Nearly Isostatic Periodic Lattices
- đ¤ Speaker: Prof. Tom Lubensky, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania
- đ Date & Time: Thursday 03 June 2010, 14:00 - 15:00
- đ Venue: Oatley Seminar Room, Department of Engineering
Abstract
In 1864, James Clerk Maxwell showed that a system of N spherical particles in d-dimensions is mechanically stable only if the number, z, of two-point contacts between particles exceeds z_c = 2d. Systems with z=z_c are isostatic. Recent work confirms that randomly packed spheres are isostatic at the point J where the volume fraction \phi reaches the critical value \phi_c necessary to support shear and that the mechanics of this isostatic state determine behavior at volume fractions above \phi_c. The square and kagome lattice with nearest neighbor springs are isostatic. This talk will discuss the mechanical properties and phonon spectrum of nearly isostatic versions of these lattices in which next-nearest-neighbor springs with a variable spring constant are added either homogeneously or randomly. In particular, it will show that these lattices exhibit characteristic lengths that diverge as 1/(z-z_c) and frequencies that vanish as (z-z_c) in agreement with general arguments by the Chicago group. The shear elastic modulus depends on the geometry of the isostatic network and is not universal. Response near z=z_c in the random case is highly nonaffine. This talk will also discuss an isostatic chiral variant of the kagome lattice that has a vanishing bulk modulus and a negative Poisson ratio for which diverging length and vanishing frequency scales have not been identified. Finally, if time permits, the application of some of these ideas to networks of semi-flexible polymers will be discussed.
Souslov, A., Liu, A.J., and Lubensky, T.C., Elasticity and Response in Nearly Isostatic Periodic Lattices, Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 205503 (2009); Mao X.M., Xu N., Lubensky T.C. Soft Modes and Elasticity of Nearly Isostatic Lattices: Randomness and Dissipation, Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 085504 (2010).
Series This talk is part of the Engineering - Mechanics and Materials Seminar Series series.
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Prof. Tom Lubensky, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania
Thursday 03 June 2010, 14:00-15:00