Jamming of Deformable Polygons
Arman Boromand, Alexandra Signoriello, Fangfu Ye, Corey S. O'Hern,, Mark D. Shattuck

TL;DR
This paper introduces a deformable polygon model for 2D cellular materials, studying how particle shape affects jamming and mechanical properties, revealing a critical asphericity where polygons fill cells and develop invaginations.
Contribution
The deformable particle model (DPM) allows for polygon shape variation and provides new insights into jamming behavior and shape effects in 2D cellular packings.
Findings
Packing fraction at jamming increases with asphericity.
A critical asphericity value marks complete cell filling and invagination onset.
Packings remain solid-like across all asphericities.
Abstract
There are two main classes of physics-based models for two-dimensional cellular materials: packings of repulsive disks and the vertex model. These models have several disadvantages. For example, disk interactions are typically a function of particle overlap, yet the model assumes that the disks remain circular during overlap. The shapes of the cells can vary in the vertex model, however, the packing fraction is fixed at . Here, we describe the deformable particle model (DPM), where each particle is a polygon composed of a large number of vertices. The total energy includes three terms: two quadratic terms to penalize deviations from the preferred particle area and perimeter and a repulsive interaction between DPM polygons that penalizes overlaps. We performed simulations to study the onset of jamming in packings of DPM polygons as a function of asphericity, ${\cal A}…
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