Granular Materials R. Behringer Duke University Durham, NC, USA.

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Granular Materials R. Behringer Duke University Durham, NC, USA

Transcript of Granular Materials R. Behringer Duke University Durham, NC, USA.

Page 1: Granular Materials R. Behringer Duke University Durham, NC, USA.

Granular Materials

R. Behringer

Duke University

Durham, NC, USA

Page 2: Granular Materials R. Behringer Duke University Durham, NC, USA.

Outline

• Overview– What’s a granular material?– Numbers, sizes and scales– Granular phases– Features of granular phases– Why study granular materials?– Special Phenomena– Open challenges—what we don’t know

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• Issues/ideas for granular gases– Kinetic theory– Hydrodynamics– Clustering and collapse– Simulations– Experiments

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• Issues/ideas for dense granular systems– Friction and dilatancy– Force chains– Janssen model– Constant flow from a hopper– Forces under sandpiles– Texture

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• Models for static force transmission– Lattice models: Q-model, 3-leg, elastic– Continuum limits of LM’s– Classical continuum models– Summary of predictions

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• Experimental tests of force transmission– Order/disorder– Friction– Vector nature of force transmission– Textured systems– So where do we stand?

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• Force fluctuations in dense systems– Force chains– Fragility– Anisotropy

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• Transitions– Jamming– Percolation– Relation to other phenomena—e.g. glasses– Clustering (see gases)– Fluidization– Subharmonic Instabilities (shaken systems)– Stick-slip

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• “Classical” systems– Shaking (convection, waves…)– Avalanches– Rotating flows– Hoppers and bunkers– Shearing– Mixing and segregation

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• Special techniques– Discrete element models (DEM or MD)– Lattice models– Special experimental techniques

• NMR

• Photoelasticity

• “Carbon paper”

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What is a granular material?

• Large number of individual solid particles

• Classical interactions between particles

• Inter-particle forces only during contact

• Interaction forces are dissipative

– Friction, restitutional losses from collisions

• Interaction forces are dissipative

• A-thermal—kBT << Etypical ~ mgd

• Other effects from surrounding fluid, charging may occur

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Numbers, Sizes and Scales

• Sizes: 1d < – powders

< d , 0.5cm—grains

d > 0.5 cm—pebbles, rocks, boulders…

• Size range of phenomena—packed powers (pills– m to mm

– A box of cereal—mm to 10 cm

– Grains in a silo—mm to 10’s of m

– Sahara desert—mm to many km

– Rings of Saturn, intergalactic dust clouds—up to 1020m

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Granular Phases and Statistical Properties

• Qualitative similarity of fluid, gas and solid states for granular and molecular systems

• Difficult question: how do granular phase changes occur?

• Open question: what are the statistical properties of granular systems?

• Caveat: No true thermodynamic temperature—far from equilibrium

• Various possible granular ‘temperatures’ proposed

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Distinguishing properties of phases

• Solids resist shear

• Fluids are viscous, i.e. shear stresses scale with the velocity gradients

• Gases are also viscous, have lower densitiesthan fluids, and have Maxwell-

Boltzmann-like distributions forvelocities

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Properties of granular gases

• Characterized by pair-wise grain collisions

• Kinetic theory works reasonably well

• Velocity distributions are modified M-B

• Gases can only persist with continuousenergy input

• Subject to clustering instability

• Models (may) show granular collapse

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Granular Clustering –(Luding and Herrmann)

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Properties of granular solids

• Persistent contacts (contrast to collisionalpicture for gases)

• Dense slow flows or static configurations

• Force chains carry most of the force

• Force chains lead to strong spatio-temporalfluctuations

• Interlocking of grains leads to jamming,yield stress, dilation on shearing

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Example of Force Chains from a Couette Experiment

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Solids, continued

• Dilation under shear (Reynolds)

• Grains interact via friction (Coulomb)

Note frictional indeterminacy history dependence– Persistent contacts may limit sampling of

phase space

• Conventionally modeled as continuum– Strong fluctuations raise questions of

appropriate continuum limit

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Granular ‘phase’ transistions

• Clustering in gases

• Elastic to plastic (semi- ‘fluid’) in dense systems—jamming

• Jamming and fragility

• Note: gravity typically compacts flows—many states not easily accessible on earth

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Do granular materials flow like water?

• Example: sand flowing from a hopper:– Mass flow, M, independent of fill height– M ~ Da a ~ 2.5 to 3.0– Why—force chains, jamming…

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Visualization in 2D by photoelasticity (more later)

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Note: method of pouring matters for the final heap (History dependence)

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Mass flow rate vs. hopper opening diameter

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Simple argument to predict flow rate

M = V D2

V ~ (gD)1/2

M ~ D5/2.

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Why study granular materials?

• Fundamental statistical and dynamicalchallenges

• Related to broader class of systems– e.g. foams, colloids, glasses

• Important applications:– Coal and grain handling– Chemical processing– Pharmaceuticals– Xerography– Mixing– Avalanche phenomena– Earthquakes and mudslides

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Some technical ‘problems’

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Close to home—about a mile from the Duke University Campus

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Interesting phenomena

• Pattern formation– In shaken systems– Hopper flows

• Mixing/segregation• Clustering—granular gases• Avalanches• Rotating flows• Granular convection• Jamming/unjamming

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Applications

• Significant contribution to economy (~1$ trillion per year (?) – in

US)

• Granular industrial facilities operate below design—large financial losses result

• Large losses due to avalanches and mudslides

Page 31: Granular Materials R. Behringer Duke University Durham, NC, USA.

Friction: Granular and otherwise

• Two parallel/intertwined concepts:– ‘Ordinary’ friction– Granular friction

• Both referenced to Coulomb’s original work

• Mohr-Coulomb friction.

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C. A. Coulomb, Acad. Roy. Sci. Mem. Phys. Divers Savants7, 343 (1773)

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Ordinary Solid Friction

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e. g. block on plane

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Indeterminacy of frictional contacts

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Hertz-Mindlin contact forces

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Reynolds Dilatancy

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Example of Reynolds dilation in before and after images from a shear experiment

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Microscopic origin of stresses, Fabric, Anisotropy

• Fabric tensor

• Microscopic origin of stress tensor

• Shape effects– nnF ˆˆ~

nnF ˆˆ~

Fn

ˆ~

Fn

ˆ~

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Fabric and fragility (e.g. Cates et al. Chaos 9, 511 (1999))

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Other effects leading to anisotropy

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Aligned force chains/contacts lead to texture and anisotropy

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Example—simple shear creates texture

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Force chains, Spatio-temporal fluctuations

• What happens when dense materials deform?– Strong spatio-temporal fluctuations– Examples: hopper, 2d shear, sound.

• Length scale/correlation questions

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Fluctuations during hopper flow

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Spectrum of stress time series

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Sound measurements (Liu and Nagel, PRL 68, 2301 (1992)

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2D Shear Experiment—stress chains break and reform

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Example of stress chains: Couette shear (Bob Hartley)

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Closeup of sheared material (Bob Hartley)

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Time series show large fluctuations (Howell et al. PRL 82, 5241 (1999))

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Also in 3D shear experiments (Miller et al. PRL 77, 3110 (1996))

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Open Questions: what we do not know

• What are the statistical properties of granular materials?

• What is their relation, if any, to broader classes of materials?

• What are the limits on predictability?

• What are the optimum continuum models?

• When do they apply?