2 research outputs found
Statistics of the contact network in frictional and frictionless granular packings
Simulated granular packings with different particle friction coefficient mu
are examined. The distribution of the particle-particle and particle-wall
normal and tangential contact forces P(f) are computed and compared with
existing experimental data. Here f equivalent to F/F-bar is the contact force F
normalized by the average value F-bar. P(f) exhibits exponential-like decay at
large forces, a plateau/peak near f = 1, with additional features at forces
smaller than the average that depend on mu. Computations of the force-force
spatial distribution function and the contact point radial distribution
function indicate that correlations between forces are only weakly dependent on
friction and decay rapidly beyond approximately three particle diameters.
Distributions of the particle-particle contact angles show that the contact
network is not isotropic and only weakly dependent on friction. High
force-bearing structures, or force chains, do not play a dominant role in these
three dimensional, unloaded packings.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, submitted to PR
Stress response inside perturbed particle assemblies
The effect of structural disorder on the stress response inside three
dimensional particle assemblies is studied using computer simulations of
frictionless sphere packings. Upon applying a localised, perturbative force
within the packings, the resulting {\it Green's} function response is mapped
inside the different assemblies, thus providing an explicit view as to how the
imposed perturbation is transmitted through the packing. In weakly disordered
arrays, the resulting transmission of forces is of the double-peak variety, but
with peak widths scaling linearly with distance from the source of the
perturbation. This behaviour is consistent with an anisotropic elasticity
response profile. Increasing the disorder distorts the response function until
a single-peak response is obtained for fully disordered packings consistent
with an isotropic description.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure captions To appear in Granular Matte