869 research outputs found
Jamming phase diagram for frictional particles
The non-equilibrium transition from a fluid-like state to a disordered
solid-like state, known as the jamming transition, occurs in a wide variety of
physical systems, such as colloidal suspensions and molecular fluids, when the
temperature is lowered or the density increased. Shear stress, as temperature,
favors the fluid-like state, and must be also considered to define the system
'jamming phase diagram' [1-4]. Frictionless athermal systems [1], for instance,
can be described by the zero temperature plane of the jamming diagram in the
temperature, density, stress space. Here we consider the jamming of athermal
frictional systems [8-13] such as granular materials, which are important to a
number of applications from geophysics to industry. At constant volume and
applied shear stress[1, 2], we show that while in absence of friction a system
is either fluid-like or jammed, in the presence of friction a new region in the
density shear-stress plane appears, where new dynamical regimes are found. In
this region a system may slip, or even flow with a steady velocity for a long
time in response to an applied stress, but then eventually jams. Jamming in
non-thermal frictional systems is described here by a phase diagram in the
density, shear-stress and friction space
Dynamics and thermodynamics of the spherical frustrated Blume-Emery-Griffiths model
We introduce a spherical version of the frustrated Blume-Emery-Griffiths
model and solve exactly the statics and the Langevin dynamics for zero
particle-particle coupling (K=0). In this case the model exhibits an
equilibrium transition from a disordered to a spin glass phase which is always
continuous for nonzero temperature. The same phase diagram results from the
study of the dynamics. Furthermore, we notice the existence of a nonequilibrium
time regime in a region of the disordered phase, characterized by aging as
occurs in the spin glass phase. Due to a finite equilibration time, the system
displays in this region the pattern of interrupted aging.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figure
Experimental study of the compaction dynamics for 2D anisotropic granular materials
We present an experimental study of the compaction dynamics for
two-dimensional anisotropic granular systems. Compaction dynamics is measured
at three different scales : (i) the macroscopic scale through the packing
fraction , (ii) the mesoscopic scale through both fractions of aligned
grains and ideally ordered grains , and (iii) the
microscopic scale through both rotational and translational grain mobilities
. The effect of the grain rotations on the compaction dynamics has
been measured. At the macroscopic scale, we have observed a discontinuity in
the late stages of the compaction curve. At the mesoscopic scale, we have
observed the formation and the growth of domains made of aligned grains. From a
microscopic point of view, measurements reveal that the beginning of the
compaction process is essentially related to translational motion of the
grains. The grains rotations drive mainly the process during the latest stages
of compaction.Comment: 8pages, 11 figure
Glass transition in granular media
In the framework of schematic hard spheres lattice models for granular media
we investigate the phenomenon of the ``jamming transition''. In particular,
using Edwards' approach, by analytical calculations at a mean field level, we
derive the system phase diagram and show that ``jamming'' corresponds to a
phase transition from a ``fluid'' to a ``glassy'' phase, observed when
crystallization is avoided. Interestingly, the nature of such a ``glassy''
phase turns out to be the same found in mean field models for glass formers.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Site Percolation and Phase Transitions in Two Dimensions
The properties of the pure-site clusters of spin models, i.e. the clusters
which are obtained by joining nearest-neighbour spins of the same sign, are
here investigated. In the Ising model in two dimensions it is known that such
clusters undergo a percolation transition exactly at the critical point. We
show that this result is valid for a wide class of bidimensional systems
undergoing a continuous magnetization transition. We provide numerical evidence
for discrete as well as for continuous spin models, including SU(N) lattice
gauge theories. The critical percolation exponents do not coincide with the
ones of the thermal transition, but they are the same for models belonging to
the same universality class.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables. Numerical part developed; figures,
references and comments adde
A fast algorithm for backbones
A matching algorithm for the identification of backbones in percolation
problems is introduced. Using this procedure, percolation backbones are studied
in two- to five-dimensional systems containing 1.7x10^7 sites, two orders of
magnitude larger than was previously possible using burning algorithms.Comment: 8 pages, 6 .eps figures. Uses epsfig and ijmpc.sty (included). To
appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Relaxation properties in a lattice gas model with asymmetrical particles
We study the relaxation process in a two-dimensional lattice gas model, where
the interactions come from the excluded volume. In this model particles have
three arms with an asymmetrical shape, which results in geometrical frustration
that inhibits full packing. A dynamical crossover is found at the arm
percolation of the particles, from a dynamical behavior characterized by a
single step relaxation above the transition, to a two-step decay below it.
Relaxation functions of the self-part of density fluctuations are well fitted
by a stretched exponential form, with a exponent decreasing when the
temperature is lowered until the percolation transition is reached, and
constant below it. The structural arrest of the model seems to happen only at
the maximum density of the model, where both the inverse diffusivity and the
relaxation time of density fluctuations diverge with a power law. The dynamical
non linear susceptibility, defined as the fluctuations of the self-overlap
autocorrelation, exhibits a peak at some characteristic time, which seems to
diverge at the maximum density as well.Comment: 7 pages and 9 figure
Static and dynamic heterogeneities in irreversible gels and colloidal gelation
We compare the slow dynamics of irreversible gels, colloidal gels, glasses
and spin glasses by analyzing the behavior of the so called non-linear
dynamical susceptibility, a quantity usually introduced to quantitatively
characterize the dynamical heterogeneities. In glasses this quantity typically
grows with the time, reaches a maximum and then decreases at large time, due to
the transient nature of dynamical heterogeneities and to the absence of a
diverging static correlation length. We have recently shown that in
irreversible gels the dynamical susceptibility is instead an increasing
function of the time, as in the case of spin glasses, and tends asymptotically
to the mean cluster size. On the basis of molecular dynamics simulations, we
here show that in colloidal gelation where clusters are not permanent, at very
low temperature and volume fractions, i.e. when the lifetime of the bonds is
much larger than the structural relaxation time, the non-linear susceptibility
has a behavior similar to the one of the irreversible gel, followed, at higher
volume fractions, by a crossover towards the behavior of glass forming liquids.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
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