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Toward Bernal Random Loose Packing through freeze-thaw cycling

We study the effect of freeze-thaw cycling on the packing fraction of equal spheres immersed in water. The water located between the grains experiences a dilatation during freezing and a contraction during melting. After several cycles, the packing fraction converges to a particular value $η_{\infty} = 0.595$ independently of its initial value $η_0$. This behavior is well reproduced by numerical simulations. Moreover, the numerical results allow to analyze the packing structural configuration. With a Voronoï partition analysis, we show that the piles are fully random during the whole process and are characterized by two parameters: the average Voronoï volume $μ_v$ (related to the packing fraction $η$) and the standard deviation $σ_v$ of Voronoï volumes. The freeze-thaw driving modify the volume standard deviation $σ_v$ to converge to a particular disordered state with a packing fraction corresponding to the Random Loose Packing fraction $η_{BRLP}$ obtained by Bernal during his pioneering experimental work. Therefore, freeze-thaw cycling is found to be a soft and spatially homogeneous driving method for disordered granular materials.

preprint2015arXivOpen access
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