2,180 research outputs found
Two-dimensional melting far from equilibrium in a granular monolayer
We report an experimental investigation of the transition from a hexagonally
ordered solid phase to a disordered liquid in a monolayer of vibrated spheres.
The transition occurs as the intensity of the vibration amplitude is increased.
Measurements of the density of dislocations and the positional and
orientational correlation functions show evidence for a dislocation-mediated
continuous transition from a solid phase with long-range order to a liquid with
only short-range order. The results show a strong similarity to simulations of
melting of hard disks in equilibrium, despite the fact that the granular
monolayer is far from equilibrium due to the effects of interparticle
dissipation and the vibrational forcing.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Effect of inelasticity on the phase transitions of a thin vibrated granular layer
We describe an experimental and computational investigation of the ordered
and disordered phases of a vibrating thin, dense granular layer composed of
identical metal spheres. We compare the results from spheres with different
amounts of inelasticity and show that inelasticity has a strong effect on the
phase diagram. We also report the melting of an ordered phase to a homogeneous
disordered liquid phase at high vibration amplitude or at large inelasticities.
Our results show that dissipation has a strong effect on ordering and that in
this system ordered phases are absent entirely in highly inelastic materials.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, published in Physical Review E. Title of first
version slightly change
The effects of forcing and dissipation on phase transitions in thin granular layers
Recent experimental and computational studies of vibrated thin layers of
identical spheres have shown transitions to ordered phases similar to those
seen in equilibrium systems. Motivated by these results, we carry out
simulations of hard inelastic spheres forced by homogenous white noise. We find
a transition to an ordered state of the same symmetry as that seen in the
experiments, but the clear phase separation observed in the vibrated system is
absent. Simulations of purely elastic spheres also show no evidence for phase
separation. We show that the energy injection in the vibrated system is
dramatically different in the different phases, and suggest that this creates
an effective surface tension not present in the equilibrium or randomly forced
systems. We do find, however, that inelasticity suppresses the onset of the
ordered phase with random forcing, as is observed in the vibrating system, and
that the amount of the suppression is proportional to the degree of
inelasticity. The suppression depends on the details of the energy injection
mechanism, but is completely eliminated when inelastic collisions are replaced
by uniform system-wide energy dissipation.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
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