Dissipation at Large Separations

Publication typeBook Chapter
Publication date2024-08-31
SJR
CiteScore0.4
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ISSN14344904, 21977127
Abstract
When two macroscopic bodies slide in contact, energy is dissipated due to friction. Sometimes it is desired, like in case of brakes in the bicycle, sometimes unwelcome—when you ask yourself why your automated coffee machine broke for the third time. In nanoscale, a tiny friction force is present when bodies in relative motion are separated by a few nanometer gap. This non-contact form of friction might be successfully measured by highly sensitive cantilever oscillating like a tiny pendulum over the surface. The elusive non-contact friction might arise due to vdW interaction, which is mediated by the long-range electromagnetic field or in many cases by fluctuations of static surface charges arising from material inhomogeneities. The huge dissipation might also originate from hysteretic switching of the studied material under the external action of the oscillating probe. In this chapter several experiments reporting on non-contact friction are discussed. First the Joule dissipation channel is discussed. Next we report on non-contact friction measurement over metal—superconductor transition, which allows to distinguish between phononic and electronic contribution to friction. Energy dissipation over a phase transition is further demonstrated on SrTiO3 crystal undergoing structural change. Next the non-contact friction due to switching of the charge density wave is discussed. Finally a energy dissipation due to single electron charging is reported on oxygen deficient SrTiO3 and topologically protected Bi2Te3 crystals. Interestingly the energy losses due to the single electron charging on Bi2Te3 surface are observed due to the protected character of the surface.
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Kisiel M. et al. Dissipation at Large Separations // NanoScience and Technology. 2024. pp. 315-343.
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
Kisiel M., Langer M., Gysin U., Rast S., Yildiz D., Meyer E., Lee D. Dissipation at Large Separations // NanoScience and Technology. 2024. pp. 315-343.
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RIS Copy
TY - GENERIC
DO - 10.1007/978-3-031-63065-1_15
UR - https://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-031-63065-1_15
TI - Dissipation at Large Separations
T2 - NanoScience and Technology
AU - Kisiel, Marcin
AU - Langer, Markus
AU - Gysin, Urs
AU - Rast, Simon
AU - Yildiz, Dilek
AU - Meyer, Ernst
AU - Lee, Dong-Weon
PY - 2024
DA - 2024/08/31
PB - Springer Nature
SP - 315-343
SN - 1434-4904
SN - 2197-7127
ER -
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@incollection{2024_Kisiel,
author = {Marcin Kisiel and Markus Langer and Urs Gysin and Simon Rast and Dilek Yildiz and Ernst Meyer and Dong-Weon Lee},
title = {Dissipation at Large Separations},
publisher = {Springer Nature},
year = {2024},
pages = {315--343},
month = {aug}
}