Sound damping in soft particle packings: the interplay between configurational disorder and inelasticity
Abstract
We numerically investigate sound damping in disordered two-dimensional soft particle packings. We simulate evolution of standing waves of particle displacements and analyze time correlation functions of particle velocities and power spectra. We control the strength of inelastic interactions between the particles in contact to show how the inelasticity affects anomalous sound characteristics of disordered systems: Increasing the strength of inelastic interactions, we find that (i) sound softening vanishes and (ii) attenuation coefficients exhibit a transition from the Rayleigh law to quadratic growth. We also report (iii) how the Ioffe–Regel limit frequencies depend on the strength of inelasticity as useful information for experiments and applications of the sound in disordered media. Our findings suggest that sound damping in soft particle packings is determined by the interplay between elastic heterogeneities and inelasticity.