Dynamically Induced Locking and Unlocking Transitions in Driven Layered Systems with Quenched Disorder
C. Reichhardt, C.J. Olson Reichhardt

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to explore how coupled driven particles in layered systems with disorder exhibit complex dynamical transitions, including decoupling, recoupling, and velocity anomalies, relevant to superconductors and colloids.
Contribution
It reveals novel dynamical phases and transitions in layered driven systems with quenched disorder, including decoupling and locking phenomena, expanding understanding of plastic flow and depinning.
Findings
Decoupling transitions lead to coexisting pinned and moving phases.
Dynamical recoupling results in negative differential conductivity.
Depinning threshold exhibits a peak effect near transition points.
Abstract
Using numerical simulations, we examine a simple model of two or more coupled one-dimensional channels of driven particles with repulsive interactions in the presence of quenched disorder. We find that this model exhibits a remarkably rich variety of dynamical behavior as a function of the strength of the quenched disorder, coupling between channels, and external drive. For weaker disorder, the channels depin in a single step. For two channels we find dynamically induced decoupling transitions that result in coexisting pinned and moving phases as well as moving decoupled phases where particles in both channels move at different average velocities and slide past one another. Decoupling can also be induced by changing the relative strength of the disorder in neighboring channels. At higher drives, we observe a dynamical recoupling or locking transition into a state with no relative motion…
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