Failure of confined granular media due to pullout of an intruder: From force networks to a system wide response
Srujal Shah, Chao Cheng, Payman Jalali, Lou Kondic

TL;DR
This study uses computational simulations to analyze how granular materials fail when an intruder is pulled out, revealing the critical role of force networks, particle-wall interactions, and force intermittency in failure mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of force network evolution and the influence of particle-wall interactions on failure in granular media using persistent homology.
Findings
Force networks evolve nontrivially before failure
Failure depends on particle-wall interaction and column diameter
Force intermittency and spatial dependence are key to understanding failure
Abstract
We investigate computationally the pullout of a spherical intruder initially buried at the bottom of a granular column. The intruder starts to move out of the granular bed once the pulling force reaches a critical value, leading to material failure. The failure point is found to depend on the diameter of the granular column, pointing out the importance of particle-wall interaction in determining the material response. Discrete element simulations show that prior to failure, the contact network is essentially static, with only minor rearrangements of the particles. However, the force network, which includes not only the contact information, but also the information about the interaction strength, undergoes a nontrivial evolution. An initial insight is reached by considering the relative magnitudes of normal and tangential forces between the particles, and in particular the proportion of…
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