Jamming transition in emulsions and granular materials

H. P. Zhang and H. A. Makse
Phys. Rev. E 72, 011301 – Published 7 July 2005

Abstract

We investigate the jamming transition in packings of emulsions and granular materials via molecular dynamics simulations. The emulsion model is composed of frictionless droplets interacting via nonlinear normal forces obtained using experimental data acquired by confocal microscopy of compressed emulsions systems. Granular materials are modeled by Hertz-Mindlin deformable spherical grains with Coulomb friction. In both cases, we find power-law scaling for the vanishing of pressure and excess number of contacts as the system approaches the jamming transition from high volume fractions. We find that the construction history parametrized by the compression rate during the preparation protocol has a strong effect on the micromechanical properties of granular materials but not on emulsions. This leads the granular system to jam at different volume fractions depending on the histories. Isostaticity is found in the packings close to the jamming transition in emulsions and in granular materials at slow compression rates and infinite friction. Heterogeneity of interparticle forces increases as the packings approach the jamming transition which is demonstrated by the exponential tail in force distributions and the small values of the participation number measuring spatial localization of the forces. However, no signatures of the jamming transition are observed in structural properties, like the radial distribution functions and the distributions of contacts.

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  • Received 16 January 2005

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.72.011301

©2005 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

H. P. Zhang

  • Physics Department, City College of New York, New York 10031, USA

H. A. Makse

  • Physics Department and Levich Institute, City College of New York, New York 10031, USA

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Vol. 72, Iss. 1 — July 2005

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