| Literature DB >> 24336340 |
Markus Langer1, Marcin Kisiel1, Rémy Pawlak1, Franco Pellegrini2, Giuseppe E Santoro3, Renato Buzio4, Andrea Gerbi4, Geetha Balakrishnan5, Alexis Baratoff1, Erio Tosatti3, Ernst Meyer1.
Abstract
Understanding nanoscale friction and dissipation is central to nanotechnology. The recent detection of the electronic-friction drop caused by the onset of superconductivity in Nb by means of an ultrasensitive non-contact pendulum atomic force microscope (AFM) raised hopes that a wider variety of mechanical-dissipation mechanisms become accessible. Here, we report a multiplet of AFM dissipation peaks arising a few nanometres above the surface of NbSe2--a layered compound exhibiting an incommensurate charge-density wave (CDW). Each peak appears at a well-defined tip-surface interaction force of the order of a nanonewton, and persists up to 70 K, where the short-range order of CDWs is known to disappear. Comparison of the measurements with a theoretical model suggests that the peaks are associated with local, tip-induced 2π phase slips of the CDW, and that dissipation maxima arise from hysteretic behaviour of the CDW phase as the tip oscillates at specific distances where sharp local slips occur.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24336340 DOI: 10.1038/nmat3836
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841