Soliton Attenuation and Emergent Hydrodynamics in Fragile Matter

Disordered packings of soft grains are fragile mechanical systems that lose rigidity upon lowering the external pressure toward zero. At zero pressure, we find that any infinitesimal strain impulse propagates initially as a nonlinear solitary wave progressively attenuated by disorder. We demonstrate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: N. Upadhyaya, L. R. Gómez, V. Vitelli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2014-03-01
Series:Physical Review X
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.4.011045
id doaj-29a5072f5ad141ab8dccf2dbec9865a6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-29a5072f5ad141ab8dccf2dbec9865a62020-11-24T21:23:18ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review X2160-33082014-03-014101104510.1103/PhysRevX.4.011045Soliton Attenuation and Emergent Hydrodynamics in Fragile MatterN. UpadhyayaL. R. GómezV. VitelliDisordered packings of soft grains are fragile mechanical systems that lose rigidity upon lowering the external pressure toward zero. At zero pressure, we find that any infinitesimal strain impulse propagates initially as a nonlinear solitary wave progressively attenuated by disorder. We demonstrate that the particle fluctuations generated by the solitary-wave decay can be viewed as a granular analogue of temperature. Their presence is manifested by two emergent macroscopic properties absent in the unperturbed granular packing: a finite pressure that scales with the injected energy (akin to a granular temperature) and an anomalous viscosity that arises even when the microscopic mechanisms of energy dissipation are negligible. Consistent with the interpretation of this state as a fluidlike thermalized state, the shear modulus remains zero. Further, we follow in detail the attenuation of the initial solitary wave, identifying two distinct regimes—an initial exponential decay, followed by a longer power-law decay—and suggest simple models to explain these two regimes.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.4.011045
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author N. Upadhyaya
L. R. Gómez
V. Vitelli
spellingShingle N. Upadhyaya
L. R. Gómez
V. Vitelli
Soliton Attenuation and Emergent Hydrodynamics in Fragile Matter
Physical Review X
author_facet N. Upadhyaya
L. R. Gómez
V. Vitelli
author_sort N. Upadhyaya
title Soliton Attenuation and Emergent Hydrodynamics in Fragile Matter
title_short Soliton Attenuation and Emergent Hydrodynamics in Fragile Matter
title_full Soliton Attenuation and Emergent Hydrodynamics in Fragile Matter
title_fullStr Soliton Attenuation and Emergent Hydrodynamics in Fragile Matter
title_full_unstemmed Soliton Attenuation and Emergent Hydrodynamics in Fragile Matter
title_sort soliton attenuation and emergent hydrodynamics in fragile matter
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review X
issn 2160-3308
publishDate 2014-03-01
description Disordered packings of soft grains are fragile mechanical systems that lose rigidity upon lowering the external pressure toward zero. At zero pressure, we find that any infinitesimal strain impulse propagates initially as a nonlinear solitary wave progressively attenuated by disorder. We demonstrate that the particle fluctuations generated by the solitary-wave decay can be viewed as a granular analogue of temperature. Their presence is manifested by two emergent macroscopic properties absent in the unperturbed granular packing: a finite pressure that scales with the injected energy (akin to a granular temperature) and an anomalous viscosity that arises even when the microscopic mechanisms of energy dissipation are negligible. Consistent with the interpretation of this state as a fluidlike thermalized state, the shear modulus remains zero. Further, we follow in detail the attenuation of the initial solitary wave, identifying two distinct regimes—an initial exponential decay, followed by a longer power-law decay—and suggest simple models to explain these two regimes.
url http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.4.011045
work_keys_str_mv AT nupadhyaya solitonattenuationandemergenthydrodynamicsinfragilematter
AT lrgomez solitonattenuationandemergenthydrodynamicsinfragilematter
AT vvitelli solitonattenuationandemergenthydrodynamicsinfragilematter
_version_ 1716726010621198336