The Allen–Cahn equation (after John W. Cahn and Sam Allen) is a reaction–diffusion equation of mathematical physics which describes the process of phase separation in multi-component alloy systems, including order-disorder transitions.
The equation describes the time evolution of a scalar-valued state variable
on a domain
during a time interval
, and is given by:
![{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}{{\partial \eta } \over {\partial t}}={}&M_{\eta }[\operatorname {div} (\varepsilon _{\eta }^{2}\,\nabla \,\eta )-f'(\eta )]\quad {\text{on }}\Omega \times {\mathcal {T}},\quad \eta ={\bar {\eta }}\quad {\text{on }}\partial _{\eta }\Omega \times {\mathcal {T}},\\[5pt]&{-(\varepsilon _{\eta }^{2}\,\nabla \,\eta )}\cdot m=q\quad {\text{on }}\partial _{q}\Omega \times {\mathcal {T}},\quad \eta =\eta _{o}\quad {\text{on }}\Omega \times \{0\},\end{aligned}}}](./_assets_/eb734a37dd21ce173a46342d1cc64c92/a1977ebfe2a2142906a0f1c55d5037eb505f8960.svg)
where
is the mobility,
is a double-well potential,
is the control on the state variable at the portion of the boundary
,
is the source control at
,
is the initial condition, and
is the outward normal to
.
It is the L2 gradient flow of the Ginzburg–Landau free energy functional. It is closely related to the Cahn–Hilliard equation.