Microscopic origins of shear stress in dense fluid-grain mixtures
Donia Marzougui, Bruno Chareyre, Julien Chauchat

TL;DR
This study uses a comprehensive numerical model to analyze the microscopic origins of shear stress in dense fluid-grain mixtures, highlighting the dominant role of shear lubrication forces and the complex interplay between contact and hydrodynamic stresses.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed simulation framework that incorporates sphere contacts, hydrodynamics, and poromechanical coupling, revealing new insights into shear stress contributions in dense suspensions.
Findings
Shear lubrication forces dominate at higher viscous numbers.
Poromechanical coupling significantly affects transient shear regimes.
Lubrication forces can increase shear stress without reducing contact forces.
Abstract
A numerical model is used to simulate rheometer experiments at constant normal stress on dense suspensions of spheres. The complete model includes sphere-sphere contacts using a soft contact approach, short range hydrodynamic interactions defined by frame-invariant expressions of forces and torques in the lubrication approximation, and drag forces resulting from the poromechanical coupling computed with the DEM-PFV technique. Series of simulations in which some of the coupling terms are neglected highlight the role of the poromechanical coupling in the transient regimes. They also reveal that the shear component of the lubrication forces, though frequently neglected in the literature, has a dominant effect in the volume changes. On the other hand, the effects of lubrication torques are much less significant. The bulk shear stress is decomposed into contact stress and hydrodynamic…
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