Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




TECH SPACE
Force is the Key to Granular State-Shifting
by Staff Writers
Raleigh NC (SPX) Feb 28, 2013


Two-dimensional granular material composed of photo-elastic disks. Regions of high stress appear bright. Researchers can determine contact forces by examining brightness patterns.

Ever wonder why sand can both run through an hourglass like a liquid and be solid enough to support buildings? It's because granular materials - like sand or dirt - can change their behavior, or state. Researchers from North Carolina State University have found that the forces individual grains exert on one another are what most affect that transition.

Physicists have explored the changing behavior of granular materials by comparing it to what happens in thermodynamic systems. In a thermodynamic system, you can change the state of a material - like water - from a liquid to a gas by adding energy (heat) to the system.

One of the most fundamental and important observations about temperature, however, is that it has the ability to equilibrate: a hot cup of tea eventually cools to match the temperature of the room.

Physicists thought they could use thermodynamics' underlying ideas to explain the changes in granular materials, but didn't know whether granular materials had properties which might equilibrate in a similar way.

In other words, instead of temperature being the change agent in a granular system, it might be a property related to the amount of free space, or the forces on the particles. But no one had really tested which of the two might exhibit this property of equilibration.

NC State physicist Karen Daniels and former graduate student James Puckett devised a way to do just that. Puckett used two different types of plastic "granules" with different properties that floated atop a layer of air on a small table.

Puckett and Daniels wanted to see what would bring the two types of particles into equilibrium with one another. In order to make their measurements, they used a plastic material that indicated a change in force by a change in brightness.

First, they measured compactivity, which describes the number of ways particles can arrange themselves inside a given space, or volume, by reducing the physical space around the granules, but the two types of particles failed to achieve equilibrium. When they measured the ways that the forces between the particles could rearrange, they saw the equilibrium they were looking for.

Their findings appear in Physical Review Letters.

"Physicists often have ideas that are theoretically elegant, such as the idea that there might be new temperature-like variables to be discovered, and then it's exciting to go into the lab and see how well these ideas work in practice," says Daniels.

"In this case, we found it is possible to take the temperature of a granular system and find out more about what makes it change its state. The 'thermometer' for this temperature is actually the particles themselves."

"Equilibrating temperaturelike variables in jammed granular subsystems" - Authors: James Puckett, Karen Daniels, North Carolina State University; Published: Physical Review Letters

.


Related Links
North Carolina State University
Space Technology News - Applications and Research






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








TECH SPACE
Tungstenite triangles emit light
London, UK (SPX) Feb 28, 2013
Researchers in the US have succeeded in growing single atomic layers of the naturally occurring mineral tungstenite for the first time. The sheets appear to have unusual photoluminescence properties that might be exploited in optics devices like lasers and light-emitting diodes. 2D materials have dramatically different electronic and mechanical properties from their 3D counterparts and so ... read more


TECH SPACE
The impact of algae parasite on algae biofuel output

Engineering cells for more efficient biofuel production

Avoiding virus dangers in 'domesticating' wild plants for biofuel use

U.S. grasslands losing to biofuel crops

TECH SPACE
Brown researchers build robotic bat wing

Japan robot suit gets global safety certificate

Lessons from cockroaches could inform robotics

Simplified brain lets the iCub robot learn language

TECH SPACE
Rethinking wind power

Global wind energy capacity grows 19 percent in 2012

Finding the right space for offshore wind turbines

Spotting the invisible cracks in wind turbines

TECH SPACE
Study: Left-hand turn, cellphone don't mix

Formula E: China Racing join all-electric Formula E line-up

Mobile apps reshape urban taxi landscape

Estonia plugs electric cars as power prices soar

TECH SPACE
Iran's oil output faces long-term decline

China has no need for U.S. coal?

France seeks to boost marine energy

U.S. oil needs should keep it in Mideast

TECH SPACE
Two workers die in fall at French nuclear plant

Areva narrows loss, targets profit in 2013

Safety concerns cloud S. Korea nuclear drive

Taiwan to vote on nuclear facility

TECH SPACE
S.Africa to introduce carbon tax from 2015

Nation Could Double Energy Productivity

China energy consumption rises 3.9% in 2012

Beijing's Pollution Alarms Neighbors

TECH SPACE
Declining Vegetation Across The Eastern US Observed

Russia moves to shut down Lake Baikal paper mill

Turkmenistan to plant 3 million trees to make desert bloom

Decoys could blunt spread of ash-killing beetles




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement