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  4. Interparticle Friction Leads to Nonmonotonic Flow Curves and Hysteresis in Viscous Suspensions
 
research article

Interparticle Friction Leads to Nonmonotonic Flow Curves and Hysteresis in Viscous Suspensions

Perrin, Hugo  
•
Clavaud, Cecile
•
Wyart, Matthieu  
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August 16, 2019
Physical Review X (PRX)

Hysteresis is a major feature of the solid-liquid transition in granular materials. This property, by allowing metastable states, can potentially yield catastrophic phenomena such as earthquakes or aerial landslides. The origin of hysteresis in granular flows is still debated. However, most mechanisms put forward so far rely on the presence of inertia at the particle level. In this paper, we study the avalanche dynamics of non-Brownian suspensions in slowly rotating drums and reveal large hysteresis of the avalanche angle even in the absence of inertia. By using microsilica particles whose interparticle friction coefficient can be turned off, we show that microscopic friction, conversely to inertia, is key to triggering hysteresis in granular suspensions. To understand this link between friction and hysteresis, we use the rotating drum as a rheometer to extract the suspension rheology close to the flow onset for both frictional and frictionless suspensions. This analysis shows that the flow rule for frictionless particles is monotonous and follows a power law of exponent alpha = 0.37 +/- 0.05, in close agreement with the previous theoretical prediction, alpha = 0.35. By contrast, the flow rule for frictional particles suggests a velocity-weakening behavior, thereby explaining the flow instability and the emergence of hysteresis. These findings show that hysteresis can also occur in particulate media without inertia, questioning the intimate nature of this phenomenon. By highlighting the role of microscopic friction, our results may be of interest in the geophysical context to understand the failure mechanism at the origin of undersea landslides.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevX.9.031027
Web of Science ID

WOS:000481471100001

Author(s)
Perrin, Hugo  
Clavaud, Cecile
Wyart, Matthieu  
Metzger, Bloen
Forterre, Yoel
Date Issued

2019-08-16

Publisher

American Physical Society

Published in
Physical Review X (PRX)
Volume

9

Issue

3

Article Number

031027

Subjects

Physics, Multidisciplinary

•

Physics

•

avalanches

•

landslides

•

transition

•

particles

•

rheology

•

dynamics

•

law

Note

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
PCSL  
Available on Infoscience
August 29, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/160689
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