Mimicking Nonequilibrium Steady States with Time-Periodic Driving
Under static conditions, a system satisfying detailed balance generically relaxes to an equilibrium state in which there are no currents. To generate persistent currents, either detailed balance must be broken or the system must be driven in a time-dependent manner. A stationary system that violates...
Main Authors: | , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
American Physical Society
2016-05-01
|
Series: | Physical Review X |
Online Access: | http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.6.021022 |
id |
doaj-8f38b8fa1fd64a7caa0f4fc8e514781a |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-8f38b8fa1fd64a7caa0f4fc8e514781a2020-11-25T01:32:25ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review X2160-33082016-05-016202102210.1103/PhysRevX.6.021022Mimicking Nonequilibrium Steady States with Time-Periodic DrivingO. RazY. SubaşıC. JarzynskiUnder static conditions, a system satisfying detailed balance generically relaxes to an equilibrium state in which there are no currents. To generate persistent currents, either detailed balance must be broken or the system must be driven in a time-dependent manner. A stationary system that violates detailed balance evolves to a nonequilibrium steady state (NESS) characterized by fixed currents. Conversely, a system that satisfies instantaneous detailed balance but is driven by the time-periodic variation of external parameters—also known as a stochastic pump (SP)—reaches a periodic state with nonvanishing currents. In both cases, these currents are maintained at the cost of entropy production. Are these two paradigmatic scenarios effectively equivalent? For discrete-state systems, we establish a mapping between nonequilibrium stationary states and stochastic pumps. Given a NESS characterized by a particular set of stationary probabilities, currents, and entropy production rates, we show how to construct a SP with exactly the same (time-averaged) values. The mapping works in the opposite direction as well. These results establish a proof of principle: They show that stochastic pumps are able to mimic the behavior of nonequilibrium steady states, and vice versa, within the theoretical framework of discrete-state stochastic thermodynamics. Nonequilibrium steady states and stochastic pumps are often used to model, respectively, biomolecular motors driven by chemical reactions and artificial molecular machines steered by the variation of external, macroscopic parameters. Our results loosely suggest that anything a biomolecular machine can do, an artificial molecular machine can do equally well. We illustrate this principle by showing that kinetic proofreading, a NESS mechanism that explains the low error rates in biochemical reactions, can be effectively mimicked by a constrained periodic driving.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.6.021022 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
O. Raz Y. Subaşı C. Jarzynski |
spellingShingle |
O. Raz Y. Subaşı C. Jarzynski Mimicking Nonequilibrium Steady States with Time-Periodic Driving Physical Review X |
author_facet |
O. Raz Y. Subaşı C. Jarzynski |
author_sort |
O. Raz |
title |
Mimicking Nonequilibrium Steady States with Time-Periodic Driving |
title_short |
Mimicking Nonequilibrium Steady States with Time-Periodic Driving |
title_full |
Mimicking Nonequilibrium Steady States with Time-Periodic Driving |
title_fullStr |
Mimicking Nonequilibrium Steady States with Time-Periodic Driving |
title_full_unstemmed |
Mimicking Nonequilibrium Steady States with Time-Periodic Driving |
title_sort |
mimicking nonequilibrium steady states with time-periodic driving |
publisher |
American Physical Society |
series |
Physical Review X |
issn |
2160-3308 |
publishDate |
2016-05-01 |
description |
Under static conditions, a system satisfying detailed balance generically relaxes to an equilibrium state in which there are no currents. To generate persistent currents, either detailed balance must be broken or the system must be driven in a time-dependent manner. A stationary system that violates detailed balance evolves to a nonequilibrium steady state (NESS) characterized by fixed currents. Conversely, a system that satisfies instantaneous detailed balance but is driven by the time-periodic variation of external parameters—also known as a stochastic pump (SP)—reaches a periodic state with nonvanishing currents. In both cases, these currents are maintained at the cost of entropy production. Are these two paradigmatic scenarios effectively equivalent? For discrete-state systems, we establish a mapping between nonequilibrium stationary states and stochastic pumps. Given a NESS characterized by a particular set of stationary probabilities, currents, and entropy production rates, we show how to construct a SP with exactly the same (time-averaged) values. The mapping works in the opposite direction as well. These results establish a proof of principle: They show that stochastic pumps are able to mimic the behavior of nonequilibrium steady states, and vice versa, within the theoretical framework of discrete-state stochastic thermodynamics. Nonequilibrium steady states and stochastic pumps are often used to model, respectively, biomolecular motors driven by chemical reactions and artificial molecular machines steered by the variation of external, macroscopic parameters. Our results loosely suggest that anything a biomolecular machine can do, an artificial molecular machine can do equally well. We illustrate this principle by showing that kinetic proofreading, a NESS mechanism that explains the low error rates in biochemical reactions, can be effectively mimicked by a constrained periodic driving. |
url |
http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.6.021022 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT oraz mimickingnonequilibriumsteadystateswithtimeperiodicdriving AT ysubası mimickingnonequilibriumsteadystateswithtimeperiodicdriving AT cjarzynski mimickingnonequilibriumsteadystateswithtimeperiodicdriving |
_version_ |
1715740579398156288 |