Finite-temperature phase diagram and critical point of the Aubry pinned-sliding transition in a two-dimensional monolayer

The Aubry unpinned-pinned transition in the sliding of two incommensurate lattices occurs for increasing mutual interaction strength in one dimension and is of second order at T=0, turning into a crossover at nonzero temperatures. Yet, real incommensurate lattices come into contact in two dimensions...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical review. B 2017-06, Vol.95 (24), p.245403, Article 245403
Hauptverfasser: Mandelli, Davide, Vanossi, Andrea, Manini, Nicola, Tosatti, Erio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Aubry unpinned-pinned transition in the sliding of two incommensurate lattices occurs for increasing mutual interaction strength in one dimension and is of second order at T=0, turning into a crossover at nonzero temperatures. Yet, real incommensurate lattices come into contact in two dimensions, at finite temperature, generally developing a mutual Novaco-McTague misalignment, conditions in which the existence of a sharp transition is not clear. Using a model inspired by colloid monolayers in an optical lattice as a test two-dimensional (2D) case, simulations show a sharp Aubry transition between an unpinned and a pinned phase as a function of corrugation. Unlike one dimension, the 2D transition is now of first order, and, importantly, remains well defined at T>0. It is heavily structural, with a local rotation of moiré pattern domains from the nonzero initial Novaco-McTague equilibrium angle to nearly zero. In the temperature (T)-corrugation strength plane, the thermodynamical coexistence line between the unpinned and the pinned phases is strongly oblique, showing that the former has the largest entropy. This first-order Aubry line terminates with a novel critical point T=Tc, marked by a susceptibility peak. The expected static sliding friction upswing between the unpinned and the pinned phase decreases and disappears upon heating from T=0 to T=Tc. The experimental pursuit of this novel scenario is proposed.
ISSN:2469-9950
2469-9969
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevB.95.245403