Packing of Compressible Granular Materials
arXiv:cond-mat/0002102 · doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.84.4160
Abstract
3D Computer simulations and experiments are employed to study random packings of compressible spherical grains under external confining stress. Of particular interest is the rigid ball limit, which we describe as a continuous transition in which the applied stress vanishes as (Ï-Ï_c)^β, where Ïis the (solid phase) volume density. This transition coincides with the onset of shear rigidity. The value of Ï_c depends, for example, on whether the grains interact via only normal forces (giving rise to random close packings) or by a combination of normal and friction generated transverse forces (producing random loose packings). In both cases, near the transition, the system's response is controlled by localized force chains. As the stress increases, we characterize the system's evolution in terms of (1) the participation number, (2) the average force distribution, and (3) visualization techniques.
4 pages, 7 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett