Cluster formation via sonic depletion forces in levitated granular matter
Melody X. Lim, Anton Souslov, Vincenzo Vitelli, Heinrich M. Jaeger

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how acoustic levitation can be used to study non-equilibrium cluster formation in granular matter, revealing the influence of active fluctuations on assembly processes and pathways.
Contribution
It introduces acoustic levitation as a novel experimental platform to investigate non-equilibrium clustering in granular systems, highlighting the role of active fluctuations.
Findings
Active fluctuations control assembly rates and pathways.
Non-equilibrium granular clusters differ from thermal colloids.
Acoustic levitation enables non-invasive manipulation of particles.
Abstract
The properties of small clusters can differ dramatically from the bulk phases of the same constituents. In equilibrium, cluster assembly has been recently explored, whereas out of equilibrium, the physical principles of clustering remain elusive. These principles underlie phenomena from molecular assembly to the formation of planets from granular matter. Here, we introduce acoustic levitation as a platform to experimentally probe the formation of nonequilibrium small structures in a controlled environment. We focus on the minimal models of cluster formation: six and seven millimetre-scale particles in two dimensions. Experiments and modelling reveal that, in contrast to thermal colloids, in non-equilibrium granular ensembles the magnitude of active fluctuations controls not only the assembly rates but also their assembly pathways and ground-state statistics. These results open up new…
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