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Published March 8, 2019 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Exotic states in a simple network of nanoelectromechanical oscillators

Abstract

Synchronization of oscillators, a phenomenon found in a wide variety of natural and engineered systems, is typically understood through a reduction to a first-order phase model with simplified dynamics. Here, by exploiting the precision and flexibility of nanoelectromechanical systems, we examined the dynamics of a ring of quasi-sinusoidal oscillators at and beyond first order. Beyond first order, we found exotic states of synchronization with highly complex dynamics, including weak chimeras, decoupled states, traveling waves, and inhomogeneous synchronized states. Through theory and experiment, we show that these exotic states rely on complex interactions emerging out of networks with simple linear nearest-neighbor coupling. This work provides insight into the dynamical richness of complex systems with weak nonlinearities and local interactions.

Additional Information

© 2019 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works http://www.sciencemag.org/about/science-licenses-journal-article-reuse. This is an article distributed under the terms of the Science Journals Default License. 20 October 2018; accepted 24 January 2019. We thank D. Abrams for fruitful comments regarding the traveling-wave states, and J. E. Sader and R. Lifshitz for useful comments regarding the manuscript. We also thank CEA-LETI (Grenoble, France) for providing piezoelectric multilayers enabling this research. We acknowledge critical support and infrastructure provided for this work by the Kavli Nanoscience Institute at Caltech. Funding: This material is based on work supported by, or in part by, the U.S. Army Research Laboratory and the U. S. Army Research Office under MURI award W911NF-13-1-0340 and W911NF-18-1-0028 and Intel Corporation support of CSC as an Intel Parallel Computing Center. Author contributions: M.H.M. and J.L. fabricated the nanomechanical devices; M.H.M., W.F., and M.L.R. designed and constructed the experimental apparatus; M.H.M. wrote the control/measurement software and performed the measurements; M.H.M. analyzed the experimental data with input from J.E., W.F., M.C.C., J.P.C., and M.L.R.; M.H.M. composed and narrated all videos with input from J.P.C.; J.E., M.H.M., A.C., A.S., and M.C.C. performed theoretical modeling with input from R.M.D., J.P.C., M.P., and M.M.; J.E., M.H.M., A.S., and A.C. performed numerical simulations with input from J.P.C., M.R., M.H.d.B., M.L.R., M.M., M.C.C., M.P., and R.M.D.; M.H.M. and M.L.R. conceived the experiment with input from W.F., M.C.C., J.E., A.C., M.M., L.D.-O., R.M.D., and J.P.C.; and M.H.M., M.C.C., W.F., J.P.C., J.E., R.M.D., and M.L.R. prepared the manuscript with input from all authors. All authors discussed the results and their implications equally at all stages. Competing interests: None declared. Data and materials availability: All (other) data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are available in the following online database: 10.5281/zenodo.2543765. All experiments, numerical simulations, and data processing were performed with custom Python and C scripts. Signals were acquired through use of a simultaneous-sampling 8-channel oscilloscope. Oscillator phase was extracted via a Hilbert transform of raw time records from the oscilloscope. Oscilloscope sampling was set to 200 kHz, which is faster than the slow-time oscillator dynamics by about three orders of magnitude.

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Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023