77 research outputs found
Minimal energy packings and collapse of sticky tangent hard-sphere polymers
We enumerate all minimal energy packings (MEPs) for small single linear and
ring polymers composed of spherical monomers with contact attractions and
hard-core repulsions, and compare them to corresponding results for monomer
packings. We define and identify ``dividing surfaces" in polymer packings,
which reduce the number of arrangements that satisfy hard-sphere and covalent
bond constraints. Compared to monomer MEPs, polymer MEPs favor intermediate
structural symmetry over high and low symmetries. We also examine the
packing-preparation dependence for longer single chains using molecular
dynamics simulations. For slow temperature quenches, chains form crystallites
with close-packed cores. As quench rate increases, the core size decreases and
the exterior becomes more disordered. By examining the contact number, we
connect suppression of crystallization to the onset of isostaticity in
disordered packings. These studies represent a significant step forward in our
ability to predict how the structural and mechanical properties of compact
polymers depend on collapse dynamics.Comment: Supplementary material is integrated in this versio
Random close packing revisited: How many ways can we pack frictionless disks?
We create collectively jammed (CJ) packings of 50-50 bidisperse mixtures of
smooth disks in 2d using an algorithm in which we successively compress or
expand soft particles and minimize the total energy at each step until the
particles are just at contact. We focus on small systems in 2d and thus are
able to find nearly all of the collectively jammed states at each system size.
We decompose the probability for obtaining a collectively jammed
state at a particular packing fraction into two composite functions: 1)
the density of CJ packing fractions , which only depends on
geometry and 2) the frequency distribution , which depends on the
particular algorithm used to create them. We find that the function
is sharply peaked and that depends exponentially on
. We predict that in the infinite system-size limit the behavior of
in these systems is controlled by the density of CJ packing
fractions--not the frequency distribution. These results suggest that the
location of the peak in when can be used as a
protocol-independent definition of random close packing.Comment: 9 pages, 14 figure
The jamming transition and new percolation universality classes in particulate systems with attraction
We numerically study the jamming transition in particulate systems with
attraction by investigating their mechanical response at zero temperature. We
find three regimes of mechanical behavior separated by two critical
transitions--connectivity and rigidity percolation. The transitions belong to
different universality classes than their lattice counterparts, due to force
balance constraints. We also find that these transitions are unchanged at low
temperatures and resemble gelation transitions in experiments on colloidal and
silica gels.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 2 table
Understanding the Frequency Distribution of Mechanically Stable Disk Packings
Relative frequencies of mechanically stable (MS) packings of frictionless
bidisperse disks are studied numerically in small systems. The packings are
created by successively compressing or decompressing a system of soft purely
repulsive disks, followed by energy minimization, until only infinitesimal
particle overlaps remain. For systems of up to 14 particles most of the MS
packings were generated. We find that the packings are not equally probable as
has been assumed in recent thermodynamic descriptions of granular systems.
Instead, the frequency distribution, averaged over each packing-fraction
interval , grows exponentially with increasing . Moreover,
within each packing-fraction interval MS packings occur with frequencies
that differ by many orders of magnitude. Also, key features of the frequency
distribution do not change when we significantly alter the packing-generation
algorithm--for example frequent packings remain frequent and rare ones remain
rare. These results indicate that the frequency distribution of MS packings is
strongly influenced by geometrical properties of the multidimensional
configuration space. By adding thermal fluctuations to a set of the MS
packings, we were able to examine a number of local features of configuration
space near each packing including the time required for a given packing to
break to a distinct one, which enabled us to estimate the energy barriers that
separate one packing from another. We found a positive correlation between the
packing frequencies and the heights of the lowest energy barriers .
