent, showing a trend towards the covariance of a random deposition in enlarging substrates as the expansion rate increases. These results considerably generalize our understanding of the height fluctuations in 2D KPZ systems, revealing a scenario very similar to the one previously found in the 1D case.

6.
Phys Rev E ; 103(2-1): 022138, 2021 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33736020

RESUMEN

The infiltration of a solute in a fractal porous medium is usually anomalous, but chemical reactions of the solute and that material may increase the porosity and affect the evolution of the infiltration. We study this problem in two- and three-dimensional lattices with randomly distributed porous sites at the critical percolation thresholds and with a border in contact with a reservoir of an aggressive solute. The solute infiltrates that medium by diffusion and the reactions with the impermeable sites produce new porous sites with a probability r, which is proportional to the ratio of reaction and diffusion rates at the scale of a lattice site. Numerical simulations for r≪1 show initial subdiffusive scaling and long time Fickean scaling of the infiltrated volumes or areas, but with an intermediate regime with time increasing rates of infiltration and reaction. The anomalous exponent of the initial regime agrees with a relation previously applied to infinitely ramified fractals. We develop a scaling approach that explains the subsequent time increase of the infiltration rate, the dependence of this rate on r, and the crossover to the Fickean regime. The exponents of the scaling relations depend on the fractal dimensions of the critical percolation clusters and on the dimensions of random walks in those clusters. The time increase of the reaction rate is also justified by that reasoning. As r decreases, there is an increase in the number of time decades of the intermediate regime, which suggests that the time increasing rates are more likely to be observed is slowly reacting systems.

7.
Phys Rev E ; 102(1-1): 012805, 2020 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32794924

RESUMEN

We study the statistics of the number of executed hops of adatoms at the surface of films grown with the Clarke-Vvedensky (CV) model in simple cubic lattices. The distributions of this number N are determined in films with average thicknesses close to 50 and 100 monolayers for a broad range of values of the diffusion-to-deposition ratio R and of the probability ε that lowers the diffusion coefficient for each lateral neighbor. The mobility of subsurface atoms and the energy barriers for crossing step edges are neglected. Simulations show that the adatoms execute uncorrelated diffusion during the time in which they move on the film surface. In a low temperature regime, typically with Rε≲1, the attachment to lateral neighbors is almost irreversible, the average number of hops scales as 〈N〉∼R^{0.38±0.01}, and the distribution of that number decays approximately as exp[-(N/〈N〉)^{0.80±0.07}]. Similar decay is observed in simulations of random walks in a plane with randomly distributed absorbing traps and the estimated relation between 〈N〉 and the density of terrace steps is similar to that observed in the trapping problem, which provides a conceptual explanation of that regime. As the temperature increases, 〈N〉 crosses over to another regime when Rε^{3.0±0.3}∼1, which indicates high mobility of all adatoms at terrace borders. The distributions P(N) change to simple exponential decays, due to the constant probability for an adatom to become immobile after being covered by a new deposited layer. At higher temperatures, the surfaces become very smooth and 〈N〉∼Rε^{1.85±0.15}, which is explained by an analogy with submonolayer growth. Thus, the statistics of adatom hops on growing film surfaces is related to universal and nonuniversal features of the growth model and with properties of trapping models if the hopping time is limited by the landscape and not by the deposition of other layers.

8.
Ann Phys Rehabil Med ; 53(9): 559-67, 2010 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés, Francés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20884313

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: If the pathophysiology of bladder cooling reflex (BCR) elicited during an ice water test (IWT) is well-known (triggered by activation of cold receptors within the bladder wall supplied by unmyelinated C fiber afferents) and is widely used for the diagnosis of upper motor neurological lesions, the significance of having a perception of cold in the bladder (PCB) during IWT has not been properly defined yet. PATIENT AND METHODS: Hundred and twenty patients undergoing IWT were analyzed and separated into four groups: group 1 (G1): patients with idiopathic overactive bladder syndrome (OAB); group 2 (G2): patients with functional dysuria (difficult urination due to bladder-neck obstruction, or congenital large bladder); group 3 (G3): patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) and group 4 (G4): patients with cauda equina syndrome (CES). All patients had a cystometry and IWT. After performing IWT, the patients were asked specific questions regarding the various sensations experienced during the cystometry and IWT, especially for detecting the presence or not of a cold sensation when their bladder was filling up. RESULTS: Patients with idiopathic OAB had more frequently a PCB than patients with MS (P<0.02). Patients with bladder-neck obstruction were more likely to retain a PCB than patients with CES (P<0.01). Lack of PCB is more frequent in patients with neurological diseases (P<0.001), with a sensitivity of 66% and specificity of 65%. CONCLUSION: Patients without neurological disease have a heightened PCB during the IWT than patients with neurological diseases. The lack of PCB may reflect an alteration of the afferent pathways or spinal reflex pathways or central neural pathways.


