Stiffness pathologies in discrete granular systems: bifurcation, neutral equilibrium, and instability in the presence of kinematic constraints
Matthew R. Kuhn, Florent Prunier, Ali Daouadji

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the complex stiffness behavior of granular systems, revealing multiple failure modes and instabilities caused by geometric and contact friction effects, with implications for understanding granular material failure.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive framework for analyzing stiffness, bifurcation, and instability in granular systems considering geometric constraints and non-symmetric stiffness matrices.
Findings
Multiple micro-scale failure modes identified in small granular systems.
Micro-scale failure is widespread and particles are often near instability.
Instabilities can be analyzed under various displacement constraints.
Abstract
The paper develops the stiffness relationship between the movements and forces among a system of discrete interacting grains. The approach is similar to that used in structural analysis, but the stiffness matrix of granular material is inherently non-symmetric because of the geometrics of particle interactions and of the frictional behavior of the contacts. Internal geometric constraints are imposed by the particles' shapes, in particular, by the surface curvatures of the particles at their points of contact. Moreover, the stiffness relationship is incrementally non-linear, and even small assemblies require the analysis of multiple stiffness branches, with each branch region being a pointed convex cone in displacement-space. These aspects of the particle-level stiffness relationship gives rise to three types of micro-scale failure: neutral equilibrium, bifurcation and path instability,…
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