When applying an oscillatory electric potential to an electrolyte solution, it is commonly assumed that the choice of which electrode is grounded or powered does not matter because the time average of the electric potential is zero. Recent theoretical, numerical, and experimental work, however, has established that certain types of multimodal oscillatory potentials that are "nonantiperiodic" can induce a net steady field toward either the grounded or powered electrode [A. Hashemi et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt is well established that application of an oscillatory excitation with zero time-average but temporal asymmetry can yield net drift. To date this temporal symmetry breaking and net drift has been explored primarily in the context of point particles, nonlinear optics, and quantum systems. Here, we present two new experimental systems where the impact of temporally asymmetric force excitations can be readily observed with mechanical motion of macroscopic objects: (1) solid centimeter-scale objects placed on a uniform flat surface made to vibrate laterally, and (2) charged colloidal particles in water placed between parallel electrodes with an applied oscillatory electric potential.
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