Pattern-fluid interpretation of chemical turbulence

ORAL

Abstract

The spontaneous formation of heterogeneous patterns is a hallmark of many nonlinear systems, from biological tissue to evolutionary population dynamics. The standard model for pattern formation in general, and for Turing patterns in chemical reaction-diffusion systems in particular, are deterministic nonlinear partial differential equations where an unstable homogeneous solution gives way to a stable heterogeneous pattern. However, these models fail to fully explain the experimental observation of turbulent patterns with spatio-temporal disorder in chemical systems. Here we introduce a pattern-fluid model as a general concept where turbulence is interpreted as a weakly interacting ensemble obtained by random superposition of stationary solutions to the underlying reaction-diffusion system. The transition from turbulent to stationary patterns is then interpreted as a condensation phenomenon, where the nonlinearity forces one single mode to dominate the ensemble. This model leads to better reproduction of the experimental concentration profiles for the ``stationary phases'' and reproduces the turbulent chemical patterns observed by in Chaos 1, 411, 1991. This abstract represents the work published in PRE 91, 042907, 2015.

Authors

  • Gerd E. Schr\"oder-Turk

    Murdoch University, Perth, School of Engineering and IT, Mathematics and Statistics, Murdoch University, Murdoch, Australia

  • Christian Scholz

    Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany

  • Klaus Mecke

    Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany