Granular flow down a rough inclined plane: transition between thin and thick piles
Leonardo E. Silbert, James W. Landry, and Gary S. Grest

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to analyze granular flow on inclined planes, identifying different flow regimes and phase boundaries, and comparing results to experimental data to understand flow initiation and cessation.
Contribution
It provides a detailed phase diagram of granular flow regimes and clarifies the physics behind flow transitions on rough inclined planes.
Findings
Identified three flow regimes: Bagnold, slow flow, and avalanche.
Determined phase boundaries based on inclination angles.
Compared simulation results with experimental data on chute flows.
Abstract
The rheology of granular particles in an inclined plane geometry is studied using molecular dynamics simulations. The flow--no-flow boundary is determined for piles of varying heights over a range of inclination angles . Three angles determine the phase diagram: , the angle of repose, is the angle at which a flowing system comes to rest; , the maximum angle of stability, is the inclination required to induce flow in a static system; and is the maximum angle for which stable, steady state flow is observed. In the stable flow region , three flow regimes can be distinguished that depend on how close is to : i) : Bagnold rheology, characterized by a mean particle velocity in the direction of flow that scales as , for a pile of height , ii)…
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