We also examined displacement fluctuations away from the MS packings to
correlate the size and shape of the local basins near each packing to the
packing frequencies.Comment: 21 pages, 20 figures, 1 tabl
Reply to "Comment on `Jamming at zero temperature and zero applied stress: The epitome of disorder' "
We answer the questions raised by Donev, Torquato, Stillinger, and Connelly
in their "Comment on "Jamming at zero temperature and zero applied stress: The
epitome of disorder.' " We emphasize that we follow a fundamentally different
approach than they have done to reinterpret random close packing in terms of
the "maximally random jammed" framework. We define the "maximally random jammed
packing fraction" to be where the largest number of initial states, chosen
completely randomly, have relaxed final states at the jamming threshold in the
thermodynamic limit. Thus, we focus on an ensemble of states at the jamming
threshold, while DTSC are interested in determining the amount of order and
degree of jamming for a particular configuration. We also argue that
soft-particle systems are as "clean" as those using hard spheres for studying
jammed packings and point out the benefits of using soft potentials
A percolation model for slow dynamics in glass-forming materials
We identify a link between the glass transition and percolation of mobile
regions in configuration space. We find that many hallmarks of glassy dynamics,
for example stretched-exponential response functions and a diverging structural
relaxation time, are consequences of the critical properties of mean-field
percolation. Specific predictions of the percolation model include the range of
possible stretching exponents and the functional
dependence of the structural relaxation time and exponent
on temperature, density, and wave number.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Tuning Jammed Frictionless Disk Packings from Isostatic to Hyperstatic
We perform extensive computational studies of two-dimensional static
bidisperse disk packings using two distinct packing-generation protocols. The
first involves thermally quenching equilibrated liquid configurations to zero
temperature over a range of thermal quench rates and initial packing
fractions followed by compression and decompression in small steps to reach
packing fractions at jamming onset. For the second, we seed the system
with initial configurations that promote micro- and macrophase-separated
packings followed by compression and decompression to . We find that
amorphous, isostatic packings exist over a finite range of packing fractions
from in the large-system limit,
with . In agreement with previous calculations,
we obtain for , where is the rate
above which is insensitive to rate. We further compare the structural
and mechanical properties of isostatic versus hyperstatic packings. The
structural characterizations include the contact number, bond orientational
order, and mixing ratios of the large and small particles. We find that the
isostatic packings are positionally and compositionally disordered, whereas
bond-orientational and compositional order increase with contact number for
hyperstatic packings. In addition, we calculate the static shear modulus and
normal mode frequencies of the static packings to understand the extent to
which the mechanical properties of amorphous, isostatic packings are different
from partially ordered packings. We find that the mechanical properties of the
packings change continuously as the contact number increases from isostatic to
hyperstatic.Comment: 11 pages, 15 figure
Stabilization of nonlinear velocity profiles in athermal systems undergoing planar shear flow
We perform molecular dynamics simulations of model granular systems
undergoing boundary-driven planar shear flow in two spatial dimensions with the
goal of developing a more complete understanding of how dense particulate
systems respond to applied shear. In particular, we are interested in
determining when these systems will possess linear velocity profiles and when
they will develop highly localized velocity profiles in response to shear. In
previous work on similar systems we showed that nonlinear velocity profiles
form when the speed of the shearing boundary exceeds the speed of shear waves
in the material. However, we find that nonlinear velocity profiles in these
systems are unstable at very long times. The degree of nonlinearity slowly
decreases in time; the velocity profiles become linear when the granular
temperature and density profiles are uniform across the system at long times.
We measure the time required for the velocity profiles to become linear
and find that increases as a power-law with the speed of the shearing
boundary and increases rapidly as the packing fraction approaches random close
packing. We also performed simulations in which differences in the granular
temperature across the system were maintained by vertically vibrating one of
the boundaries during shear flow. We find that nonlinear velocity profiles form
and are stable at long times if the difference in the granular temperature
across the system exceeds a threshold value that is comparable to the glass
transition temperature in an equilibrium system at the same average density.
Finally, the sheared and vibrated systems form stable shear bands, or highly
localized velocity profiles, when the applied shear stress is lowered below the
yield stress of the static part of the system.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figure
Reversible plasticity in amorphous materials
A fundamental assumption in our understanding of material rheology is that
when microscopic deformations are reversible, the material responds elastically
to external loads. Plasticity, i.e. dissipative and irreversible macroscopic
changes in a material, is assumed to be the consequence of irreversible
microscopic events. Here we show direct evidence for reversible plastic events
at the microscopic scale in both experiments and simulations of two-dimensional
foam. In the simulations, we demonstrate a link between reversible plastic
rearrangement events and pathways in the potential energy landscape of the
system. These findings represent a fundamental change in our understanding of
materials--microscopic reversibility does not necessarily imply elasticity.Comment: Revised pape
Viscoplasticity and large-scale chain relaxation in glassy-polymeric strain hardening
A simple theory for glassy polymeric mechanical response which accounts for
large scale chain relaxation is presented. It captures the crossover from
perfect-plastic response to strong strain hardening as the degree of
polymerization increases, without invoking entanglements. By relating
hardening to interactions on the scale of monomers and chain segments, we
correctly predict its magnitude. Strain activated relaxation arising from the
need to maintain constant chain contour length reduces the dependence of
the characteristic relaxation time by a factor during
active deformation at strain rate . This prediction is consistent
with results from recent experiments and simulations, and we suggest how it may
be further tested experimentally.Comment: The theoretical treatment of the mechanical response has been
significantly revised, and the arguments for coherent relaxation during
active deformation made more transparen
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