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Pressure-dependent shear response of jammed packings of frictionless, spherical particles

Invited

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-G0> scales with pα, where α ≈ 1, but above a characteristic pressure p**, <G-G0> scales with pβ, where β ≈ 0.5. However, we find that the shear modulus Gi 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 Gi 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.

Presenters

  • Kyle VanderWerf

    Yale University

Authors

  • Kyle VanderWerf

    Yale University

  • Arman Boromand

    Yale University

  • Mark Shattuck

    The City College of New York, City College of New York, The City College of the City University of New York, Department of Physics and Benjamin Levich Institute, City College of New York

  • Corey Shane O'Hern

    Yale University, Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, Yale University