Abstract

This paper presents a detailed computational investigation of the effect of particle shape on the interface shear behavior of granular materials. The discrete element method (DEM) using clusters to model rough particles is used, expanding the procedure introduced in an earlier paper by Jensen et al. [1]. Seven new cluster shapes (i.e., particle configurations) of varying degrees of roughness are presented herein, and numerical experiments simulating ring shear tests are made using these clusters. From these simulations, the effect of particle shape on void ratio (e) and interface angle of friction between soil and structure surface (δ) is reported. Particle shape characteristics include roundness, angularity, and surface roughness. The results of numerical simulations using the newly formed cluster shapes are in very good qualitative agreement with laboratory tests. Simulation results showed that the void ratio of a particle mass increased as the angularity or roughness of the particles increased. They also showed an increase in interface shear strength between perfectly round DEM particles and the more angular cluster shapes, but no systematic correlations with the various definitions of particle shape parameters was found. It may be necessary to use greater accuracy in modeling the size and shape distributions of a natural medium to further investigate the influence of particle shape on interface friction. The simulations also successfully reflected the relationship between interface friction angle and structure surface roughness as demonstrated in recent physical experiments. The simulations comparing initially “dense” media to initially “loose” media demonstrated behavior that is similar to the behavior of a natural sandy soil observed in experiments.

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