2006 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2006;
Baltimore, MD
Session B8: Focus Session: Granular Materials Near Jamming
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Monday, March 13, 2006
Baltimore Convention Center
Room: 314
Sponsoring
Units:
GSNP DFD
Chair: Bob Behringer, Duke University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.MAR.B8.1
Abstract: B8.00001 : Elastic Granular Flows
11:15 AM–11:51 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Charles Campbell
(University of Southern California)
There is no fundamental understanding of the mechanics of granular solids.
Partially this is because granular flows have historically been divided into
two very distinct flow regimes, (1) the slow, quasistatic regime, in which
the bulk friction coefficient is taken to be a material constant, and (2)
the fast, rapid-flow regime, where the particles interact collisionally. But
slow hopper flow simulations indicate that the bulk friction coefficient is
not a constant. Rapidly moving large scale landslide simulations never
entered the collisional regime and operate in a separate intermediate flow
regime. In other words, most realistic granular flows are not described by
either the quasistatic or rapid flow models and it is high time that the
field look beyond those early models.
This talk will discuss computer simulation studies that draw out the entire
flowmap of shearing granular materials, spanning the quasistatic, rapid and
the intermediate regimes. The key was to include the elastic properties of
the solid material in the set of rheological parameters; in effect, this
puts solid properties back into the rheology of granular solids. The solid
properties were previously unnecessary in the plasticity and kinetic theory
formalisms that respectively form the foundations of the quasistatic and
rapid-flow theories. Granular flows can now be divided into two broad
categories, the Elastic Regimes, in which the particles are locked in force
chains and interact elastically over long duration contact with their
neighbors and the Inertial regimes, where the particles have broken free of
the force chains. The Elastic regimes can be further subdivided into the
Elastic-Quasistatic regime (the old quasistatic regime) and the
Elastic-Inertial regime. The Elastic-Inertial regime is the ``new'' regime
observed in the landslide simulations, in which the inertially induced
stresses are significant compared to the elastically induced stresses. The
Inertial regime can also be sub-divided into an Inertial-Non-Collisional
where the stresses scale inertially, but the particles interact in clusters
through long duration contacts, and the Inertial-Collisional (or the old
rapid-flow) regime.
Finally, the simulations show that Stress-Controlled flows are rheologically
different from Controlled-Volume flows. Physically, there is a range of
dense concentrations (0.5$<\nu <$0.6) in which it is possible, but not
necessary to form force chains and demonstrate elastic behavior. (In other
words it is possible for the material to exhibit two different states at the
same concentration.) By forcing the material to support an applied loads
across force chains, Stress-Controlled flows may behave elastically through
this range of concentrations while, at the same shear rates rate
Controlled-Volume flows, fixed at the average concentration of the
Stress-Controlled flow, behave inertially.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.MAR.B8.1