99 research outputs found

    How granular materials deform in quasistatic conditions

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    Based on numerical simulations of quasistatic deformation of model granular materials, two rheological regimes are distinguished, according to whether macroscopic strains merely reflect microscopic material strains within the grains in their contact regions (type I strains), or result from instabilities and contact network rearrangements at the microscopic level (type II strains). We discuss the occurrence of regimes I and II in simulations of model materials made of disks (2D) or spheres (3D). The transition from regime I to regime II in monotonic tests such as triaxial compression is different from both the elastic limit and from the yield threshold. The distinction between both types of response is shown to be crucial for the sensitivity to contact-level mechanics, the relevant variables and scales to be considered in micromechanical approaches, the energy balance and the possible occurrence of macroscopic instabilitie

    Discrete numerical simulation, quasistatic deformation and the origins of strain in granular materials.

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    International audienceSystematic numerical simulations of model dense granular materials in monotonous, quasistatic deformation reveal the existence of two different régimes. In the first one, the macroscopic strains stem from the deformation of contacts. The motion can be calculated by purely static means, without inertia, stress controlled or strain rate controlled simulations yield identical smooth rheological curves for a same sample. In the second régime, strains are essentially due to instabilities of the contact network, the approach to the limits of large samples and of small strain rates is considerably slower and the material is more sensitive to perturbations. These results are discussed and related to experiments : measurements of elastic moduli with very small strain increments, and slow deformation (creep) under constant stress

    Quasistatic rheology and the origins of strain

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    Published in special issue of "Comptes-Rendus Physique" on granular materialsInternational audienceFeatures of rheological laws applied to solid-like granular materials are recalled and confronted to microscopic approaches via discrete numerical simulations. We give examples of model systems with very similar equilibrium stress transport properties -- the much-studied force chains and force distribution -- but qualitatively different strain responses to stress increments. Results on the stability of elastoplastic contact networks lead to the definition of two different rheological regimes, according to whether a macroscopic fragility property (propensity to rearrange under arbitrary small stress increments in the thermodynamic limit) applies. Possible consequences are discussed

    Discrete numerical simulation, quasistatic deformation and the origins of strain in granular materials

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    Systematic numerical simulations of model dense granular materials in monotonous, quasistatic deformation reveal the existence of two different r\'egimes. In the first one, the macroscopic strains stem from the deformation of contacts. The motion can be calculated by purely static means, without inertia, stress controlled or strain rate controlled simulations yield identical smooth rheological curves for a same sample. In the second r\'egime, strains are essentially due to instabilities of the contact network, the approach to the limits of large samples and of small strain rates is considerably slower and the material is more sensitive to perturbations. These results are discussed and related to experiments : measurements of elastic moduli with very small strain increments, and slow deformation (creep) under constant stress.Comment: Third international symposium on deformation characteristics of geomaterials, Lyon : France (2003

    Experimental validation of nonextensive scaling law in confined granular media

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    In this letter, we address the relationship between the statistical fluctuations of grain displacements for a full quasistatic plane shear experiment, and the corresponding anomalous diffusion exponent, α\alpha. We experimentally validate a particular case of the so-called Tsallis-Bukman scaling law, α=2/(3q)\alpha = 2 / (3 - q), where qq is obtained by fitting the probability density function (PDF) of the measured fluctuations with a qq-Gaussian distribution, and the diffusion exponent is measured independently during the experiment. Applying an original technique, we are able to evince a transition from an anomalous diffusion regime to a Brownian behavior as a function of the length of the strain-window used to calculate the displacements of grains in experiments. The outstanding conformity of fitting curves to a massive amount of experimental data shows a clear broadening of the fluctuation PDFs as the length of the strain-window decreases, and an increment in the value of the diffusion exponent - anomalous diffusion. Regardless of the size of the strain-window considered in the measurements, we show that the Tsallis-Bukman scaling law remains valid, which is the first experimental verification of this relationship for a classical system at different diffusion regimes. We also note that the spatial correlations show marked similarities to the turbulence in fluids, a promising indication that this type of analysis can be used to explore the origins of the macroscopic friction in confined granular materials.Comment: 8 pages 4 figure

    Jamming transition in a two-dimensional open granular pile with rolling resistance

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    We present a molecular dynamics study of the jamming/unjamming transition in two-dimensional granular piles with open boundaries. The grains are modeled by viscoelastic forces, Coulomb friction and resistance to rolling. Two models for the rolling resistance interaction were assessed: one considers a constant rolling friction coefficient, and the other one a strain dependent coefficient. The piles are grown on a finite size substrate and subsequently discharged through an orifice opened at the center of the substrate. Varying the orifice width and taking the final height of the pile after the discharge as the order parameter, one can devise a transition from a jammed regime (when the grain flux is always clogged by an arch) to a catastrophic regime, in which the pile is completely destroyed by an avalanche as large as the system size. A finite size analysis shows that there is a finite orifice width associated with the threshold for the unjamming transition, no matter the model used for the microscopic interactions. As expected, the value of this threshold width increases when rolling resistance is considered, and it depends on the model used for the rolling friction.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure

    FEMxDEM multi-scale modelling with second gradient regularization

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    The multi-scale FEMxDEM approach is an innovative numerical method for geotechnical problems, using at the same time the Finite Element Method (FEM) at the engineering macro-scale and the Discrete Element Method (DEM) at the scale of the microstructure of the material. The link between scales is made via computational homogenization. In this way, the continuum numerical constitutive law and the corresponding tangent matrix are obtained directly from the discrete response of the microstructure [1,2,3]. In the proposed paper, a variety of operators, rather than the tangent consistent for the Newton- Raphson method, is tested in a challenging attempt to improve the poor convergence performance. The independence of the DEM computations between the different elements is exploited to develop a parallelized code using an OpenMP paradigm. At the macro level, a second gradient constitutive relation is implemented in order to enrich the first gradient Cauchy relation bringing meshindependency to the model. The second gradient regularization, together with the speedup provided by the parallelization allows by first time to the FEMxDEM model to be applied to real scale problems with the desired mesh refinement. Some results are given exhibiting the above findings with emphasis on aspects related to strain localisation
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