Issue 22, 2017

Experimental observation of Shapiro-steps in colloidal monolayers driven across time-dependent substrate potentials

Abstract

We experimentally study the motion of a colloidal monolayer which is driven across a commensurate substrate potential whose amplitude is periodically modulated in time. In addition to a significant reduction of the static friction force compared to an unmodulated substrate, we observe a Shapiro step structure in the force dependence of the mean particle velocity which is explained by the dynamical mode locking between the particle motion and the substrate modulation. In this regime, the entire crystal moves in a stick-slip fashion similar to what is observed when a single point contact is driven across a periodic surface. Contrary to numerical simulations, where typically a large number of Shapiro steps is found, only a single step is observed in our experiments. This is explained by the formation of kinks which weaken the synchronization between adjacent particles.

Graphical abstract: Experimental observation of Shapiro-steps in colloidal monolayers driven across time-dependent substrate potentials

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
24 Feb 2017
Accepted
04 May 2017
First published
04 May 2017

Soft Matter, 2017,13, 4024-4028

Experimental observation of Shapiro-steps in colloidal monolayers driven across time-dependent substrate potentials

T. Brazda, C. July and C. Bechinger, Soft Matter, 2017, 13, 4024 DOI: 10.1039/C7SM00393E

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