Structural Transitions and Dynamical Regimes for Directional Locking of Particles Driven over Periodic Substrates
C. Reichhardt, C.J. Olson Reichhardt

TL;DR
This study numerically explores how particles in superconductors and colloids lock to substrate symmetry directions under rotation, revealing structural transitions, dynamical commensuration effects, and the impact of substrate strength on particle flow and order.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of directional locking, structural transitions, and dynamical commensuration effects in driven particles over periodic substrates, highlighting differences from static systems.
Findings
Locking steps correspond to structural transitions between ordered states.
Dynamical commensuration effects occur at specific particle-to-substrate ratios.
Chaotic flow destroys locking steps at the crossover between weak and strong substrates.
Abstract
We numerically investigate collective ordering and disordering effects for vortices in type-II superconductors interacting with square and triangular substrate arrays under a dc drive that is slowly rotated with respect to the fixed substrate. A series of directional locking transitions occur when the particle motion locks to symmetry directions of the substrate, producing a series of steps in the velocity-force curves. The locking transitions coincide with structural transitions between triangular, square, smectic, or disordered particle arrangements, which can be identified using the structure factor. We show that the widths of the locking steps pass through local minima and maxima as a function of the ratio of the number of particles to the number of substrate minima. Unlike a static system, where matching effects occur for simple integer commensuration ratios, our system exhibits…
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