“…Thus, we understand that the surface collapses and wrinkles in the limit of b → 0 while it swells and becomes smooth in the limit of b → ∞ [8,9,10]. Theoretical studies utilizing the renormalization group technique predict that the crumpling transition is continuous [11,12,13,14,15], while density-matrix renormalization group studies on the folding of triangular lattice [16] and recent numerical simulations of the model on triangulated surfaces [17,18,19,20] indicate that the crumpling transition is of the first-order and accompanies the collapsing transition.By including certain inhomogeneous components such as cytoskeletal structure or holes in the abovementioned homogeneous models, we obtain a variety of surface models for numerical studies [21,22,23]. Lateral diffusion of lipids can also be implemented in the models by the so-called dynamical triangulation technique, which introduces non-uniform coordination numbers q to the triangulated surfaces [24].…”