Gauge invariant and gauge dependent aspects of topological walking colloidal bipeds.


Journal

Soft matter
ISSN: 1744-6848
Titre abrégé: Soft Matter
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101295070

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
19 Feb 2021
Historique:
pubmed: 29 12 2020
medline: 29 12 2020
entrez: 28 12 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Paramagnetic colloidal spheres assemble to colloidal bipeds of various length in an external magnetic field. When the bipeds reside above a magnetic pattern and we modulate the direction of the external magnetic field, the rods perform topologically distinct classes of protected motion above the pattern. The topological protection allows each class to be robust against small continuous deformations of the driving loop of the external field. We observe motion of the rod from a passive central sliding and rolling motion for short bipeds toward a walking motion with both ends of the rod alternately touching down on the pattern for long bipeds. The change of character of the motion occurs in form of discrete topological transitions. The topological protection makes walking a form of motion robust against the breaking of the non symmorphic symmetry. In patterns with non symmorphic symmetry walking is reversible. In symmorphic patterns lacking a glide plane the walking can be irreversible or reversible involving or not involving ratchet jumps. Using different gauges allows us to unravel the active and passive aspects of the topological walks.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33367385
doi: 10.1039/d0sm01670e
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1663-1674

Auteurs

Mahla Mirzaee-Kakhki (M)

University of Bayreuth, Physics, Universitätsstr. 30, 95447 Bayreuth, Germany. Thomas.Fischer@uni-bayreuth.de.

Adrian Ernst (A)

University of Bayreuth, Physics, Universitätsstr. 30, 95447 Bayreuth, Germany. Thomas.Fischer@uni-bayreuth.de.

Daniel de Las Heras (D)

University of Bayreuth, Physics, Universitätsstr. 30, 95447 Bayreuth, Germany. Thomas.Fischer@uni-bayreuth.de.

Maciej Urbaniak (M)

Institute of Molecular Physics, Polish Academy of Sciences, ul. M. Smoluchowskiego 17, 60-179 Poznań, Poland.

Feliks Stobiecki (F)

Institute of Molecular Physics, Polish Academy of Sciences, ul. M. Smoluchowskiego 17, 60-179 Poznań, Poland.

Andreea Tomita (A)

Institute of Physics and Center for Interdisciplinary Nanostructure Science and Technology (CINSaT), University of Kassel, Heinrich-Plett-Strasse 40, D-34132 Kassel, Germany.

Rico Huhnstock (R)

Institute of Physics and Center for Interdisciplinary Nanostructure Science and Technology (CINSaT), University of Kassel, Heinrich-Plett-Strasse 40, D-34132 Kassel, Germany.

Iris Koch (I)

Institute of Physics and Center for Interdisciplinary Nanostructure Science and Technology (CINSaT), University of Kassel, Heinrich-Plett-Strasse 40, D-34132 Kassel, Germany.

Arno Ehresmann (A)

Institute of Physics and Center for Interdisciplinary Nanostructure Science and Technology (CINSaT), University of Kassel, Heinrich-Plett-Strasse 40, D-34132 Kassel, Germany.

Dennis Holzinger (D)

Institute of Physics and Center for Interdisciplinary Nanostructure Science and Technology (CINSaT), University of Kassel, Heinrich-Plett-Strasse 40, D-34132 Kassel, Germany.

Thomas M Fischer (TM)

University of Bayreuth, Physics, Universitätsstr. 30, 95447 Bayreuth, Germany. Thomas.Fischer@uni-bayreuth.de.

Classifications MeSH