4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Material instability in granular assemblies from fundamentally different models

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/nag.591

Keywords

material instability; phenomenological constitutive relation; multi-scale model; Distinct Element Method; second-order work; stress probe

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Three fundamentally different models: a phenomenological constitutive relation, a micro-mechanical model and direct numerical simulations by Distinct Element Method (DEM) are compared in this paper. In addition, the local form of Hill's sufficient condition of stability (i.e. the vanishing of the second-order work d(2)W) is considered to describe material instabilities in granular assemblies. Stress probes in the axisymmetric plane of stress increments are achieved with all three models to check whether d(2)W vanishes at different stress-strain states. For all the models, cones of unstable stress directions (cones of stress probe directions for which d(2)W = 0) are found and they appear for stress states strictly inside the plastic limit condition. Thus, independently of the model, a bifurcation domain exists inside the plastic limit condition which can describe the sudden collapses of sand samples observed in laboratory tests before reaching the Mohr Coulomb criterion. Taking advantage of the different models considered, the vanishing of the second-order work is linked to the existence of non-associated plastic strains and to micro-mechanical bases. Copyright (c) 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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