Unified theory of inertial granular flows and non-Brownian suspensions
Abstract
Rheological properties of dense flows of hard particles are singular as one approaches the jamming threshold where flow ceases both for aerial granular flows dominated by inertia and for over-damped suspensions. Concomitantly, the length scale characterizing velocity correlations appears to diverge at jamming. Here we introduce a theoretical framework that proposes a tentative, but potentially complete, scaling description of stationary flows. Our analysis, which focuses on frictionless particles, applies both to suspensions and inertial flows of hard particles. We compare our predictions with the empirical literature, as well as with novel numerical data. Overall, we find a very good agreement between theory and observations, except for frictional inertial flows whose scaling properties clearly differ from frictionless systems. For overdamped flows, more observations are needed to decide if friction is a relevant perturbation. Our analysis makes several new predictions on microscopic dynamical quantities that should be accessible experimentally.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review E
- Pub Date:
- June 2015
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevE.91.062206
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1410.3535
- Bibcode:
- 2015PhRvE..91f2206D
- Keywords:
-
- 45.70.-n;
- 83.10.Gr;
- 83.50.-v;
- 64.60.Ht;
- Granular systems;
- Constitutive relations;
- Deformation and flow;
- Dynamic critical phenomena;
- Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter;
- Condensed Matter - Disordered Systems and Neural Networks
- E-Print:
- 13 pages + 3 pages SI