Softening and Yielding of Soft Glassy Materials
Simon Dagois-Bohy, Ell\'ak Somfai, Brian P. Tighe, and Martin van, Hecke

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive framework for understanding softening and yielding in soft glassy materials, revealing two distinct behaviors based on packing density and identifying a pressure-dependent crossover scale.
Contribution
The study introduces a unified numerical approach to characterize softening and yielding, distinguishing between dense and weakly jammed soft glassy materials.
Findings
Dense systems soften at a single strain independent of pressure.
Weakly jammed systems exhibit a two-step softening process.
A pressure scale determines the transition between the two behaviors.
Abstract
Solids deform and fluids flow, but soft glassy materials, such as emulsions, foams, suspensions, and pastes, exhibit an intricate mix of solid and liquid-like behavior. While much progress has been made to understand their elastic (small strain) and flow (infinite strain) properties, such understanding is lacking for the softening and yielding phenomena that connect these asymptotic regimes. Here we present a comprehensive framework for softening and yielding of soft glassy materials, based on extensive numerical simulations of oscillatory rheological tests, and show that two distinct scenarios unfold depending on the material's packing density. For dense systems, there is a single, pressure-independent strain where the elastic modulus drops and the particle motion becomes diffusive. In contrast, for weakly jammed systems, a two-step process arises: at an intermediate softening strain,…
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