Superlubric-Pinned Transition in Sliding Incommensurate Colloidal Monolayers
Davide Mandelli, Andrea Vanossi, Michele Invernizzi, S. V. Paronuzzi, Ticco, Nicola Manini, Erio Tosatti

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a sharp first-order transition from superlubricity to pinning in 2D colloidal monolayers sliding over optical lattices, depending on system parameters like corrugation strength and lattice misalignment.
Contribution
We provide the first simulation evidence of a first-order superlubric-pinned transition in 2D colloidal monolayers, extending the concept of the Aubry transition to two dimensions.
Findings
A clear superlubric-pinned transition exists in 2D colloidal systems.
The transition is first-order, characterized by abrupt energy changes.
Misalignment angle affects the critical corrugation amplitude for pinning.
Abstract
Two-dimensional (2D) crystalline colloidal monolayers sliding over a laser-induced optical lattice recently emerged as a new tool for the study of friction between ideal crystal surfaces. Here we focus in particular on static friction, the minimal sliding force necessary to depin one lattice from the other. If the colloid and the optical lattices are mutually commensurate, the colloid sliding is always pinned by static friction; but when they are incommensurate the presence or absence of pinning can be expected to depend upon the system parameters. If a 2D analogy to the mathematically established Aubry transition of one-dimensional systems were to hold, an increasing periodic corrugation strength should turn an initially free-sliding monolayer into a pinned state through a well-defined dynamical phase transition. We address this problem by the simulated sliding of a realistic…
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