4.6 Article

Stochastic thermodynamics of self-oscillations: the electron shuttle

Journal

NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS
Volume 21, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1367-2630/ab2727

Keywords

stochastic thermodynamics; electron shuttle; self-oscillation; nanoscale; nonlinear systems; electron transport; autonomous engines

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [163436311-SFB 910]
  2. Graduate Research Training Group RTG 1558
  3. European Research Council [681456]
  4. DFG [STR 1505/2-1]
  5. US National Science Foundation [DMR-1506969]

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Self-oscillation is a phenomenon studied across many scientific disciplines, including the engineering of efficient heat engines and electric generators. We investigate the single electron shuttle, a model nanoscale system that exhibits a spontaneous transition towards self-oscillation, from a thermodynamic perspective. We analyse the model at three different levels of description: The fully stochastic level based on Fokker-Planck and Langevin equations, the mean-field (MF) level, and a perturbative solution to the Fokker-Planck equation that works particularly well for small oscillation amplitudes. We provide consistent derivations of the laws of thermodynamics for this model system at each of these levels. At the MF level, an abrupt transition to self-oscillation arises from a Hopfbifurcation of the deterministic equations of motion. At the stochastic level, this transition is smeared out by noise, but vestiges of the bifurcation remain visible in the stationary probability density. At all levels of description, the transition towards self-oscillation is reflected in thermodynamic quantities such as heat flow, work and entropy production rate. Our analysis provides a comprehensive picture of a nano-scale self-oscillating system, with stochastic and deterministic models linked by a unifying thermodynamic perspective.

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