Publication | Closed Access
A micro‐mechanical study of peak strength and critical state
11
Citations
35
References
2015
Year
EngineeringMultiscale MechanicsMicromechanicsMechanical EngineeringGranular MediumMechanics ModelingMechanicsDilation AngleStrength PropertyStressstrain AnalysisMicrostructure-strength RelationshipPeak StrengthMaterials ScienceMechanical BehaviorSolid MechanicsMaterial MechanicsMicrostructureMechanical PropertiesMultiscale MechanicApplied PhysicsInternal FrictionGranular MaterialsMechanics Of Materials
Summary We present a micro‐mechanical analysis of macroscopic peak strength, critical state, and residual strength in two‐dimensional non‐cohesive granular media. Typical continuum constitutive quantities such as frictional strength and dilation angle are explicitly related to their corresponding grain‐scale counterparts (e.g., inter‐particle contact forces, fabric, particle displacements, and velocities), providing an across‐the‐scale basis for a better understanding and modeling of granular materials. These multi‐scale relations are derived in three steps. First, explicit relations between macroscopic stress and strain rate with the corresponding grain‐scale mechanics are established. Second, these relations are used in conjunction with the non‐associative Mohr–Coulomb criterion to explicitly connect internal friction and dilation angles to the micro‐mechanics. Third, the mentioned explicit connections are applied to investigate, understand, and derive micro‐mechanical conditions for peak strength, critical state, and residual strength. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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