Detailed characterization of rattlers in exactly isostatic, strictly jammed sphere packings

Steven Atkinson, Frank H. Stillinger, and Salvatore Torquato
Phys. Rev. E 88, 062208 – Published 23 December 2013
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Abstract

We generate jammed disordered packings of 100N2000 monodisperse hard spheres in three dimensions whose strictly jammed backbones are demonstrated to be exactly isostatic with unprecedented numerical accuracy. This is accomplished by using the Torquato-Jiao (TJ) packing algorithm as a means of studying the maximally random jammed (MRJ) state. The rattler fraction of these packings converges towards 0.015 in the infinite-system limit, which is markedly lower than previous estimates for the MRJ state using the Lubachevsky-Stillinger protocol. This is because the packings that the TJ algorithm creates are closer to the true MRJ state, as shown using bond-orientational and translational order metrics. The rattler pair correlation statistics exhibit strongly correlated behavior contrary to the conventional understanding that they be randomly (Poisson) distributed. Dynamically interacting “polyrattlers” may be found imprisoned in shared cages as well as interacting through “bottlenecks” in the backbone and these clusters are mainly responsible for the sharp increase in the rattler pair correlation function near contact. We discover the surprising existence of polyrattlers with cluster sizes of up to five rattlers (which is expected to increase with system size) and present a distribution of polyrattler occurrence as a function of cluster size and system size. We also enumerate all of the rattler interaction topologies we observe and present images of several examples, showing that MRJ packings of monodisperse spheres can contain large rattler cages while still obeying the strict jamming criterion. The backbone spheres that encage the rattlers are significantly hypostatic, implying that correspondingly hyperstatic regions must exist elsewhere in these isostatic packings. We also observe that rattlers in hard-sphere packings share an apparent connection with the low-temperature two-level system anomalies that appear in real amorphous insulators and semiconductors.

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  • Received 13 November 2013

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.88.062208

©2013 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Steven Atkinson

  • Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA

Frank H. Stillinger

  • Department of Chemistry, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA

Salvatore Torquato

  • Department of Chemistry, Department of Physics, Princeton Institute for the Science and Technology of Materials, and Program in Applied and Computational Mathematics, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA

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Issue

Vol. 88, Iss. 6 — December 2013

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