195 research outputs found

    Finite-range viscoelastic subdiffusion in disordered systems with inclusion of inertial effects

    Get PDF
    This work justifies the paradigmatic importance of viscoelastic subdiffusion in random environments for cellular biological systems. This model displays several remarkable features, which makes it an attractive paradigm to explain the physical nature of biological subdiffusion. In particular, it combines viscoelasticity with distinct non-ergodic features. We extend this model to make it suitable for the subdiffusion of lipids in disordered biological membranes upon including the inertial effects. For lipids, the inertial effects occur in the range of picoseconds, and a power-law decaying viscoelastic memory extends over the range of several nanoseconds. Thus, in the absence of disorder, diffusion would become normal on a time scale beyond this memory range. However, both experimentally and in some molecular-dynamical simulations, the time range of lipid subdiffusion extends far beyond the viscoelastic memory range. We study three 1d models of correlated quenched Gaussian disorder to explain the puzzle: singular short-range (exponentially correlated), smooth short-range (Gaussian-correlated), and smooth long-range (power-law correlated) disorder. For a moderate disorder strength, transient viscoelastic subdiffusion changes into the subdiffusion caused by the randomness of the environment. It is characterized by a time-dependent power-law exponent of subdiffusion, which can show nonmonotonous behavior, in agreement with some recent molecular-dynamical simulations. Moreover, the spatial distribution of test particles in this disorder-dominated regime is shown to be a non-Gaussian, exponential power distribution, which also correlates well with molecular-dynamical findings and experiments. Furthermore, this subdiffusion is nonergodic with single-trajectory averages showing a broad scatter, in agreement with experimental observations for subdiffusion of various particles in living cells

    Coefficient of tangential restitution for the linear dashpot model

    Full text link
    The linear dashpot model for the inelastic normal force between colliding spheres leads to a constant coefficient of normal restitution, Ï”n=\epsilon_n=const., which makes this model very popular for the investigation of dilute and moderately dense granular systems. For two frequently used models for the tangential interaction force we determine the coefficient of tangential restitution Ï”t\epsilon_t, both analytically and by numerical integration of Newton's equation. Although Ï”n=\epsilon_n=const. for the linear-dashpot model, we obtain pronounced and characteristic dependencies of the tangential coefficient on the impact velocity Ï”t=Ï”t(g⃗)\epsilon_t=\epsilon_t(\vec{g}). The results may be used for event-driven simulations of granular systems of frictional particles.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure

    Collision of Viscoelastic Spheres: Compact Expressions for the Coefficient of Normal Restitution

    Full text link
    The coefficient of restitution of colliding viscoelastic spheres is analytically known as a complete series expansion in terms of the impact velocity where all (infinitely many) coefficients are known. While beeing analytically exact, this result is not suitable for applications in efficient event-driven Molecular Dynamics (eMD) or Monte Carlo (MC) simulations. Based on the analytic result, here we derive expressions for the coefficient of restitution which allow for an application in efficient eMD and MC simulations of granular Systems.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Coefficient of Restitution for Viscoelastic Spheres: The Effect of Delayed Recovery

    Full text link
    The coefficient of normal restitution of colliding viscoelastic spheres is computed as a function of the material properties and the impact velocity. From simple arguments it becomes clear that in a collision of purely repulsively interacting particles, the particles loose contact slightly before the distance of the centers of the spheres reaches the sum of the radii, that is, the particles recover their shape only after they lose contact with their collision partner. This effect was neglected in earlier calculations which leads erroneously to attractive forces and, thus, to an underestimation of the coefficient of restitution. As a result we find a novel dependence of the coefficient of restitution on the impact rate.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure

    Structural features of jammed-granulate metamaterials

    Full text link
    Granular media near jamming exhibit fascinating properties, which can be harnessed to create jammed-granulate metamaterials: materials whose characteristics arise not only from the shape and material properties of the particles at the microscale, but also from the geometric features of the packing. For the case of a bending beam made from jammed-granulate metamaterial, we study the impact of the particles' properties on the metamaterial's macroscopic mechanical characteristics. We find that the metamaterial's stiffness emerges from its volume fraction, in turn originating from its creation protocol; its ultimate strength corresponds to yielding of the force network. In contrast to many traditional materials, we find that macroscopic deformation occurs mostly through affine motion within the packing, aided by stress relieve through local plastic events, surprisingly homogeneously spread and persistent throughout bending
    • 

    corecore