Transients in sheared granular matter
Brian Utter, R. P. Behringer

TL;DR
This study investigates how dense granular materials respond to shear, revealing that force networks are fragile to shear reversal and that steady states are quickly reestablished after perturbations, with detailed insights into particle and force network dynamics.
Contribution
The paper provides experimental insights into the transient behavior of force networks and particle dynamics in sheared granular matter, especially during shear reversal.
Findings
Force networks are fragile to shear reversal.
Steady state is quickly reestablished after shear perturbations.
Particle spin decreases during shear transients.
Abstract
As dense granular materials are sheared, a shear band and an anisotropic force network form. The approach to steady state behavior depends on the history of the packing and the existing force and contact network. We present experiments on shearing of dense granular matter in a 2D Couette geometry in which we probe the history and evolution of shear bands by measuring particle trajectories and stresses during transients. We find that when shearing is stopped and restarted in the same direction, steady state behavior is immediately reached, in agreement with the typical assumption that the system is quasistatic. Although some relaxation of the force network is observed when shearing is stopped, quasistatic behavior is maintained because the contact network remains essentially unchanged. When the direction of shear is reversed, a transient occurs in which stresses initially decrease,…
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