Velocity tuning of friction with two trapped atoms
Dorian Gangloff, Alexei Bylinskii, Ian Counts, Wonho Jhe, Vladan, Vuleti\'c

TL;DR
This study uses a novel atomic-scale friction emulator to measure and analyze friction forces across a wide velocity range, revealing four distinct regimes and clarifying the roles of thermal and structural lubricity at the atomic level.
Contribution
It introduces an ion-crystal friction emulator with single-atom resolution to quantitatively study velocity-dependent friction and the interplay of thermal and structural effects.
Findings
Observed four distinct friction regimes over five orders of magnitude in velocity.
Demonstrated control of temperature and dissipation at the atomic scale.
Provided a simple explanation of friction behavior using the Peierls-Nabarro potential.
Abstract
Friction is the basic, ubiquitous mechanical interaction between two surfaces that results in resistance to motion and energy dissipation. In spite of its technological and economic significance, our ability to control friction remains modest, and our understanding of the microscopic processes incomplete. At the atomic scale, mismatch between the two contacting crystal lattices can lead to a reduction of stick-slip friction (structural lubricity), while thermally activated atomic motion can give rise to a complex velocity dependence, and nearly vanishing friction at sufficiently low velocities (thermal lubricity). Atomic force microscopy has provided a wealth of experimental results, but limitations in the dynamic range, time resolution, and control at the single-atom level have hampered a full quantitative description from first principles. Here, using an ion-crystal friction emulator…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
