Coarse-graining microscopic strains in a harmonic, two-dimensional solid and its implications for elasticity: non-local susceptibilities and non-affine noise
K. Franzrahe, P. Nielaba, S. Sengupta

TL;DR
This paper investigates how coarse-graining microscopic strains in a 2D harmonic solid reveals non-local elastic correlations and non-affine noise, with implications for experimental measurements of elasticity in soft matter systems.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of non-local strain susceptibilities and non-affine noise in a 2D harmonic lattice, connecting microscopic fluctuations to macroscopic elastic properties.
Findings
Non-local strain correlations depend on ensemble and boundary conditions.
Non-affine noise can be modeled with a simple cell model.
A universal scaling law for noise distribution is identified.
Abstract
In soft matter systems the local displacement field can be accessed directly by video microscopy enabling one to compute local strain fields and hence the elastic moduli using a coarse-graining procedure. We study this process for a simple triangular lattice of particles connected by harmonic springs in two-dimensions. Coarse-graining local strains obtained from particle configurations in a Monte Carlo simulation generates non-trivial, non-local strain correlations (susceptibilities), which may be understood within a generalized, Landau type elastic Hamiltonian containing up to quartic terms in strain gradients (K. Franzrahe et al., Phys. Rev. E 78, 026106 (2008)). In order to demonstrate the versatility of the analysis of these correlations and to make our calculations directly relevant for experiments on colloidal solids, we systematically study various parameters such as the choice…
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