Nonconservative current-induced forces: A physical interpretation

Beilstein J Nanotechnol. 2011:2:727-33. doi: 10.3762/bjnano.2.79. Epub 2011 Oct 27.

Abstract

We give a physical interpretation of the recently demonstrated nonconservative nature of interatomic forces in current-carrying nanostructures. We start from the analytical expression for the curl of these forces, and evaluate it for a point defect in a current-carrying system. We obtain a general definition of the capacity of electrical current flow to exert a nonconservative force, and thus do net work around closed paths, by a formal noninvasive test procedure. Second, we show that the gain in atomic kinetic energy over time, generated by nonconservative current-induced forces, is equivalent to the uncompensated stimulated emission of directional phonons. This connection with electron-phonon interactions quantifies explicitly the intuitive notion that nonconservative forces work by angular momentum transfer.

Keywords: atomic-scale conductors; current-induced forces; failure mechanisms; nanomotors.