Abstract

We investigate the mechanical response of jammed packings of circulo-lines in two spatial dimensions, interacting via purely repulsive, linear spring forces, as a function of pressure P during athermal, quasistatic isotropic compression. The surface of a circulo-line is defined as the collection of points that is equidistant to a line; circulo-lines are composed of a rectangular central shaft with two semicircular end caps. Prior work has shown that the ensemble-averaged shear modulus for jammed disk packings scales as a power law, 〈G(P)〉∼P^{β}, with β∼0.5, over a wide range of pressure. For packings of circulo-lines, we also find robust power-law scaling of 〈G(P)〉 over the same range of pressure for aspect ratios R≳1.2. However, the power-law scaling exponent β∼0.8-0.9 is much larger than that for jammed disk packings. To understand the origin of this behavior, we decompose 〈G〉 into separate contributions from geometrical families, G_{f}, and from changes in the interparticle contact network, G_{r}, such that 〈G〉=〈G_{f}〉+〈G_{r}〉. We show that the shear modulus for low-pressure geometrical families for jammed packings of circulo-lines can both increase and decrease with pressure, whereas the shear modulus for low-pressure geometrical families for jammed disk packings only decreases with pressure. For this reason, the geometrical family contribution 〈G_{f}〉 is much larger for jammed packings of circulo-lines than for jammed disk packings at finite pressure, causing the increase in the power-law scaling exponent for 〈G(P)〉.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call