Research

Packing Disks

New experiments show that disks can pack together in unexpected ways.

Liquid crystals, bottles of pills, and hoppers of grains can all involve disk-shaped particles. To better understand how disks pack together, researchers studied how disks in a box orient themselves after shaking. They used MRI to observe the disks’ interior packing.

These reconstructions show the packing found in the experiment. The disks are color-coded by orientation; more horizontal disks are redder and vertical ones are bluer. Initially, the packing has many horizontal disks (left), but after shaking, the disks get more compacted (right). The disks form short stacks that are randomly oriented. This increases the overall density but the random orientations reduce the total alignment.
These reconstructions show the packing found in the experiment. The disks are color-coded by orientation; horizontal disks are redder and vertical ones are bluer. Initially, the packing has many horizontal disks (left), but after shaking, the disks get more compacted (right). The disks form short stacks that are randomly oriented. This increases the overall density but the random orientations reduce the total alignment of disks.

The team found that shaking increases the disks’ density, but that increase does not come from disks orienting in the same direction. Instead, the disks form short stacks of similarly-oriented disks. The stacks themselves took on many different orientations, which reduced the system’s overall alignment in orientation. (Image credit: coins – M. Blan, packing – Y. Ding et al.; research credit: Y. Ding et al.; via APS Physics)

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