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Dive into the research topics where Chengjie Xia is active.

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Featured researches published by Chengjie Xia.


Nature Communications | 2014

Similarity of wet granular packing to gels

Jindong Li; Yixin Cao; Chengjie Xia; Binquan Kou; Xianghui Xiao; Kamel Fezzaa; Yujie Wang

To date, there is still no general consensus on the fundamental principle that governs glass transition. Colloidal suspensions are ordinarily utilized as model systems to study the dynamical arrest mechanisms in glass or gels. Here, we tackle the problem using athermal granular particles. Slow dynamics and structural evolution of granular packing upon tapping are monitored by fast X-ray tomography. When the packing are wet and short-range attractive interactions exist, we find a large amount of locally favoured structures with fivefold symmetry, which bear great structural similarity to colloidal gels. In addition, these structures are almost absent in dry packing with similar packing fractions. The study leads strong support for the geometrical frustration mechanism for dynamic arrest in both thermal and athermal systems with attractive interactions. It also suggests nontrivial structural mechanism, if exists, for dynamic arrest in systems with purely repulsive interactions.


Nature | 2017

Granular materials flow like complex fluids

Binquan Kou; Yixin Cao; Jindong Li; Chengjie Xia; Zhifeng Li; Haipeng Dong; Ang Zhang; Jie Zhang; Walter Kob; Yujie Wang

Granular materials such as sand, powders and foams are ubiquitous in daily life and in industrial and geotechnical applications. These disordered systems form stable structures when unperturbed, but in the presence of external influences such as tapping or shear they ‘relax’, becoming fluid in nature. It is often assumed that the relaxation dynamics of granular systems is similar to that of thermal glass-forming systems. However, so far it has not been possible to determine experimentally the dynamic properties of three-dimensional granular systems at the particle level. This lack of experimental data, combined with the fact that the motion of granular particles involves friction (whereas the motion of particles in thermal glass-forming systems does not), means that an accurate description of the relaxation dynamics of granular materials is lacking. Here we use X-ray tomography to determine the microscale relaxation dynamics of hard granular ellipsoids subject to an oscillatory shear. We find that the distribution of the displacements of the ellipsoids is well described by a Gumbel law (which is similar to a Gaussian distribution for small displacements but has a heavier tail for larger displacements), with a shape parameter that is independent of the amplitude of the shear strain and of the time. Despite this universality, the mean squared displacement of an individual ellipsoid follows a power law as a function of time, with an exponent that does depend on the strain amplitude and time. We argue that these results are related to microscale relaxation mechanisms that involve friction and memory effects (whereby the motion of an ellipsoid at a given point in time depends on its previous motion). Our observations demonstrate that, at the particle level, the dynamic behaviour of granular systems is qualitatively different from that of thermal glass-forming systems, and is instead more similar to that of complex fluids. We conclude that granular materials can relax even when the driving strain is weak.


Soft Matter | 2014

X-ray tomography study of the random packing structure of ellipsoids

Chengjie Xia; Kuan Zhu; Yixin Cao; Haohua Sun; Binquan Kou; Yujie Wang

We present an X-ray tomography study for the random packing of ellipsoids. The local structure displays short-range correlations. In addition to the contact number Z, we introduce ρshell, the average contact radius of curvature for contacting neighbors, as an additional parameter to characterize the local orientational geometry. In general, the local free volume w is affected by both Z and ρshell. We believe that the particle asphericity induces a polydispersity effect to influence the packing properties. A model is introduced which explicitly maps the ellipsoid packing onto a polydispersed sphere one, and it reproduces most of the experimental observations.


Nature Communications | 2018

Structural and topological nature of plasticity in sheared granular materials

Yixin Cao; Jindong Li; Binquan Kou; Chengjie Xia; Zhifeng Li; Rongchang Chen; Honglan Xie; Tiqiao Xiao; Walter Kob; Liang Hong; Jie Zhang; Yujie Wang

