“…Non-equilibrium phase transitions in one-dimensional driven diffusive systems caused by a single static defect bond have a long history of study [1,2,3,4,5,6,7] and continue to intrigue not only from a statistical physics and probabilistic perspective [8,9,10,11,12] but also because of their recently recognized significance for biological transport by molecular motors [13,14,15,16]. The general picture is that at a critical density ρ c of driven particles there is a defect-induced nonequilibrium phase transition from a spatially homogeneous "free-flow" phase for ρ < ρ c to a "congested phase" for ρ > ρ c with two coexisting low density and high-density segments, corresponding to the formation of a macroscopic "traffic jam" upstream of the blockage bond.…”