Green's Function Measurements of Force Transmission in 2D Granular Materials
Junfei Geng (1), G. Reydellet (2), E. Clement (2), R. P. Behringer (1), ((1)Duke Univeristy, (2)Universite Pierre et Marie Curie)

TL;DR
This study experimentally investigates how disorder, packing, friction, and texture influence force transmission in 2D granular materials, revealing that force response varies from lattice-like propagation to elastic behavior depending on disorder.
Contribution
It provides detailed experimental measurements of force response in 2D granular systems under various conditions, comparing results with elastic and diffusive models.
Findings
Force propagates along lattice directions in weakly disordered packings.
Increased disorder causes the force response to merge into a single direction.
Strongly disordered systems' response aligns with elastic models.
Abstract
We describe experiments that probe the response to a point force of 2D granular systems under a variety of conditions. Using photoelastic particles to determine forces at the grain scale, we experimentally show that disorder, packing structure, friction and texture significantly affect the average force response in granular systems. For packings with weak disorder, the mean forces propagate primarily along lattice directions. The width of the response along these preferred directions grows with depth, increasingly so as the disorder of the system grows. Also, as the disorder increases, the two propagation directions of the mean force merge into a single direction. The response function for the mean force in the most strongly disordered system is quantitatively consistent with an elastic description for forces applied nearly normally to a surface. These observations are consistent with…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
