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Density fluctuations in vibrated granular materials

Physical Review E, Vol. 57, No. 2. (February 1998), 1971.

X Abstract

We report systematic measurements of the density of a vibrated granular material as a function of time. Monodisperse spherical beads were confined to a cylindrical container and shaken vertically. Under vibrations; the density of the pile slowly reaches a final steady-state value about which the density fluctuates. We have investigated the frequency dependence and amplitude of these fluctuations as a function of vibration intensity Γ. The spectrum of density fluctuations around the steady state value provides a probe of the internal relaxation dynamics of the system and a link to recent thermodynamic theories for the settling of granular material. In particular; we propose a method to evaluate the compactivity of a powder; first put forth by Edwards and co-workers; that is the analog to temperature for a quasistatic powder. We also propose a stochastic model based on free volume considerations that captures the essential mechanism underlying the slow relaxation. We compare our experimental results with simulations of a one-dimensional model for random adsorption and desorption.

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This article has been bookmarked 4 times, initially on 2007-06-03.

2008-05-10 User kdesmond
2008-04-27 User dchen
2007-09-19 User weeks
2007-06-03 User kedmond , 1 note

A paper by Nagel and others that talks about how a granular system is able to relax into a more compact configuration. Discusses the localized reordering of beads, and how they require the cooperation of their nearest neighbors, which is similar to the cooperative motion required by super-cooled liquids that approach the glass transition. This paper also discusses "granular temperature," which is a useful ocncept. I wonder if it's applicable to glassy systems...

2007-06-03 20:17:34
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