Density-wave fronts on the brink of wet granular condensation

ORAL

Abstract

From sand dunes to Faraday heaping, driven granular matter, i.e., large agglomeration of macroscopic particles, is rich pattern forming system. When a granular material is partially wet (e.g., wet sand on the beach), a different pattern forming scenario arises due to the cohesive particle-particle interactions. Here, we focus on the formation of density-wave fronts in an oscillated wet granular layer undergoing a gas-liquid-like transition \footnote{A. Zippelius and K. Huang, \textbf{Sci. Rep.} 7, 3613}. The threshold of the instability is governed by the amplitude of the vertical vibrations. Fronts, which are curved into a spiral shape, propagate coherently along the circular rim of the container with leading edges. They are stable beyond a critical distance from the container center. Based on the measurement of the critical distance and the rotation frequency, we propose a model for the pattern formation by considering the competition between the time scale for the collapse of cohesive particles and that of the energy injection resisting this process.

Authors

  • Kai Huang

    University of Bayreuth, Experimentalphysik V, University of Bayreuth, 95440 Bayreuth, Germany

  • Andreas Zippelius

    Experimentalphysik V, University of Bayreuth, 95440 Bayreuth, Germany