Read the last publication from Louison Thorens et al. on Magnetic Janssen effect in Nature Communications




Congratulations to Louison Thorens, PhD candidate at PoreLab UiO, Norway, Knut Jørgen Måløy, Professor at UiO, Mickaël Bourgoin, Directeur de Recherche at CNRS, ENS Lyon and Stéphane Santucci, CNRS researcher at ENS Lyon, France, for their last publication under Nature Communications.

This is a major accomplishement!


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Title: Magnetic Janssen Effect

Abstract:

A pile of grains, even when at rest in a silo, can display fascinating properties. One of the most celebrated is the Janssen effect, named after the pioneering engineer who explained the pressure saturation at the bottom of a container filled with corn. This surprising behavior arises because of frictional interactions between the grains through a disordered network of contacts, and the vessel lateral walls, which partially support the weight of the column, decreasing its apparent mass. Here, we demonstrate control over frictional interactions using ferromagnetic grains and an external magnetic field. We show that the anisotropic pairwise interactions between magnetized grains result in a radial force along the walls, whose amplitude and direction is fully determined by the applied magnetic field. Such magnetic Janssen effect allows for the fine tuning of the granular column apparent mass. Our findings pave the way towards the design of functional jammed materials in confined geometries, via a further control of both their static and dynamic properties. 

Published: 30 April 2021

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-22722-y