Transforming mesoscale granular plasticity through particle shape
Kieran A. Murphy, Karin A. Dahmen, Heinrich M. Jaeger

TL;DR
This study investigates how particle shape influences stress fluctuations and slip event statistics in granular materials, revealing shape-dependent effects on maximum event size and system criticality, challenging existing models of amorphous plasticity.
Contribution
The paper introduces particle shape as a new control parameter affecting mesoscale plasticity and stress fluctuation characteristics in granular systems.
Findings
Stress relaxation events follow a truncated power law distribution.
The power law exponent is approximately 1.5, shape-independent.
Maximum event size varies significantly with particle shape.
Abstract
When an amorphous material is strained beyond the point of yielding it enters a state of continual reconfiguration via dissipative, avalanche-like slip events that relieve built-up local stress. However, how the statistics of such events depend on local interactions among the constituent units remains debated. To address this we perform experiments on granular material in which we use particle shape to vary the interactions systematically. Granular material, confined under constant pressure boundary conditions, is uniaxially compressed while stress is measured and internal rearrangements are imaged with x-rays. We introduce volatility, a quantity from economic theory, as a powerful new tool to quantify the magnitude of stress fluctuations, finding systematic, shape-dependent trends. For all 22 investigated shapes the magnitude of relaxation events is well-fit by a truncated power…
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