Superfluidity Meets the Solid State: Frictionless Mass Transport through a (5,5) Carbon Nanotube

Phys Rev Lett. 2023 Nov 17;131(20):206301. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.131.206301.

Abstract

Superfluidity is a well-characterized quantum phenomenon which entails frictionless motion of mesoscopic particles through a superfluid, such as ^{4}He or dilute atomic gases at very low temperatures. As shown by Landau, the incompatibility between energy and momentum conservation, which ultimately stems from the spectrum of the elementary excitations of the superfluid, forbids quantum scattering between the superfluid and the moving mesoscopic particle, below a critical speed threshold. Here, we predict that frictionless motion can also occur in the absence of a standard superfluid, i.e., when a He atom travels through a narrow (5,5) carbon nanotube (CNT). Because of the quasilinear dispersion of the plasmon and phonon modes that could interact with He, the (5,5) CNT embodies a solid-state analog of the superfluid, thereby enabling straightforward transfer of Landau's criterion of superfluidity. As a result, Landau's equations acquire broader generality and may be applicable to other nanoscale friction phenomena, whose description has been so far purely classical.