Brownian ratchet in a thermal bath driven by Coulomb friction
arXiv:1211.4209 · doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.110.120601
Abstract
The rectification of unbiased fluctuations, also known as the ratchet effect, is normally obtained under statistical non-equilibrium conditions. Here we propose a new ratchet mechanism where a thermal bath solicits the random rotation of an asymmetric wheel, which is also subject to Coulomb friction due to solid-on-solid contacts. Numerical simulations and analytical calculations demonstrate a net drift induced by friction. If the thermal bath is replaced by a granular gas, the well known granular ratchet effect also intervenes, becoming dominant at high collision rates. For our chosen wheel shape the granular effect acts in the opposite direction with respect to the friction-induced torque, resulting in the inversion of the ratchet direction as the collision rate increases. We have realized a new granular ratchet experiment where both these ratchet effects are observed, as well as the predicted inversion at their crossover. Our discovery paves the way to the realization of micro and sub-micrometer Brownian motors in an equilibrium fluid, based purely upon nano-friction.
main paper: 4 pages and 4 figures; supplemental material joined at the end of the paper; a movie of the experiment can be viewed http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aHrdY4BC71k ; all the material has been submitted for publication [new version with substantial changes in the order of the presentation of the results; differences with previous works have been put in evidence]