The alternating-current-driven motion of dislocations in a weakly damped Frenkel-Kontorova lattice

Citation
G. Filatrella et Ba. Malomed, The alternating-current-driven motion of dislocations in a weakly damped Frenkel-Kontorova lattice, J PHYS-COND, 11(37), 1999, pp. 7103-7114
Citations number
19
Categorie Soggetti
Apllied Physucs/Condensed Matter/Materiales Science
Journal title
JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER
ISSN journal
09538984 → ACNP
Volume
11
Issue
37
Year of publication
1999
Pages
7103 - 7114
Database
ISI
SICI code
0953-8984(19990920)11:37<7103:TAMODI>2.0.ZU;2-2
Abstract
By means of numerical simulations, we demonstrate that an alternating-curre nt (ac) field can support stably moving collective nonlinear excitations in the form of dislocations (topological solitons, or kinks) in the Frenkel-K ontorova (Fl) lattice with weak friction, as was qualitatively predicted by Bonilla and Malomed (Bonilla LL and Malomed BA 1991 Phys. Rev. B 43 11 539 ). Direct generation of the moving dislocations turns out to be virtually i mpossible; however, they can be generated initially in the lattice subject to an auxiliary spatial modulation of the on-site potential strength. Gradu ally relaxing the modulation, we are able to get stable moving dislocations in the uniform FK lattice with periodic boundary conditions, provided that the driving frequency is close to the gap frequency of the linear excitati ons in the uniform lattice. The excitations that can be generated in this w ay have a large and noninteger index of commensurability with the lattice ( so suggesting that the actual value of the commensurability index is irrati onal). The simulations reveal two different types of moving dislocation: br oad ones, that extend, roughly, to half the full length of the periodic lat tice (in that sense, they cannot be called solitons); and localized soliton -like dislocations, that can be found in an excited state, demonstrating st rong persistent internal vibrations. The minimum (threshold) amplitude of t he driving force necessary to support the travelling excitation is found as a function of the friction coefficient. Its extrapolation suggests that th e threshold does not vanish at zero friction, which may be explained by rad iation losses. The moving dislocation can be observed experimentally in an array of coupled small Josephson junctions in the form of an inverse Joseph son effect, i.e., a direct-current-voltage response to the uniformly applie d ac bias current.