Deformation-driven diffusion and plastic flow in amorphous granular pillars
Author(s)
Li, Wenbin; Rieser, Jennifer M.; Liu, Andrea J.; Durian, Douglas J.; Li, Ju
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We report a combined experimental and simulation study of deformation-induced diffusion in compacted quasi-two-dimensional amorphous granular pillars, in which thermal fluctuations play a negligible role. The pillars, consisting of bidisperse cylindrical acetal plastic particles standing upright on a substrate, are deformed uniaxially and quasistatically by a rigid bar moving at a constant speed. The plastic flow and particle rearrangements in the pillars are characterized by computing the best-fit affine transformation strain and nonaffine displacement associated with each particle between two stages of deformation. The nonaffine displacement exhibits exponential crossover from ballistic to diffusive behavior with respect to the cumulative deviatoric strain, indicating that in athermal granular packings, the cumulative deviatoric strain plays the role of time in thermal systems and drives effective particle diffusion. We further study the size-dependent deformation of the granular pillars by simulation, and find that different-sized pillars follow self-similar shape evolution during deformation. In addition, the yield stress of the pillars increases linearly with pillar size. Formation of transient shear lines in the pillars during deformation becomes more evident as pillar size increases. The width of these elementary shear bands is about twice the diameter of a particle, and does not vary with pillar size.
Date issued
2015-06Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and Engineering; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Research Laboratory of ElectronicsJournal
Physical Review E
Publisher
American Physical Society
Citation
Li, Wenbin, Jennifer M. Rieser, Andrea J. Liu, Douglas J. Durian, and Ju Li. "Deformation-driven diffusion and plastic flow in amorphous granular pillars." Phys. Rev. E 91, 062212 (June 2015). © 2015 American Physical Society
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1539-3755
1550-2376