Synopsis

The Opposite of Friction

Physics 5, s96
Particles on a surface can have a negative mobility when subject to an oscillating driving force.
D. Speer et al., Phys. Rev. E (2012)

The motion of paired particles (dimers) on a surface appears in a wide variety of different contexts, such as the layer-by-layer growth of a semiconductor or the hopping of molecules in an optical lattice. In Physical Review E, David Speer at Bielefeld University, Germany, and colleagues report a nonintuitive effect based on their calculations of the motion of a dimer of two identical particles on an isotropic surface: in spite of the intrinsic symmetry of the system, a periodic external potential acting on the dimer can cause a spontaneous symmetry breaking. This is reflected in the net motion of the dimer in a specific direction, which depends on the initial conditions. The essential condition for this effect is a non-convex interaction potential between the dimer components, such as one where the potential changes from repulsive to attractive with distance.

Speer et al. show that if a dimer is also subjected to thermal noise, it can exhibit a divergent diffusion constant at low temperatures – a counterintuitive result, given that the diffusion coefficient of a particle on a surface usually vanishes as the temperature goes to zero. Furthermore, under the action of a constant force, the dimer can have a “negative mobility,” where it moves in the opposite direction to that of the applied force. According to the authors, this behavior could be observed in a nanofriction experiment, where the friction force may be acting not against, but along the pulling direction – a phenomenon bearing some resemblance to so-called superlubricity. – Hernan Rozenfeld


Subject Areas

Statistical Physics

Related Articles

Link Verified between Turbulence and Entropy
Statistical Physics

Link Verified between Turbulence and Entropy

The verification of a 63-year-old hypothesis indicates that nonequilibrium statistical mechanics could act as a theoretical framework for describing turbulence. Read More »

Nonreciprocal Frustration Meets Geometrical Frustration
Nonlinear Dynamics

Nonreciprocal Frustration Meets Geometrical Frustration

New theoretical work establishes an analogy between systems that are dynamically frustrated, such as glasses, and thermodynamic systems whose members have conflicting goals, such as predator–prey ecosystems. Read More »

Failed Barrier Crossings Tell a Story
Statistical Physics

Failed Barrier Crossings Tell a Story

Researchers have measured short-timescale fluctuations in metastable systems, uncovering information about failed attempts to cross the barriers that define the metastable state. Read More »

More Articles