Measuring the configurational temperature of a binary disc packing.
Abstract
Jammed packings of granular materials differ from systems normally described by statistical
mechanics in that they are athermal. In recent years a statistical mechanics of static
granular media has emerged where the thermodynamic temperature is replaced by a configurational
temperature X which describes how the number of mechanically stable configurations
depends on the volume. Four different methods have been suggested to measure X. Three
of them are computed from properties of the Voronoi volume distribution, the fourth
takes into account the contact number and the global volume fraction. This paper answers
two questions using experimental binary disc packings: first we test if the four methods
to measure compactivity provide identical results when applied to the same dataset.
We find that only two of the methods agree quantitatively. This implies that at least
two of the four methods are wrong. Secondly, we test if X is indeed an intensive variable;
this becomes true only for samples larger than roughly 200 particles. This result
is shown to be due to recently measured correlations between the particle volumes
[Zhao et al., Europhys. Lett., 2012, 97, 34004].
Type
Journal articleSubject
Science & TechnologyPhysical Sciences
Technology
Chemistry, Physical
Materials Science, Multidisciplinary
Physics, Multidisciplinary
Polymer Science
Chemistry
Materials Science
Physics
STATISTICAL-MECHANICS
ENTROPY
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20166Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1039/c3sm53176gPublication Info
Zhao, Song-Chuan; & Schröter, Matthias (2014). Measuring the configurational temperature of a binary disc packing. Soft matter, 10(23). pp. 4208-4216. 10.1039/c3sm53176g. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20166.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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