The rheology of granular particles in an inclined plane geometry is studied
using molecular dynamics simulations. The flow--no-flow boundary is determined
for piles of varying heights over a range of inclination angles θ. Three
angles determine the phase diagram: θr, the angle of repose, is the
angle at which a flowing system comes to rest; θm, the maximum angle
of stability, is the inclination required to induce flow in a static system;
and θmax is the maximum angle for which stable, steady state flow is
observed. In the stable flow region θr<θ<θmax, three
flow regimes can be distinguished that depend on how close θ is to
θr: i) θ>>θr: Bagnold rheology, characterized by a
mean particle velocity vx in the direction of flow that scales as
vx∝h3/2, for a pile of height h, ii)
θ≳θr: the slow flow regime, characterized by a linear
velocity profile with depth, and iii) θ≈θr: avalanche flow
characterized by a slow underlying creep motion combined with occasional free
surface events and large energy fluctuations. We also probe the physics of the
initiation and cessation of flow. The results are compared to several recent
experimental studies on chute flows and suggest that differences between
measured velocity profiles in these experiments may simply be a consequence of
how far the system is from jamming.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figs, submitted to Physics of Fluid