Force chains in crystalline and frustrated packing visualized by stress-birefringent spheres

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Abstract

Force networks play an important role in the stability of configurations when granular material is packed into a container. These networks can redirect part of the weight of grains inside a container to the side walls. We employ monodisperse stress-birefringent spheres to visualize the contact forces in a quasi-2D and a nearly-2D configuration of these spheres in a thin cuboid cell. The packing structures are particularly simple: a hexagonal lattice in the ground state when the cell width is equal to the sphere diameter, and a frustrated, slightly distorted lattice in thicker cells. The force redistribution is substantially changed by this geometrical modification. In both cases, we observe an ‘inverse’ Janssen effect with the pressure decreasing from the top to the bottom of the container when the material is loaded with a weight on top of the vessel.

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Fischer, D., Stannarius, R., Tell, K., Yu, P., & Sperl, M. (2021). Force chains in crystalline and frustrated packing visualized by stress-birefringent spheres. Soft Matter, 17(16), 4317–4327. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0sm02048f

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