We have studied how two- and three-dimensional systems made up of particles interacting with finite range, repulsive potentials jam (i.e., develop a yield stress in a disordered state) at zero temperature and zero applied stress. At low packing fractions [Formula presented] the system is not jammed and each particle can move without impediment from its neighbors. For each configuration, there is a unique jamming threshold [Formula presented] at which particles can no longer avoid each other, and the bulk and shear moduli simultaneously become nonzero. The distribution of [Formula presented] values becomes narrower as the system size increases, so that essentially all configurations jam at the same packing fraction in the thermodynamic limit. This packing fraction corresponds to the previously measured value for random close packing. In fact, our results provide a well-defined meaning for “random close packing” in terms of the fraction of all phase space with inherent structures that jam. The jamming threshold, point J, occurring at zero temperature and applied stress and at the random-close-packing density, has properties reminiscent of an ordinary critical point. As point J is approached from higher packing fractions, power-law scaling is found for the divergence of the first peak in the pair correlation function and in the vanishing of the pressure, shear modulus, and excess number of overlapping neighbors. Moreover, near point J, certain quantities no longer self-average, suggesting the existence of a length scale that diverges at J. However, point J also differs from an ordinary critical point: the scaling exponents do not depend on dimension but do depend on the interparticle potential. Finally, as point J is approached from high packing fractions, the density of vibrational states develops a large excess of low-frequency modes. Indeed, at point J, the density of states is a constant all the way down to zero frequency. All of these results suggest that point J is a point of maximal disorder and may control behavior in its vicinity—perhaps even at the glass transition. © 2003 The American Physical Society.
CITATION STYLE
O’Hern, C. S., Silbert, L. E., Liu, A. J., & Nagel, S. R. (2003). Jamming at zero temperature and zero applied stress: The epitome of disorder. Physical Review E - Statistical Physics, Plasmas, Fluids, and Related Interdisciplinary Topics, 68(1), 19. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.68.011306
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