Abstract

Granular materials immersed in a fluid are ubiquitous in daily life, industry, and nature. They include food processing, pastes, cosmetics, paints, concretes, cements, muds, wet sands, snows, landslides, and lava flow. They are known to exhibit a rich variety of complex rheological behavior, but the role of a fluid component in such behavior has remained poorly understood due to the nonlocal and many-body nature of hydrodynamic interactions between solid particles mediated by the fluid. We address this fundamental problem by comparing the microrheological response of athermal granular suspensions with and without hydrodynamic interactions to an externally driven probe particle by numerical simulations. We find that the presence of the fluid drastically increases the drag coefficient of the probe particle by more than one order of magnitude near the jamming transition. We reveal that this is a consequence of the nontrivial long-range nature of hydrodynamic interactions, which originates from unlimited cumulative transmission of near-field hydrodynamic interactions due to the incompressibility of both fluid and solid particles. Force chain formation of solid particles is dynamically coupled with hydrodynamic flow, leading to strong spatiotemporal fluctuations of flow pattern and nonlinear rheological response. Our study reveals essential roles of hydrodynamic interactions in complex rheological behavior of dense granular suspensions under an external drive.

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