4.8 Article

A jamming plane of sphere packings

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2021794118

Keywords

jamming transition; sphere packing; shear jamming; reversibility

Funding

  1. KAKENHI from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan [25103005, 19H01812, 20H00128]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11974361, 11935002, 11947302]
  3. Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) [ZDBS-LY-7017]
  4. CAS Pioneer Hundred Talents Program

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The concept of jamming has attracted great research interest due to its broad relevance in soft-matter and its connection to sphere packing and optimization problems. The study shows that amorphous jammed states of frictionless spheres can be extended from a fixed density jamming-point to a jamming-plane that spans density and shear strain axes. The jamming-plane can be divided into reversible-jamming and irreversible-jamming regimes, reflecting the escape from metastable glass basins.
The concept of jamming has attracted great research interest due to its broad relevance in soft-matter, such as liquids, glasses, colloids, foams, and granular materials, and its deep connection to sphere packing and optimization problems. Here, we show that the domain of amorphous jammed states of frictionless spheres can be significantly extended, from the well-known jamming-point at a fixed density, to a jamming-plane that spans the density and shear strain axes. We explore the jamming-plane, via athermal and thermal simulations of compression and shear jamming, with initial equilibrium configurations prepared by an efficient swap algorithm. The jamming-plane can be divided into reversible-jamming and irreversible-jamming regimes, based on the reversibility of the route from the initial configuration to jamming. Our results suggest that the irreversible-jamming behavior reflects an escape from the metastable glass basin to which the initial configuration belongs to or the absence of such basins. All jammed states, either compression- or shear-jammed, are isostatic and exhibit jamming criticality of the same universality class. However, the anisotropy of contact networks nontrivially depends on the jamming density and strain. Among all state points on the jamming-plane, the jamming-point is a unique one with the minimum jamming density and the maximum randomness. For crystalline packings, the jamming-plane shrinks into a single shear jamming-line that is independent of initial configurations. Our study paves the way for solving the long-standing random close-packing problem and provides a more complete framework to understand jamming.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available