Slow relaxation in granular compaction
Preprint
- 25 March 1996
Abstract
Experimental studies show that the density of a vibrated granular material evolves from a low density initial state into a higher density final steady state. The relaxation towards the final density value follows an inverse logarithmic law. We propose a simple stochastic adsorption-desorption process which captures the essential mechanism underlying this remarkably slow relaxation. As the system approaches its final state, a growing number of beads have to be rearranged to enable a local density increase. In one dimension, this number grows as $N=\rho/(1-\rho)$, and the density increase rate is drastically reduced by a factor $e^{-N}$. Consequently, a logarithmically slow approach to the final state is found $\rho_{\infty}-\rho(t)\cong 1/\ln t$.
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All Related Versions
- Version 1, 1996-03-25, ArXiv
- Published version: Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena, 123 (1-4), 380.
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