Fragility in shear jamming of dense frictional suspensions

ORAL

Abstract

Particulate systems often undergo fluid-solid transition. The packing fraction that corresponds to this particular transition is often found to be protocol dependent. In case of frictional particulate systems, starting from a force-free random configuration at φ > φsjμ and subjected to shear by constant stress, some rearrangements (i.e., flowing) may occur before getting jammed. Such shear jammed states may flow again by changing the direction of the applied stress; such states are termed "fragile." We quantify this fragility with a stress reversal simulation and identify the point where the fragility vanishes as the isotropic jamming point φjμ. We also present a shear-jamming phase diagram of stress-dependent suspension model with a critical-load friction model.

*This study was supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grants No. JP17K05618.

Presenters

  • Ryohei Seto

    • Chemical Engineering, Kyoto University

Authors

  • Ryohei Seto

    • Chemical Engineering, Kyoto University
  • Abhinendra Singh

    • James Franck Institute and Institute for Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago
  • Omer Sedes

    • Levich Institute, City College of New York
  • Morton M Denn

    • Levich Institute, City College of New York
  • Bulbul Chakraborty

    • Brandeis University
    • Physics, Brandeis University
  • Jeffrey Morris

    • Levich Institute, City College of New York
    • City College of New York