Abstract

The possibility to achieve entirely frictionless, i.e., superlubric, sliding between solids holds enormous potential for the operation of mechanical devices. At small length scales, where mechanical contacts are well defined, Aubry predicted a transition from a superlubric to a pinned state when the mechanical load is increased. Evidence for this intriguing Aubry transition (AT), which should occur in one dimension (1D) and at zero temperature, was recently obtained in few-atom chains. Here, we experimentally and theoretically demonstrate the occurrence of the AT in an extended two-dimensional (2D) system at room temperature using a colloidal monolayer on an optical lattice. Unlike the continuous nature of the AT in 1D, we observe a first-order transition in 2D leading to a coexistence regime of pinned and unpinned areas. Our data demonstrate that the original concept of Aubry not only survives in 2D but is relevant for the design of nanoscopic machines and devices at ambient temperature.Received 20 November 2017Revised 1 February 2018DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.8.011050Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI.Published by the American Physical SocietyPhysics Subject Headings (PhySH)Research AreasFrictionPhase transitionsPhysical SystemsColloidsSolid-solid interfacesCondensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Highlights

  • The possibility to achieve entirely frictionless, i.e., superlubric, sliding between solids holds enormous potential for the operation of mechanical devices

  • At small length scales, where mechanical contacts are well defined, Aubry predicted a transition from a superlubric to a pinned state when the mechanical load is increased

  • Around the critical contact strength, the 2D Aubry transition brings about the occurrence of a novel phase separation with a coexistence region between pinned and free-sliding colloidal patches

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Summary

Featured in Physics

Experimental Observation of the Aubry Transition in Two-Dimensional Colloidal Monolayers. At small length scales, where mechanical contacts are well defined, Aubry predicted a transition from a superlubric to a pinned state when the mechanical load is increased. Evidence for this intriguing Aubry transition (AT), which should occur in one dimension (1D) and at zero temperature, was recently obtained in few-atom chains. In the thermodynamic limit and at zero temperature, the 1D incommensurate chain-substrate interface may undergo a second-order transition between an unpinned and a pinned state at a critical value of the substrate corrugation, i.e., contact strength, U0. Unlike 1D, a sliding 2D crystal will develop a misalignment angle

Published by the American Physical Society
Experiments Simulations
Findings
Fraction of colloidal particles
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