Abstract

Grain crushing underpins key mechanical behaviours of granular materials. A variety of factors, including grading, particle shapes and loading conditions, have been recognised to affect the crushability of grains and the overall behaviour of a granular material. Among them, the role of intermediate principal stress in a general stress condition on the shear behaviour of crushable granular sand remains less understood, owing to the scarcity of experimental data and analytical tools available. In this paper, a multi-scale computational approach is employed to investigate the shear behaviour of crushable granular sand under general stress conditions with varying intermediate principal stresses and confining pressures. The computational approach features multi-scale coupling between non-smooth contact dynamics and peridynamics, and offers a rigorous way to consider the intertwined evolution of particle size and shape during the process of grain crushing. The numerical study helps to quantify comprehensively and analyse the grain crushing-induced changes of macro- and micro-scale material behaviours including strength, deformability, particle size and shape evolution, particle-scale forces and contact conditions, and the development of anisotropy. The competition between a void-filling mechanism due to grain size change and enhanced friction and interlocking due to grain shape change in dictating the deformation of crushable sand is further discussed. The findings offer insights into the complex behaviours of crushable granular materials under general stress conditions and facilitate future development of physics-based constitutive theories on crushable sand.

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