Jamming transition in emulsions and granular materials
H. P. Zhang, H. A. Makse

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to analyze the jamming transition in emulsions and granular materials, revealing power-law scaling, history dependence in granular systems, and force heterogeneity near the transition.
Contribution
It compares jamming behaviors in emulsions and granular materials, highlighting the effects of preparation history and force heterogeneity on the transition.
Findings
Power-law scaling of pressure and contacts near jamming
Granular systems' properties depend on compression history
Force heterogeneity increases approaching jamming
Abstract
We investigate the jamming transition in packings of emulsions and granular materials via molecular dynamics simulations. The emulsion model is composed of frictionless droplets interacting via nonlinear normal forces obtained using experimental data acquired by confocal microscopy of compressed emulsions systems. Granular materials are modeled by Hertz-Mindlin deformable spherical grains with Coulomb friction. In both cases, we find power-law scaling for the vanishing of pressure and excess number of contacts as the system approaches the jamming transition from high volume fractions. We find that the construction history parametrized by the compression rate during the preparation protocol has a strong effect on the micromechanical properties of granular materials but not on emulsions. This leads the granular system to jam at different volume fractions depending on the histories.…
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