Designing materials that better respond to dynamic loading can help vehicles minimize
vibration1, better protect military
convoys2 or potentially make buildings safer during an earthquake. Granular materials -- assemblages of particles that range broadly from powders to sand to
microscopic3 beads4 of glass -- are one of the least understood forms of matter due to the incredibly complex ways that those particles interact. But those complicated physics also offer
tantalizing5 potential to create materials with unique properties -- like the ability to absorb impact energy in customized ways.
In a paper published May 13 in Physical Review Letters, University of Washington mechanical engineers have for the first time observed and
analyzed6 collective interparticle
vibrations7 in two-dimensional microscale granular crystals -- a type of designer granular material.
This understanding and ability to predict how these tiny arrays of particles behave as forces are
applied8 is a first step in creating novel materials that could be used for everything from impact mitigation to signal processing, disease
diagnosis9, or even making more controllable solid rocket propellants.
One of the more interesting characteristics of granular materials is that they are dynamically responsive -- when you hit them harder, they react differently.
"You can take a pencil and push it through a sandbag, but at the same time it can stop a bullet," said senior author Nicholas Boechler, a UW assistant professor of mechanical engineering. "So in some ways what we're trying to do is build better sandbags in an informed way."
The research team discovered that microscale granular crystals -- made of spheres that are smaller than a human blood cell -- exhibit significantly different physical
phenomena10 than granular materials with larger particles.
Adhesive11 forces play a more important role, for instance. The array of tiny particles also resonates in complex patterns as forces are applied and they knock into each other, including combinations of up-and-down, horizontal and
rotational12 motion.
"This material has properties that we wouldn't normally see in a solid material like glass or metal," said lead author and UW mechanical engineering doctoral student Morgan Hiraiwa. "You can think of it as all these different knobs we can turn to get the material to do what we want."