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Crystallisation in a granular material
Author(s) -
Nicolas François,
Mohammad Saadatfar,
Maryam Hanifpour,
Ron Cruikshank,
Adrian Sheppard
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
aip conference proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
eISSN - 1551-7616
pISSN - 0094-243X
DOI - 10.1063/1.4811944
Subject(s) - crystallization , voronoi diagram , dissipative system , materials science , granular material , crystal (programming language) , cluster (spacecraft) , volume (thermodynamics) , tetrahedron , statistical physics , crystallography , physics , geometry , computer science , mathematics , thermodynamics , chemistry , composite material , programming language
The athermal and dissipative nature of packings of grains is still challenging our understanding of their compaction as well as their crystallisation. For instance, some beads poured in a container get jammed in random disordered congura- tions, which cannot be denser than 64%, the random closed packing (RCP) limit. Remarkably it has been suggested that the RCP bound is saturated with dense patterns of beads aggregated into polytetrahedral structures. Yet when a suitable vibration is applied, a packing of beads might start to order and some regular patterns appear. We present new experiments on the crystallisation of the packing of beads. By extending tapping techniques, we have obtained packings with volume fractions φ ranging from the RCP to the crystal (φ = 0.74). Computing tomography has been used to scan the internal structure of large packings (≈200,000 beads). Voronoi and Delaunay space partitions on the grain centres were performed to characterise the structural rearrangements during the crystallisation. This allows us to describe statistical properties of the local volumeuctuations and the evolution of the densest patterns of beads. In terms of statistical description, a parameter based on the volumeuctuations discloses different regimes during the transition. In terms of geometry, we conrm that polytetrahedral dense clusters are ubiquitous at the RCP. We describe some intrinsic features of these clusters such as rings of tetrahedra and show how they disappear as the crystal grows. This experiment enlightens how an athermal system jammed in a complex frustrated conguration is gradually converted into a periodic crystal.

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