Diffusion in discrete ratchets.

The phenomenon of noise-induced transport in ratchet devices offers an explanation for directed motion on the molecular scale observed in many biological systems. Net transport through a series of discrete states, occurring in cyclic processes or reactions, can be related to widely investigated continuous ratchet models in the context of thermally activated transitions. The transport process can be described effectively in terms of two characteristic coefficients: velocity and diffusion. Their relation to model parameters and limitations for the ratchet mechanism are discussed in this paper. As an application we consider a four-state model for uphill transmembrane transport and compare theoretical results with existing data from a related experiment.