The Stress-Force-Fabric relation across shear bands
Carmen Lee, \'Emilien Az\'ema, Karen Daniels

TL;DR
This study investigates how shear bands affect the internal fabric and force transmission in granular materials, revealing significant local variations in contact orientation that influence bulk strength and are decoupled from direct loading.
Contribution
It extends the Stress-Force-Fabric framework to analyze spatial gradients within shear bands, highlighting local fabric variations independent of bulk loading conditions.
Findings
Fabric anisotropy varies significantly within shear bands.
Contact orientation changes are location-dependent, even under uniform loading.
Packing fraction and boundary effects influence local fabric orientation.
Abstract
The strength of granular materials is highly dependent on grain connectivity (fabric), force transmission, and frictional mobilization at the particle scale. Furthermore, these bulk properties are strongly dependent on the geometry and history of loading. It is well established that anisotropy in fabric and force transmission through a granular packing directly relates to the bulk scale strength of the packing via the Stress-Force-Fabric (SFF) relation. We have recently verified the validity of this framework for a broad variety of loading histories and geometries in experimental granular packings, using photoelastic disks to measure individual interparticle contact forces. By tracking both particle positions and interparticle contact force vectors, we mapped the anisotropy of the fabric and forces to the macroscale stress and strain and found excellent agreement between the anisotropic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGranular flow and fluidized beds · Material Dynamics and Properties · Geotechnical Engineering and Soil Mechanics
