Torque Hyperuniformity in Frictional Granular Matter - Theory and Experiments
Jin Shang, Jie Zhang, Itamar Procaccia

TL;DR
This paper investigates the long-range stress autocorrelation decay in frictional granular materials, confirming theoretical predictions about torque hyperuniformity through experiments on 2D systems under various loading conditions.
Contribution
It provides experimental validation of the theoretical conditions for stress autocorrelation decay and torque hyperuniformity in frictional amorphous solids, extending previous findings to more complex loading scenarios.
Findings
Torque fluctuations are hyperuniform in 2D frictional granular assemblies.
Stress autocorrelations decay like the elastic Green's function under certain conditions.
Experimental confirmation extends to systems under shear and with normal force contributions.
Abstract
A question of some fundamental importance is whether a given assembly of frictional granules (say sand or powder) will exhibit stress autocorrelations with long-range anisotropic decay as determined by the elastic Green's function. In Hamiltonian systems with central forces, mechanical balance and material isotropy demand the stress auto-correlation matrix to be fully determined by the pressure auto-correlation only. If the local pressure fluctuations are normal, it follows that stress autocorrelations decay at long distance like the elastic Green's function. With friction, Hamiltonian symmetry is lost, and one may expect more constraints. Indeed, it was shown recently that for frictional amorphous solids mechanical balance and material isotropy demand the stress auto-correlation matrix to be fully determined by two spatially isotropic functions: the pressure and torque…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGranular flow and fluidized beds · Material Dynamics and Properties · Brake Systems and Friction Analysis
