| Literature DB >> 32031840 |
Kyle VanderWerf1, Arman Boromand2, Mark D Shattuck3, Corey S O'Hern1,2,4.
Abstract
The mechanical response of packings of purely repulsive, spherical particles to athermal, quasistatic simple shear near jamming onset is highly nonlinear. Previous studies have shown that, at small pressure p, the ensemble-averaged static shear modulus ⟨G-G_{0}⟩ scales with p^{α}, where α≈1, but above a characteristic pressure p^{**}, ⟨G-G_{0}⟩∼p^{β}, where β≈0.5. However, we find that the shear modulus G^{i} for an individual packing typically decreases linearly with p along a geometrical family where the contact network does not change. We resolve this discrepancy by showing that, while the shear modulus does decrease linearly within geometrical families, ⟨G⟩ also depends on a contribution from discontinuous jumps in ⟨G⟩ that occur at the transitions between geometrical families. For p>p^{**}, geometrical-family and rearrangement contributions to ⟨G⟩ are of opposite signs and remain comparable for all system sizes. ⟨G⟩ can be described by a scaling function that smoothly transitions between two power-law exponents α and β. We also demonstrate the phenomenon of compression unjamming, where a jammed packing unjams via isotropic compression.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32031840 PMCID: PMC9128574 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.124.038004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.185