Upon mechanical loading, granular materials yield and undergo plastic deformation. The nature of plastic deformation is essential for the development of the macroscopic constitutive models and the understanding of shear band formation. However, we still do not fully understand the microscopic nature of plastic deformation in disordered granular materials. Here we used synchrotron X-ray tomography technique to track the structural evolutions of three-dimensional granular materials under shear. We establish that highly distorted coplanar tetrahedra are the structural defects responsible for microscopic plasticity in disordered granular packings. The elementary plastic events occur through flip events which correspond to a neighbor switching process among these coplanar tetrahedra (or equivalently as the rotation motion of 4-ring disclinations). These events are discrete in space and possess specific orientations with the principal stress direction.It is a general consensus that the structural defects are the plasticity carriers in amorphous solids, but its microscopic view remains largely unknown. Cao et a. show that highly distorted coplanar tetrahedra act as defects in granular packings, which flip under shear to carry local plasticity.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Origin of Noncubic Scaling Law in Disordered Granular Packing

Chengjie Xia; Jindong Li; Bingquan Kou; Yixin Cao; Zhifeng Li; Xianghui Xiao; Yanan Fu; Tiqiao Xiao; Liang Hong; Jie Zhang; Walter Kob; Yujie Wang

Recent diffraction experiments on metallic glasses have unveiled an unexpected noncubic scaling law between density and average interatomic distance, which led to the speculation of the presence of fractal glass order. Using x-ray tomography we identify here a similar noncubic scaling law in disordered granular packing of spherical particles. We find that the scaling law is directly related to the contact neighbors within the first nearest neighbor shell, and, therefore, is closely connected to the phenomenon of jamming. The seemingly universal scaling exponent around 2.5 arises due to the isostatic condition with a contact number around 6, and we argue that the exponent should not be universal.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Fast x-ray micro-tomography imaging study of granular packing under tapping

Yujie Wang; Chengjie Xia; Yixin Cao; Binquan Kou; Jindong Li; Xianghui Xiao; Kamel Fezzaa

Owing to the high photon flux of synchrotron radiation, the exposure time is greatly reduced, and the total data-acquisition time of a tomography scan has been shortened to second level. Thus a four dimensional (3D structural and temporal) imaging technique can be utilized to capture the structural evolvement of 3D systems. Utilizing this technique, we studied the structural evolvement and particle-scale dynamics of three dimensional (3D) granular packing under tapping. We conducted a tomographic scan of the packing after each tapping, and the displacement of each particle was captured through a tracking algorithm. An averaged 3D flow field of the packing under tapping was also calculated. The major conclusion of this work is that the local particle fluctuation displacements are correlated with local packing structures, which are characterized through the size and shape of the Voronoi cells.


POWDERS AND GRAINS 2013: Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Micromechanics of Granular Media | 2013

Fast synchrotron X-ray tomography study of the rod packing structures

Xiaodan Zhang; Chengjie Xia; Haohua Sun; Yujie Wang

We present a fast synchrotron X-ray tomography study of the packing structures of rods under tapping. Utilizing the high flux of the X-rays generated from the third-generation synchrotron source, we can complete a tomography scan within several seconds, after which the three-dimensional (3D) packing structure can be obtained for the subsequent structural analysis. Due to the high-energy nature of the X-ray beam, special image processing steps including image phase-retrieval has been implemented. Overall, this study suggests the possibility of acquiring statistically significant static packing structures within a reasonable time scale using high-intensity X-ray sources.


Nature Communications | 2015

The structural origin of the hard-sphere glass transition in granular packing

Chengjie Xia; Jindong Li; Yixin Cao; Binquan Kou; Xinaghui Xiao; Kamel Fezzaa; Tiqiao Xiao; Yujie Wang


Physical Review E | 2014

Angularly anisotropic correlation in granular packings

Chengjie Xia; Yixin Cao; Binquan Kou; Jindong Li; Yujie Wang; Xianghui Xiao; Kamel Fezzaa


Physical Review Letters | 2018

Translational and Rotational Dynamical Heterogeneities in Granular Systems

Binquan Kou; Yixin Cao; Jindong Li; Chengjie Xia; Zhifeng Li; Haipeng Dong; Ang Zhang; Jie Zhang; Walter Kob; Yujie Wang

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Yujie Wang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Yixin Cao

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Binquan Kou

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Jindong Li

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Kamel Fezzaa

Argonne National Laboratory

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Xianghui Xiao

Argonne National Laboratory

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Jie Zhang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Zhifeng Li

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Walter Kob

University of Montpellier

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Haohua Sun

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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