论文标题
在类似冰的机械超材料中受拓扑保护的稳定循环
Topologically Protected Steady Cycles in an Ice-Like Mechanical Metamaterial
论文作者
论文摘要
竞争基础状态可能会导致拓扑受到的激发,例如域壁或准颗粒,这些域或准粒子控制着稳定状态及其动力。在磁性系统(例如人造自旋冰)中对域壁和更多的外来拓扑激发进行了充分的研究,其中纳米级磁偶极子放在几何沮丧的晶格上,从而产生高度退化的地面状态。我们提出了一种由软盘,可动的方形单元细胞构造的机械自旋冰。我们将这种超材料中引起的域壁激励与它们的磁性对应物进行了比较,发现在这种过度阻尼的机械系统中出现了新的行为。通过调整单位电池的内部元素的比率,我们控制了内部域壁的曲率和传播速度。我们将域壁的形态从二元,严格的自旋状态更改为更连续的弹性状态。在弹性状态下,我们通过在边界处强迫注射,操纵和驱逐域壁。该系统表现出动态滞后,我们发现了驾驶频率的一阶动力转变。我们展示了一种强迫协议,该方案会产生多个,拓扑上的稳定周期,该稳定周期受其内部域壁排列的差异的保护。随着施加强迫纹理的复杂性的增加,这些独特的稳定周期迅速增殖,因此表明这种机械系统可以用作研究材料中的多稳定性,玻璃度和记忆力的有用模型系统。
Competing ground states may lead to topologically constrained excitations such as domain walls or quasiparticles, which govern metastable states and their dynamics. Domain walls and more exotic topological excitations are well studied in magnetic systems such as artificial spin ice, in which nanoscale magnetic dipoles are placed on geometrically frustrated lattices, giving rise to highly degenerate ground states. We propose a mechanical spin-ice constructed from a lattice of floppy, bistable square unit cells. We compare the domain wall excitations that arise in this metamaterial to their magnetic counterparts, finding that new behaviors emerge in this overdamped mechanical system. By tuning the ratios of the internal elements of the unit cell, we control the curvature and propagation speed of internal domain walls. We change the domain wall morphology from a binary, strictly spin-like regime, to a more continuous, elastic regime. In the elastic regime, we inject, manipulate, and expel domain walls via textured forcing at the boundaries. The system exhibits dynamical hysteresis, and we find a first-order dynamical transition as a function of the driving frequency. We demonstrate a forcing protocol that produces multiple, topologically-distinct steady cycles, which are protected by the differences in their internal domain wall arrangements. These distinct steady cycles rapidly proliferate as the complexity of the applied forcing texture is increased, thus suggesting that such mechanical systems could serve as useful model systems to study multistability, glassiness, and memory in materials.