Dynamic patterns of compaction in brittle porous media
When compacting a brittle porous medium—think stepping on fresh snow—patterns develop. Simulations and densification experiments with cereals now provide an understanding of compaction patterns in terms of a lattice model with breakable springs. Brittle porous media exhibit a variety of irreversible...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature physics 2015-10, Vol.11 (10), p.835-838 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | When compacting a brittle porous medium—think stepping on fresh snow—patterns develop. Simulations and densification experiments with cereals now provide an understanding of compaction patterns in terms of a lattice model with breakable springs.
Brittle porous media exhibit a variety of irreversible patterns during densification, including stationary and moving compaction bands in rocks
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,
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,
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, foams
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, cereal packs
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and snow
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. We have recently found moving compaction bands in cereal packs
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; similar bands have been detected in snow
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. However, the question of generality remains: under what conditions can brittle porous media disclose other densification patterns? Here, using a new heuristic lattice spring model undergoing repeated crushing events, we first predict the possible emergence of new types of dynamic compaction; we then discover and confirm these new patterns experimentally in compressed cereal packs. In total, we distinguish three observed compaction patterns: short-lived erratic compaction bands, multiple oscillatory propagating compaction bands reminiscent of critical phenomena near phase transitions, and diffused irreversible densification. The manifestation of these three different patterns is mapped in a phase diagram using two dimensionless groups that represent fabric collapse and external dissipation. |
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ISSN: | 1745-2473 1745-2481 |
DOI: | 10.1038/nphys3424 |