Hypostatic jammed packings of frictionless nonspherical particles
Kyle VanderWerf, Weiwei Jin, Mark D. Shattuck, and Corey S. O'Hern

TL;DR
This study investigates how various nonspherical particles form hypostatic packings that are mechanically stable despite having fewer contacts than predicted, revealing universal behaviors related to particle asphericity.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new interparticle potential for accurate force and torque calculations and uncovers universal scaling laws and stability mechanisms for hypostatic packings of nonspherical particles.
Findings
Packing fraction and coordination number scale with asphericity ${\
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Abstract
We perform computational studies of static packings of a variety of nonspherical particles including circulo-lines, circulo-polygons, ellipses, asymmetric dimers, and dumbbells to determine which shapes form hypostatic versus isostatic packings and to understand why hypostatic packings of nonspherical particles can be mechanically stable despite having fewer contacts than that predicted from na\"ive constraint counting. To generate highly accurate force- and torque-balanced packings of circulo-lines and -polygons, we developed an interparticle potential that gives continuous forces and torques as a function of the particle coordinates. We show that the packing fraction and coordination number at jamming onset obey a master-like form for all of the nonspherical particle packings we studied when plotted versus the particle asphericity , which is proportional to the ratio of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsModular Robots and Swarm Intelligence · Additive Manufacturing and 3D Printing Technologies · Material Properties and Processing
