Shear strength properties of wet granular materials
Vincent Richefeu (LMGC), Moulay Sa\"id El Youssoufi (LMGC), Farhang, Radja\"i (LMGC)

TL;DR
This study explores how water content affects the shear strength of wet granular materials, combining experiments, simulations, and a new model to understand capillary interactions and bond distributions.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model linking capillary forces, particle texture, and size polydispersity to shear strength, validated by experiments and simulations.
Findings
Shear strength saturates with increasing water content.
Capillary bond distribution significantly influences shear strength.
Strong bonds exhibit anisotropic force and orientation distributions.
Abstract
We investigate shear strength properties of wet granular materials in the pendular state (i.e. the state where the liquid phase is discontinuous) as a function of water content. Sand and glass beads were wetted and tested in a direct shear cell and under various confining pressures. In parallel, we carried out three-dimensional molecular dynamics simulations by using an explicit equation expressing capillary force as a function of interparticle distance, water bridge volume and surface tension. We show that, due to the peculiar features of capillary interactions, the major influence of water content over the shear strength stems from the distribution of liquid bonds. This property results in shear strength saturation as a function of water content. We arrive at the same conclusion by a microscopic analysis of the shear strength. We propose a model that accounts for the capillary force,…
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