839 research outputs found
Friction law and hysteresis in granular materials
The macroscopic friction of particulate materials often weakens as the flow
rate is increased, leading to potentially disastrous intermittent phenomena
including earthquakes and landslides. We theoretically and numerically study
this phenomenon in simple granular materials. We show that velocity-weakening,
corresponding to a non-monotonic behavior in the friction law , is
present even if the dynamic and static microscopic friction coefficients are
identical, but disappears for softer particles. We argue that this instability
is induced by endogenous acoustic noise, which tends to make contacts slide,
leading to faster flow and increased noise. We show that soft spots, or
excitable regions in the materials, correspond to rolling contacts that are
about to slide, whose density is described by a nontrivial exponent .
We build a microscopic theory for the non-monotonicity of , which also
predicts the scaling behavior of acoustic noise, the fraction of sliding
contacts and the sliding velocity, in terms of . Surprisingly,
these quantities have no limit when particles become infinitely hard, as
confirmed numerically. Our analysis rationalizes previously unexplained
observations and makes new experimentally testable predictions.Comment: 6 pages + 3 pages S
Effect of Friction on Dense Suspension Flows of Hard Particles
We use numerical simulations to study the effect of particle friction on
suspension flows of non-Brownian hard particles. By systematically varying the
microscopic friction coefficient and the viscous number , we build a
phase diagram that identifies three regimes of flow: Frictionless, Frictional
Sliding, and Rolling. Using energy balance in flow, we predict relations
between kinetic observables, confirmed by numerical simulations. For realistic
friction coefficient and small viscous numbers (below ) we show
that the dominating dissipative mechanism is sliding of frictional contacts,
and we characterize asymptotic behaviors as jamming is approached. Outside this
regime, our observations support that flow belongs to the universality class of
frictionless particles. We discuss recent experiments in the context of our
phase diagram.Comment: 8 page
Non-affine response: jammed packings versus spring networks
We compare the elastic response of spring networks whose contact geometry is
derived from real packings of frictionless discs, to networks obtained by
randomly cutting bonds in a highly connected network derived from a
well-compressed packing. We find that the shear response of packing-derived
networks, and both the shear and compression response of randomly cut networks,
are all similar: the elastic moduli vanish linearly near jamming, and
distributions characterizing the local geometry of the response scale with
distance to jamming. Compression of packing-derived networks is exceptional:
the elastic modulus remains constant and the geometrical distributions do not
exhibit simple scaling. We conclude that the compression response of jammed
packings is anomalous, rather than the shear response.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, submitted to ep
On the dependence of the avalanche angle on the granular layer thickness
A layer of sand of thickness h flows down a rough surface if the inclination
is larger than some threshold value theta which decreases with h. A tentative
microscopic model for the dependence of theta with h is proposed for rigid
frictional grains, based on the following hypothesis: (i) a horizontal layer of
sand has some coordination z larger than a critical value z_c where mechanical
stability is lost (ii) as the tilt angle is increased, the configurations
visited present a growing proportion $_s of sliding contacts. Instability with
respect to flow occurs when z-z_s=z_c. This criterion leads to a prediction for
theta(h) in good agreement with empirical observations.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
The distribution of forces affects vibrational properties in hard sphere glasses
We study theoretically and numerically the elastic properties of hard sphere
glasses, and provide a real-space description of their mechanical stability. In
contrast to repulsive particles at zero-temperature, we argue that the presence
of certain pairs of particles interacting with a small force soften elastic
properties. This softening affects the exponents characterizing elasticity at
high pressure, leading to experimentally testable predictions. Denoting
the force distribution of such pairs and the
packing fraction at which pressure diverges, we predict that (i) the density of
states has a low-frequency peak at a scale , rising up to it as
, and decaying above as where and is the frequency,
(ii) shear modulus and mean-squared displacement are inversely proportional
with where
, and (iii) continuum elasticity breaks down on a
scale where
and , where is the
coordination and the spatial dimension. We numerically test (i) and provide
data supporting that in our bi-disperse system,
independently of system preparation in two and three dimensions, leading to
, , and . Our results for the
mean-square displacement are consistent with a recent exact replica computation
for , whereas some observations differ, as rationalized by the
present approach.Comment: 5 pages + 4 pages supplementary informatio
Geometric origin of excess low-frequency vibrational modes in amorphous solids
