Abstract
Changes of granular material anisotropy with stress are a function of numerous microscale attributes, such as contact network, particle size uniformity and shape. Such influences are often represented with fabric variables. Although multiple choices for fabric exist, the question of which variable best explains why and how granular materials adapt to stress is still open. In this study, the effectiveness of different fabric variables in tracking stress-induced anisotropy is compared. The analysis is restricted to a simple, yet fundamental, range of behavioir: elastic deformation. Both particle-scale simulations and continuum analyses are deployed. Analyses based on the discrete-element method (DEM) reveal that, depending on the contact behaviour, anisotropy may emerge even if the topology of the grain contact network is unchanged. The inspection of these results through a continuum-scale hyperelastic constitutive law further reveals that the computed trends cannot be captured without an evolving fabric variable. A comparison between such fabric and multiple microstructural indicators extracted from DEM simulations suggests that elastic stress-induced anisotropy is primarily a manifestation of changes in the anisotropic particle contact area distribution in response to the current magnitude and orientation of force chains. These results not only offer opportunities to enhance current continuum elastic models for granular materials, but can also be used to design testing strategies quantifying changes in fabric anisotropy through multi-scale measurements.
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