Experimental study of transport of a dimer on a vertically oscillating plate

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Abstract

It has recently been shown that a dimer, composed of two identical spheres rigidly connected by a rod, under harmonic vertical vibration can exhibit a self-ordered transport behaviour. In this case, the mass centre of the dimer will perform a circular orbit in the horizontal plane, or a straight line if confined between parallel walls. In order to validate the numerical discoveries, we experimentally investigate the temporal evolution of the dimer's motion in both two- and three-dimensional situations. A stereoscopic vision method with a pair of high-speed cameras is adopted to perform omnidirectional measurements. All the cases studied in our experiments are also simulated using an existing numerical model. The combined investigations detail the dimer's dynamics and clearly show that its transport behaviours originate from a series of combinations of different contact states. This series is critical to our understanding of the transport properties in the dimer's motion and related self-ordered phenomena in granular systems.

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Wang, J., Liu, C., & Ma, D. (2014). Experimental study of transport of a dimer on a vertically oscillating plate. Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 470(2171). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2014.0439

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