Memory of biaxial compression during shear jamming in granular materials

ORAL

Abstract

We have designed a novel experimental apparatus to probe the jamming features of granular materials based on photoelastic techniques. The experiment consists of a floating layer of photoelastic disks, which is subject to deformation (compression or shearing). We first compress the granular sample to detect the jamming packing fraction of a given systemusing the photoelastic response. This also yields the force chain networks and stresses throughout the material. we decompress the system to a certain distance from the jamming point.We next decompress the system below jamming, and then apply pure shear, lead to a shear jammed state. We compare the force network, coordination number and local density distribution for the states obtained by compression vs. those obtained by shear jamming state when the systems have the same pressure to understand structural similarities in the two types of states.

*This work was supported by NSF grants DMR-1206351 NASA grant NNX15AD38G, the William M. Keck Foundation, DARPA grant 4-347281, and a Triangle MRSEC fellowship for DW. HZ thanks NSFC Grant No. 41672256 for financial support.

Presenters

  • Hu Zheng

    • Hohai University
    • Hohai University (currently Duke Univ.)
    • Dept. of Physics, Duke Univ
    • Duke University
    • Hohai University/Duke University
    • Physics, Duke University

Authors

  • Hu Zheng

    • Hohai University
    • Hohai University (currently Duke Univ.)
    • Dept. of Physics, Duke Univ
    • Duke University
    • Hohai University/Duke University
    • Physics, Duke University
  • Dong Wang

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