Coulomb friction law Coulomb regarded internal forces between granular particles as a friction process, and proposed the friction law, that the force of friction of solid particles is proportional to the normal pressure between them and the static friction coefficient is greater than the kinetic friction coefficient. He studied the collapse of piles of sand and found empirically two critical angles: the maximal stable angle \theta_m and the minimum
angle of repose \theta_r. When the sandpile slope reaches the maximum stable angle, the sand particles on the surface of the pile begin to fall. The process stops when the surface inclination angle is equal to the angle of repose. The difference between these two angles, \Delta\theta=\theta_m-\theta_r, is the Bagnold angle, which is a measure of the
hysteresis of granular materials. This phenomenon is due to the
force chains: stress in a granular solid is not distributed uniformly but is conducted away along so-called
force chains which are networks of grains resting on one another. Between these chains are regions of low stress whose grains are shielded for the effects of the grains above by
vaulting and
arching. When the
shear stress reaches a certain value, the force chains can break and the particles at the end of the chains on the surface begin to slide. Then, new force chains form until the shear stress is less than the critical value, and so the sandpile maintains a constant angle of repose.
Janssen effect In 1895, H. A. Janssen discovered that in a vertical cylinder filled with particles, the pressure measured at the base of the cylinder does not depend on the height of the filling, unlike Newtonian fluids at rest which follow
Stevin's law for hydrostatic pressure. Janssen suggested a simplified model with the following assumptions: • The vertical pressure, \sigma_{zz}, is constant in the horizontal plane; • The horizontal pressure, \sigma_{rr}, is proportional to the vertical pressure \sigma_{zz}, where K=\frac{\sigma_{rr}}{\sigma_{zz}} is constant in space; • The wall friction static coefficient \mu=\frac{\sigma_{rz}}{\sigma_{rr}} sustains the vertical load at the contact with the wall; • The density of the material is constant over all depths. The pressure in the granular material is then described in a different law, which accounts for saturation: p(z)=p_\infin[1-\exp(-z/\lambda)], where \lambda=\frac{R}{2\mu K} and R is the radius of the cylinder, and at the top of the silo z=0. The given pressure equation does not account for boundary conditions, such as the ratio between the particle size to the radius of the silo. Since the internal stress of the material cannot be measured, Janssen's speculations have not been verified by any direct experiment.
Rowe stress and dilatancy relation In the early 1960s, engineer studied
dilatancy effect on shear strength in shear tests and proposed a relation between them. The mechanical properties of assembly of mono-dispersed particles in 2D can be analyzed based on the
representative elementary volume, with typical lengths, \ell_1,\ell_2, in vertical and horizontal directions respectively. The geometric characteristics of the system is described by \alpha=\arctan(\frac{\ell_1}{\ell_2}) and the variable \beta, which describes the angle when the contact points begin the process of sliding. Denote by \sigma_{11} the vertical direction, which is the direction of the major principal stress, and by \sigma_{22} the horizontal direction, which is the direction of the minor principal stress. Then stress on the boundary can be expressed as the concentrated force borne by individual particles. Under biaxial loading with uniform stress \sigma_{12}=\sigma_{21}=0 and therefore F_{12}=F_{21}=0. At equilibrium state: \frac{F_{11}}{F_{22}}=\frac{\sigma_{11}\ell_2}{\sigma_{22}\ell_1}=\tan(\theta+\beta), where \theta, the friction angle, is the angle between the contact force and the contact normal direction. \theta_{\mu}, which describes the angle that if the tangential force falls within the friction cone the particles would still remain steady. It is determined by the coefficient of friction \mu=tg\phi_u, so \theta\leq\theta_\mu. Once stress is applied to the system then \theta gradually increases while \alpha,\beta remains unchanged. When \theta\geq\theta_{\mu} then the particles will begin sliding, resulting in changing the structure of the system and creating new force chains. \Delta_1,\Delta_2, the horizontal and vertical displacements respectively satisfies \frac{\dot{\Delta_2}}{\dot{\Delta_1}}=\frac{\dot{\varepsilon_{22}}\ell_2}{\dot{\varepsilon_{11}}\ell_1}=-\tan\beta. == Granular gases ==