Tuning Jammed Frictionless Disk Packings from Isostatic to Hyperstatic
Carl F. Schreck, Corey S. O'Hern, Leonardo E. Silbert

TL;DR
This study investigates how the structural and mechanical properties of two-dimensional bidisperse disk packings evolve from isostatic to hyperstatic states, revealing continuous changes in properties with increasing contact number.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive computational analysis of the transition from isostatic to hyperstatic packings, including structural and mechanical characterizations across different packing protocols.
Findings
Isostatic packings exist over a finite packing fraction range.
Structural order increases with contact number in hyperstatic packings.
Mechanical properties change continuously from isostatic to hyperstatic states.
Abstract
We perform extensive computational studies of two-dimensional static bidisperse disk packings using two distinct packing-generation protocols. The first involves thermally quenching equilibrated liquid configurations to zero temperature over a range of thermal quench rates and initial packing fractions followed by compression and decompression in small steps to reach packing fractions at jamming onset. For the second, we seed the system with initial configurations that promote micro- and macrophase-separated packings followed by compression and decompression to . We find that amorphous, isostatic packings exist over a finite range of packing fractions from in the large-system limit, with . In agreement with previous calculations, we obtain for , where…
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