Asunto(s)
Frío , Fibras Nerviosas Amielínicas/fisiología , Reflejo Anormal/fisiología , Sensación Térmica , Vejiga Urinaria/fisiopatología , Adulto , Anciano , Disuria/fisiopatología , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Esclerosis Múltiple/fisiopatología , Polirradiculopatía/fisiopatología , Sensibilidad y Especificidad , Médula Espinal/fisiopatología , Canales Catiónicos TRPM/fisiología , Vejiga Urinaria Hiperactiva/fisiopatología , Micción/fisiología
9.
Ann Phys Rehabil Med ; 52(3): 256-68, 2009 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés, Francés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19522039

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: The physiology of urinary continence is complex and the respective role of active and passive mechanisms is still subject to debate. Many different sacral reflexes are involved in these processes. The present literature review focuses on the neuromuscular mechanisms, which are involved in the pathophysiology of female stress urinary incontinence (SUI). MATERIAL AND METHODS: We performed a systematic review of the literature in the Medline, Pascal and Embase databases by using the following keywords: reflex, perineal, sacral, urethral pressure, urethra, pelvic floor, fatigue, continence, incontinence and muscle. RESULTS: In recent years, new pathophysiological hypotheses concerning abnormal pelvic floor muscle reflex responses to stress have been discussed and included an abnormal time course of pelvic floor muscle activation during coughing. It has also been suggested that unusually rapid fatigue of the pelvic floor muscle reflex may be involved in some women. CONCLUSION: Overall, there are arguments in favour of the involvement of neuromuscular dysfunction in the pathophysiology of female SUI - particularly dysfunctional and delayed pelvic floor muscle reflex responses during coughing. It would be useful to establish whether these neuromuscular dysfunctions may be remedied by physiotherapeutic pelvic floor muscle training.


Asunto(s)
Región Lumbosacra/fisiopatología , Diafragma Pélvico/fisiopatología , Incontinencia Urinaria de Esfuerzo/fisiopatología , Tos , Femenino , Humanos , Músculo Esquelético/inervación , Músculo Esquelético/fisiopatología , Reflejo Anormal
10.
Muscle Nerve ; 24(1): 116-9, 2001 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11150974

RESUMEN

Pudendal neuropathy is an unusual but important complication of orthopedic surgical procedures involving traction on the fracture table. We describe the clinical and electrophysiological features in six patients presenting with perineal sensory disorders and sexual dysfunction following surgical repair of femoral fracture, hip dislocation, or intra-articular foreign body, in which the traction table was used. All underwent electrophysiological recordings: bulbocavernosus muscle electromyography (EMG), measurements of the bulbocavernosus reflex latencies (BCRLs), somatosensory evoked potentials of the pudendal nerve (SEPPNs), sensory conduction velocity of the dorsal nerve of the penis (SCVDNP), and pudendal nerve terminal motor latencies (PNTMLs). Signs of denervation localized to the territory of the pudendal nerve were found in 3 patients, normal BCRL in 6, abnormal SEPPNs in 4, and abnormal SCVDNPs and PNTMLs in all cases. The outcome at 2-year follow-up was good, except in one patient with initially unrecordable PNTML. Perineal electrophysiological examination can thus confirm the pudendal neuropathy and give prognostic information.


Asunto(s)
Electrofisiología , Ingle/fisiopatología , Enfermedades del Sistema Nervioso Periférico/diagnóstico , Enfermedades del Sistema Nervioso Periférico/etiología , Tracción/efectos adversos , Adolescente , Adulto , Disfunción Eréctil/etiología , Potenciales Evocados Somatosensoriales , Ingle/inervación , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Conducción Nerviosa , Pene/inervación , Pene/fisiopatología , Nervios Periféricos/fisiopatología , Tiempo de Reacción , Recuperación de la Función , Reflejo , Trastornos de la Sensación/etiología , Disfunciones Sexuales Psicológicas/etiología
11.
J Urol ; 164(4): 1280-4, 2000 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10992381

