Physical Review X (Apr 2022)

Mechanical Properties of Acoustically Levitated Granular Rafts

  • Melody X. Lim,
  • Bryan VanSaders,
  • Anton Souslov,
  • Heinrich M. Jaeger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.12.021017
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. 021017

Abstract

Read online Read online

We investigate a model system for the rotational dynamics of inertial many-particle clustering, in which submillimeter objects are acoustically levitated in air. Driven by scattered sound, levitated grains self-assemble into a monolayer of particles, forming mesoscopic granular rafts with both an acoustic binding energy and a bending rigidity. Detuning the acoustic trap can give rise to stochastic forces and torques that impart angular momentum to levitated objects. As the angular momentum of a quasi-two-dimensional granular raft is increased, the raft deforms from a disk to an ellipse, eventually pinching off into multiple separate rafts, in a mechanism that resembles the breakup of a liquid drop. We extract the raft effective surface tension and elastic modulus and show that nonpairwise acoustic forces give rise to effective elastic moduli that scale with the raft size. We also show that the raft size controls the microstructural basis of plastic deformation, resulting in a transition from fracture to ductile failure.