McLaren, ChristopherChristopherMcLarenKovar, Thomas M.Thomas M.KovarPenn, AlexanderAlexanderPennMüller, Christoph RüdigerChristoph RüdigerMüllerBoyce, Christopher M.Christopher M.Boyce2020-11-272020-11-272019-05-07Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 19 (116): 9263-9268 (2019-05-07)http://hdl.handle.net/11420/8035The motion and mixing of granular media are observed in several contexts in nature, often displaying striking similarities to liquids. Granular dynamics occur in geological phenomena and also enable technologies ranging from pharmaceuticals production to carbon capture. Here, we report the discovery of a family of gravitational instabilities in granular particle mixtures subject to vertical vibration and upward gas flow, including a Rayleigh–Taylor (RT)-like instability in which lighter grains rise through heavier grains in the form of “fingers” and “granular bubbles.” We demonstrate that this RT-like instability arises due to a competition between upward drag force increased locally by gas channeling and downward contact forces, and thus the physical mechanism is entirely different from that found in liquids. This gas channeling mechanism also generates other gravitational instabilities: the rise of a granular bubble which leaves a trail of particles behind it and the cascading branching of a descending granular droplet. These instabilities suggest opportunities for patterning within granular mixtures.en0027-8424Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America20191992639268FluidizationGranular materialInstabilitiesGravitational instabilities in binary granular materialsJournal Article10.1073/pnas.182082011631010930Journal Article