Jamming on deformable surfaces
Zhaoyu Xie, Timothy J Atherton

TL;DR
This paper introduces the concept of metric jamming in deformable geometries, revealing continuous tunability of mechanical properties and new vibrational modes, advancing understanding of jamming beyond fixed geometries.
Contribution
It proposes and studies metric jamming, a novel framework capturing shape-particle interactions in deformable media, and uncovers continuous mechanical tunability and new vibrational modes.
Findings
Metric jammed states have continuously tunable mechanical properties.
Discovery of new vibrational modes coupling particles and surface.
Unification of jamming understanding in deformable geometries.
Abstract
Jamming is a fundamental transition that governs the mechanical behavior of particulate media, including sand, foam and dense suspensions but also biological tissues: Upon compression, particulate media can change from freely flowing to a disordered solid. Jamming has previously been conceived as a bulk phenomenon involving particle motions in fixed geometries. In a diverse class of soft materials, however, solidification can take place in a deformable geometry, such as on the surface of a fluid droplet or in the formation of a bijel. In these systems the nature and dynamics of jamming remains unknown. Here we propose and study a scenario we call metric jamming that aims to capture the complex interactions between shape and particles. Unlike classical jamming processes that exhibit discrete mechanical transitions, surprisingly we find that metric jammed states possess mechanical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSlime Mold and Myxomycetes Research
