Fundamental challenges in packing problems: From spherical to non-spherical particles

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Abstract

Random packings of objects of a particular shape are ubiquitous in science and engineering. However, such jammed matter states have eluded any systematic theoretical treatment due to the strong positional and orientational correlations involved. In recent years progress on a fundamental description of jammed matter could be made by starting from a constant volume ensemble in the spirit of conventional statistical mechanics. Recent work has shown that this approach, first introduced by S. F. Edwards more than two decades ago, can be cast into a predictive framework to calculate the packing fractions of both spherical and non-spherical particles. © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2014.

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Baule, A., & Makse, H. A. (2014). Fundamental challenges in packing problems: From spherical to non-spherical particles. Soft Matter, 10(25), 4423–4429. https://doi.org/10.1039/c3sm52783b

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