Experimental observation of shear jamming in 3D granular materials

ORAL

Abstract

Frictional granular media can shear jam over a range of packing fractions below the isotropic jamming packing fraction. We experimentally study shear jamming in 3D by applying cyclic shear at fixed volume for a granular packing submerged in a density-matched solution; the effects of gravity are minimized in this environment, preventing compaction by grain weight. We observe signatures of shear jamming in the macroscopic pressure signal with a variety of packing fractions and shear amplitudes over many (on the order of 100) shear cycles. We report on analysis of particle positions (tracked via refractive index matched scanning [1]) from cycle to cycle that show correlations between microscopic rearrangements and changes in peak pressure across cycles.

[1] J. Dijksman, et. al., Review of Scientific Instruments 83, 011301 (2012)

*The following grants support this work: DARPA 4-34728, NSF-DMR1206351, NASA NNX15AD38G, Army Research Office Grant W911NF-18-1-0184.

Presenters

  • David Z Chen

    • Physics, Duke University
    • Duke University

Authors

  • David Z Chen

    • Physics, Duke University
    • Duke University
  • Ryan Kozlowski

    • Physics, Duke University
    • Duke University
  • Robert P Behringer

    • Department of Physics, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA
    • Physics, Duke University
    • Duke University
    • Physics Department, Duke University