Kinetic Frustration Effects on Dense Two-Dimensional Packings of Convex Particles and Their Structural Characteristics
Charles Emmett Maher, Frank H. Stillinger, Salvatore Torquato

TL;DR
This paper investigates how kinetic factors like compression rate influence the structure and density of two-dimensional packings of various convex particles, revealing that faster kinetics lead to less ordered, lower-density arrangements.
Contribution
It introduces the kinetic frustration index and demonstrates how varying compression/shear rates affects packing density and order in 2D convex particle packings.
Findings
Faster compression/shear rates decrease packing density.
Greater particle asphericity increases kinetic frustration.
Kinetic effects influence short- and long-range order.
Abstract
The study of hard-particle packings is of fundamental importance in physics, chemistry, cell biology, and discrete geometry. Much of the previous work on hard-particle packings concerns their densest possible arrangements. By contrast, we examine kinetic effects inevitably present in both numerical and experimental packing protocols. Specifically, we determine how changing the compression/shear rate of a two-dimensional packing of noncircular particles causes it to deviate from its densest possible configuration, which is always periodic. The adaptive shrinking cell (ASC) optimization scheme maximizes the packing fraction of a hard-particle packing by first applying random translations and rotations to the particles and then isotropically compressing and shearing the simulation box repeatedly until a possibly jammed state is reached. We use a stochastic implementation of the ASC…
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