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Sub-Jamming Transition in Binary Sphere Mixtures

Published 21 Jul 2017 in cond-mat.soft, cond-mat.dis-nn, and cond-mat.stat-mech | (1707.06751v1)

Abstract: We study the influence of particle size asymmetry on structural evolution of randomly jammed binary sphere mixtures with varying large-sphere/small-sphere composition. Simulations of jammed packings are used to assess the transition from large-sphere dominant to small-sphere dominant mixtures. For weakly asymmetric particle sizes, packing properties evolve smoothly, but not monotonically, with increasing small sphere composition, $f$. Our simulations reveal that at high values of ratio $\alpha$ of large to small sphere radii, ($\alpha\geq \alpha_c \approx 5.75$) evolution of structural properties such as packing density, fraction of jammed spheres and contact statistics with $f$ exhibit features that suggest a sharp transition, either through discontinuities in structural measures or their derivatives. We argue that this behavior is related to the singular, composition dependence of close-packing fraction predicted in infinite aspect ratio mixtures $\alpha\rightarrow\infty$ by the Furnas model, but occurring for finite values range of $\alpha$ above a critical value, $\alpha_c \approx 5.75$. The existence of a sharp transition from small- to large-$f$ values for $\alpha\geq \alpha_c$ can be attributed to the existence of a {\it sub-jamming transition} of small spheres in the interstices of jammed large spheres along the line of compositions $f_{sub}(\alpha)$. We argue that the critical value of finite size asymmetry $\alpha_c \simeq 5.75$ is consistent with the geometric criterion for the transmission of small sphere contacts between neighboring tetrahedrally close packed interstices of large spheres, facilitating a cooperative sub-jamming transition of small spheres confined within the disjoint volumes.

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