Experimental evidence of thermal-like behaviour in dense granular suspensions
Abstract
We experimentally investigate the statistical behaviour of a model two-dimensional granular system undergoing stationary sedimentation. Buoyant cylindrical particles are rotated in liquid-filled drum, thus confined in a harmonic centripetal potential with tunable curvature, which competes with gravity to produce various stationary states: though heterogeneous, the packing fraction of the system can be tuned to be fully dispersed to fully crystallised as the rotation rate is increased. We show that this dynamical system is in mechanical equilibrium in the confining potential and exhibits a thermal-like behaviour, where the granular pressure and the packing fraction are related through an equation of state. We obtain a semi-analytical expression of the equation of state allowing to probe the nature of the hydrodynamic interactions between the particles. This description is valid in the whole range of the physical parameters we investigated and reveals a buoyant energy scale that we interpret as an effective temperature. We finally discuss the behaviour of our system at high packing fractions and the relevance of the equation of state to the liquid-solid phase transition.
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