Abstract:
Stimulated by the eect of the nearest neighbor interactions in
vehicular trac and motor proteins, we study a 1D driven lattice gas model, in
which the nearest neighbor particle interactions are taken in accordance with
the thermodynamic concepts. The non-equilibrium steady-state properties of
the system are analyzed under both open and periodic boundary conditions
using a combination of cluster mean-field analysis and Monte Carlo simulations.
Interestingly, the fundamental diagram of current versus density shows a complex
behavior with a unimodal dependence for attractions and weak repulsions that
turns into the bimodal behavior for stronger repulsive interactions. Specific
details of system-reservoir coupling for the open system have a strong eect
on the stationary phases. We produce the steady-state phase diagrams for
the bulk-adapted coupling to the reservoir using the minimum and maximum
current principles. The strength and nature of interaction energy has a striking
influence on the number of stationary phases. We observe that interactions lead
to correlations having a strong impact on the system dynamical properties. The
correlation between any two sites decays exponentially as the distance between
the sites increases. Moreover, they are found to be short-range for repulsions
and long-range for attractions. Our results also suggest that repulsions and attractions asymmetrically modify the dynamics of interacting particles in
exclusion processes.