Authors
KM Hill, DV Khakhar, JF Gilchrist, JJ McCarthy, JM Ottino
Publication date
1999/10/12
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
96
Issue
21
Pages
11701-11706
Publisher
The National Academy of Sciences
Description
An important industrial problem that provides fascinating puzzles in pattern formation is the tendency for granular mixtures to de-mix or segregate. Small differences in either size or density lead to flow-induced segregation. Similar to fluids, noncohesive granular materials can display chaotic advection; when this happens chaos and segregation compete with each other, giving rise to a wealth of experimental outcomes. Segregated structures, obtained experimentally, display organization in the presence of disorder and are captured by a continuum flow model incorporating collisional diffusion and density-driven segregation. Under certain conditions, structures never settle into a steady shape. This may be the simplest experimental example of a system displaying competition between chaos and order.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
KM Hill, DV Khakhar, JF Gilchrist, JJ McCarthy… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1999