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: We describe the effect of intravesical ice water instillation in patients with multiple sclerosis and without an overactive bladder. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Of 131 consecutive patients with multiple sclerosis who presented with a urinary disorder we selected for study 10 men and 29 women with a mean age plus or minus standard deviation of 50 +/- 9 years who had multiple sclerosis without an overactive bladder. Nonoveractive bladder was defined as no involuntary detrusor contraction up to 400 ml. of maximum fill on routine cystometry. We performed cystometry with saline at 25 to 30C at an infusion rate of 50 and 100 ml. per minute, and with ice water at 0 to 4C at a rate of 100 ml. per minute. Ice water cystometry was considered positive when an involuntary detrusor contraction occurred before 200, and between 200 and 400 ml. of filling. Ice water cystometry was considered negative when there was no involuntary detrusor contraction during ice water filling up to 400 ml. RESULTS: Ice water cystometry enabled us to elicit involuntary detrusor contractions in 21 patients, which remained undetected by warm water cystometry at rates of 50 and 100 ml. per minute. The test was positive before 200, and between 200 and 400 ml. in 10 and 11 cases, respectively. Positive ice water cystometry was significantly associated with irritative signs or significant post-void residual urine volume. CONCLUSIONS: An involuntary detrusor contraction was not elicited by cystometry at 50 or 100 ml. per minute, implying that the afferent mechanoreceptor reflex limb via ADelta fibers is not involved. In contrast, ice water cystometry at 100 ml. per minute elicited an involuntary detrusor contraction, suggesting involvement of an afferent reflex limb via capsaicin sensitive C fibers. These involuntary detrusor contractions revealed by ice water cystometry are probably relevant to an overactive bladder. In urinary disorders such a positive test indicates a spinal lesion. In multiple sclerosis it may have pathophysiological value, indicating a spinal rather than cerebral mechanism of overactive bladder, and diagnostic value, indicating multifocal demyelination.


Asunto(s)
Frío , Esclerosis Múltiple/fisiopatología , Contracción Muscular , Reflejo , Vejiga Urinaria/fisiopatología , Trastornos Urinarios/etiología , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Esclerosis Múltiple/complicaciones , Incontinencia Urinaria/etiología , Urodinámica
12.
Presse Med ; 29(20): 1139-44, 2000 Jun 10.
Artículo en Francés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10901797

RESUMEN

EXAMINATION: Clinical evaluation of stress and urge incontinence is always necessary before therapeutic decisions. Full bladder examination may reveal stress incontinence during cough when cervico-urethral hypermobility is suspected, and leak during Vasalva manoeuvre when incontinence is due to intrinsic sphincter deficiency. OBJECTIVE SCORES: Pad test objectives the quantitative importance of incontinence. Symptom scores allow intra and inter individual comparisons. Psychosocial implications are studied with specific quality of life scales. They allow better therapeutic strategies in the management of urge and stress urinary incontinence. Objective evaluation of the different treatments and medico-economic approach of incontinence are thus possible.


Asunto(s)
Incontinencia Urinaria de Esfuerzo/diagnóstico , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Femenino , Humanos , Examen Físico , Índice de Severidad de la Enfermedad , Incontinencia Urinaria de Esfuerzo/patología
13.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry ; 68(6): 771-3, 2000 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10811704

RESUMEN

The objective was to describe perineal electrophysiological findings and to determine their diagnostic value in a type of lumbosacral plexopathy after vaginal delivery, which only involves the lower part of the plexus (S2-S4). Consecutive female patients referred to an outpatients' urodynamic clinic were the source. Nineteen previously healthy women, 13 multiparae and six para 1, were investigated. Mean age was 33.7 (SD 5.4) (range 28-41) years. All of them presented with urinary (stress incontinence 14, dysuria five), anorectal (faecal incontinence eight, dyskesia one), or sexual dysfunctions (hypoorgasmia or anorgasmia six) after vaginal delivery. No associated lower limb sensory or motor deficits were noted. All the patients had electrophysiological recordings (bulbocavernosus muscle EMG, measurements of the bulbocavernosus reflex latencies (BCRLs), somatosensory evoked potentials of the pudendal nerve (SEPPNs), and pudendal nerve terminal motor latencies (PNTMLs)). Cystometry and urethral pressure profile (UPP) were performed in the 14 patients with stress urinary incontinence. Perineal electrophysiological examination disclosed signs of denervation in the perineal muscles in all the cases, prolonged BCRLs in 17/19, and abolished BCRLs in 2/19, abnormal SEPPN in 1/19, and normal PNTMLs in all the patients. Urodynamic investigations disclosed low urethral closure pressure for age (< 50 cm H(2)O) in half of the patients. In conclusion, Lower postpartum lumbosacral plexopathy is evoked when perineal sensory disturbances whether or not associated with urinary or faecal incontinence persist after a history of a difficult vaginal delivery. Electrophysiological investigations precisely identify the site of the lesion and demonstrate distal innervation integrity.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedades del Sistema Nervioso Autónomo/diagnóstico , Plexo Lumbosacro/fisiopatología , Perineo/inervación , Trastornos Puerperales/diagnóstico , Adulto , Enfermedades del Sistema Nervioso Autónomo/fisiopatología , Incontinencia Fecal/diagnóstico , Incontinencia Fecal/fisiopatología , Femenino , Estudios de Seguimiento , Humanos , Masculino , Trastornos Puerperales/fisiopatología , Tiempo de Reacción/fisiología , Reflejo Anormal/fisiología , Estudios Retrospectivos , Incontinencia Urinaria/diagnóstico , Incontinencia Urinaria/fisiopatología , Urodinámica/fisiología
SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA