Hyperuniformity of generalized random organization models
Zheng Ma, Salvatore Torquato

TL;DR
This paper investigates how hyperuniformity persists in generalized random organization models with particles of various sizes and shapes, revealing that mass redistribution, not just particle centroids, is key to hyperuniform states.
Contribution
It demonstrates that hyperuniformity is maintained in generalized models with size and shape diversity, extending understanding of the conditions for hyperuniform states.
Findings
Binary disks' critical states are hyperuniform as two-phase media.
Particles with continuous size distribution also exhibit hyperuniformity.
Hyperuniformity persists in noncircular particles with short-range orientational order.
Abstract
Studies of random organization models of monodisperse spherical particles have shown that a hyperuniform state is achievable when the system goes through an absorbing phase transition to a critical state. Here we investigate to what extent hyperuniformity is preserved when the model is generalized to particles with a size distribution and/or nonspherical shapes. We begin by examining binary disks in two dimensions and demonstrate that their critical states are hyperuniform as two-phase media, but not hyperuniform nor multihyperuniform as point patterns formed by the particle centroids. We further confirm the generality of our findings by studying particles with a continuous size distribution. Finally, to study the effect of rotational degrees of freedom, we extend our model to noncircular particles, namely, hard rectangles with various aspect ratios, including the hard-needle limit.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPickering emulsions and particle stabilization
