Minimal model of mobile particles interacting with an infinite one-dimensional lattice: dissipation, thermalization, drag, and diffusion
ORAL
Abstract
We explore the classical dynamics of mobile particles interacting with an infinite one-dimensional chain of harmonic oscillators (a 1D lattice). This effective model describes ionic conduction in anisotropic solid-state materials or molecular motion in nanotubes. Through a combination of analytic and numerical calculations, we show that, in the absence of thermal motion in the lattice, coupling to the lattice will dissipate the mobile particle's kinetic energy. This dissipation leads to drag that is nonmonotonic in the particle speed. Under a constant bias, this system exhibits multiple steady drift velocities, linking macroscopic transport to microscopic lattice properties. We discuss how thermal motion influences these properties, and how such a model could be implemented in a collection of trapped ions or neutral atoms to explore thermalization and transport in low-dimensional systems.
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Publication: Physical Review Research 5, 013053 (2023)
Presenters
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Ben A Olsen
Yale-NUS College
Authors
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Ben A Olsen
Yale-NUS College
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Harshitra Mahalingam
Institute for Functional Intelligent Materials, National University of Singapore
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Zhun Wai Yap
Yale-NUS College
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Aleksandr Rodin
Yale-NUS College, Centre for Advanced 2D Materials, Materials Science & Engineering, National University of Singapore