Abstract

With magnetic resonance imaging experiments, we study packings of granular spherocylinders with merely 2% asphericity. Evident structural anisotropies across all length scales are identified. Most interestingly, the global nematic order decreases with increasing packing fraction, while the local contact anisotropy shows an opposing trend. We attribute this counterintuitive phenomenon to a competition between gravity-driven ordering aided by frictional contacts and a geometric frustration effect at the marginally jammed state. It is also surprising to notice that such slight particle asphericity can trigger non-negligible correlations between contact-level and mesoscale structures, manifested in drastically different nonaffine structural rearrangements upon compaction from that of granular spheres. These observations can help improve statistical mechanical models for the orientational order transformation of nonspherical granular particle packings, which involves complex interplays between particle shape, frictional contacts, and external force field.

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