Glasses have a large excess of low-frequency vibrational modes in comparison
with crystalline solids. We show that such a feature is a necessary consequence
of the geometry generic to weakly connected solids. In particular, we analyze
the density of states of a recently simulated system, comprised of weakly
compressed spheres at zero temperature. We account for the observed a)
constancy of the density of modes with frequency, b) appearance of a
low-frequency cutoff, and c) power-law increase of this cutoff with
compression. We predict a length scale below which vibrations are very
different from those of a continuous elastic body.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Argument rewritten, identical result
Toward a microscopic description of flow near the jamming threshold
We study the relationship between microscopic structure and viscosity in
non-Brownian suspensions. We argue that the formation and opening of contacts
between particles in flow effectively leads to a negative selection of the
contacts carrying weak forces. We show that an analytically tractable model
capturing this negative selection correctly reproduces scaling properties of
flows near the jamming transition. In particular, we predict that (i) the
viscosity {\eta} diverges with the coordination z as {\eta} ~
(z_c-z)^{-(3+{\theta})/(1+{\theta})}, (ii) the operator that governs flow
displays a low-frequency mode that controls the divergence of viscosity, at a
frequency {\omega}_min\sim(z_c-z)^{(3+{\theta})/(2+2{\theta})}, and (iii) the
distribution of forces displays a scale f* that vanishes near jamming as
f*/\sim(z_c-z)^{1/(1+{\theta})} where {\theta} characterizes the
distribution of contact forces P(f)\simf^{\theta} at jamming, and where z_c is
the Maxwell threshold for rigidity.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Thermocapillary effects in driven dewetting and self-assembly of pulsed laser-irradiated metallic films
In this paper the lubrication-type dynamical model is developed of a molten,
pulsed laser-irradiated metallic film. The heat transfer problem that
incorporates the absorbed heat from a single beam or interfering beams is
solved analytically. Using this temperature field, we derive the 3D long-wave
evolution PDE for the film height. To get insights into dynamics of dewetting,
we study the 2D version of the evolution equation by means of a linear
stability analysis and by numerical simulations. The stabilizing and
destabilizing effects of various system parameters, such as the peak laser beam
intensity, the film optical thickness, the Biot and Marangoni numbers, etc. are
elucidated. It is observed that the film stability is promoted for such
parameters variations that increase the heat production in the film. In the
numerical simulations the impacts of different irradiation modes are
investigated. In particular, we obtain that in the interference heating mode
the spatially periodic irradiation results in a spatially periodic film rupture
with the same, or nearly equal period. The 2D model qualitatively reproduces
the results of the experimental observations of a film stability and spatial
ordering of a re-solidified nanostructures
Hypoconstrained Jammed Packings of Nonspherical Hard Particles: Ellipses and Ellipsoids
Continuing on recent computational and experimental work on jammed packings
of hard ellipsoids [Donev et al., Science, vol. 303, 990-993] we consider
jamming in packings of smooth strictly convex nonspherical hard particles. We
explain why the isocounting conjecture, which states that for large disordered
jammed packings the average contact number per particle is twice the number of
degrees of freedom per particle (\bar{Z}=2d_{f}), does not apply to
nonspherical particles. We develop first- and second-order conditions for
jamming, and demonstrate that packings of nonspherical particles can be jammed
even though they are hypoconstrained (\bar{Z}<2d_{f}). We apply an algorithm
using these conditions to computer-generated hypoconstrained ellipsoid and
ellipse packings and demonstrate that our algorithm does produce jammed
packings, even close to the sphere point. We also consider packings that are
nearly jammed and draw connections to packings of deformable (but stiff)
particles. Finally, we consider the jamming conditions for nearly spherical
particles and explain quantitatively the behavior we observe in the vicinity of
the sphere point.Comment: 33 pages, third revisio
Polymer drift in a solvent by force acting on one polymer end
We investigate the effect of hydrodynamic interactions on the non-equilibrium
drift dynamics of an ideal flexible polymer pulled by a constant force applied
at one end of the polymer using the perturbation theory and the renormalization
group method. For moderate force, if the polymer elongation is small, the
hydrodynamic interactions are not screened and the velocity and the
longitudinal elongation of the polymer are computed using the renormalization
group method. Both the velocity and elongation are nonlinear functions of the
driving force in this regime. For large elongation we found two regimes. For
large force but finite chain length the hydrodynamic interactions are
screened. For large chain lengths and a finite force the hydrodynamic
interactions are only partially screened, which in three dimensions results in
unusual logarithmic corrections to the velocity and the longitudinal
elongation.Comment: 6 page
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