Gravity and friction in shear jamming of 3D granular materials

ORAL

Abstract

Shear jamming occurs in 2D frictional particles over a range of packing fractions below isotropic jamming. Simulations show shear jamming for frictionless spheres, but over a vanishing range as the system size grows. We use packings of submerged hydrogel particles to determine the shear-induced macroscopic response of 3D, low-frictional granular systems near jamming, bridging the gap between frictionless and low-frictional packings. We find that a ~0.4% density-mismatch easily compacts the low frictional (μ ~ 0.03) system, superseding shear jamming and highlighting the importance of gravity. We perform experiments with density-matched high- and low-frictional particles to recover a macroscopic shear jamming response in 3D and elucidate the role of friction in shear jamming. Accompanying DEM simulations corroborate our experimental results.

*DARPA grant 4-34728, NSF grant DMR1206351, and NASA grant NNX15AD38G

Presenters

  • David Chen

    • Duke Univ
    • Physics, Duke University
    • Department of Physics, Duke Univ

Authors

  • David Chen

    • Duke Univ
    • Physics, Duke University
    • Department of Physics, Duke Univ
  • Robert Behringer

    • Duke Univ
    • Physics, Duke University
    • Dept. of Physics, Duke Univ
    • Duke University
    • Department of Physics, Duke Univ
    • Physics Department, Duke Univ.
    • Phsyics, Duke University
    • Physics Department, Duke Univ