Issue 13, 2010

Local coulomb versus global failure criterion for granular packings

Abstract

Contacts at the Coulomb threshold are unstable to tangential perturbations and thus contribute to failure at the microscopic level. How is such a local property related to global failure, beyond the effective picture given by a Mohr–Coulomb type failure criterion? Here, we use a simulated bed of frictional disks slowly tilted under the action of gravity to investigate the link between the avalanche process and a global generalized isostaticity criterion. The avalanche starts when the packing as a whole is still stable according to this criterion, underlining the role of large heterogeneities in the destabilizing process: the clusters of particles with fully mobilized contacts concentrate local failure. We demonstrate that these clusters, at odds with the pile as a whole, are also globally marginal with respect to generalized isostaticity. More precisely, we observe how the condition of their stability from a local mechanical property progressively builds up to the generalized isostaticity criterion as they grow in size and eventually span the whole system when approaching the avalanche.

Graphical abstract: Local coulomb versus global failure criterion for granular packings

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Jan 2010
Accepted
08 Apr 2010
First published
26 May 2010

Soft Matter, 2010,6, 2939-2943

Local coulomb versus global failure criterion for granular packings

S. Henkes, C. Brito, O. Dauchot and W. van Saarloos, Soft Matter, 2010, 6, 2939 DOI: 10.1039/C000956N

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