Depinning and nonequilibrium dynamic phases of particle assemblies driven over random and ordered substrates: a review
C. Reichhardt, C.J. Olson Reichhardt

TL;DR
This review explores the complex nonequilibrium dynamic phases and depinning phenomena of particle assemblies driven over various substrates, highlighting experimental observations, theoretical models, and open questions in the field.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of depinning transitions, dynamic phases, and the influence of substrate type, disorder, and interactions, including future research directions.
Findings
Different depinning regimes and dynamic phases identified.
Transitions between liquid-like and ordered moving states analyzed.
Hysteresis and multiple nonequilibrium transitions observed.
Abstract
We review the depinning and nonequilibrium phases of collectively interacting particle systems driven over random or periodic substrates. This type of system is relevant to vortices in type-II superconductors, sliding charge density waves, electron crystals, colloids, stripe and pattern forming systems, and skyrmions, and could also have connections to jamming, glassy behaviors, and active matter. These systems are ideal for exploring the broader issues of characterizing transient and steady state nonequilibrium flow phases as well as nonequilibrium phase transitions between distinct dynamical phases, analogous to phase transitions between different equilibrium states. We discuss elastic and plastic depinning on random substrates and the different types of nonequilibrium phases that produce features in the velocity-force curves, fluctuation spectra, scaling relations, and local or…
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